 |
 |
|
|
|
Jump to navigation
Nearly two-thirds of all emails now spam...
|
Nearly two-thirds of all emails now spam
Firm warns of lasting damage to internet business as spam rates continue to rise
Iain Thomson in San Francisco,
vnunet.com
28 Jul 2004
Sixty-five per cent of all emails sent in June 2004 were spam
- up from just eight per cent three years ago, according to
email monitoring company Brightmail.
CLICK HERE to read this article in its entirety.
|
|
|
|
|
Post-Impression Purchasing: It's Not Just Gravy Anymore
|
Post-Impression Purchasing: It's Not Just Gravy Anymore
By Tom Hespos
Wednesday, July 27, 2004
We've known there is more value to an online impression than the click for several years now. But with all the excitement in the industry over immediate click-to-buy action centered on media venues like paid search and contextually-targeted text links, it doesn't hurt to be reminded.
A 1998 report issued by the merged-into-non-existence AdKnowledge taught us that we can expect at least as many online ad conversions as the result of an impression as we can the result of immediate ad clicks. "View-through" became part of the lexicon as soon as we figured out how to track it with cookies. Those conversions that came about as the result of the mere ad view, without a click, came to be known as "non-click conversions." Many online advertisers considered any non-click conversions from their campaigns to be gravy - CPC or CPA vendors didn't get paid for them, but the advertiser did benefit from them.
Yesterday, DoubleClick released two separate reports that show the impact of online advertising over time. Apparently, they're coining a new term for view-through-related back end activity - "in-direct response." The major difference between non-click conversions and in-direct response is that in-direct response is measured by comparing the activity of non-clickers exposed to an ad to the activity of a control group. The measurement of the resultant lift neatly isolates the effect of the online advertising, and it gives us a more accurate picture of what online advertising is worth.
Together with Continental Airlines, DoubleClick launched the study to address a question about non-click conversions that clients have been asking for years - how can we be sure that the conversions attributed to people who have seen an ad were the result of viewing the ad? After all, one can't simply take credit for any conversion attributed to someone who had seen an ad up to 30 days prior to the action. How would we know whether or not the person who was exposed to the ad would have purchased anyway, due to offline advertising or pre-existing brand awareness? This question is a big one for companies like Continental Airlines that have strong brands with or without online advertising. DoubleClick's solution was to employ the exposed/control methodology described earlier.
The DoubleClick study found that just over two-thirds (67.5%) of non-click conversion activity is attributable to online advertising. So while we can't take credit for the purchasing behavior of anyone exposed to an ad, we can take credit for a good-sized chunk of it. Of course, not everyone has the established brand awareness of a company like Continental Airlines, so your mileage may vary.
The study, which I urge you to read thoroughly, shows the effects of the online advertising within a 30-day window, which I'm not going to comment on here. To me, the real impact of DoubleClick's release is that we're gaining insight into the value of an ad impression, regardless of whether anyone actually clicks on the ad or not. DoubleClick's 2Q Ad Serving Trends report, also released yesterday, showed that view-through typically accounts for six times more conversions than post-click activity. If you're counting only conversions that are the result of post-click activity, you're getting only a small piece of the picture. For every one post-click purchase, you might be getting six view-through purchases, at least four of which can be attributed back to your online ads, depending on the strength of your brand.
I'd say that's good news.

©2004 MediaPost Communications. All rights reserved.
16 W. 19th Street, 9th floor New York, NY 10011
phone: 212-204-2000 fax: 212-204-2038
feedback@mediapost.com
|
|
|
|
|
More big numbers were forecasted for online advertising...
|
Hi Everyone,
This report was posted in "Just An Online Minute" by Media Post on
July 28, 2004. It's more proof that online marketing is a tremendous
growth area for online publishers and Quikonnex publishers are well poised
to benefit from this growing trend. Here's the clip:
More big numbers were forecasted for online advertising by JupiterResearch. The market researcher projected that online advertising will more than double over the next five years, growing from $6.6 billion in 2003 to $16.1 billion in 2009. Paid search is poised to grow 30 percent compounded annually over the next two years, while display advertising and classifieds will each grow more than 25 percent annually.
