October 29th, 2007
Interesting news from the ACCC who say that Consumers consider blogs as reliable and as influential as mainstream media.
Sounds like call to action for online reputation monitoring
Its also interesting to consider how the ACCC see’s its role in new media. Will they try to control and censor australian bloggers and online review sites.
“CONSUMERS who get their news from the internet are likely to trust a blog for reliability as much as a mainstream media site, the competition watchdog said today.
“For a growing base of users, these are all equally valid sources of news, information, entertainment and gossip, and users are not necessarily discriminating between traditional and new sources.”"
“For regulators like the ACCC, it means ensuring regulation relied on during the last century does not become an irrelevant fallback position that fails to serve the public’s best interests,” he said”.
This is very cool but also scary, what has made the internet great is its total freedom. Will that be eroded by Australian governments and what can we do to ensure that bloggers cannot be held legally liable if they critisise an Australian Company online.
Source: Courier Mail
Tags: Blog, blogs, consumer, conversations, internet, Marketing, online, pr, PR 2.0, reputation, reputation management, reputation monitoring, sem, seo, social media
Call Shifted Today on 1300 144 367
At Shifted Pixels we go the extra mile to ensure that whatever work we do be it strategy, planning, design, development, online marketing, media buying yields a tangible net benefit.
Give us a call, we would love to help your business grow online!
August 7th, 2007
We just bumped into a podcast from mid 2006 from PodWorkx that we thought was was quite interesting to see some early perspectives on podcasting and the role of consumer consumer generated media coming into play.
Click to Download – PodWorkx.com – An interview with Mick Stanic.mp3 (27.86 MB)
Today we had the pleasure of interviewing Mick Stanic. Co-Founder of ThePodcastNetwork and founding GM/EP at Singleton OgilvyInteractive. We talk about the state of the podcasting industry aswell as how Advertising and Media companys can relate to Podcasting as a technology and as a marketing channel. Thanks Mick!
Disclosure: PodWorkx is now part of the Shifted Group, Copyright 2007
Tags: advertising, communities, internet, Marketing, online, podcasting, Startups
Call Shifted Today on 1300 144 367
At Shifted Pixels we go the extra mile to ensure that whatever work we do be it strategy, planning, design, development, online marketing, media buying yields a tangible net benefit.
Give us a call, we would love to help your business grow online!
July 27th, 2007
We have blogged about Twitter and emerging lightweight social networks over the past few months. This week in Sydney was the first STUB meeting (Sydney Twitter Underground Brigade), a group of 100 or so sydney twitterers. We were pleased to attend and meet the other elite emerging web 2.0 community influencers.
The interesting aspect of the twitter community, is that the majority of members are either
- Internal influencers within companies
- Change drivers within digital agencies
- Influential bloggers and podcasters
- Jerky corporates trying to understand and exploit the social media space (like telstra)
- Awesome net-savvy community engager’s from non evil companys (like microsoft)
You can catch some interviews from the evening at the NetX Blog. One of our team was lucky enough to have a few words. (Download the Nick HaC Shifted Pixels Interview)
If your on twitter, you can connect with us at http://twitter.com/nickhac or http://twitter.com/shiftedpixels
Dave King of our own St Edmonds Lab hypothesizes that Twitter circles can amplify existing social circles Download MP3 (2.3M)
Nick Hack of Shifted Pixels imagines casual group gatherings that are instigated and organized through Twitter bursts. Download MP3 (1.8M)
Cathy Edwards of the Telstra Chief Technology Office points to the corporate dimension of Twitter: Maintaining and deepening business relationships Download MP3 (2.5M)
Ian Grant of Sound Alliance sees worldwide fan circles spontaneously forming around live gigs, bands and music minutiae. Download MP3 (1.9M)
David Whittle evaluates the true data amassed through Twitter. He envisions that the constant messages about state create new marketing opportunities Download MP3 (3.7M)
Tags: Blog, communities, consumer, online, pr, social networking, web 2.0
Call Shifted Today on 1300 144 367
At Shifted Pixels we go the extra mile to ensure that whatever work we do be it strategy, planning, design, development, online marketing, media buying yields a tangible net benefit.
Give us a call, we would love to help your business grow online!
July 10th, 2007
It’s estimated that up to 50 percent of visitors to landing pages will bail in the first eight seconds.And while that amount of time can feel like an eternity to a bull rider in the rodeo, it’s a mere blink of an eye to an email marketer hoping for strong conversions and a positive return-on-investment.
Online marketers spend countless hours and untold millions trying to make recipients click on a link leading to a landing page. But delivering only clicks is short-changing the company. Marketers need to convert prospects to customers; clicks need to result in purchases. with online marketing, the bridge between the click and the credit card is generally a landing page.
