Article on Marketing Vox
Tuesday, August 08, 2006
Google Myspace deal
Article on Marketing Vox
Thursday, August 03, 2006
Agency.com's extra cheesy pitch video to Subway goes viral
I came across this story through Steve’s bellicose posting. I started to write a contrarian post to defend Agency.com’s much mocked-after video pitch to Subway, diligently posted on Youtube for the world and its viruses to enjoy. However, after reading comments on AdFreak, Adrants and on Youtube, I changed my mind. There is ground for reputational damages.
Friday, July 28, 2006
Wednesday, July 26, 2006
The London Blogging School
Very proud!
Via Divine Miss N
Advertisers' opportunities in video-games
Following from my previous post on in-games advertising, I found this video from bruceprokopets showcasing different ad formats for video-games. Nice work and there is a CNBC report thrown in too.
Tuesday, July 25, 2006
Youniversal Branding: in-games advertising and online communities
- More than 100 million people worldwide log on every month to play interactive computer games (source: NYT, December 2005).
- Gaming is, for gamers, the third-most-popular use of media entertainment in the last week, after watching TV (96%) and listening to music (94%) (source: Mediaedge:cia, December 2005).
- In 2005, advertisers spent approximately $56M placing ads in video games, up from $34 in 2004.
- In-game advertising results in a 60 percent increase in awareness for a new product and animated 3-D ads achieve twice the recall of static billboards (Nielsen Interactive Entertainment)
It's me and me again!
I rarely comment on my public speaking engagements or publishing mentions but I decided to be more upfront. So with a total lack of subtlety, I am pointing out to two recent contributions: an article on blogs in Corp Comms magazine and a merit award for Atticus, WPP's thought-leadership magazine for the piece I submitted to Global PR Blog Week 2.0. last year. Apparently it will be published in the next issue.
Wednesday, July 19, 2006
It has been a long time...
Monday, July 03, 2006
Sunday, July 02, 2006
It's France v. Portugal in the semi final!
Chinese blog more popular than Boing Boing
Friday, June 30, 2006
5 reasons why social networks fail, succeed
I would add that social networks can fail or succeed depending on whether they attract the right type of crowd at the first place, then balance members quality and quantity. Example: if you and your friends joined a social network, only to find out that the coolest kids in your class are on another one, will you switch? Most likely because cool people will attract more cool people. This networking effect is behind the success of Linkedin, who has many members at VP level and above. So if I were to look for a job, would I go to the place where VPs hang out or just any social network as long as it has loads of functionality?
Tuesday, June 27, 2006
Geoportail: exclusive picture
Monday, June 26, 2006
Geoportail offers closer look on France (when working).
Geoportail offers closer look on France (when working).
Wednesday, June 21, 2006
Cannes Lions Advertising Festival Slams Google on Failure to Build Brands
From Publishing 2.0. quoting an article from the FT where the Chief Executive of Mediavest
I understand Mediavest's concerns: they are not making a lot of money when their clients spend their media budgets on Google AdWords v. TV or online ads. And yes, most advertisers are still in the dark as to how AdWords work.
Yet, to advertisers 1.0's credits, their brand (and clickthroughs to their sites) would certainly benefit from having pictures or videos displayed in search results. Google AdSense already does that with click-to-play video ads. When searching for designer perfume, to use Publishing 2.0. 's example, I could tolerate some visual ads in the sponsored results. This is the thin line between providing me with relevant information and enticing me to click and as long as these two do not contradict each other, why not? Note of caution: I would recommend Google to test whether its users would accept seeing Google’s purist white layout turned into a billboard before wide-scale rollout…In the meantime, advertisers will have to relearn writing compelling copy.
Sunday, June 18, 2006
Marketing to avatars: American Apparel opens in Second-Life
Business week ran a comprehensive article last month on Second-Life highlighting business opportunities and how companies are seeing more than fun and games when looking at virtual worlds.
Harvard Business Review has an excellent article on "Marketing to Avatars"
Saturday, June 17, 2006
Italy 1 - USA 1
Friday, June 16, 2006
Pentagon to tap social networks?
