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S*pam Filters Making Ad Trafficking Harder

September 10th, 2002

Our long-suffering ad sales trafficking manager is just emailed me per our media kit’s new avoid-spam-filters ad creative rules, (typos mine) “I have the ad for Thursday however, I had to send it back because it read something this: F^REE, F*REE, CLICK H^ERE … blah,blah,blah. They are revising can I get you the Ad tomorrow? Please let me know.”

I feel guilt about this, because let’s face it, ad trafficking is job-from-hell and now s*pam filters are making it even harder.

Useful links to 1000s of PR & marketing sites

September 9th, 2002

Reader Harry Hoover of Hoover PR Ink just emailed over a list of useful free PR links online, to supplement to list of Top 25 Free Online PR Resources we published this spring:

  • http://www.online-pr.com/ This one has hundreds of general, technology, financial and medical media links.
  • http://www.newspaperlinks.com/home.cfm This provides links to newspapers by state.
  • http://www.mediapost.com/ Offers links to 13,000 radio/TV stations, 8,000 publications, 3,000 online sites and networks.
  • http://www.hoover-ink.com/ And, finally, Hoover’s own site has a wide variety of marketing and PR-related white papers, a comprehensive resource/link page, and sign up for a free monthly newsletter.

    Also, separately, Mitch Arnowitz over at the AdMarketing email discussion group says the press contacts list they’ve posted at their site is now updated to include National High Tech Trades, National Tech Business Media and Local (DC) Tech Publications. You can find these lists off the right hand side of the homepage at www.netpreneur.org/connect/am/default.html. You must be a registered member (no cost) of the site to view them.

  • Must-Read Mitch Ratcliffe Interview

    September 9th, 2002

    eFinance Insider has published a fascinating in-depth interview with ON24’s former Chief Content Officer Mitch Ratcliffe. If you are remotely interested or involved in broadband content online, I suggest you read it.

    Ratcliffe shares his insights into how Web surfers use broadband, how lowering delivery costs change the playing field, what content he thinks will sell the most subscriptions online, and what he’s learned as an advisor to other companies such as Audible, Web-X and Match.com. Plus, his picks for the most exciting trends for online content going forward. (Yeah, Blogging wins again.)

    http://www.efinanceinsider.com/email9402.htm

    New Firm Wants to Sell Your Reports to Europe

    September 9th, 2002

    The bad news first: I’ve heard from a few research publishers that INT Media
    (Internet.com) has told them that it is ceasing to sell third party reports through its CyberAtlas and AllNetResearch services this month in order to concentrate on its own Jupiter reports. This wasn’t a big income stream for anybody I know, but those little incremental sales can add up over time.

    The good news: A new Ireland-based firm, Research And Markets, just launched. They’re interested in selling B2B publications including “premium” newsletters, management reports, syndicated market research, conference proceedings, CD ROMs, audiotapes, technical guidebooks, etc. from all countries (especially the US) into the European market. Their deal is 50/50 split with publishers, which is fairly standard.

    Unlike MarketResearch.com their standard contract does *not* ask that you allow your content be split and sold in smaller pieces on demand (I’ve always been against this, because many research reports are sold to buyers who just want that one chart for their presentation. I’ve found if you say, “Too bad buddy you want the chart, buy the whole report.” they will usually ante up).

    Mike Bell at Research and Markets tells me, “My personal target is to get 750 of the content sources signed by Christmas, which so far seems realistic.” He asks that everyone with business, trade or technical content to sell on a non-exclusive basis through his service email publishers@researchandmarkets.com.
    You’ll get an authorization letter that lets you upload your own reports so you can start selling within 24 hours.

    Bell says the firm sells via telesales, its own email newsletters, Web marketing, direct mail and fax. He also noted that the firm is moving into offices next to the Guinness Brewery this week, which has got to be a portent of great things to come!

    http://www.researchandmarkets.com

    Email marketing on Sept 11th might offend some customers

    September 9th, 2002

    If you are a marketer publishing an email newsletter for promotional purposes, and you have an issue due out Sept 11th, my suggestion is to move your issue to the 12th. The 10th is too close (in fact any recipients in Asia and Australia will already be “in” the 11th) and frankly you risk offending people on the 11th.

    I’m personally a gung ho let’s-keep-the-economy-strong-and-rolling-as-our-first-defense person. My personal inclination would be to publish and promote on the 11th just as sort of a flag waving activity in and of itself. However, my own feelings don’t matter in this area. My readers and customers feelings are what counts. And some of them would be deeply offended if we published. I respect that entirely. We’re not publishing or doing any marketing activities on the 11th.

