DigiTales Blog - Mel Carson

June 2008 - Posts

Just watched Amy Winehouse "sing" at the Nelson Mandela 90th birthday concert in Hyde Park.

It's known she's in all sorts of medical trouble, on crack and all sorts. So why was she allowed on stage at what is supposed to be a celebration?

Her interview with Fearne Cotton was incoherent and her performance stumbling and uninspiring.

For Phillip Schofield to set her up saying it was a powerful performace was just plain daft.

She's obviously in trouble, and it's very sad someone with such talent has such a problem, but should ITV have stuck her performance on the box?

Don't TV channels have a responsibility not to encourage youngsters to see drug addicts on TV in such a glorified way?

I don't remember behaviour like that 20 years ago....

If I had a pound for everyone who's asked me to fix their PC or laptop after they found out I work for Microsoft, I wouldn't be as rich as Bill Gates but I'd have a few bob.

Today is Bill's last day at Microsoft after 30 odd years. He's hanging up his mouse in order to give away everything he's ever owned through his charitable foundation The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

Checking out this timeline from the BBC his achievements are quite staggering, so even if you're a Firefox aficionado or you've had a bit of trouble with Vista in the past, spare a thought for the guy who's responsible for much of the productivity software and services that most of us earn a living using every day.

It really is an end of an era...

I don't know why I've never passed this on before but here's 25 tips for bloggers than AdSense guru Jen wrote last year.

I revisited it yesterday for some work I'm doing, and it pretty much sums up what you need to think about when optimising or setting up a blog.

The comments are also very useful too...

 

So Facebook is bigger than MySpace! Surely it was only a matter of time? To survive the onslaught the latter goes niche into entertainment and music while FB proves a better connector and communication tool.

The fabulous Anne Kennedy of Beyond Ink gave a presentation at the International Search Summit back in May on Facebook and Social Networking.

My notes:

- Worldwide advertising spend on social networks will be £2bn but 2011 (emarketer.com)

- Ad spend on social networks will outpace online advertising on the whole by a wide margin 68% to 22% in 2008 (emarketer.com)

- Google is down streaming traffic to social networks – in 6 months traffic to YouTube is up 78%, traffic to video and images up 18% (ComScore)

- 37% of adults internet users participate on social networks – 50% by 2001 (emarketer.com)

Some Tips:

- Brand profiles with compelling content to bring members back

- Groups created for single purpose, event or campaign

- Feeds integrate ads into page content, e.g. Facebook News Feeds

- Display and banner ads; low CTR, but low price and high supply

- Create  and participate in groups to build professional referrals and attract new referral sources

- Use ad feeds to increase visibility in relevant social media sites

- Beef up clear compelling product information on you website to satisfy researchers

- Monitor traffic and conversions

Is there a contender out there waiting to pounce and become the next big thing, or will FB be as ingrained as Hoover, Coke or a particular search engine I could mention?

You only have to flick through the pages of Media Week every week to notice how fast-paced and ever-changing the digital agency world is. The "ink" has hardly had a chance to dry before we hear via the online news wires that so and so has just left X to head up a new division of Y, or agency A has been snapped up by even bigger agency B for zillions of $$$ in order to plug a gap in their portfolio of service offerings.
 
Much more rarely though, you read about a couple of brave fellows who have led creditable and exemplary careers in digital so far, but are hankering to go it alone and break ranks with their current employers to set up on their own.
 
It just so happens I met two such gentlemen the other day. I was introduced to Martin Kelly and Andy Cocker in a pub in Victoria by a friend. They had just left their respective agencies (Martin's wife being 9 months pregnant!) in order to start Infectious Digital – catchy name huh?!
 
Listening to their passion, conviction and ideas for doing things a little differently, I thought it an idea to start a "blogumentary" about their journey – so over the coming months we're going to track their progress, successes, trials and tribulations on the DigiTales Blog. I'll kick things off interview style but we'd love comments and questions from the community as we go on, so do get stuck in!

Q – Andy & Martin – Give us a little background on your careers to date...

We both started life at Zenith media, I was in press and Andy in TV.  When Zenith Interactive Solutions started up in 1999 we both moved over to be a part of the new team.  Noone really knew what we were doing and we got emails for months afterwards asking us to come and fix the printers from our old colleagues, people thought we were mad to move over to digital! 

From there I went over to Tribal DDB and latterly Agency Republic, I’ve always enjoyed working in a full service environment, in digital there’s so much more possible when creative and media are working together. 

We both also have had some time out travelling in South America and hooked up in Argentina and Rio for Carnival which was great fun, in fact we both came back with wives!   Since the days at Zenith, Andy moved over to Diffiniti where he headed up trading and up until we started Infectious he was doing this role at group level in Isobar.

Q – What is it about the here and now that gave you the idea to go solo? Is it more about your own personal circumstances or is there factors in this changing market that have prompted some new thinking?