Social Media: Big Numbers
- MYSPACE.COM: 51,441,000
- Classmates.com: 14,792,000
- FACEBOOK.COM: 14,069,000
- YOUTUBE.COM: 12,669,000
- MSN Spaces: 9,566,000
- XANGA.COM: 7,146,000
- FLICKR.COM: 5,163,000
- Yahoo! 360°: 4,936,000
- LIVEJOURNAL.COM: 3,904,000
- MYYEARBOOK.COM: 3,048,000
First seen at Steve Rubel's.
Tagfetch
Via Steve Rubel who retrieves and displays on one single blog all new applications you are searching for. Handy time saver.
Wednesday, June 14, 2006
Diet coke + mentos = unhappy brand managers
Yet another example of consumers 2.0. derailing a campaign from traditional advertisers' carefully laid out tracks.
Sunday, June 11, 2006
Is the blogosphere too US centric? Technorati's World Cup's tags say no.
Given football's popularity in the US, we can assume that:
- Joga.com, the Nike - Google's social network for football fans is becoming popular,
- US brands are integrating blogs into their world cup themed sponsorships,
- Like the World Cup, the blogosphere is becoming a global level playing field.
Thursday, June 08, 2006
Au delà du PR: Beyond PR goes global.
Thanks to Trevor Cook who gave me this bad idea from looking at his excellent blog.
Wednesday, June 07, 2006
Blogger spreadsheet screenshot
Tuesday, June 06, 2006
Hexakosioihexekontahexaphobia... the fear of number 666!
- 670 is the approximate number of the Beast
- /666 is the Beast Common Denominator
- $665.95 is the retail price of the Beast
- 666 F is the oven temperature for roast Beast
Google launches spreadsheet application
- Choose who can access your spreadsheets.
Just enter the email addresses of the people you want to share a given document, and then send them a message.
- Share documents instantly.
People with whom you share a given spreadsheet can access it as soon as they sign in.
- Edit with others in real time.
Multiple people can edit or view your spreadsheet at the same time as you - their names will appear in an on-screen chat window.
- Edit from anywhere.
There's nothing to download; you access your spreadsheets from any computer with an Internet connection and a supported browser.
- Never lose your work.
Online storage and auto-save mean you need not fear hard drive failures and power outages.
Via Damien Mulley
Monday, June 05, 2006
No man is an island
Create technorati tags automatically in Blogger with Greasemonkey script for Firefox.
1. Go to a consuming experience
2. Follow instructions
Cheeky monkey but if I can do it, so can you. It's simple and well explained.
Friday, June 02, 2006
7 millions French web users read a blog once a month
Most popular blog platforms are Skyblogs (from radio station Skyrock) with 4.17 millions visitors, followed by MSN Spaces (2.95 millions visitors), OverBlog (2.32 millions), Six Apart (1.87), Blogger (1.56) and BlogSpirit (1.3).
Article in French at ZDNet.fr
Mediametrie report in PDF here (en francais)
Problem: One thousand paintings and counting.
How long will it take him to sell one million pixels?
Wednesday, May 31, 2006
Nikon Owns Flickr
I agree. Flickr is a community and therefore belongs to its members, not to a single brand. There is a danger of backlash. While I like the idea and I am sure Nikon will run a great campaign, my advice to whoever is running it is to make sure the campaign is not too intrusive and respect the community spirit, as would any members. Seth Godin's permission marketing principles come to mind: an opt-in to see ads on Flickr for community members is now needed.
Newspaper Industry: Deep Depressing Dive
Via Mediapost
I enjoyed reading more about this from Adhurl who thinks Mr. Murdoch ultimately has a plan (MySpace?) and Maddie Hanna.
Monday, May 29, 2006
Bloggers can shield sources from Apple
Tuesday, May 16, 2006
LSE Study: WOM drives business growth
The London School of Economics (LSE) compared the results of a telephone survey on a random sample UK consumers against the 2003 and 2004 sales data from companies mentioned in the survey. They found that word-of-mouth, both positive and negative were statistically significant predictors of sales growth.
