Hello and welcome to my blog. Here I will share with you my passion about design, the internet, communications, branding and what talented amazing people are creating everyday.

Top 10: 20 Février

1. La Victoire du Canadien!!!!!!!!!!!! SPEC-TA-CU-LAIRE!

2. Google experimental. Un peu space et pas trop ergo, mais bon... un tres bon présage des choses à venir...

3. Vous rapellez vous de la pub de Bill Murray dans Lost in Translation?
Au moin c'était dans un film...mais voyez cette pub de Condé Nast avec nul autre que Hugh Jackman. J'imagine que même les acteurs de Hollywoods ont des factures d'Hydro à payer eux aussi.


4. Très bon post de Seth Godin: "No user servicable parts inside"
Pour ceux qui aurot la chance d'être à Salt Lake City pour la conférence Omniture, Seth est un des speakers!

5. Comme je suis confu/heureux/surpris quand j'entend dire que la publicité de bannières et le référencement sont des initiatives de publicité traditionnelles. J'adoooore.

6.
Le blog corpo même dans les smoke meats! MIAM!

7. Le widget Météomedia Météoéclair MAC ne fonctionne pas. J'adore ce qu'ils font d'habitude et ca me rend triste de ne pas avoir le feed de MMT. Je dois me contenter du widget Accuweather.

8. RÉFÉRENCER DES SITES EN FLASH? OUI CEST POSSIBLE!
Bravo Nicolas Et Fred pour cet article dans Abondance!

9. L'usage des blackberry pendant des meetings. C'est vulgaire et un manque de respect. Une montre affichant le début et la fin prévu du meeting sont par contre recommandés.

10. "Le chalet de ski" le plus tueur que j'ai vu de ma vie. La vue qui donne sur les Alpes, wow.

Top 10: de retour apres un petit repos (de paternité)

1. Mes 2 tickets de parking consécutifs durant l'opération de déneigement Montreal Storm. Le plaisir de me faire réveiller 2 jours de suite par les remorqueuses.

2. Les blogues corpo et l'évangélisation de ce "medium". Un couloir étroit et glissant mais efficace et porteur si autentique et honnete. "Soap box pour business rock-star diva in the making" ?...bah...LES BLOGS C'EST DE LA COMMUNICATION! Et bien sur la communication implique partager un message. Alors toute allusion discrete mise a part sur le profil "psychologique" des blogueurs, je ne crois pas que les réseaux sociaux soient de près ou de loin des outils qui rejoignent les amateurs de la masse, du conformisme et du One-Size-Fits-All media.

3. Les sondages. Comment intégrer l'échantillonage et la représentation de comportements nichés dans un univers web de Long Tail.

4. Le Grenier d'Or de Revolver 3. Miam Miam Maim. Moi j'aime les biscuits! Bravo.

5. Finalement, on dirait qu'il y a une baisse des demandes "Vampires, Zombies, etc..." dans facebook. Enfin! C'était quoi le trip? À la rigeur je comprenais les tamagushis mieux...

6. Microsoft-Yahoo! Encore une fois on en parle, on dirait que c'est toujours a ce temps ci de l'année que ca recommence. Oh well, je vais le croire quand je vais le voir. L'idée d'intéger ces 2 organisations releve du quasi-impossible d'un point de vue organisationel et visionnaire. Mais bon...

7. Le nouveau widget Digg dans Digg Labs.

8. Le mot de la journée: consoprosélytisme.

9. Les lettres me rapellant mes obligation de non-sollicitation.

10. Le partage vidéo Joox.net Et toute le monde pensait que Facebook était LE gouffre de temps le plus profond?

Top 10: December 10th 2007

1.Boomerangs: Provokat.
Great title. Not too sensationalist but great at maintaining the hype. Smart.

2.A new website for hot chicks.
New LOULOU new site by Cloudraker

3.What Do You REALLY Want?
You aren't getting anywhere because you dont know where you want to go

4.DASHBOARD
http://dashboardspy.com/

5.Facebook is the ultimate solution.
Always very impressed by how people post extremely personal things in their facebook status line. I have heard of a girl who broke up with her bf via the status line. Although I have never witnessed such an extreme event, I have seen countless public flirting, grieving, fights and mucho anger expressed.
Addendum: It's still uber hard to explain the virtues of Twitter to most webnewbies, but somehow, they figure out the status line the next day after signing up.

6.PDF
WHY DO PEOPLE STILL USE PDF FILES SPLICED IN BETWEEN WEB PAGES. JEEZ....


7.I hate my xmas gifts
http://badgiftemporium.com/

8.NALGENE BOTTLES ARE EVIL! SERIOUSLY!

Apparently Nalgene bottles are bad for you. Mountain equipment Coop pulled them off their shelves today accross the country.
Google news

9.Machine Girl Movie Trailer: “The Cult Film of Next Year”

I saw the trailer and I think you should see it to judge for yourself. Machine GIRL!


10."Flashturbatoire"
Great post by Michel Leblanc. hehe I like.
I quote "
Du Flash C’EST PAS DU WEB CALVERT! Vous primez des “sites” qui sont en fait des CD ROM accédés par internet. Ces “sites” là ne sont pas vraiment accessible, pas vraiment indexables (engins de recherches), ils souffrent d’une utilisabilité des plus douteuse et leurs “pages” ne sont pas des pages et ne sont pas linkables."
Beautiful. Please read the whole post.

TOP 10 (ANNOYING) ONLINE MARKETING BUZZWORDS:

TOP 10 (ANNOYING) ONLINE MARKETING BUZZWORDS:

1. ROI
Maybe 1 out of 10 marketing decision makers have a vague concept of calculating ROI the correct way. No need to wave this killer buzzword when all your want to say is « profitability ». Extra points for being an acronym buzzword.

2. WEB 2.0
The King Kong of powerpoint buzzland. I die a little everytime someone uses it to refer to « the web of today and tomorrow». I must admit the french upped the ante by dropping the « point o » and calling it « le web deux ». Advil please.


3. INTERACTIVE MARKETING
Marketing has always been interactive, if there was no human interaction, it would be called accounting. Drop the redundant adjective + noun combo.

4. COMSCORE
Beyond it’s dismal meaninglessness, I still hear the sound of it’s name cause there still is nothing « better ». Pass the Kool Aid please.

5. KPI
Key Performance Indicators : ie things that matter for your business. In


6. Dashboard
It takes 30 mins to set one unless you’re suffering from AADD (analytics ADD). Know your « KPIs » and learn to use your analytics tool.