Jupiter attributes strong growth rates to improved ad targeting technologies and behavioral marketing techniques.
Meanwhile, Time Warner reported reduced profits for the second quarter. The media giant's America Online division posted a 13 percent increase in profits for the quarter, before depreciation and amortization, and saw a 23 percent jump in ad revenues. That's good news for AOL, though the unit continued to lose subscribers-another 668,000 of them during the second quarter versus the first quarter. Overall revenue for AOL during the quarter rose 10 percent to $10.9 billion.

©2004 MediaPost Communications. All rights reserved.
16 W. 19th Street, 9th floor New York, NY 10011
phone: 212-204-2000 fax: 212-204-2038
feedback@mediapost.com
|
|
|
|
|
Online Ad Spending Poised to Surpass Magazines, Yellow Pages
|
Online Ad Spending Poised to Surpass Magazines, Yellow Pages
By Ross Fadner
Staff Writer
Wednesday, July 28, 2004
New Jupiter Research numbers say that the total advertising spend online will match that of print magazines by 2007, and then surpass it in 2008.
According to the new Jupiter Research forecast, set to be unveiled this morning at the Jupiter Media Advertising Forum, marketers will spend $8.4 billion on online advertising this year, growing a massive 45 percent over the next three years to $13.8 billion by 2007, and then $15 billion by 2008. Magazine spending will rise at a more modest rate, from $12.2 billion in 2004 to $13.8 billion in 2007, and finally $14.5 billion in 2008.
Across other media, Jupiter forecasts Yellow Pages spending to hit $17.5 billion, and radio to hit $26.5 billion by 2009.
Jupiter Research analyst Niki Scevak said online advertising will continue its rapid growth pattern as it becomes more performance-driven, to the benefit of publishers, advertisers, and their clients.
"There is strong growth in the pricing of advertising," Scevak said. He cited paid search as the key driver of performance advertising, and noted that the trend is now spreading to other online ad platforms. "We've seen the CPM beaten down; price-effectiveness is now measured on a direct sales basis. That translates into calculatable ROI."
Scevak said that the proliferation Web analytics platforms play a key role in this. "Once [advertisers] know the measurement framework, they're willing to spend more."
Carat Interactive executive vice president, creative and technology, Karim Sanjabi adds that analytics will be crucial to the increased migration of ad dollars online. Citing Carat's recent win of Proctor & Gamble's coveted account, Sanjabi says that analytics played a "fundamental" role in driving the advertising giant toward the shop's communications planning division. He says that several of Carat's TV clients have also expressed interest in cross media initiatives involving the Web.
The online industry, he said-which got itself into trouble with empty promises in the past-is finally reaching the point of accountability through the development of Web analytics.
According to Sanjabi, the "serious marketers" have put dollars back into the Internet now that the economy has picked up. "The top 100 advertisers are all taking the Internet very seriously," he said. Based on Carat's own growth projections, Sanjabi said that "in the short term the [Jupiter Research] numbers feel good." He said that Carat's interactive unit sees growth across virtually all of its services, especially search, media and creative, affiliate marketing, and Web development services. . Both Scevak and Sanjabi noted that the Internet is starting to feature in the plans of large brand advertisers. "At the top end, we're seeing renewed confidence, [advertisers are] using the Internet as a branding medium, integrating it in the media mix," said Jupiter's Scevak. Sanjabi highlighted the success of a recent creative developed by Carat Interactive for Adidas. He said the feedback Carat received from consumers for the spot, which is still running on MSN and Yahoo!, was 99 percent positive.
According to Jupiter Research, in 2003 users spent 62 percent of their time online at Google, America Online, Yahoo!, or MSN. These properties also accounted for 51 percent of the overall Internet ad spending in 2003. Sanjabi said that advertisers will continue to allocate dollars to these massive Web properties, but the adoption of newer technologies, like contextual marketing and behavioral targeting will enable marketers to vary their spending on granular, specialized audience segments.