- A 7% increase in WOM advocacy (willingness to recommend a product) unlocks 1 per cent additional company growth.
- A 2% reduction in negative word of mouth boosts sales growth by 1 per cent.
See press release on LSE's website.
BBC News: wrong expert interviewed
He looks a bit baffled (to say the least) but managed to answer three questions...
Story on BBC
Video on ">youtube (thanks to another Guy for the link).
Thursday, May 11, 2006
Google Trends: Search Analytics
The bonus is that Google maps news stories (from its Google News service) on the graph so you can see correlations between news and searches. A news volume graph is also displayed underneath the search volume graph.
Google explains that the results are extrapolation from a sample, therefore cannot be entireley accurate.
Considering that 81% of consumers aged 30 to 64 years old use the web to research products or services (Pew Internet Survey 2005), I can see Google trends being used for "share of searches" (share of voice) over time to assess popularity of brands and products or look at the impact of marketing campaigns. It is fair to assume that more people should search for a particular brand after an awareness campaign is being aired (or PR through media coverage on Google News). You could roughly compare how this trend matches sales volume.
Wednesday, May 10, 2006
YouTube launch mobile upload service
Via cnet
Tuesday, May 09, 2006
Newspaper sales dip, but websites gain
Via Micropersuasion
Wired online video guide is a must read
See the new networks for video portals, Watch this way for animations, diaries, documentaries and vlogs for... well for vlogs.
As a bonus: a guide to making your own clips.
Friday, May 05, 2006
The impact of blogging has reached a tipping point
"When a company's marketing story differs from the one being told by online consumers, a credibility gap will emerge that could have dire consequences on brand perception and favourability. "
Biggest task is alignment then but that often goes way beyond PR agencies remit...
BTW, I just came back from a fantastic social media event organised by my colleagues and friends at Digital PR in Milan. More on that Monday when I'll have more time to blog (study, study...)
Monday, May 01, 2006
AQA: Any Question Answered
Sunday, April 30, 2006
Podcasts: a legal guide
This will save you thousands in legal fees.
Via New Media Musing
Thursday, April 27, 2006
Google sketchup gives a second life to Google earth
Via The Business 2.0 blog
Wednesday, April 26, 2006
New World, Old France. Nouveau Monde, Vieille France
Amazon Wikified
See comprehensive article on the Motley Fool
Tuesday, April 25, 2006
American Express: 15 seconds film CGM competition
ComVu broadcasts live from Phone to Web.
Wednesday, April 19, 2006
IPA Q1 2006 Bellwether report: Advertising, sales promotion and direct down, online marketing up.
- Marketers cut traditional media budget for the 6th quarter in a row,
- Only 22.7% of marketing budgets were increased for 2006-2007 (the lowest percentage since 2002)
- Online was the only media to have budgets increased in Q1 ; the strongest gain since Q1 2004.
I am reproducing a quote verbatim from Sir Martin Sorrell which sums-up clients' mood:
“The IPA Bellwether report confirms our experience. The UK remains one of the weakest geographical markets at the moment. But new media and new technologies are growing rapidly as clients experiment with different approaches and question the value of traditional media.”
Wednesday, April 12, 2006
Bonjour America: French arrogance explained
Tuesday, April 11, 2006
Chevy Tahoe Apprentice Campaign: Results Published.
Of total submissions to chevyapprentice.com:
- About 84% have been straight product-pieces favorable to the Tahoe
- Of the remaining 16% of submissions, the majority are either anti-SUV (as a category) or the creator is using the ad as a platform to promote a specific cause or defame a particular group; a minority of submissions directly attack the product
- 4 million page views
- 400,000 unique visitors
- 22,000 ad submissions
It is quite commendable that Chevy share their campaign results.
Friday, April 07, 2006
Consumers 2.0: Mash-Ups
Mash-ups are becoming increasingly popular with our favourite target audience: Millenials (and some Gen-X too). Bloggers took over the news by adding their own comments to create new meanings. Media and technology savvy consumers take over cultural products such as movies or music to enhance them, to create something more personal or just for fun sake. Newsweek ran a good feature on mash-ups last month. It’s easy to see why mash-ups are becoming so popular: they are cool.