7. OPTIMIZING CLICK THROUGH RATE
If your KPI involves some clicks, people need to click. Just change the ads that suck, ok fine we’ ll call that optimizing. Natural selection sound sdramatic but would also be accepted.

8. VIRAL
John tells Mike who tells 5 other people who tell 10 other people each. Kinda like in Outbreak with Dustin Hoffman and that little monkey. Must we be so dramatic that we want to replicate some doomsday vocabulary ?

9. STRATEGY
Common sense people. We have yet to place someone on the moon in this business (ok we did this). What we do everyday is 90% common sense with 10% analysis. Strategy could be as simple as not just looking at your feet when you run.

10. ROAD MAP
Used too often to be taken seriously anymore, everytime I hear this one, I keep thinking of following a map and ending up at Bates Motel.

Extra buzzword points will be awarded to combinations ie Web 2.0 Strategy roadmap.

TOP 10: December 8 2007

1.Spare $1Million?
Wealthy New York Family Begs for 1 Million Dollars: must maintain lifestyle and times are hard. Incredible story and incredible nerve. Pauvres bourgeois!

By the way, there are people far less fortunate than us. There are over a dozen causes in Montreal that need your REAL support:
http://www.danslarue.com/
http://www.oldbrewerymission.ca/
http://www.fondationdesmaladiesmentales.org/
http://www.redcross.ca/article.asp?id=000005&tid=003


2.Pecha kucha
Unfortunately I was not able to attend the last event in Montreal last Wednesday but I have to say the format of these presentations is brilliant.
To quote Wikipedia:

Pecha Kucha or Pecha Kucha Night is a presentation format in which (mostly creative) work can be easily and informally shown. It was originally devised by Astrid Klein and Mark Dytham of Klein-Dytham Architecture (KDa) in Tokyo in 2003 as a place for young designers to meet, network, and show their work in public. The format has spread virally to many cities across the world. The name derives from a Japanese term for the sound of conversation ("chit-chat"). The idea behind Pecha Kucha is to keep presentations concise, the interest level up and to have many presenters sharing their ideas within the course of one night. Therefore the 20x20 Pecha Kucha format was created: each presenter is allowed a slideshow of 20 images, each shown for 20 seconds each. This results in a total presentation time of 6 minutes 40 seconds on a stage before the next presenter is up.

I have to say that I tried the format once and overshot by 30 mins. Ouch. Practice practice practice. But yeah, everyone was asking questions so it wasn't really fair.


3.Xmas shopping
If Clotaire Rapaille says that going shopping is our cultural equivalent of connecting back with our world, I have to say that the mall madness I witnessed today is the cultural equivalent of a rugby game. Such a sea of people "connecting" with xmas gift guilt I have the pleasure of witnessing only once a year. Thank god. I don't think I have the stomach nor the patience behind the wheel to go for another round. People : go shop online, better yet, don't spend all that money and spend some real time with someone you havent spoken to in a while.

4.15% commision on paid search ads
Good post on Yannick Manuri's Blog. The age old topic that some people are out there to screw you. What do you really expect? This is an industry of people selling stuff to people selling stuff to people. Markups, albeit obscene are part of the DNA of the fauna. 25% comm on ad buys is obscene. There is no way to rationalize anymore on paid search.


5.The Hon. Denis Coderre, P.C., M.P. on FB (Facebook)

I must say that marketers dont have the stronghold on Facebook marketing anyore. Enter the political players! None other than Liberal Superstar Denis Coderre in the FB universe!
The image “http://profile.ak.facebook.com/profile5/1370/51/n601814248_1877.jpg” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.


6.Jackson 5 makes another blip on the Search radar
See Google trends activity
The actual search phrase "Jackson 5" is 75th out of the top 100 search queries for December 8th 2007. Just thought you'd like to know.

7.MBA's
Is it really worth it? I ran accros this article on a MBA competition.
Is it just another way of writing on a piece of paper: I AM BETTER THAN YOU ACCORDING TO THIS SCHOOL? Then again, I might be wrong. I have met people with amazing minds with the notorious MBA suffixes (poor form if you ask me). But I would argue that they were just as brilliant before entering the sausage grinder. Cause and effect still tbd.

8.Great quote by founder of Patagonia
I'VE BEEN A BUSINESSMAN for almost 50 years. It's as difficult for me to say those words as it is for someone to admit to being an alcoholic or a lawyer.

I've never respected the profession. It's business that has to take the majority of the blame for being the enemy of nature, for destroying native cultures, for taking from the poor and giving to the rich, and for poisoning the earth with the effluent from its factories. Yet business can produce food, cure disease, control population, employ people, and generally enrich our lives. And it can do these good things and make a profit without losing its soul.

read the rest here


9.Leekspin.com
Why?Because it's there.
Read all about it on Wikipedia.

10.Darwin award of the day:
Yahoo-Adobe partnership to put contextual ads in PDF documents.
Yawn, come on guys. Seriously....







TOP 10 LIST: 2007 Boomerang Awards

10-The company that makes those outdoor heating lamps must really be laughing since smoking indoors is outlawed.
9-Facebook is the new business card
8-Justice DJ music.
7-Le Proprio in house web design. Respect !
6-The Canoe bar is dry after 1 hour. BOOOOOOOOH.
5-Being an event sponsors : a great way to win a boomerang?
4-Denis Talbot : why and how much are they paying you?
3-Les "ballounes" Yahoo !
2-Fjord’s DC fashion style. Year after year, stylin'
1-Provokat. Nuff said.

Top 10: December 7th 2007

1- Sony advertising on Mac Rumours site.
I’m not really convinced by the strategy of placing Sony laptop ads on a die hard Mac lover site. Do you really think theres any hope of converting macusers with the most uber-basic display ads ?
http://www.macrumors.com/


2- Live ads.
There are people accross my screen. I love the execution on this campaign. I have no idea how to read Norwegian but I’m still laughing out loud.
http://www.adverblog.com/archives/003323.htm


3- Opinion Lab
Does anyone use Opinion Lab tools ? I’m especially interested in the AD FEEDBACK feature. I’ve seen some very promising features and apparently the back end reporting is out of this world.
http://www.opinionlab.com/


4- A moment of philosophy.
Long tail distribution in human beings: general versus specific needs mold different templates of personalities. Isn’t the Long Tail just a example of a healthy bio diverse model. The more diverse an ecosystem is, the better and more adapted it is ?