©2004 MediaPost Communications. All rights reserved.
16 W. 19th Street, 9th floor New York, NY 10011
phone: 212-204-2000 fax: 212-204-2038
feedback@mediapost.com
|
|
|
|
|
RSS Gains Traction as More Publishers Offer Feeds
|
RSS Gains Traction as More Publishers Offer Feeds
By Ross Fadner
Staff Writer
Friday, July 23, 2004
Content providers are deploying RSS feeds at a rapid pace these days. Industry insiders maintain that the adoption of the technology by major online publishers like The New York Times Digital, The Wall Street Journal Online, and CNET Networks indicates that RSS could have a major impact on media distribution. In fact, just this week, The Online Journal began offering RSS feeds for the first time, while NYTimes.com brought its RSS operations in-house and expanded the number of feeds to 27.
And yet, most Internet users still have no idea what RSS is. Those that do, claim it will transform the way people consume media.
RSS, or Really Simple Syndication, is an electronic feed that sends content to recipients who proactively choose to receive it. Users choose the feed they want from content providers, and then receive the information through RSS readers, or aggregators. RSS readers regularly scan sites to receive feeds in real-time, thereby providing continuously updated content from each site.
RSS is separate from the e-mail pipeline, and since it is 100 percent opt-in, there is no way for a user to receive an RSS feed he or she did not request.
"From a business perspective it's a way of enhancing and expanding communication with your customers," said Michael Gartenberg, VP-Research Director, Jupiter Research. He added that it's a great way to monitor a company, by essentially "subscribing" to its Web site.
Royal Farros, chairman and CEO of MessageCast, a marketing solutions company specializing in real-time networks, adds that RSS is really "a triggering mechanism," a frequently updated file that waits for people to reach out and read.
"Before the end of the year, every major content site will deploy an RSS feed," said Tom Barnes, CEO of Mediathink. "RSS equals more efficiency and less work." That means less work for programmers, less work for content providers, and less work for consumers. But as Barnes noted, it will probably mean more work for marketers.
RSS poses the biggest threat to e-mail marketers. Both Farros and Barnes note that RSS feeds eliminate the need for blacklists and spam filters because users have total control over which messages they receive. "Once you get into the RSS world, you don't have direct control over marketing to your customer-the thing marketers are most afraid of," said MessageCast's Farros.
Jupiter's Gartenberg said that RSS represents an opportunity for marketers, but he too, notes a downside, "right now it's only a one-way communication."
According to Farros, the industry is spending too much time looking for answers to a problem (spam), that is taking years to fix and one that, to date, has largely affected the efforts of legitimate e-mail marketers. He adds that people expect e-mail to work as seamlessly as a telephone conversation, but nearly 40 percent of all in-house lists are blocked. "Today, more and more people are saying, 'I'm just not getting your message,'" he said.
For Farros, RSS and other platforms that use real-time networks are a logical alternative to e-mail marketing. "Here we have a near ubiquitous network that can handle all traffic in a totally authenticated, opt-in, anonymous manner," he said.
However, Mediathink's Barnes believes that the marketing implications of RSS will move beyond e-mail marketing, once the technology reaches critical mass. The first step for marketers, he says, will be to make sure their ads show up when RSS readers download their publishing partners' content feeds.
Barnes adds marketers will need to heavily invest in generating more content themselves, without piggybacking on their content provider partners. In order to retain customers in an RSS world, advertisers may have to produce their own content and send it out via feeds. This will require marketers to refine their tracking technologies and get even more granular, with a better understanding of each individual consumer. Should there be an RSS revolution, he said that it will inevitably require more research on the part of advertisers.
Soon, Barnes says advertisers may need to figure out a way to advertise on RSS readers via interstitials that appear before content is loaded after users click-through to available headlines.
RSS remains in its infancy. In fact, according to the Radio Community Server, which measures the Top 100 Most-Subscribed to RSS Feeds, Wired News is the most subscribed-to feed with a mere 3,128 subscribers.
