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Social Media Networking Has Helped Wrestlers Tremendously

By Rob Sutter


Social media networking is the kind of tool that can help out businesses, as you can probably imagine. You can tell that it can work for a number of individuals in certain businesses, wrestlers being one of the many examples to consider. It's apparent that these pages are used in order to help increase awareness for a brand but wrestlers themselves are brands on their own, aren't they? How can this level of networking help them in ways that other methods wouldn't even dream of?

Firms such as fishbat operate in separate ways but they understand the importance behind fan interaction. They know that social media networking is just one platform that can be utilized, whether for the sake of business or not. With so many individuals who are going to be intrigued by your business, you want to make sure that you address them well. Constant interaction is more important than perpetual advertising and I believe that those companies which have been around for so long understand this, too.

Fans want to keep in touch with their favorite wrestlers, which goes without saying. Back in the days when Hulk Hogan was running roughshod in WWE, the only way that you could feasibly send messages to wrestlers is through fan mail and it was unlikely they'd respond to every message. Those days have changed, though, and now interaction is as simple as typing and clicking. You have to wonder how much different the scene would be if social media had truly developed a couple of decades earlier.

Let's be honest for a moment; how much of these personalities would you have known about if these platforms did not exist? For example, Big E Langston has mostly been a silent presence on television, not saying much apart from the times when it is convenient for certain scenes. However, on Twitter he is easily one of the quirkiest wrestlers you could imagine. His sense of humor is what many can call off the wall but it is one that has proven how charismatic he can be when given the chance.

Isn't it fair to assume that people can get away with acting a certain way on the Internet than anywhere else? Perhaps this is true but you should also consider the idea that the way individuals are on Twitter, for example, relate to their personalities in real-life scenarios. I don't think that this is something to be argued against, especially when you see how certain wrestlers are through various channels. Such platforms have proven themselves so far and will continue to do so in the future.




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