Technology is changing everything about digital media planning and buying, the pace of change is actually getting quicker, not slowing down.  We see an opportunity to do something different and build an agency from scratch with no legacy structures and problems.  We just do digital, we’re built for digital and we’ve got technology running through everything we do, be that planning, buying or reporting.  
 
Q – How agile do agencies need to be in the digital versus traditional channels? Sketch us a picture of agency-land in the UK right now.

Agencies fulfil such a different role in digital compared to other media, it’s frightening.  Most media are traded like a commodity, formats are standardised and planning is about selecting the right schedule and creativity from a media perspective is limited. 

Within digital it’s not just about selecting the right media owners to work with, what do you do with them?  The choices are endless, display, widgets, building profiles, seeding content, syndicating content, building something completely new.  And then off the back of this planner/buyers are expected to have deep data analysis skills to look at response data. 
 
Q – What areas are you going to focus on? Search, Display, BT, Social media? How will your approach differ from what you've been used to?

 I don’t think our product offering is that different from a lot of agencies  in that we will be covering the whole digital media mix, search, display, affiliates and social media.  What is different is our structure and approach, with Infectious, technology runs through our planning and buying.  We don’t see buying media as the only answer to a problem, within digital and social media environments especially the answer is about how you integrate your brand with these properties, not how cheaply you can buy banners on them.

Q – Let's talk practicalities here! You have laptops & mobiles I take it? What about offices, staff, where on earth do you start with the tax man and companies house?

We’ve got offices in Waterloo which is great, you can see the view from our window on our site (www.infectiousdigital.com), we’ll also be staffing up this year  and hopefully will be able to announce a few client wins in the coming months. 

In terms of company set up, I think the most difficult thing to work out was our name, you’d be amazed at how many URL’s we’ve registered that will never see the light of day!  My advice to anyone would be to get yourself some good financial advice before you do anything as setting up a company needs to be done right from the start.

To be continued...

Just wondering when you find the time to read blogs, newsletters or marketing emails.

At the eMetrics Summit in San Francisco a few months back I chatted to Vanessa Fox about optimal times for sending marketing emails. It was suggested we'd be better placed and more engaged on Tuesdays or Wednesdays, with the "Monday mayhem" out of the way and the "weekend wind down" some way off.

So when's the best time to try and talk to you?

When it comes to reading blogs I tend to grab a concious 20 minutes everyday to find out what people are saying. I set up alerts with various engines to send me news on particular subjects and have signed up to about 20 newsletters.

The newsletter tactics are interesting.

One big network sends its daily, weekly and monthly at the same time.

Too much information! - So they all tend to get deleted!

One UK-based newsletter sends its email through in the early morning, probably because they think it'll be there in my inbox first thing in the morning when I'm fresh.

But they're missing a couple of points:

1) I don't want to read a newsletter first thing as I'm "doing email" for my first hour

2) They may be forgetting mobile. I read email on my mobile in the morning on the train into work. So I try and DELETE anything I don't really have to deal with so the actual day at my desk starts a little tidier.

So when is the best time to blog or send newsletters...........or better still when do you find time to read all this information?

Will you read this, or are you too busy packing the car in order to escape to the country as soon as you can?

Read the other day that flash young entrepreneurs are clogging up the cafes and hotel lobbies of the capital, sparking up their laptops and doing business on the fly.

Known as Moofers - "mobile-out-of-office-workers" - the problem comes when they're looking for a bit of privacy to nail down that big deal.

If they've got the cash their search may be over. A bunch of rock stars (including Nick Mason and Phil Collins) are pumping money into One Alfred Place, a flash members-club-***-office.

Rob Shreeve, the brains behind the project, talks about it here.

It all looks jolly nice and so it should be at £1500 for the year!

Personally I'm quite happy with Cafe Nero :-)

 

I won’t be cause I’m very happy with my HTC TyTN II thank you very much, but I know a load of people who will upgrade.

In all my years in the tech sector I don’t think I’ve quite seen grown men drool and salivate over a piece of hardware as they have the iPhone. The staggering regression into childlike “oohs and aaahs” has been fascinating to watch.

I’m sure many of these guys haven’t felt quite like this since they boarded their first steam train or clocked a digger on a building site next to their elementary school!

It is very cool....

In Apple's own words the new model will provide:

“...fast 3G wireless technology, Maps with GPS, support for enterprise features like Microsoft Exchange and the new App Store, iPhone 3G puts even more amazing features in your hands. And just like the original iPhone, it combines three products in one — a revolutionary phone, a widescreen iPod and a breakthrough Internet device with rich HTML email and full web browsing. iPhone 3G.”

The iPhone going 3G is a fabulous thing for the mobile advertising industry. Back in January, Media Week published a feature on what sort of impact the iPhone was having in the market place. There were the usual gripes; no keyboard and no stylus leading to “fat finger syndrome,” (speak for yourself!), while surfing the internet, but the biggest issue was the speed.