5- The new social MIXX.
It makes all the sense of the world for a news media company to team up with social tagging startup Mixx, who’s users are snubbing the Digg Culture. I can’t say I’ve been using this new site but it’s looking good and fun to use. Update coming soon !
article


6- The land before the web
Will the next generation believe stories of the land before the web ? wikipedia, homework, cell phones, etc…It’s pretty impressive how quickly technology moved from comunicating to a daily appliance. Almost banale really, the light swicth goes on and the rest is magic. I just wanted to take a moment and thank all the little elves of the digital world for making the « light go on » everytime the switch goes on.

7- No comments? No blog for you!
If no one is talking back it’s not a conversation. So if you’re gonna blog, get ready to get some people talking back to you. Clearly it’s a sense of engagement from the user but also of respect by the blogger.
Great article in a great blog byMaggie Fox



8- McDonald report cards.
What might make sense in a marketing plan makes absolutely no sense from a community sense. I dislike this brand more and more every day. YA YOU HEARD ME RONALD, I DON’T LIKE YOU.
full article here


9- Infopresse Boomerang award list.
Very happy to see Cyberpresse picking up the interactive banner award. The banner was created by Generation Flash and is a great showcase of how updated RSS feeds can always keep banners fresh and up to date with current events. WOOHOO!
On another note, tidewave of awards for Provokat. hehe.
http://www.infopresse.com/prixboomerang/2007/


10. Comscore.
Please lets all put our thinking caps on and lets find a solution/ alternative.

TOP 10: New Blog Format

Top 10 : December 6th 2007

1. Blogging- how easy and how hard it is
Facebook, Digg, Delicious, Twitter etc…Its very easy to share cool links, odd articles and the occasional WTF website. It’s become super hard lately to sit down and actually write original content on my blog lately. So I came up with a solution to bring the efficiency of twitter with the content value of a blog: Theme oriented TOP 10 LISTS. It’s an experiment right now , but I plan on posted every day a TOP 10 LIST summing up whats on my mind around a theme.

2. Dove
Even if I loved the 1st Dove Viral ad, and the second ad was so-so, and the irony around Unilever pushing accepting your body is overwhelming, this brand just keeps swinging.
http://www.imediaconnection.com/content/17585.asp

3. Book review: naked conversations
How Blogs are changing the way businesses talk with customers.
Great book for demystifying the dark art of blogging. A lot of examples, a lot of must-dos but more importantly a list of reasons people should not blog. Very interesting points about sustainable business communication practices. I still give it a 8/10 as it get repetitive and doesn’t have much depth to it after 50 pages.

4. Twitter
Yes I love it. Yes I know Facebook copy catted the status line to be like it, but I’m still a huge lover of the micro-blogging aggregator.
My Twitter here

5. Analytics
After the Workopolis Analytics Summit lasy week, I realize that we really do have a new language: marketing analytics. I’ve noticed that fluent speakers of this digi-mark-speak ( as opposed to corp-speak) havea lot in common: Love of SEO, Scepticism of Banner Advertising, Respect for the user, and doubt as to dogmatic design. All your data are belong to us.

6. FYI: ROI of SMO
Is there a ROI on Social Media? No I don’t think so, not that I can calculate right now. Is it pointless? No definitely Not. Is it critical? Not yet, but you can't (IMHO) just wait for the whole market to get there 1st. I think I had this exact conversation 10 years ago re: search engines. Incoming links are not only a great source of SEO love but actual traffic that actual people are driving to you. Is there a ROI on PR initiative?


7. SEO and site development
Yes Finally I think we did it! Walking into a meeting with the dev team, project management and SEO specialist and everyone got along great! No it’s not a miracle, it’s simply people talking the same language and respecting each others skill.


8. Foosball and type A personalities
It’s a great game. Nuff said.


9. Simplify:
Loved the S.H.E. concept by John MAEDA:

* S: Simplify
* H: Hide
* E: Embody

10. Facebook beacon
Facebook screwed up, blah blah blah. Too fast too soon too greedy. Everyone’s favourite screw up is still worth more that some small countries ( don’t quote me on that). I think they still have a great platform and great following and people are so damn addicted to Facebook, it doesn’t matter

Life after the spotlight---la vie apres la une.

Digg's Long-Term Effect on Traffic



Ben Cook created a blog with a single post and submitted it to Digg. The post reached Digg's front page, a deluge of visitors ensued, but what's next? High search engine rankings and a continuous trickle of visitors, Ben Cook explains.

Original post: Digg's Long-Term Effect on Traffic

Ok I have been lazy with my blog

Ok I admit it. I have been very lazy in the last 2 monts with my blog. I take the blame, but I can definitly say that posting to facebook has been getting so much easier lately.
Here is a selection of my latest Posted Items in Facebook:



Blogged with Flock

Why To Use Flock | How To Split An Atom

Why To Use Flock | How To Split An Atom

Like most of you, I was a quick convert to Firefox a few years back. When compared to IE6, it was an absolute treat. If nothing else, the tabs and the extensions made Firefox the browser to beat. Add to that better security and a rendering engine that actually worked, and there simply was no competition.

A couple years later, I am still a huge fan of Firefox but with Firefox 3 on the horizon I wanted to point you in the direction of what for some of you might be a worthy successor to everyone’s favorite Fox.

Flock.

Yea, I know. Version 0.7 was an absolute mess, but the newest version of Flock is definitely worth your time.


Birds Of A Feather

Flock is a “social web browser” based on the Firefox code base. That means that converts will be treated to pretty much the same experience as they have come to expect out of Firefox, except with a whole lot of other widgets thrown on top.

First let me say that the best part of Flock is that you can ignore most of the more irritating “Social Features” of the browser, but for those of us who need to integrate our digital empires into one dashboard, Flock makes this exceptionally easy.

If you are on a site with an RSS Feed, just click a button and add it to the built in feed reader.

If you want a side-bar to keep track of what your Twitter friends are doing, just open one up using their “people” panel.

If you want to whip up a blog post on the fly, you can do that too with their built in editor.

Surprisingly enough, for all the stuff they have packed into this browser — it runs light. In fact, it feels a lot less heavy than Firefox has since version 1.5. Then again, I hear rumors that Flock is based on that particular version of the Fox’s code base.

All the social “stuff” aside, the real selling point of this browser is its speed. I do most of my writing from a three year old laptop, which in computer years dates it to just about the end of the Mesozoic. Using Firefox for more than twenty minutes almost always leads to a slow and painful death, often involving me force exiting the program just to get my computer to stop churning.

So far, Flock has run without a hitch. This is with my usual 8 to 10 tabs open.

What are the downsides? Well, you don’t have access to some of your extensions but that can mostly be solved with a little hackery courtesy of Frobba.

Beyond that, seasoned Firefox users should have no problems at all getting used to the browser.