    Print Newsletter Subscription Prices Rising Slowly

    September 9th, 2002

    NEPA (Newsletter & Electronic Publisher’s Assn) is about to publish their new member directory and just announced they’ve seen some interesting trends in subscription print newsletter pricing over the past couple of years. Here are a few insights from their recent newsletter:

    One third of NEPA member newsletters increased prices in the past year, which is just half the number who’d raised prices the year before. Also, the amount they raised prices was much smaller, just 7.96% raise on average vs. nearly 14% the year before.

    Nearly 60% of newsletters have prices ending in “9” or “5.” The next biggest chunk is almost 20% with prices ending in “7.” Just 10% end in “0.” Other numbers are low single digits.

    They also reported trends in total price (the most popular price overall was $150-199 with 12% of the pack) however I withhold further comments on this because they didn’t break out B2B versus B2C and since pricing is so incredibly different in the two fields, I don’t think you can look at trends when they are mixed into the same pot.

    http://www.newsletters.org

    CRMGuru changes its newsletter name to

    September 5th, 2002

    Excellent! Today just as I was complaining to one of our reporters on the phone that the term “CRM” has been so over-used, abused and confused that it’s basically meaningless, Bob Thompson who heads up CRMGuru.com emailed everyone saying he’s changing the name of his newsletter (which more than 100,000 business execs get) to “CustomerThink” because in the end that’s what really matters.

    It may be a made up word, but as far as I’m concerned it’s my word for the day.

    Message to all tech companies: keep your customers in the loop during breakdowns

    September 5th, 2002

    It’s been tech hell week for us. A big part of the hell hasn’t been so much the fact that technology breaks, as much as it is how awful tech companies are to deal with. Alexis says that’s because tech companies think of themselves as just that: People who make and fix technology. They don’t think of themselves as being in the service industry. As in serving customers’ needs.

    Two big tech companies who make our business possible had huge nasty problems this week. In one case we couldn’t send out any of our email issues. In the other case, our merchant account processing stopped working so customers got errors when they tried to buy at our store.

    Both of these companies did something I consider unthinkable. Instead of reaching out to customers like us to let us know us know what was up, and what an estimated fix time was, and perhaps offering alternate suggestions so we could keep our business going while waiting for their fixes… they turned inward and presented their backs to the world. In one case the help phone line held a recorded message saying, “We’re too busy to help you.” In another case the phone line held a recorded message saying “Leave a message at our general mailbox.” In neither case did we get emailed alerts during the crisis, nor did we get personal emails returned.

    I finally reached a PR rep at one of the companies. When asked why they didn’t at least issue bulletins to customers who were depending on their service, he said, “Because people don’t read email.” Yeah.

    Here’s a message to all tech companies. When you have breakdowns, it’s ok as long as you keep customers in the loop continuously. Customers understand breakdowns. Customers don’t understand being ignored.

    Should Merchants be Encrypting their Customers’ Email Addresses?

    September 4th, 2002

    Which would you rather have to change, your email address or your credit card account?

    In today’s MarketingSherpa, we pointed out that the list of opt-in email addresses that you have collected from site visitors is most vulnerable when it is sitting on your list host’s (or your own) server.

    I’ve given this a bit more thought, and it occurs to me that while most merchants encrypt the credit cards of the customers who make purchases from them (if you’re not, you should be), none that I know of encrypt the email addresses of customers. An encrypted field makes the database far less valuable to a hacker, and protects your customers even from an employee who is in a position to take a backup of your database home with him.

    Yet, upon further reflection, it’s obvious to me that (at least in the United States), most email users who have had their email addresses for more than a year and are in the addressbooks of other professionals *at that address* would be far more willing to have to get a new credit card number (and update any companies that directly debit their accounts) than get a new email address, and try to reach everyone who might have contacted them at their current email addresses. Yes, I know there are services that will handle email forwarding, but between finding an infinite number of people from whom I *want* to hear via email, and contacting the handful of companies that charge my credit card monthly, it’s a no-brainer. I AM my email address in a way that I am not my credit card account.

    Then, why is it that email vendors (A.K.A. List Hosts) don’t generally encrypt email addresses of subscribers on their servers?

    What, you know of someone who does? Please tell us and we’ll blog it here.

    In the meantime, we’d like you to take our very brief survey about your answer to my first question above and your perception of list security in general. Click here (only 5 brief multiple-choice questions).

    The best press release of the year addresses journalists' reality

    September 3rd, 2002

    Best emailed press release of the year (so far) just arrived in my email from the Talented agency in Scotland who obviously understand journalists’ reality. It begins:

    “Hi Anne

    You’re receiving this press release in plain text format because we know you’re busy and because you’re probably behind a vicious firewall that would rip out any HTML content. But if you can spare a moment, please click on the link below to read it in your browser, where you will be able not only TO SEE the attached images, but also TO DOWNLOAD THEM for print.http://jpsend.com/vwc?c=5PgcmJKd#user_handle#

    Yer tea’s oot…