As online competition intensifies, greater efforts are being placed on maximizing revenues from each and every opportunity. And few opportunities are as rich with possibilities as when an email recipient clicks a link within a message and comes knocking at your online door.
A MarketingSherpa reader survey found that average landing page conversion rates for email campaigns ranged from 5.67 percent to 11 .31 percent for free offers, and from 5.67 percent to 7.63 percent for e-commerce campaigns.If your conversion rates are running near the bottom or below those ranges, consider making changes to your landing page program. A new evaluation by Silverpop of landing pages from 50 companies finds that placing a little more effort on nurturing recipients once they hit those landing pages would be time and money well spent. This report, evaluating landing pages from companies throughout North America and the United Kingdom, can serve as a valuable guide.
Key Findings
Landing pages that pass the eight-second test successfully feature a number of important attributes. Unfortunately, many of those reviewed in this study failed to grab the attention of customers and prospects, leading them down a clear path to conversion. Silverpop found that:
- Successful landing pages grab attention quickly by matching the promotional copy in the email’s call-to-action that yielded the click. Yet 45 percent of the landing pages evaluated failed to repeat the email’s promotional copy in the headline.
- Catapulting a clicker to a Web site’s home page generally fails to deliver on the promise inherent in the email’s call-to-action. Yet 7 percent of email campaigns dumped recipients there.
- Recipients can be taken aback when they click on a link and end up on a landing page without the same look and feel as the email that captured their attention. But three out of 0 marketers risked confusing customers and prospects by sending them to landing pages not matching the email.
- Asking too many questions can lead prospective customers to become wary and frustrated enough that they abandon the process. Nevertheless, 45 percent of landing pages that included forms required more than 0 fields to be completed.
- While the presence of a navigation bar on a landing page can be a distraction that pulls visitors away from the primary conversion goal, nearly seven out of 0 landing pages included them.
- Professional writers know it’s a lot harder to write short copy than long. Apparently some marketers are taking the easy way out, since 25 percent of the landing pages reviewed by Silverpop required scrolling through more than two screens of text.
Download the full PDF Report
Tags: advertising, behaviour, Email, Marketing, online, websites
Call Shifted Today on 1300 144 367
At Shifted Pixels we go the extra mile to ensure that whatever work we do be it strategy, planning, design, development, online marketing, media buying yields a tangible net benefit.
Give us a call, we would love to help your business grow online!
July 9th, 2007
We have seen an explosion of consumer choice, a new level of scarcity of consumer attention, the growth of abundance of options and masses and masses of online consumer review and comparison sites.
Under 30’s have grown up with advertising, and are fully aware of the processes that corporate marketers use to sell them products.
Are there are more products than consumers need? Just go to the supermarket, you have 20 types of peanut butter, 200 types of cheese and 80 types of toothbrushes.
Want to but a tshirt online? Which one of the 10 million sites do you choose?
We could speculate that consumers and businesses make more choices based on social recommendation than advertisements.
We could also speculate that are seeing the end of the media-industrial era, and the rebirth of the pre-industrial era consumer run Market Place (this time with global, realtime efficiencies).
This new era is the market place of the people for the people. Of course there will still be a strong need for insustrial processes, but these will become commoditised as platforms, just like electricity and the railroads have become.
If you are selling a product, a service or an idea… spreading your brand will soon strongly rely on person to person social reccomendation.
But with so many products and features on offer, how do you get noticed? Instead of selling based on pure functionality, as a coat functionally keeps you warm, the new market is about style! So what defines style or fashion, social influence and reccomendation?
The drivers of social reccomendation are the early adopters, the merchants of cool. Those who take early risks and by breaking the norm send waves through the social landscape. Sometimes they succeed, and sometime they miss the mark. Aside from the risks of this space, this is the source of new social influence and trends. And this space must be recognised.
Dont think this only applies to consumer goods, business to business services and products follow the same rules. Business communities and social networks are potentially even closer, tighter and more intimate than those of the consumer social community. Is it possible that the tightness of the business community creates an even stronger desire to use the hip process or service or business practice?
The rules of consumer influenced have changed. Has your businsess shifted?
Tags: advertising, behaviour, branding, communities, consumer, design, internet, Marketing, online, pr, reputation, social networking, technology, viral, web 2.0
Call Shifted Today on 1300 144 367
At Shifted Pixels we go the extra mile to ensure that whatever work we do be it strategy, planning, design, development, online marketing, media buying yields a tangible net benefit.
Give us a call, we would love to help your business grow online!
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