Probably one of the lamest posts ever

Live Search : We are flattered, but...

I really cant believe MSN actually had the nerve to come out with this post. I know this is from late March but somehow it's found its way on the not so rightious wall of shame.
"We have been seeing broad use of these features by legitimate users but unfortunately also what appears to be mass automated usage for data mining."

Guys seriously, how can you even type this and not die of shame.
Nuff said. Whatever progress you made in the 18 months or so with Ad Center, you totally burned off.

Feedster Quietly Dies... So Which Blog Search Engine Do You Use?

Written by Richard MacManus / November 21, 2007 / 8 comments

Blog search engine Feedster has had the following notice on its frontpage for at least a few weeks now:

There is no sign of life on the site and the Feedster blog has already been killed off (the big 404 in the sky).

In terms of the blog search market in general, Feedster has been struggling for 3+ years now - this RWW post in July 2005 shows how Feedster was falling behind Technorati even then. Now Feedster seems to be, if not in the DeadPool, then at least in the PurgatoryPool. PubSub was another victim in this market.

Nowadays, the blog search market seems to be made up of 3 main players - Google Blog Search, Technorati and Bloglines/Ask.com - and a lot of smaller players such as Zuula and Blogdigger. Personally I still use Technorati a few times a week, and the search function of Google Reader. I also am a heavy user of Google's main search, which I find brings up good blog results (i.e. often I don't see the need for a specialist blog search engine). I did a quick poll of the other RWW writers. Josh said he still uses Technorati sometimes, but also Google Blog search. Marshall said that he uses Ask.com for minimizing spam, relies heavily on feeds with subscribers in Bloglines, and uses Technorati too. He finds that Google Blog Search is good for speed.

What blog search engine do you use - and why?

Yet another PC versus MAC ad



Despite the simplicity of the roadblock with somewhat of an interaction, this ad by Apple scores yet another point against the PC squad. Touché boys! Maybe a animated wallpaper could have been nice as an extra but overall it's got my attention.

Brijit: A Digg For Dead-Tree Media

Brijit: A Digg For Dead-Tree Media

Can’t keep up with all those magazines piling up in your mailbox, especially the high-brow ones you thought would make you smarter but never have time to read? Well, cancel those subscriptions and head on over to Brijit, a self-styled “Thinking Man’s Digg.”

There you will find 100-word abstracts on the latest articles from magazines such as The New Yorker, The Atlantic Monthly, The Economist, Fortune, Harper’s, Vanity Fair, and Wired, with links to most of them. The site also covers video from 60 Minutes, Charlie Rose, The Colbert Report, and The Daily Show. Readers vote the best stories up or down, so you can keep up on the ones most likely to come up during a dinner party. You can even get paid to write abstracts, $5 apiece if your submissions are accepted.

Brijit is designed to be a filter for the smart set. But it oddly defines smart only as what’s in print. Where are the blogs? Other than Salon and Slate, very little online-only media is represented. Perhaps that is because Brijit is focussed on long-form narrative, and there is not much of that online. But it makes you wonder whether sifting through the dead-tree titles will be enough to keep readers coming back to this site, or whether they will prefer a broader view of the world.

Brijit has raised $1 million from angel investors, including former Time Inc. editor-in-chief Norman Pearlstine.

brijit-screen-2.png

Blogged with Flock

Pas besoin d'une raison pour un nouveau browser

Pas trop sur si j'aime ca encore mais bon, le changement c'est toujours bon.
Welcome to Flock 1.0
Et bien oui j'essaye un nouveau browser, c'est pas par reproche à Firefox que j'adore encore. On s'entend que IE est tres tres tres loin derriere dans mon rétroviseur...
Mais bon, j'ai trouvé ce nouvel outil FLOCK 1.0 ( déja c'est pas 2.0) avec la self-proclaimed promesse d'etre le "social web browser". Interessant jusqu'à maintenant! Usage assez simple avec intégration de mon blogger, facebook, flickr, etc...
Alors apres 1 heure d'usage c'est 7/10 et une recommandation à mes amigos. Je vous garde au courant!  

Blogged with Flock

VA Tech

L'horribe incident qui a pris place a Virgina Tech aujourd'hui est un autre exemple de l'horreur humaine lorsque des armes à feu sont dans les mains de monstres et malades.

Voir article très intéressant sur le crowdsourcing des nouvelles lors de la tuerie.
Crowdsourcing the VA Tech shooting

Second life...encore second life

Apparement nous sommes très méchant.
Oui, voyez vous, dans ce monde virtuel de la spéculation de buzzword marketing, nous aimons prévoir le prochain train-wreck. Assis tranquilles dans les estrades, comfo et cyniques, on regarde les gladiateurs de buzz se tapper sur la gueulle à coup de nouveaux joujous technologiques. C'est présisement la que notre cynisme se crystalise: "ca va jamais marcher ce truc", "c'est une mode", "ca va disparaitre d'ici 2 mois", "c'est qui utilise ce truc anyways". Oui je sais, on ne le dit pas tout le temps pour tous le nouveaux joujous 2.0 mais bon, c'est définitivement la tendence. Mais voyez vous, malgré tous les nay-sayers, desfois , le plus doomed des doomed des produits web pesistent. Et non seulement survivent mais font un pied de nez à l'establishement (en l'occurence nous, "the man").

Je vous présente le brand map de l'univers Second Life. Voici toutes les marques cartographiées par leur présence dans le monde SL. Effectivement, il est possible que ce soit encore un autre Buzz marketing. Possible. Quand meme, BMW, Sony, Toyota, Comcast, Pontiac, STA travel, Cisco, Reebok, Telus, etc, c'est pas que du geek-wear web. Mais bon...

L'image « http://www.kzero.co.uk/blog/wp-content/uploads/2007/03/sl-brand-map-v12.jpg » ne peut être affichée, car elle contient des erreurs.

En passant, intéressant article sur le " Futur de Marketing Interactif". J'adore l'expression. Business week online a sorti quelques résultats de sondage sur les différentes initiatives que les agences et clients ont entrepris. A lire.

The web

The web is not a media.
The web is not a destination.
The web is not an advertising medium.
The web is not technology, or worse IT.
The web is not content.
The same way Hydro Quebec is not gaming, cooking or alarm clocks.
The web is our information matrix.
It is our conscience, our past, our hopes, our dreams.
It provides tools, and extensions to speech and print.
The web will not make our life harder or easier.
The web is amoral and very organic.
Our flaws and our aspirations leave their mark and grow in this matrix.
Brands exist in this matrix.
As well as people, in forms they cannot take elsewhere.
Emotions are created and maintained.
Thoughts and information are gathered using tools.
There is no online and offline.
There is no cyber or digital.
There is no traditional or new-media.
The web is uniting humans.
Not to say a book doesn’t.
A book is paper and paper has limits.
The web has problems, and problems create fear.
The web is not the solution to all problems.
The web is not the source of all problems.

