Saturday, October 20, 2012

A Few Good Men

Recently, I received an email from a conference promoter. I'll quote it in part:

"From the creators of The Event Marketing Summit and The Event Design Summit comes the Second Annual EventTech Conference and Expo. Join hundreds of event designers for two days of education and training. Crowdsourcing, gamification, digital influencers and social media streaming—these are just some of the 'wired' strategies you’ll get a perspective on. Plus, new technologies and the best ways to 'plug' your live events into the future. Receive a total tech tune up for 2013."

Despite its length, the email provides only half the information a prospect needs to consider the offer.

The email states Who, What and Why. 

But it neglects to mention Where, When and How. 

Pretty important stuff.

I guess the promoter has never read Rudyard Kipling's poem about writing:

I keep six honest serving-men
(They taught me all I knew);
Their names are What and Why and When
And How and Where and Who.

Friday, October 19, 2012

Tip #1 for Getting Money

Advertise Your Business
Part 1 of a 5-part series on the Golden Rules for Making Money

Showman P.T. Barnum published a little book in 1880 titled Art of Money Getting.

In it, he shared his "Golden Rules for Making Money," including this one, "Advertise Your Business."

If you want to get rich, "Be careful to advertise," Barnum says.

"If a man has got goods for sale and he don't advertise them in some way, the chances are that some day the sheriff will do it for him," Barnum warns.

But advertising alone isn't enough.

You have to advertise a lot, Barnum insists. Like knowledge, a little advertising is "a dangerous thing."

"Your object in advertising is to make the public understand what you have got to sell, and if you have not the pluck to keep advertising until you have imparted that information, all the money you have spent is lost."

Monday, October 8, 2012

Facedown with Facebook

Chunka Mui, writing for Harvard Business Review, applauds Facebook's decision to stop using facial recognition software to identify people in the photos you upload.

Facebook's decision comes after Ireland's data protection commissioner scolded the company for violating users' privacy.

The self-imposed ban applies only in Europe.

Facebook claims facial recognition eases sharing.

But critics like Mui think it will "accelerate the creation of a de facto photo identification database long before anyone understands the ramifications."

With such a database, retailers could identify you the moment you enter their stores and begin badgering you with offers.

"Facebook's conciliatory moves in Europe will not stop the erosion of privacy but will, I hope, slow it," Mui writes.

Saturday, October 6, 2012

Twote the Raven

Once upon a Debate Night dreary,
Appeared on phones a Tweet so eerie,
'Twas hard to think it really real.
Nonetheless, the missive's source,

Not knowing he was truly coarse,
Had pushed it out like some football score.

It revealed a strange alliance
(the 
GOP and a kitchen appliance) 
Which no one knew of heretofore;
Only this and nothing more.

His firm moved fast to hit delete,
But not before the tasteless Tweet

Had whirled about the Twittersphere. 
The guy was sacked without delay.
Now he's polishing his resume;
Wants work as a Social Media Connoisseur.
But a big bird's Tweet predicted his chances
Of a future job and steady advances
Are worse in fact than very poor:
Twote the Raven, "Nevermore."

Wednesday, October 3, 2012

Re-Targeting


Facebook has begun selling ads to resellers who specialize in "re-targeting" Web ads.
A re-targeted ad presents a product you nearly bought.
Here's an example. 
You visit a retailer's Website, where you ogle a pair of boots. But you don't buy them, because you have unpaid electricity bills.
Meanwhile, the retailer has downloaded a cookie onto your tablet. In a language understood only by computers, the cookie says "she wants these boots."
The next day, the boots are pictured in an ad from the retailer on your Facebook page.
How did it happen? The re-seller's server found the cookie on your laptop and knew exactly what to do to tempt you. Or re-tempt you.
Re-targeted ads are so effective, they command three times the price of other Facebook ads, according to one reseller.
But critics say that retailers' demand for the ads is limited, despite their effectiveness.
That's because the re-targeted ads make consumers feel like retailers are stalking them.
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