Several challenges loom for the RSS industry, including resolving how people will pay for RSS feeds. There are also questions about bandwidth. RSS readers continuously troll sites for updated information, and for smaller publishers that don't have several servers, this can cause information to slow down or crash.
According to Farros, the RSS revolution will evolve as consumers continue to take control of their media choices and environments. "Its kind of like Napster, only legal," he said. But even Napster took a little while to catch on.

©2004 MediaPost Communications. All rights reserved.
16 W. 19th Street, 9th floor New York, NY 10011
phone: 212-204-2000 fax: 212-204-2038
feedback@mediapost.com
|
|
|
|
|
NYTimes.com, Other Web Publishers Increase RSS Adoption
|
NYTimes.com, Other Web Publishers Increase RSS Adoption
By Kate Kaye
Contributing Writer
Thursday, July 22, 2004
As content consumption continues to fragment and 24/7 news cycles are par for the course, more mainstream Internet media outlets are syndicating headlines via RSS, an automated distribution and publishing technology. The New York Times Co.'s NYTimes.com this week broadened its RSS feed offering to 27 categories in the hopes of driving more site traffic, increasing customization and user retention, and building its database of registered users.
"RSS is fairly low cost to implement so we decided to expand the number of feeds," said Christine Mohan, NYTimes.com's associate director of product development. According to Mohan, the RSS feeds generate over one million page views to the site each month.
RSS, an acronym for Rich Site Summary or Really Simple Syndication, allows lists of information or feeds to be published and distributed to subscribers automatically. There are several RSS aggregators or news reader tools available for use on multiple platforms including Windows, Apple, Linux, and Palm. In February, MarketingSherpa estimated that a quarter of a million users worldwide have downloaded news reader software.
Through RSS technology, users accessing news reader applications can link to regularly updated Times content, and site publishers can add Times headlines and summaries to their own site content. New Times feed categories include Editorials/Op-Ed, Most E-mailed Articles, Magazine and Multimedia, as well as Campaign 2004 and Times on the Trail political coverage. Visitors can now download any and all feeds listed through the RSS section of NYTimes.com or at the bottom of each site page. The feeds will also be promoted at the upper right hand corner of site pages.
Popular sites including The Christian Science Monitor's csmonitor.com, Salon.com, BBC News, MSN Slate Magazine, CBS MarketWatch, Time.com, Wired News, and CNETNews.com all offer RSS feeds of their headlines. NYTimes.com's sister site, Boston.com also began offering RSS news feeds for Logan International Airport's new WiFi service in June.
WashingtonPost.com launched RSS feeds last fall, and while traffic propelled through the feeds continues to grow, the offering remains in the testing phase. "We're really just watching it right now," explained Eric Easter, Senior Manager of Communications at WashingtonPost.com. The publisher plans to promote its feeds through a contest inviting readers to choose the best political blogs; the contest will involve outreach to bloggers credentialed to cover the National Democratic and Republican Conventions.
Still, the term RSS remains gibberish to many of those outside the tech community and so-called blogosphere, where RSS feeds gained popularity by enabling readers of blogs to keep up with the latest posts to their favorite blog sites. Installing newsreader programs is one obstacle for the less tech savvy. And perhaps a more formidable barrier to RSS adoption cited by insiders is a lack of comprehensive directories of RSS feeds. Some, however, do exist, including BlogStreet, a site that lists and categorizes close to 2,000 blog sites enabling RSS feeds, and Syndic8.com, a warehouse for RSS and Atom feeds (a similar technology) that counts 7,725 registered users and 128,647 total feeds. Among Syndic8.com's top most viewed feeds are news headline aggregation site Moreover, techie favorite Slashdot, and Wired News.
In addition to providing feeds of its news content, Yahoo! is currently testing a My Yahoo! feature that enables users to display RSS feed headlines on their personalized My Yahoo! pages. The latest version of the Opera Web browser also now supports RSS feeds in its built-in e-mail client.