What it is, after all, is very simple:
The web is the most advanced human language .

Montage-a-google

Montage-a-google est une app web qui utilise Google image pour générer une mosaique de thumbnails basée sur les mots clés d'une recherche. Voici ce que Tourisme Québec génère:


Définitivement a essayer avec des mots clés choc tel que 9-11, George W Bush, Prozac, etc...

Montage-a-Google

Myspace au service de la mode...


Apparemment, la deuxieme source de trafic UK pour le site d'une boutique de mode de Glasgow, TopShop.co.uk, proviendrait de son profil Myspace.

3230 amis quand meme!

Article complet de Helen Leggatt.


Twitter newbie















Ok Ok Ok Ok, apres hi5, linkedin, myspace, facebook et viaduc, me voici sur un autre band-wagon de communauté web : http://twitter.com.
Concept assez intéressant: le discours avec amis et membres de la tribus tourne autour de la question (très) existentielle WHAT ARE YOU DOING.

Widget American Airlines

Outil interessant pour interface Google IG. Un widget American Airlines offrant a l'usager un acces direct au moteur de réservation et disponibilitées en temps réel. Un exemple d'outillage et de réflexion out-of-the-site qui étend la portée et l'usage. A quand un engin similaire pour les sites de rencontre? Pour ceux qui ne m'ont pas entendu parler des RSS en 2004, et surtout ceux qui l'ont vu venir, voici une application monnaiyable tres tangible pour l'ésotérique RSS ;-)

The image “http://www.google.com/ig/cache/53/75/537550dbadcf41b43ef4fd7be122e1e5.png” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.

Telus attaque !

ET bien nous voici en pleine guerre de transférabilité. Depuis la campagne de Vidéotron avec Jaimemonnuméro.com, et les campagnes de Virgin plutot cute, voici maintenant Telus sur l'offensive. Telus a effectivement acheté TOUT l'inventaire publicitaire du réseau ad-sense de Google le14 Mars. Blitz très aggressif mais très pointu considérant la portée et l'exclusivité. Bravo Telus, un très bel exemple.

The image “http://www.mobilemag.com/content/images/12052_large.jpg” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.
Dans la publicité

Dans la publicité y aplein de gros flemmards qui se gonflent l'égo, mais bon, ya aussi ce vid qui se fout de la gueule de tous ca?
R
Web 2.0 ... The Machine is Us/ing Us

Despite all the marketing buzzword and the bs-meter running on high lately, the web has changed. Changed our ways of communicating and the way information is consummed. Changing the way humans process information and organize their thoughts around a topic.I like this video for its simplicity and its brute strenght at documenting how far along we have gone. SO beyond the buzzwords and the next big google-esque widget, lets remember the beauty behind communicating and exchanging. Humans. Not machine.
PS3 vs. Wii - Apple Style!
SONY ROBOTS ADVERT
Watching an RSS Feed in Second Life

Lets talk about penetration rate?
R
When I Grow Up I Wanna Work in Advertising

HILARIOUS!!!!!!!

Make your city more exciting

Ok it's been done. And it's gonna be done over and over again.
Nice interface, so-so execution and customization. Not as much a "me-too" vis-a-vis Stockholm, but more of a "kinda-like-but-not-really".

Web Two Point D'Ohhhh

Web Two Point Ohhhh

Intel Launches Blogger Challenge with Mystery Blogger

I2m_intelbloggerchallenge_1

Today marks the launch of another unique personal media campaign with Intel - this time a collaboration between six rising stars of the blogosphere. For the Intel Centrino Duo Blogger Challenge, we gathered the following six bloggers together to share their views on blogs, blogging and the world:

Not only is this one of most unique collections of bloggers that I have ever seen participating in a single promotion, it will also unfold over the next five weeks to offer an interesting window into the art of blogging and what drives bloggers to share their lives and view online, regardless of their "category." Perhaps most interestingly, at noon EST on November 15th we will unveil the identity of our mystery blogger - a person who many have considered to have defined the genre of blogging itself and continues to innovate and remain an inspiration to many other bloggers. Think you know who it is? Share your guess with Intel through the contact form on the site and you could win a prize from Intel. Either way, check out the blogger challenge site, share a comment or thought, and add your voice to the challenge.

Wired News: Social Bookmarking Showdown

Wired News: Social Bookmarking Showdown

The reason that social bookmarking has exploded in the last year is obvious -- storing your bookmarks online instead of in the browser just makes sense.

Social bookmarking services let you keep links to your favorite web destinations in one location that's accessible from any computer on the net. Add the ability to share your favorite web destinations and search through other users' bookmarks to discover new sites, and you've got a highly addictive and truly remarkable phenomenon.

NFL.com - Super Ad

NFL.com - Super Ad

"The NFL wants you! The NFL is going to make the best Super Bowl commercial ever and this is the fans' chance to make that happen. This fall, you the fans, can pitch us your idea for the best NFL Super Bowl commercial ever. The winning pitch may be produced into a TV commercial that will air during Super Bowl XLI to be seen by millions of people! "

MIT Advertising Lab: future of advertising and advertising technology: Context-Sensitive Ads on MSN Messenger

MIT Advertising Lab: future of advertising and advertising technology: Context-Sensitive Ads on MSN Messenger: "Context-Sensitive Ads on MSN Messenger"

Analysis of Political Paid Search Ads

Analysis of Political Paid Search Ads


The Rimm-Kaufman Group published an analysis of a handful of political ads that appeared in search engines (mostly Google). Some of the findings: the blues were more negative than the reds but the reds were more numerous, no ad referenced Bush, only two ads linked to videos. The observation I liked the most: "Blue ads were more likely to include an exclamation point. Red ads were more likely to contain a question mark."

There is something haiku about packing powerful political proclamations into the puny 90 characters of an AdWords blurb.

Zune

The image “http://a676.g.akamaitech.net/f/676/773/60m/images.delivery.net/cm50content/18569/09008101805d01fc/in-the-air.jpg” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.
Zune.net went live today.

