Archive

Archive for 2002

ConsumerReports.org Gaining 75,000 New Paids per Month

February 4th, 2002

The PR guy for ConsumerReports.org just called to let me know to expect a press release in a matter of days revealing that the site has hit its 800,000 paid subscriber. This means right now the site is adding almost 75,000 paid subscribers a month! (From late November 2001 to mid-Jan 2002, the site went from 650,000 to 750,000 paids.) While I expect some of the speed of growth was due to a holiday blip as people used the site to research big ticket gift purchases, I’m also going go out on a limb here and pronounce that I think these and other numbers indicate consumers are getting used to paying for online content.

Spencer Stuart Sends Nice Thank You

February 2nd, 2002

Jackie Huba, of marketing consultancy Wabash & Lake sent in this viral marketing idea:

“Have you ever received a thank you note for “tell a friend?” I just got one and I think it’s pretty well done. Thought you might be interested to see….

No, I am not looking for a job, but I guess I am on Spencer Stuart’s list. They sent me a email regarding a marketing position which I passed on to a friend. Check out the reply I received. Extra bonus points for inviting me to “share my expertise and insights” with them. (Only improvement would be to sign it with a real person’s name).”

The emailed note Jackie got:

Dear Ms Jackie Huba:

Thank you for referring your friend to Spencer Stuart Talent Network. Our entire online community benefits as we continue to expand our network
of leading executives, and we fully appreciate your active involvement.

We also welcome your contributions to our growing collection of resources.
If you are interested in sharing your expertise and insights with our talented staff as they produce articles, thought pieces, or chats, please email us at info@spencerstuart.com and let us know.

Please continue to check our latest offerings at
http://www.spencerstuart.com.

Tips on Selling Via Online Research Stores

February 2nd, 2002

Research publishers are often frustrated by the sales online research stores make for them. David Strassel, Managing Editor for Intermarket Group, manages deals with the usual players — MarketResearch.com, MindBranch, AllNetResearch, and as of next week SherpaStore.com. He says, “You get what you put into them. They aggregate thousands of reports, and if you just send them the publication info in your files, they’ll load it up into their database and leave it at that.” His advice:

– MarketResearch.com — “You have to suggest where they should index and cross-index your report. For example, they indexed our wireless mobile report under ‘Wireless” but not under ‘Wireless Internet.’ Unless you stay on top, you’re probably not going to be all that successful.

Also, be aware that MarketResearch.com’s publisher contracts include a section allowing them to sell “slices” of any report they fulfill digitally on your behalf. Since many full-report buyers traditionally bought simply to get their hands on one particular chart or figure, you could lose substantial revenues by allowing by-the-slice sales. That’s why Intermarket fulfills all PDFs themselves after the 3rd party store emails them orders.

– MindBranch — They won’t push you for lots of marketing copy and info about your report, but if you send them more stuff they’ll usually upload it, and the more details in their system about your report, the more sales you’ll make. Report buyers like to see a fully-fleshed description.

– AllNetResearch — Internet-topic report sales have gone down radically in the last 6-9 months. “We’d give stuff to them, they’d put it in their twice-weekly newsletter and bammo, we’d generate a thousand dollars in sales. That’s changed.”

CRMGuru.com Gains 30% More Opt-Ins w/ New Home Page

February 2nd, 2002

Wahoo! I was just chatting with Bob Thompson, Publisher and Editor of CRMGuru.com, and he said that he changed his home page after being inspired by a Case Study we ran last Fall on Reader’s Digest’s new console-style home page. I was dying to know how that idea would work for another publisher, because it’s heavily influenced our own site redesign, which is now underway. Bob said that his changes improved his visitor opt-ins by 30%!!!

Bob currently gets about 5,000 new opt-in subscribers per week. Most are mid-level managers in corporate America. Despite losses from corporate lay-offs, his circ is at 115,000. He thinks it’s kind of funny that as a self-described “shy guy who’s not really a journalist” that he’s becoming one of the most influential business journalists around. His motto: “Speak softly and carry a big email list.”

Reader’s Digest Case Study:

http://www.marketingsherpa.com/article.php?ident=22833

TRUSTe announces spam-fighting certifications

January 31st, 2002

Today Truste announced they are launching a new program to fight spam by adding a digital certification of, well non-spamminess, to messages sent by legitimate mailers. Microsoft and Doubleclick have both signed on to test the program. If you’re a certified email sender, then your emails would have a little seal in the upper right hand corner. Kind of like having a Better Business Bureau seal on your shop window.

It doesn’t stop spam, and you have to open the email to see it. But I’ll bet some of the spam filtering software folks are considering adding a “look for the seal” to their programs, to make it easier for consumers.

