Podcasting Business Blogging Articles

Will California’s Spam Law Kill Your Email Marketing?

October 28th, 2003

by Brian Klais

Originally published in MarketingProfs

Spam bills are passing because constituents are pushing legislators for a resolution to their inbox deluge. They want their inboxes reserved for conversations with people they know, not solicitations from people they don’t. Email is NOT direct mail. Traditional direct mail in the online world IS spam. Read on to learn how to prepare to play the new game.

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Out-Googling Google

September 1st, 2003

by Stephan Spencer

Originally published in Unlimited

Dubbed the “operating system of the internet”, Google has become the default term for web searching. It’s the top destination site for web searches, receiving more than 150 million queries daily. All of which makes the behemoth in Redmond, Washington, a trifle concerned.

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Beware the Spam Catchers

August 1st, 2003

by Stephan Spencer

Originally published in Unlimited

Every day, scores of legitimate emails get blocked by email filters and corporate firewalls. In fact, market intelligence company RoperASW estimates 38% of permission-based emails are wrongly blocked by filters and firewalls. Your all-important email campaigns and newsletters, and even personal correspondence, may be getting blocked too.

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Analyze This

July 1st, 2003

by Stephan Spencer

Originally published in Unlimited

An online wine shop used metrics to improve its web marketing. It broke its visitors into five distinct segments and found that one segment comprised less than 10% of its audience but accounted for over 80% of its revenue. Track the following metrics for your site and use the data to make improvements.

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Have Online Advertisers Gone Too Far?

June 1st, 2003

by Stephan Spencer

Originally published in Unlimited

In an intensifying effort to capture internet users’ attention, online advertisers are resorting to ever more intrusive - even dodgy - tactics like…

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Blogging for Fun and Profit

May 1st, 2003

by Stephan Spencer

Originally published in Unlimited

One in five teens between 12 and 17 maintains a blog, according to a US survey, and now corporates are catching on -from telecommunications company Verizon, to analysts Gartner Group, to small Sydney consultancy Step Two Designs. There is a sound business case for blogging. It gives customers, suppliers and staff an inside view of how you think. After all, people buy from people, not some faceless corporate entity.

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King Hit

April 1st, 2003

by Stephan Spencer

Originally published in Unlimited

Why does Montana Wines appear on the first page of Google’s search results for “New Zealand wines,” while Matua can’t be found until page two? And why does Trelawn Place come up number one in a Google search for “Queenstown bed and breakfast”, whereas competitor White Shadows Country Inn is number 11?

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Pros and Cons of an Online Community

March 1st, 2003

by Stephan Spencer

Originally published in Unlimited

An online community for writers and publishing professionals is a raging success by the old dot-com criteria - heaps of traffic (140,000 visitors a month) and average visit times of over seven minutes. But it’s a dud as a business venture. It has operated at a loss every year.

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PHP versus ASP comparison

February 16th, 2003

by Stephan Spencer

Why do we code in PHP rather than ASP? For reasons including price, capability, its “open source” and platform-agnostic nature, popularity, speed, security, and efficiency.

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Your Web Site Should Not Need a Manual

February 1st, 2003

by Stephan Spencer

Originally published in Unlimited

Usability. Boring but crucial, it’s about making your website easy and intuitive to use. Users shouldn’t need to learn how to use your site. Put stuff where people expect it.

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