Measurement - Another Free Google Tool: Multivariate Website Optimizer

Measurement - Another Free Google Tool: Multivariate Website Optimizer

At the Emetrics Summit in Washington DC last Wednesday, Brett Crosby of Google announced the launch of Google Website Optimizer, beta. A multivariate testing platform free to those with a Google Adwords account, Optimizer allows you to test landing pages or conversion events for not only search engine marketing, but also email, ads or an offline drive-to-web campaign. Sure, this will help Google increase Adwords revenue but it’s a definite win-win for Adwords customers as well. Way to go Google!

I had been in Washington for the Summit since the Saturday before, and after 4 days of very long days and jam-packed sessions, some of our heads were filled to brim. However, we were awake enough to suspect something was up when Brett walked to the podium wearing a suit with his presentation on a flash drive and not preloaded.

Use of the Optimizer is by invitation only. Google will be screening sites before they allow access to the Optimizer. Brett said that they definitely have criteria for admission and I hope that this includes a screening of the readiness of the applicant to do a robust test. There’s nothing more dangerous than an invalid test. Because people tend to have more confidence in test results, they tend to risk more. Taking action on invalid test results can be deadly.

Mobile Social Networking Gets Boost @ Media Buyer Planner

Mobile Social Networking Gets Boost @ Media Buyer Planner

L'image “http://www.mediabuyerplanner.com/uploads/5255_image.jpg” ne peut être affichée car elle contient des erreurs.Hoping to give a boost to its mobile social-networking service, Boost Mobile has teamed up with West Coast Customs in a promotion to give away a free customized Dodge Charger.

Boost Mobile's promotion is aimed at recruiting teens and young adults to its Hookt social networking service, AdWeek reports (via MarketingVox). Hookt's 300,000 members can register for the contest via ads on the welcome screen of their cell phones.

Social networking appears ready to make the jump from the computer to the cell phone. MySpace has a deal with Helio to allow users of the service to access the social-networking site. Hookt, which Boost introduced last year, allows users to create profiles and find users with similar interests. The service costs 50 cents a day.

Yahoo Launches Panama Ad Platform @ Media Buyer Planner

Yahoo Launches Panama Ad Platform

Yahoo's long-awaited - and belated - ad-serving platform update, dubbed Panama, has finally been launched. The first phase of the launch consists of a new interface; the new ranking algorithm is expected to go live early next year.

Some of Yahoo Search Marketing's U.S. advertisers have begun asking to switch to the new system, and more will be invited to migrate through early 2007, Yahoo CEO Terry Semel announced during a conference call discussing third-quarter earnings, MediaPost reports (via MarketingVOX). "We believe that through this platform we will be able to unlock the full potential of our large global user base and improve our search monetization capabilities," Semel is quoted as saying.


Setting up a Mobile Marketing Program: A Primer | MarketingProfs.com

Setting up a Mobile Marketing Program: A Primer | MarketingProfs.com: "Quick—is your marketing mobile? Can your message reach your on-the-go audience and can your in-motion customer interact with you wherever they are?"

Jaide.ca

Jaide.ca

Tous les revenus publicitaires de Jaide.ca sont versés à la Société canadienne de la sclérose en plaques.

Google

Materazzi's steel chest

I think that fo the 1st time, I am seriousy doubting Nike's advertising smarts. A great positive brand like Nike should try to distance itsef from such a moron as Materazzi. Obviously hype is hype and this ad will work itsef into the notoriously-popular ads of Nike in the end. Maybe this raises the question of popular sports brands associating themseves with professional athletes, be them coke-sniffing wife beating basketball players, gambling hockey players, and dopped up cyclists. They make for good entertainment but bring down the positive image of the sport. Nike, you messed up on this one despite the tongue in cheek tone.

Seven Deadly Sins of Advertising Via Viral Video

Show me a marketer without “viral” on her marketing plan and I’ll show you an online video site that’s profitable. Advertising offline is getting harder with time-shifted television and declining viewership, and online advertising is getting more complex with paid-search prices rising and banner click-thru’s dropping. Given the low variable cost of viral, it’s natural that advertisers would want to experiment with it. “I want a piece of Web 2.0,” they say.
Advertisers beware. Getting people to promote your product by forwarding a viral video is not as easy as it appears. Save you and your clients some money and consider the “7 Deadly Sins of Advertising Via Viral Video.”

1. Make a white and brown cow. Seth Godin has a term called “Purple Cow,” which refers to marketing that is “remarkable” and worth paying attention to and talking about. Your viral video better be Technicolor Purple if you actually expect it to break through an increasingly crowded space. What is remarkable? Take a look at the Volkswagen “Fast” series featuring Jim Meskimen. (Jim is a comedian and impersonator, and you’ve heard him as the voice of Messing With Sasquatch” series. Would you view this content more than once, and show it to a co-worker or forward it to a friend? I would, and have.
2. Pretend you’re not advertising. Nothing quite irrates a consumer like being secretly persuaded. “Al Gore’s Penguin Army” is a classic example of a “funny video” that was exposed as having a PR agenda. Transparency is a ticket in the viral video door, friends. No ticket, no ride.

3. Spend a fortune on production. It pains me to see companies throw around huge production budgets on online video. I’ve seen it payoff only once. Here’s Smirnoff’s Ice Tea Partay (which was featured yesterday as one of YouTube’s top 3 on Good Morning America). Clearly this cost north of $300K to produce. But even if you pay that much, you might be better off giving it a “rough around the edges” look. Improv acting, sloppy camera moves and poor production can actually give your video that “consumer generated video” feel. There’s going to be a huge market for individual directors that can shoot viral videos for around $20-$50K, and it makes it much easier to get an ROI on viral video when you’re not having to recoup a big fixed-cost investment in production. When Yahoo featured on its homepage my “Lay Me Off” video (which I’ve temporarily pulled down at the request of some of the actors), I got a number of e-mails from people asking how much I’d charge for a viral video for their clients. Since I have a day job and I do videos as a hobby, I declined. But they’ll find someone who is quite happy to take a low fee for a video that’s powerful. Of course an advertising agency will probably mark up the director’s fees by 500%.
4. Tell consumers instead of engage them. Don’t think of your viral video as an adaptation of a 60-second spot. Obviously it’s got to be irreverent, weird, funny and different. But more importantly, the web has the ability to make the viral event a dialogue. Contests are a good example. There have been plenty of online video contests, but Mentos Geyser Contest is already shaping to be one of the most successful. Check out all of the consumers creating buzz around a candy that was a 7-11 relic 6 months ago. Seventy to date! Production costs for Mentos on those videos? Zero. (By the way, vote this Mentos Jet Pack one 5 stars and I’ll send you some cheese). BarterBee’s contest created buzzz for a CD and DVD exchange. The CEO wore a bee suit to promote it. Brave.