"The adoption profile of RSS technology is substantial," Tom Barnes indicated, CEO at Mediathink, a marketing services firm that recently published a white paper entitled "RSS-The Next Big Thing Online." He believes no matter how frequently publishers update their content, they need to think about deploying RSS because they will "have to generate more content to maintain people's attention and maintain meaning."

©2004 MediaPost Communications. All rights reserved.
16 W. 19th Street, 9th floor New York, NY 10011
phone: 212-204-2000 fax: 212-204-2038
feedback@mediapost.com
|
|
|
|
|
ISPs Selected By Spam Control Effectiveness
|
ISPs Selected By Spam Control Effectiveness
New survey results presented At the Gartner IT Security Summit 2004 show that despite the effort and expense that Internet service providers (ISPs) are devoting to anti-spam measures, consumers still receive tremendous amounts of unsolicited online content. According to the survey, approximately one of every three online households reported that 75 percent or more of their e-mail was spam.
Betsy Burton, research vice president for Gartner, said "Consumer concern about spam is a significant factor in consumers' choice of an ISP. If another ISP could do a better job of stopping spam at the same price as their current ISP, 11 percent of online households said they would switch to the ISP that was better. Another 42 percent... said they would be more likely to switch than not."
According to the survey:
23 percent of online households believe that their ISP is not at all successful (in controlling spam effectively)
7 percent believe that their ISP is extremely successful.
Enterprises that use e-mail marketing or list management for mass mailings online are often viewed negatively, as spammers:
when their e-mails are not solicited by recipients
recipients are not members of a clearly defined target group that matches the e-mail content.
You can find out more
HERE.

The above article was found in the July 21, 2004 issue of Research Brief
by the Center for Media Research. It is reprinted here based on permissions
at the end of that email newsletter issue, which are as follows:
We welcome and appreciate forwarding of our newsletters in their entirety or in part with proper attribution.
©2004 MediaPost Communications, 16 W. 19th St., New York, NY 10011
|
|
|
|
|
Vectorizing Black and White Line Art
by Ron Leishman
|
|
There is no "typical" method for creating vector images on the computer. Some cartoonists like to use a drawing tablet and others are comfortable using a mouse to create their lines, most often using the Bezier tool and layering their shapes in a drawing application.
I once heard someone compare drawing with a mouse to drawing with a bar of soap and I have to admit that they weren't too far off. I take my hat off to those artists who can effectively draw with a mouse.
I'm not nearly that clever and so prefer to work in more traditional methods i.e.: drawing with old-fashioned pen and ink on paper. This more indirect method seems to work best for me.
I start by scanning my black and white ink drawing at 600 dpi and save it as a tif file. Once scanned and saved, the image is now ready to be vectorized. For years I've used an auto trace program called Adobe Streamline to import and vectorize my images. They were the only kid on the block except perhaps for Corel Trace and perhaps other more obscure apps that I was unaware of.
Being a Mac user I've become disillusioned with Streamline since the last time they upgraded their program was back in 1997, an eternity in the computer world. Being a Mac user and working in OS X, I've given up on Streamlline.
Recently I've discovered a vector program called Silhouette (http://www.silhouetteonline.com) and this program is a real gem. It supports both Windows and Mac environments and comes as a stand-alone version or as a plug in for Adobe Illustrator. If you're an Illustrator user, that fact alone makes it worth the purchase. They even have a demo that you can download and try.
When an auto tracing program such as Silhouette, vectorizes an image, it first traces the black outline of the cartoon and then traces the white areas that sit in top of the outline. Each piece is a separate entity that you can manipulate and color. That is one of the things I like about vector images; I can manipulate them more freely than a bitmap. As well they are infinitely resizable unlike bitmaps that degrade the more you enlarge them. You can also change the layer position of elements in your layout
The only problem with vector images is that the trace is not always as true to the original as you might like and it lends itself more to a smoother style of drawing. If you draw in a very loose style, you're probably better off leaving your cartoons as bitmaps and coloring them up in a program like Photoshop. Many cartoonists do just that and their work is beautiful.
