Have our inboxes grown too quickly? Is email passé? Are terms such as ‘Facebook me’ about to become the norm and kill email entirely?

I read an interesting article by Erik Qualman this morning about Generation Z no longer using email and using social networks instead.

Erik writes: “Just as people use Google as a verb — Google it — they’re starting to use phrases like “Facebook Me.” People are no longer exchanging e-mails; they’re exchanging social media information. In many instances, they will never get this e-mail address. If they desire this type of communication, the social networks have inboxes of their own that replicate and replace e-mail.”

I must admit we appear to be using Facebook, Skype, Yahoo etc much more often to send messages around but email still remains a key tool for the job I do in digital communications.

  1. Do I seriously see this changing soon? No
  2. Do I see this changing over the next five years? Possibly

Useful services like Meebo which aggregate the various instant messaging services are likely to become increasingly popular and as the walls of the social networks drop further and contacts become easier to share between our MySpace, Facebook, Bebo, accounts – the need for email will certainly diminish.

Are we seeing the death of email? I would say maybe but I think it’s likely to be a slow death…

About Chris Norton

Chris Norton is the founder of Prohibition and an award winning communications consultant with more than twenty years’ experience. He was a lecturer at Leeds Beckett University and has had a varied PR career having worked both in-house and in a number of large consultancies. He is an Integrated PR and social media blogger and writes on a wide variety of blogs across a huge amount of topics from digital marketing, social media marketing right through to technology and crisis management.