5. Do a video contest because everyone else is. This online-video “contest fad” will continue, and it will become more difficult to activate consumers to promote your product. Do a search for “video contest” on Google and you’ll see four or five different ads for contests. The David Chappelle video contest is a good example of a nice idea with some executional flaws. First, it didn’t initially promote the contest on its own website because it wanted to focus people on buying the DVD. Second, it petered out. Contest winners weren’t announced and insufficient media budget promoted the contest. To give you an idea of how abused contests are getting, there was a summer promotion for a mayonnaise manufacturer looking for videos about may recipes.

6. Set unrealstic conversion metrics. After someone watches your video, what do you think they’ll do? Will 30% come to your site? Will 10% buy your brand in two months? Give me a break. Viral video is one of the most difficult-to-measure parts of your marketing mix. Sure you can count views. But none of the online video sites are yet able to track the viewers so you can conduct your DynamicLogic unaided recall and awareness study. And very f people will take an immediate and measurable action. Sorry to sober you.

7. Throw in the towel and decide to just advertise around viral videos. Please don’t give up and decide that it’s easier to simply advertise around videos. There are certainly products and services that can do well through this, but it’s the lazy way to approach online video. The online video sites are mostly new, and there is an unlimited possibility for creative partnerships. Even YouTube (which has been slow to embrace commercial interests) has a homepage advertising feature for advertisers. As I write, it’s a trailer for Beerfest. Yesterday it was Paris Hilton. Revver has run a few contests, and has married EepyBird to Mentos in probably the best case study for viral video marketing yet. For best results, don’t think you have to decide between getting your videos seen on sites for free OR advertising on them. Do both in partnership.

Book Preview: Word of Mouth Marketing by Andy Sernovitz

I highly recommend this book because it was so practical, tactical, and hysterical. Here are the ten ideas, stories, and recommendations from the book that I liked the most:

  1. Companies could hire a customer service rep to cruise the Internet looking for kudos and complaints. When the rep finds kudos, he should thank the person. When the rep finds complaints, he should get it fixed. This is such a simple, effective idea—I doubt, therefore, that many companies will do it! :-)

  2. Commerce Bank has a free change-counting machine in its branches that anyone can use. This beats the hell out of the machines in markets that take 7%.

  3. A study by the Verde Group showed that people who heard about a bad shopping experience are less likely to go to the same store than the person who actually had the bad experience.

  4. The most powerful word-of-mouth advocates might be the customers who have only done business with you once so far. They are the most excited; repeat customers are probably accustomed to the great product/service and therefore, ironically, less likely to talk about it.

  5. The Prostate Net, a not-for-profit educational organization, contacted 50,000 barbers to talk to their clients about prostate cancer detection and prevention.

  6. Incentives and rewards are likely to reduce word-of-mouth advertising because motivation becomes suspect. You can’t “buy” word-of-mouth advertising.

  7. The Wynn Las Vegas resort gave free rooms to cabbies to generate word-of-mouth advertising via this very influential part of the transportation infrastructure.

  8. Henkel Consumer Adhesives, the manufacturer of Duck Tape, sponsors a contest for college scholarships called “Stuck at Prom.” Is this funny or what?

  9. A word-of-mouth campaign, brought back “Family Guy” from the dead (that is, cancellation). How many tv series have you heard of coming back from the dead?

  10. Zappos has a one-year, no questions asked return policy for shoes. This boggles my mind although I’ve never heard of any woman return anything to Zappos.

College Students Wired from Dorm Room to Classroom @ Media Buyer Planner

College Students Wired from Dorm Room to Classroom @ Media Buyer Planner: "These essential tools tether students to a sophisticated, wired campus, where connectedness extends from the dorm room to the classroom; and friends, professors, and troves of digital music are rarely out of touch."

Data released this week from the 2006 Alloy College Explorer Study, powered by Harris Interactive, shows that mobility is among students' highest priorities. Students are spending a total of eleven hours of each day engaged with media and are constantly on the go.

The role of desktop computers is down 13 percent this year, with 50 percent of students going to class with a laptop. That 8 percent gain over the previous year may indicate students' preference for mobility.

Students also hit wifi hotspots on campus to enjoy the nearly 3.5 hours of email, instant messaging, and web surfing they put in daily.

Campuses nationwide have ramped up to meet student demand for mobility and networked interaction. Twenty-nine percent of all schools provide blanket coverage, with 64 percent reporting such plans in the works.

The classroom lecture has gone digital as well, with a growing number of students utilizing their portable MP3 players to catch up by podcast.

As for cell phones, an additional 1.3 million students now own them and are spending nearly 20 minutes each day sending and receiving text messages. Of the 41 percent of students who own an MP3 player, 85 percent are plugged in to their portable MP3's daily.

The role of "friends" has also evolved within the online world, empowered by the widespread adoption of social networking sites among students. Fully 85 percent of students who visit social networking sites use them to see what their friends are up to. On average, 18-24 year old students are hanging out on these sites for 6.5 hours a week. Students claim to have an average of 111 friends across many profiles online, changing the definition of today's peer group and the way in which students connect with each other. And 61 percent of students on social networking sites say they are interacting with people they've never met in person.

The survey was conducted online by Harris Interactive on behalf of Alloy Media + Marketing among 1,793 U.S. college students between April 14 and May 2, 2006.

Cannon in D (Rock Version)

Survey: Users Support Ad Supported Video

Survey: Users Support Ad Supported Video: "We think the Internet becomes just another way for people to get this programming, as opposed to a zero-sum battle with other media,' said McIntyre."

By Enid Burns | September 6, 2006

Over half of all U.S. Internet users watch and download online video, according to a survey conducted jointly by AP and AOL. Close to three-quarters of viewers prefer ad-supported content to paid.

Clips and full-length video are watched by 54 percent of Web users in the U.S., and 32 percent of that group says they watch more online video than one year ago.

Interestingly, online video users exhibit a preference for ad-supported content. Seventy one percent prefer to watch an ad for free video while 23 percent said they would rather pay for ad-free video.

Demand for ad-supported video still hasn't provided enough inventory. "Right now there's not," VP of AOL Video Fred McIntyre told ClickZ News regarding inventory availability. "As we get more and more people finding video through AOL, we'll create more inventory through that process."

News is the highest-watched category of video online. Seventy-two percent watch clips reporting current events and other news, whereas 59 percent of users watch TV and movie clips on the Internet.

"We think the Internet becomes just another way for people to get this programming, as opposed to a zero-sum battle with other media," said McIntyre.

About 69 percent search for online video; 61 percent are often notified virally by friends; and 58 percent regularly search sites which host video.