Audio mash-ups
To make an audio mash-up: mix the instrumental version of your favourite track with the lyrics of another song. If you are musically adventurous, you can take different elements of different songs to create a brand new track (Eminem vs. Stereo MCs vs Eagles anyone?). The best part of it is that all can be done on your PC which affordable software, a bit of time and a healthy dose of talent. A guide on how to create mash-ups is available here. Look at Wikipedia if you are interested in mash-ups history. I personally like PartyBen or Instamatic’s mash-up of Madonna’s ubiquitous single “Hung-up” (“If Madonna calls, tell her I am not here...”). Look at Mashculture too for new releases.
Movie mash-ups
Mash-ups are not only about music. Did you ever think the movie Fight Club could become a romantic comedy? What would happen if Toy Story met Requiem For A Dream? Here again, affordable and user-friendly technology contributes to unleash creativity and give consumer control over content. Check out Mashupmansion or youtube for more.
Web mash-ups
You must now be all familiar with web mash-ups so I won’t spill much electronic ink about them on this post. Programmableweb.com has a web 2.0. popular mash-ups list.
I believe that mash-ups are another genuine consumer 2.0 trends which is likely to get bigger and bigger. The Beastie Boys published acapella version of their albums on their website, invited their fans to remix them, and posted the new tracks on their online forum. As a result, the Beastie Boys are among the most sampled artists by mash-up DJs. Consumers love it, it creates a lot of positive WOM and certainly helps boost their album sales.
However, mash-ups could pit consumers and corporations’ interest against each other. What about copyrights? What happens when the mash-up is more popular than the original? What are the benefits for the content originator?
A lot of these questions are being asked when talking about open source. This trend could call for a rethink of the movie or music industry’s business model. Let me rephrase that to set expectations right: mash-ups will get increasingly popular with consumers and as a result we will see plenty of lawsuits.
From a marketing standpoint, I can see immediate applications for mash-ups to reach millenials but I am still trying to reconcile mash-ups’ value with company profits. I need to articulate my thoughts on this and I’ll post more on that later. Your comments or suggestions are welcome.
Wednesday, April 05, 2006
Chevy Tahoe's apprentice: you bloggers are fired!
Thanks to Guy for the tip.
Tuesday, April 04, 2006
Chevy Tahoe: when CGM goes wrong
Sounds like a good idea but unfortunately some cheeky consumers felt a little too empowered and started subverted the marketing machine.
Check this clip out or this one while they are still online.
Via Twist and Shout Comics
Saturday, April 01, 2006
Google Romance?
Could it confirms Google's rumoured business strategy: to throw as many new business ideas as possible against a wall to see which ones will stick? Could Google's mighty search technology really be harnessed to mend and match broken hearts?
No. It's an April Fool's joke.
Saturday, March 25, 2006
School 1, Blogging 0.
Monday, March 20, 2006
Top tip to improve your search engine ranking: sue Google.
Reuters article Via Seth Godin.
Wednesday, March 08, 2006
Media consumption: surfing web officially overtakes watching TV
I am going to ask one of my all time favourite question again: why is online media not getting a fair share of media budget compared to TV or newspapers? When will marketers get it? I ranted about this a while ago following an unofficial survey I gathered from Millward-Brown, one of our sister agency. There are no rational reasons.
Tuesday, March 07, 2006
Wal-Mart enlists bloggers for PR campaign
This excellent article raises some valid questions about bloggers’ “independence” and what they should disclose to their readers. It seems to me that on the long-term, bloggers who churn out press-releases or have affiliation with companies, but do not disclose them will loose their readers’ trust, thus deflating the very own reason why they were worth engaging with at the first place. From a PR standpoint, it provides an interesting challenge: how to drive communication agenda with bloggers while preserving their authenticity?
Disclaimer: Edelman is a respected competitor to Hill & Knowlton, my agency. This post does not cast any judgement of value but is aimed at stimulating discussion on relationships between PR professionals and bloggers.