The biggest problem ahead is defining exactly who gets certified, and who doesn’t. (In fact some of the companies involved with the program have themselves been accused of at least minor spamming infractions in the past.) Are opt-out mailers ok? Do you have to be single opt-in? Various industry organizations and email list brokers are under tremendous pressure from list owners and mailers to say opt-out, and renting pre-checked box collected names, is fine because they make more money that way — at least short term — even though consumers dislike it.

My thanks to Michael Herman of ChristianityToday.com for sending in a link to one of the best written overviews of today’s news and its possible implications. This article by The Washington Post’s Leslie Walker is a must-read if you send email.

Baltex launches second annual interactive swimwear fashion show

January 31st, 2002

Got the mid-winter doldrums? Today Baltex launches their second annual interactive swimwear fashion show. At first I was psyched because I thought that meant you could alter the model to be your own body type and actually see if the suits would look ok on, without having to endure the agonies of store changing rooms. But no, “interactive” just means you can click on the models as they walk by and be taken to an ecommerce site, purchase the suit, and then return to the show again. Well, hey, that’s still kinda cool.

Formerly Free eTeamz Makes $75k in 6 Weeks

January 31st, 2002

Andy Bourland’s new site tracking news about paid content online has a quick inspirational item on eTeamz today. Seems that the formerly all-free site, has made $75,000 in the past six weeks by offering sports fans and sports-related groups the ability to set up and manage their own Web sites. It’s a play on the BigStep.com biz model (they offer easy-to-create sites for small businesses.)

http://www.bourland.com

CTAM's Mark Awards: cable & entertainment marketing

January 30th, 2002

Usually I dislike unexpected audio leaping out at me from sites as I’m surfing. However, you gotta check out this page for the Mark Awards! (BTW: If you’re a marketer in the cable TV industry, you have until Feb 11th to get your entry in for this prestigious award.)

Business 2.0's Sweet Spot Awards

January 30th, 2002

Another contest for marketers — Business 2.0 is asking for entries to their 2002 Sweet Spot Awards. You can enter in any of three categories:
– Most Innovative Campaign
– Biggest Bang for the Buck
– Best Viral Campaign

Entry deadline is Wednesday, Feb. 13, 2002. Entry info at: http://www.business2.com/sweetspot

4 common grumblings from media buyers renting b-to-c email lists

January 30th, 2002

I’m hearing a lot of unhappy stories from media buyers renting b2c email lists these days. Common grumblings include:

– List owners or brokers who lie about how many names they are renting you. Say you decide to run a test of 100k names. The broker tells you he/she sent your campaign to 100k when he/she actually sent it to 500k or more. You’re innocently thrilled with the % results, and agree to roll out to a much larger order — often millions of names — and pay cash up front. Then surprise, surprise, your response rate plummets beyond the boundaries of reason.

– List owners or brokers who refuse to offer services such as an a/b split, suppression of previously run names, or suppression against a marketer’s house file. These services are a requirement for doing business selling postal mail lists, but rarely seen in email, even though smart direct response marketers demand them.

– List owners or brokers who try to dictate the creative the client can run with them, even if the offer is appropriate for the list, non-competitive and legal. One agency media buyer just called me to rant, “My client’s repeatedly tested text versus HTML, and for him text works much better. Now this VP at [well known list brokerage] is dictating we have to run in HTML or she won’t take our order!”

– Clients who “turn & burn” by renting up to 10 million names at a shot for $1-2 CPM. The list owner still makes a fat profit because the list cost them little to build in a not-overly-permission-based manner, so their only real cost is a few cents per name to send the email. The marketer is happy because at CPMs this low, their response rate can be .0002% and still make the campaign profitable.

Why then should anyone care? Burn. The theory is that email names are getting burned out by an overload of this email, so folks are less likely to respond to anything. Which could hurt everyone. Also, spam cries rise to the heavens, where legislative and/or ISP “angels” can hear and may act on them in ways that could hurt regular permission-based marketers too. A media buyer who places orders in the millions at low prices for clients every day told me over dinner Monday night, “There’s a six month window open for this. After that people like SpamCop will shut this activity down.”

[Note: A high-ranking staffer at a fairly well-known email ad network, sent in this response to the Blog above: “I thought the part above it about the guy and his “window of six months” was funny. I’ve spoken pretty candidly with a lot of these people, and they all know the bubble will burst. They don’t care, because they’ll have made their millions and will just re-enter legitimately (not that what they’re doing is technically illegal, but it’s certainly in a grey area).

Think about it — it’s like a check floating scheme. They start with X amount of capital (as opposed to a bad check), but it’s a game against the clock – several games against several clocks. Keep feeding co-reg in one end fast enough to continue growing at a rate quicker than the unsubscribe rate, while pounding the list unmercifully until AOL bans it; move the names over to the other host (often re-supplying the new list with it’s pre-host unsubscribes) and start over.”