The survey examined the habits of 1,347 online video users.

Bypassing the Search Engine: Using Direct Navigation to Your Advantage | MarketingProfs.com

Bypassing the Search Engine: Using Direct Navigation to Your Advantage | MarketingProfs.com

Bypassing the Search Engine: Using Direct Navigation to Your Advantage
by Matt Bentley
August 22, 2006

Marketers assume that "googling" for information is an automatic response the instant a Web surfer opens a browser. And the theory holds true for many Internet users.

But for a number of reasons, and with increasing regularity, many people bypass search engines altogether in favor of a technique called direct navigation. Simply put, direct navigation is when a user directly types a Web address into a browser.

The concept of direct navigation is as old as the Web—Internet users frequently key in their favorite sites stored in their personal memory. To put this into context, WebSideStory's StatMarket division notes that more than two-thirds of daily global Internet users arrive at a Web site via direct navigation, compared with just 14 percent from search engines.

But the phenomenon of direct navigation to generically named sites with an "intent to search" is a relatively new concept that shifts how marketers must think about their own Web site traffic and how consumers are finding information about the things that interest them.

Marketers are turning to direct navigation programs to compliment their search campaigns for a number of reasons, including the emergence of programs like AdSense and other technologies that can populate unused Web domains with information to create mini-portals. Online consumers are turning to these "parked" Web sites—pages populated mostly by relevant keyword ads—because they can sometimes produce better, quicker results that avoid the manipulated listings that increasingly clog search engine results for highly commercial keyword terms.

n fact, it is estimated by several organizations that traffic to "parked" pages drives about 10% of the pay-per-click (PPC) ad market. Even more interesting, WebSideStory found that direct navigation had a 4.23% conversion-to-sale rate, while search engine clicks on average lead to a 2.3% conversion-to-sale rate.

With that much quality traffic heading to these generic sites, organizations are now considering how to capture that traffic directly. Consider that a parked page like Wifi.com, for example, captures 15,000 monthly targeted visitors. Purchasing this volume of traffic through a pay-per-click search engine would cost nearly $10,000 per month (based on the current top Yahoo bid price of $0.66 for the term "Wifi"). Yet we have the domain name currently listed for sale at domain marketplace Sedo.com with an asking price of $350,000—an investment that would pay for itself in under three years—even faster if current trends of rising traffic and click prices continue. So instead of writing a hefty check to Google or Yahoo every month, why not purchase the domain and secure this traffic for life?

Marketers can use generic targeted domain names as a traffic source in three primary ways:

  1. Simply re-direct the domain to your main site. Examples: Books.com (Barnes & Noble), PC.com (Intel), Loans.com (Bank of America), Website.com (DotEasy), RentalCar.com (Enterprise)

  2. Use the domain as a targeted vertical portal to drive traffic to your main site. This method requires more effort but is more likely to lead to increasing traffic over time, generate higher conversion rates, and strengthen your position as a leader in a given market category. Examples: Baby.com (Johnson & Johnson), Meningitis.com (Chiron Vaccines)

  3. Re-brand your entire operation on the new generic domain. Obviously, this is the most extreme example, but there are many advantages to branding your company on a premium generic domain: You instantly gain credibility as a leader in your space, and you generally garner higher conversion-to-sale ratios with less expenditure on marketing and brand-building. Examples: DealTime and Epinions become Shopping.com; Ice.com becomes Diamond.com.

Finding the Right Domains for Direct Navigation

There are a number of things to consider when determining which domain names to acquire in your direct navigation initiatives. Much of it gets back to marketing basics: Who are your audience and how can you reach them?

  1. Taken from a customer perspective, what are they looking for that you have to offer? Don't just think of which "category" you position yourself in, but how do your customers describe you/your product? Acquiring the .com version of your most productive SEM keyword terms is usually a good place to start.

  2. Keep it simple. One-word domains or very short phrases offer the greatest value and highest traffic.

  3. Choose the right extension. Generally .com domains are the best choice as they receive a magnitude more type-in traffic than other extensions. However, if you're interested in traffic from a particularly country, you may be better off acquiring the country-code version of the domain name—for example, .co.uk for traffic from the United Kingdom.

  4. Keep it generic. Registering a variation of your competitor's site or products rather than generic descriptive terms could put you in conflict with trademark law.

  5. Research traffic volume before buying. Some domain sellers or domain marketplaces will provide guidance as to how many visitors the domain currently receives. Otherwise, a handy rule of thumb is that direct navigation traffic volume is generally correlated to search query volume for that keyword, which you can research using Yahoo's Keyword Selector Tool (http://inventory.overture.com).

Once you identify the domains you'd like, there are a variety of ways to acquire them. If you're lucky and the domains are still available, you just need to choose a domain registrar and pay an annual registration fee of $10 to $35. If the domains are already taken—and most good traffic domains are— you still have options: you can try researching the domain owner and making an unsolicited offer, or browse the listings at a domain name marketplace where you'll find thousands of high-traffic domain names that are definitely for sale.

If all of that sounds like a bit too much work, you can always hire a domain broker to do all of the legwork, including tracking down owners, negotiating a price, and assisting with the ownership transfer.

Direct Navigation as a Marketing Investment

As a marketer, investing in direct navigation generally pays for itself within a year or two, dependent of course on the quality of the domain and how well you can convert the traffic into sales. However, instead of being an expense as with purchasing clicks from a search engine, acquiring a domain (or portfolio of domains) for direct navigation purposes becomes an asset that retains its value (possibly even increasing in value) and can even be re-sold in the future should your marketing objectives change.

Domain name prices have risen dramatically over the past years as the supply of quality names becomes ever smaller; with more and more businesses coming online every day, that picture is unlikely to change.

Only a few very savvy firms have already discovered that in this click-hungry era, when many companies blow tens of thousands of dollars each month on PPC advertising, that purchasing targeted generic domain names delivers the same type of high-quality targeted visitors at a much, much lower cost.



ClickZ Internet Marketing Solutions for Marketers

ClickZ Internet Marketing Solutions for Marketers: "One of America's major direct marketers has a new value proposition 'Get Information How You Want, When You Want.' Cardholders can opt to receive awards program news, travel offers, and offers targeted to specific geographical regions."

Liens sponsorisés : eBay signe avec Google pour l'international

Liens sponsorisés : eBay signe avec Google pour l'international

Le moteur de recherche devient dès 2007 le fournisseur exclusif de liens sponsorisés sur les sites internationaux d'eBay. La place de marché avait signé un accord similaire en mai avec Yahoo pour son site américain.