Who needs RSS when web users 'only visit six websites'?
Steve Rubel thinks that this could explain why RSS hasn't taken off yet. I agree, most people don't need to keep a watch on dozens of websites or blogs, so see little use for an aggregator or feed system. The fact that RSS feeds are not user-friendly enough for the average web users doesn't help either. This could confine RSS to innovators or professional usage for a while.
Via Steve Rubel
Tuesday, February 28, 2006
If Microsoft designed the iPod packaging...
I read about the clip via Seth Godin's blog but he linked to it through YouTube, which is down for maintenance. You can see it on Google video instead.
Thursday, February 16, 2006
Steve Micropersuasion Rubel joins Edelman and Harold Burson launches blog
- Steve Rubel announced that he is joining Edelman as a Senior Vice President, based in NY. See Edelman's blog announcement.
- Harold Burson (Burson-Marsteller) launches his very own blog.
Google buys Measure Map to bring web analytics to blogs
According to their site:
- Measure Map helps you understand what people do at your blog, and what influence you are having on the world.
- Easily navigate the numbers that matter
- Track links to see who sends you traffic
- Find out what people do at your site
See Google's blog announcement (is that the end of the press release?!)
Tuesday, February 14, 2006
McDonald's is open for discussion
Wednesday, February 08, 2006
Yahoo! and AOL to charge for emails
Monday, February 06, 2006
Google Removes German BMW Site
Tuesday, January 31, 2006
Seat guru: Is the future of flying experience pricing?
Thanks to the web, we can now compare prices easily and quickly before any purchase (think kelkoo) so consumers can find out whether they are being ripped-off or not. This took a lot of power out of travel agents and airlines who could charge pretty much what they wanted before and gave consumers the upper-hand in negotiation.
Seatguru doesn't compare prices but passengers' experiences flying in different aircrafts, from different airlines. I found out that if I flight Lufthansa on an A333, seats 45 A, B,H and K don't recline as much as other seats and get all the traffic from the gallery.
Now that I am armed with that knowledge, can I negotiate a better seat or a cheaper price since my flying experience won't be as pleasant as others?
Monday, January 30, 2006
Despite all odds, I survived food poisoning, corporate finance and NY last week.
Nonetheless, my time in NY was put to good use. First, we had the opportunity to hear from Jeff Jarvis at Acquavit (great food, great service). Jeff shared with us his views on how blogs are impacting traditional media. When talking about bloggers, his advice to PR agencies was to get out of the way, which we will of course not take :-) On the second day, we had three other external speakers:
- Nick Desai from Juice Wireless on mobile communication in the US. Although I am not a specialist in mobile communication, I realised that Europe was a few years ahead of the US in terms of brands using mobile phones in their marketing. It must be a frustrating situation for Nick, to see cool stuff happening here while having to go through a lengthy educational process with clients in the US. This is the situation we face in Europe with social media :-)
- Elizabeth Talerman from Campfire talked about branded entertainment. This is the team behind the Sega Beta-7 campaign with Wieden+Kennedy so I listened. They presented the art of heist campaign they ran for Audi. Pretty good stuff, very guerilla, seamlessly integrated and the experience they create is very compelling for consumers because it provides a lot of fun. And it delivers ROI too.
- Valla Vakili from Yahoo! showed us how Yahoo! is embracing social media and gave us a great overview of what folksonomy is about and what it means for brands. With loads of cool examples. So cool that they will be promptly recycled, with credits due in my future presentations.
I will try to share some of these insights and these examples over the next few days, when I will digest them, now that I can.
Monday, January 16, 2006
Need extra money? become an iPod coach!
Via The Register.
Wednesday, January 11, 2006
Blair, Cameron: The Podcasts War
Tuesday, January 10, 2006
I'd love this product even if I weren't a stealth marketer!
Google Video Future of Movie Distribution?