But even with slow connections The FT reported Google seeing 50 times more searches on the iPhone than other handset, which shows the new browser was helping users engage and start to discover the internet through their mobile device.

With Microsoft launching Windows Mobile 6.1, and a much better browsing experience coming in the Autumn, the stage is set for mobile web interaction and advertising opportunities to really take off.

When I said I’d done all my 2006 Xmas shopping on my mobile at Search Marketing World in Dublin last year, they laughed!

When it was mentioned at the same conference this year, they giggled!

I hope next year they’ll simply say, “So what? So did I!”

It's now been a couple of weeks since  BrandRepublic revamped their site, bringing down the walled garden and adding better blogging and forum functionality.

Having made a few suggestions to Rich Sutcliffe since he joined Media Week as Digital Editor, I know he's listened along with Steve Barrett to a few ideas I've had and those of many others who have chipped in.

Change does take time, especially where technology is concerned, but something had to be done to bring the site's "community" aspect into 2008.

And what a great job they've done! We use Community Server 2007 on the adCenter Blog and find it robust and flexible.

Comments are not necessarily a gauge of a successful blog, but not needing to log in to the site in order to comment has seen engagement flourish.

Please do get involved!

There’s been a significant investment to let Media Week readers have a voice and impart their wisdom - so get stuck in!  :-)

If you want to see me talking about a particular subject then just email me or leave a comment and I’ll do my utmost!

Media Week have provided a really good service so I encourage you all to use it.

 

It’s all about team work. Recognising each other’s strengths and weaknesses is crucial to success in any given project. I work with some of the cleverest people I’ve ever met, but I wouldn’t let some of them out in front of customers, just as they wouldn’t let me near a spreadsheet. Having empathy with colleagues and knowing that a one-size-fits-all approach to “impact and influence” doesn’t work, are both great qualities. Being self-critical, accountable and aware are also fabulous attributes as you demonstrate that you don’t know everything and are continually learning

We have to teach presentations skills at school. Some of the apprentices were woeful. It’s not easy standing up and speaking, in fact it’s one of our greatest fears, so why is it not nipped in the bud early in education. I still see appalling presentations at conferences where people have not rehearsed, provide wordy slides and then read from them verbatim!!! It’s not easy but it isn’t rocket science either.

It’s OK to cheat and lie on your CV about your education or professional background. People who do that are bound to be winners and command £100,000 salaries as an apprentice in a multi-national company.

Right I’m off to update my resume!

I knew other people used this tactic to buy stuff on eBay, but never thought someone would create a widget to automate it.

But someone’s just pinged me a new online gadget to play with and make it oh-so-much-easier - Typobay.co.uk

We all know there are millions of eBayers out there hawking their wares and making a tidy sum for themselves in the process. But it appears many of them can’t spell!

Guessing that over 90% of products are found by buyers on the site through searching for them with keywords, when sellers are creating their listings, the slightest spelling mistake or typo can mean zero visibility for their product because eBay doesn’t cater for misspellings in the same way a search engine might.

 So as the hours and minutes tick by the sellers with poor spelling get fewer bids than those boffins who could be bothered to get a dictionary out.

This all means bargains galore for us thrifty deal-hunters.

Typobay.co.uk found 864 items listed in error for the term Sony Ericsson!

It appears that search engine optimisation tactics haven’t reached many sellers either. They have a limit to the amount of characters they can use in the title of their listing, but many aren’t using this gift to cram in as many searchable keywords as they can.

So the next time you’re looking for a particular product, click down through the categories so see if there are any badly targeted listings malingering in a title-less wasteland, begging you to place a bid and pick up a sweet deal.

Posted Jun 11 2008, 08:56 AM by Mel Carson with no comments
Filed under: ,

James Caan, the new bloke in the Dragon's Den, has been giving away advice in the Sunday Times Business Section.

In a series called Minimising Risk, he offers tips to businesses on how to analyse the market and be more imaginative when promoting themselves.

In these times of belt-tightening and re-assessment of operating costs, it's great to read James going straight in with the web! :-)

"With customers no longer randomly looking for a product or service, the internet offers a great opportunity to develop a targeted route to your market.......firms need to focus on the content, functionality and positioning of their web presence."

He doesn't go into too much detail. I'd have expected him to at least mention affiliate marketing because of its performance based, low risk attributes.

However, it was nice to see yet another high-profile businessman promoting our marketing channel.

I'm seeing more and more of it in the main-stream press and long may it continue!

A light-hearted look at one option!

Here are 10 Things Hugh MacLeod has taken issue with.

My favourite:

"People at conference panels, pretending that the only reason they're attending is to offer valuable insight to their fellow man, as opposed to just pimping their wares and/or scouting for consulting gigs."

Although I'm not sure what that has to do with Web 2.0 :-)

 

Page 1 of 2 (21 items)
1 2  Next
 
 

ADVERTISEMENT