Once my cartoons are vectorized, I go in and begin to manipulate the nodes or control points, pulling them in new directions, and adding points. What I mostly do, is eliminate what I deem to be unnecessary points. I often spend more time on cleaning up my images than I did drawing them in the first place but I've come to expect that and incorporate it as a necessary of my process.
As you can see in the examples, the image on the left has not been cleaned up. The lines are fairly rough as opposed to the cleaned up version on the right. I've eliminated a number of points to smooth out the curves and used the ellipse tool to redraw the pupils in the eyes.
Some of the cartoon 'mills' that pump out dozens of cartoons a day, tend not to go in and clean up their drawings. They scan, vectorize and color. Needless to say, some of the images are pretty rough.
Below is the image, as it appears when I've cleaned it up and added color. I've posted this image on my freebies page http://www.toonaday.com/freebies.htm so you can download it if you like. The gif and tif versions are created from my vector eps files after they're tweaked and colored.

Ron Leishman is the creator of Toonaday.com, a site dedicated to producing unique cartoons daily.
You can email Ron at
ron@toonaday.com

On a more personal note, Ron has been the source of all the digital cartoons used for the
Carlton's Corner channel and for the KickTheEmailHabit.com. I subscribe to Ron's
ToonADay cartoon delivery service and I look forward to a new cartoon in my inbox every
day. Ron is a successful cartoon artist, with professional comic book experience, and recently
retired from his job as an art instructor in order to pursue his beloved cartoon business.
Take a few minutes to check out ToonADay
subscription services and CD collections. There are eight CD's containing a year each of
digital cartoons created for ToonADay subscribers.
The newest ToonADay offerings include - BizWomen, Critterz and Dawgs. You're certain to have at least a smile a day when you subscribe to ToonADay! Enjoy!
Cathy Carlton at KickTheEmailHabit.com
This article or ad was created on behalf of a syndication marketing client of KickTheEmailHabit.com. Visit our website for more information.
©Copyright 2004 - KickTheEmailHabit.com
All rights reserved.
|
|
|
|
###
Media Release ###
NM business woman and TX
based business woman combine talents to further the push away from traditional
email marketing into the new, exciting RSS technology.
BUSINESS
WOMEN FRUSTRATED WITH EMAIL MARKETING OFFER NEW VENUE
Albuquerque,
NM (PRWEB) July 10, 2004 --Home-based business woman, Kim Bloomer, owner of
Aspenbloom, has combined talents with Cathy Carlton, owner and operator of
Carlton's Corner online along with several other businesses, to form a
partnership venture in the competitive arena of online marketing. WWW.KickTheEmailHabit.com is the result of their joint efforts.
[Read More!]
Syndication Information & Links
|
Shadrach the Neo Mastiff, Publisher of Bark 'n' Blog Welcomes You!
One of the most beneficial features of Quikonnex is the capability to Syndicate your Channel. Syndicating
is simply making your channel (or site) content available for easy use by others. Below, you
can see an example of the syndication content (Recent Articles & Postings heading below),
find out how to sign-up for Quikonnex and QuikView and find the syndication link information.
Enjoy!!
Recent Articles & Postings to the Bark 'n' Blog QChannel:
Bark 'n' Blog Syndication Link:
Recent Articles & Postings to the Pawsitively Natural Pet Products QChannel:
Pawsitively Natural Pet Products Syndication Link:
Quick & Easy Quikonnex/QuikView Sign-up Page:
Sign up for Quikonnex and enjoy the freedom of reading Carlton's Corner, and many other
fine QPublications, using the new QuikView channel viewer. Just
CLICK HERE to get started.
If you already have a channel viewer, use the appropriate link below to subscribe to this channel:
New from InClick:
|

This article or ad was created on behalf of a syndication marketing client of KickTheEmailHabit.com. Visit our website for more information.
©Copyright 2004 - KickTheEmailHabit.com
All rights reserved.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|