Tell-a-pal incentivises referrals
Netomat brings mobile phones and PCs together
Monday, January 09, 2006
Sun acknowledges blogging's positive effect
via Micropersuasion
Thursday, January 05, 2006
West Virginia Tragedy Will Damage Trust In Media Even Further
Wednesday, January 04, 2006
Crazy Frog Advertising Irritates But Brings Big Bucks
Interestingly, the bulk of media buying went to TV and press with a pithy £39,591 on online advertising. It seems to have paid off though as the frog grabbed over 30% of the UK ringtones market. M&C Saatchi concludes that "traditional media channels remain heavy hitters with UK youth.”
Via a press article on Marketing and the online edition of the Times.
Tuesday, January 03, 2006
Wall Street Journal Launch Blog
Fortune 500 Business Blogging Wiki
2005, the year of the digital citizen
Sunday, January 01, 2006
Happy New Year (while it lasts)
- The International Year of Deserts,
- The Rembrandt Year,
- The Mozart Year,
- The Tesla Year,
- The International Asperger's Year,
- The year of the dog in Chinese Astrology.
Many psychics, pundits and forecasters predict that 2006 will also be:
- The year when action movie hero Arnold is re-elected as governor of California and military draft is re-established in the United States (no connection here I hope),
- The year when phone calls will be free (a one in three chance that is happens),
- The year when a 9-mile-long asteroid will strike the earth (after the world cup, fortunately)
See USA Today.
I cannot wait, especially for the asteroid part. I already missed the beginning of the world, I wouldn't want to miss the end.
Happy New Year by the way :-)
Friday, December 30, 2005
Citizen journalism at 30,000 feet
Tuesday, December 27, 2005
My 2006 Predictions (Not)
Will Ajax finally make the transition from kitchen sink to popular web design technology? Will we ever trust Wikipedia? Will we soon run out of buzzwords combining the word"blog" with less fortunate technology related words? (vlog?, splog? ...).
I planned to articulate a clear vision for 2006 in this post through proper research, talking to industry players, looking at tech and marketing budget trends, sampling consumers... but then I realised that it was a substantial amount of work to do, all before the end of this year. Instead, I used Mcalister's 2006 tech prediction generator:
Last year I made several predictions that now seem ridiculously too ahead of times... But a few ideas were pretty close. I've got a feeling that 2006 will be a big year, and here are some of the reasons why:
A Los Altos startup is going to open our eyes to some new ways that social RSS tagging can influence culture. Business 2.0. will pick up on this and run several cover stories on the founders.
Jorma Ollila (NOKIA) will be in the spotlight for his decision to support AFLAX remote scripting. This will upset Robert Scoble, and the blogosphere will react "mainstream media like"... The noise will quiet before the end of the year and it will all be forgotten soon after the shock.
Amazon will see their stock skyrocket after their Podcasting business starts taking off. We've seen it coming for a while now, but 2006 will be the year it really kicks into gear.
Either Yahoo! or Google will seek to expand their social networking business by acquiring Linkedin. AOL will be overlooked in the process, and they will see a management shakeout later in the year.
One of the big leaders in the entertainment industry will wake up to the opportunity in the Internet and the Web 2.0 trends. After months of speculation, they will make a key acquisition that will shake up the landscape for years to come.
Saturday, December 17, 2005
Happy Holidays, Merry Christmas, and all of that.
Thursday, December 15, 2005
Science in Wikipedia as accurate as Encyclopaedia Britannica
8 serious errors were found, 4 in each encyclopaedia. Slightly more factual errors were found in Wikipedia (163 v 132 for E.B).
See article on BBC
It is pretty remarkable given than Wikipedia is entirely edited by volunteers. It also brings some faith back into the value and quality of open source knowledge, given the recent issues with Adam Curry (The original podcaster :-) and John Seigenthaler Sr.
Wednesday, December 14, 2005
Martell Cognac Blog: Conversation NOT Flowing!
Seth Godin on e-marketing
I have been a convert of Seth's marketing philosophy for years but with hindsight, I am now casting a more critical eye on his assertions. Seth predicted that banner ads will disappear in 2000… While paid search is attracting more online marketing budget, "interruptive advertising", be it banners, pop-ups or eyeblasters is still a major eyesore on the internet landscape. Why? Because it works. It gets you noticed and it delivers click through. And conceptually, I don’t see the difference between displaying a banner about the new Jeep on an online automotive magazine, and pushing an announcement about that same car in a subscribed automotive RSS feed...
Tuesday, December 13, 2005
Opinmind : mostly positive sentiments
One interesting feature is how it categorises results between positive and negative opinions with a "sentimeter". I typed "bird flu" and the positive results came up with "love", "good" or "awesome" in the sentence while the negative have "hate" or "sucks" or "stupid". It looks like the sentimeter matches keywords according to their proximity in a sentence. Probably pulling from a dictionary of negative and positive qualifiers. This works well for opinions which are expressed “directly” but could miss more subtle comments. There is also a risk that one whole post will be judged based on one sentence. i.e. the whole post is positive but there is one sentence containing "hate" and the term you search for too close together).
Nonetheless, I think that it is great to have a tool like Opinmind freely available. I am sure it will grow and improve with time.
You can read the Opinmind blog here.
via Micropersuasion
Monday, December 12, 2005
Nabaztag, the smartest rabbit on the Internet
Thursday, December 08, 2005
The Consumerist
Worth keeping an eye on anyway.
Wednesday, December 07, 2005
The Phelps Group Adds Cedarlane Natural Foods And Whatever To Its Roster And I Am Fed Up With Receiving Your Press Releases
This is the kind of email I receive almost daily in my mailbox. No message, just a copy and paste of a press release in an email. This one is from Bahareh Ramin, media contact for the Phelps Group. I was close to put his email address here on the spur of the moment...
I don't know who the Phelps Group is. I bet I am not alone. What on earth is "workforce testing services?". May be Phelps Groups or PSI are famous in the US. But I am based in London. Why should I care? OK, my blog talks about marketing and PR, but mostly from an online perspective. Why emailing me this press release? Does the Phelps Group get the email addresses of all bloggers remotely related to marketing and bombard them blindly with emails in the hope that one of them will say: "wow! how did I live without knowing that! I must post the entire press release at once on my blog and that will certainly attract millions of readers who will join me and the prestigious Phelps Group in celebrating that glorious account win."
If you want to engage me, at least make an effort of being relevant. And a note saying "hi, this is why I am sending you this" will be appreciated as well.
Monday, December 05, 2005
Blogging the shoposphere
Tuesday, November 29, 2005
Million dollar homepage: why didn’t I think of that!
There are now hundreds of copycat websites, some of them with interesting twists on the concepts, other just simple rip-offs. Someone is even selling a script to “create your own million dollar homepage”…
Hats-off to Alex. It is a one-off but will definitely be part of Internet advertising history. On a personal level, AdRants summarises my feeling well in true “Onion” style: “Million dollar homepage causes entrepreneurial depression".
Thursday, November 24, 2005
We are human, after all.
via Seth Godin
Wednesday, November 23, 2005
Ikea blog: better do it yourself
I also found a "boycott Ikea" in Italian to counter balance that.
via Micropersuasion... again... (yes, I do read other blogs!)
Google: click to call adwords
via Micropersuasion
Mashups: XBOX 360 inventory google map locator
See more Google maps mashups on Googlemapsmania.
Tuesday, November 22, 2005
Can you be sued because of what you say in your blog?
Based on my limited legal knowledge, these are the common blogging legal pitfalls I identified:
- Breach of copyright: reproducing someone else content without permission. Grey area since bloggers often reproduce articles to comment on...
- Breach of employer's contract, especially releasing proprietary or confidential information.
- Libel: you are insulting and causing prejudice to someone (the plaintiff must show that he/she occured damages).
- Publishing false or malicious information (for example to get a share price to rise or spreading false rumours about a product being defective to kill a competitor's sales...)
Apparently, you could be sued because of the comments posted on your blog too...
The Electronic Frontier Foundation has a legal guide for bloggers (this is based on US law only).
Wednesday, November 16, 2005
Advertisers to sponsor podcasts
Via Tech based marketing