AUG. 18, ISSUE #1427
|
Article Categories |
• Advertising
• Blogs & Podcasts
• Business
• Ecommerce
• Google
• Linking Strategies
• Marketing
• RSS
• SE Optimization
• SE Positioning
• SE Submission
• SE Tactics
• Security
• Technology
• Video Marketing
• Web 2.0
• Web Design
• Webmasters
• Website Promotion
• Website Traffic
• Writing
|
Web Search
|
• Add a Site
• Rapid Paid Inclusion
• Low Cost Search Engine Ads
• Search 85K News Sources
|
Blog Search
|
• Add a Blog
• Search 38,100+ Blogs
• Grab a Blog RSS Feed
• Grab a Blog Content Feed
|
Tools & Services |
|
|
Webmaster Tools |
• Web Page Analyzer
• Meta Tag Generator
• Keyword Popularity Tool
• Link Popularity Checker
• Search Engine Submitter
• Internet Tools Directory
• Site Resource Directory
|
Traffic Exchanges |
Get Free Visitors to Your Site with these Outstanding Services:

TrafficZap

TrafficSwarm
|
Site of the Day |
popurls popurls is a gateway for the latest web-buzz; a single
page that provides up-to-the-minute headlines from the most popular sites on the internet (Twitter, DIGG,
YouTube, Flickr, Yahoo Buzz, Google Blogs/News, Spike, Wired, Hulu), etc.
Does your web site qualify as a SPN Site of the Day? Webmaster resource sites can apply via email:
sotd@sitepronews.com
|
App of the Day |
Feed Counter 1.0
(107.5 KB) allows you to find a website's FeedBurner stats (circulation, hits, reach) for a particular
day or period of time and export them as a CSV file. Freeware for Windows NT/ 2k/ Me/ XP/ 2003/
Vista/ 7/. Requires .NET Framework.
If you have a Webmaster App that you would like listed on the SPN site, send us an email with details to:
wapps@sitepronews.com
|
SPN Partners |
|
Hostway's Business Broadcast: - Maximize
your marketing power with an instant Web presence in multiple high traffic Internet directories! Hostway's Tango Reseller Platform
has the industry's broadest set of white-label hosting services. Just sign up, set your revenue margin and sell!
Web-Source - Your Guide to Professional
Web Site Design & Development.
DropJack - Add news, blog posts and links to one of the fastest growing
social bookmarking services on the Web. Join over 91,000 active members.
Get a Featured Article Position on GoArticles - Put your
article at the top of any GoArticles.com category or sub-category for greater exposure and better rankings.
|
|
|
The Behavioral Targeting Promise Land?
By Jerry Bader (c) 2010
|
If you were to put together a list of irritating and annoying
everyday occurrences, those dinnertime phone calls about getting
your ducts cleaned or your windows and doors replaced would be
high on the list, followed closely by email spam, and television
commercials that seem to be twice as loud as the program and
repeated 'ad infinitum.'
Would You Like Some Behavioral Targeting With Your Duct
Cleaning?
My own special hell includes all those newsletters, reports, and
white papers touting statistical analysis aimed at directing
advertisers to the behavioral targeting promise land. Behavioral
targeting refers to the practice of collecting data (that's
data not information) about how people behave. That data is then
used to display advertisements that are supposed to be of value
to individuals who have shown an interest in that subject
matter.
|
From an advertiser's point-of-view it seems like a very
promising tactic for increasing the effectiveness of what
otherwise would be a shotgun approach, and I would hazard a
guess that at its most sophisticated (as in expensive) it may
actually work. On the other hand, if it's not done properly, it
can lead to silly if not downright unfortunate marketing gaffes.
It doesn't take much of an imagination to see how this approach
in the wrong hands or set to autopilot by some backroom
programmers could go terribly wrong.
And then there is the whole issue of privacy. It appears that
the Federal Trade Commission in the US is considering a
do-not-track browser plug-in that would allow people to opt-out
of this hidden form of data collection, something that some fear
is the slippery slope to an invasion of privacy.
What Does Behavior Really Tell Us?
To my mind the issue is far more clear-cut and avoids the whole
moral dilemma issue; is behavioral targeting really valid if it
doesn't track motivation? Tracking what you do is not the same
as tracking why you do it. And if we don't consider the 'why'
of someone's actions, is that data really valid, and is the
money spent on collecting, analyzing, and acting on it worth the
expense?
It seems to be just another example of how we as responsible
business owners and executives want to rationalize what is
essentially an emotional and psychological aspect of human
nature - we are motivated for the most part by emotion as much
as we want to believe otherwise. And it is emotion that drives
purchase decisions and sales.
It's A Jungle Out There
The notion of the Internet as an information highway is a
canard, it is more like an information jungle, a place with no
predefined paths to follow, but rather a mysterious dense
wilderness in which Web-travelers must meander their way around
dead-ends and false starts while avoiding numerous dangers in
order to discover something of value, and that is what makes the
Web so damn powerful.
|
Efforts to make the Web a cut-to-the-chase environment, miss the
point of what ultimately makes the Web so attractive to people.
It's not just finding what you set out to find, but rather
discovering all the wonderful information, knowledge, companies,
and yes even products and services that you would have never
known about without the Web's most powerful feature -
serendipity. Remove that aspect of the Web with so called
statistical targeting and we might as well go back to the days
when we looked for things in the Yellow Pages.
Turning over the Web to behavioral targeting tactics means
turning the Web over to Wal-Mart and their ilk, leaving small
and medium-sized companies behind. If people wanted to be
inundated with pitches and promotions from major advertisers all
they have to do is turn on their televisions. The Web's success
has been that it is an alternative; that it's open and free for
all comers, both big and small. It is the democratization of
marketing, and it's not in your interests to mess it up. It may
be sloppy, confusing, and occasionally frustrating, but it
works.
So What Does This Mean To You
If network television is for the marketing big boys with deep
pockets, the Web is for the rest of us. It provides an even
playing field as long as you don't allow it to be taken over by
mega corporations who will outbid you for ad space and takeover
search results. So how do you fight the good fight, how do you
help your company succeed and at the same time practice a little
marketing 'rope-a-dope?' The answer is properly constructed
website content, content that matters, content that has impact,
and not just a recycled PowerPoint slideshow, or PDF catalog, or
even a video filled with platitudes.
You can use every trick in the book to attract people to your
website in order to sell them something, but if once they get
there the experience is lame or the content is confusing then
you've wasted your money. It's always nice to attract more
people to your site and no one would argue against spending
money to do it, but if once people arrive they find it
confusing, irritating, ugly, non-functional, or boring then
you've lost them forever. If you are not getting the
conversions you need then it's time to rethink how you're
spending your marketing dollars. If your website isn't an
experience, if it's not informative, entertaining, and
memorable, you can be assured all those visitors you paid to
attract will be on their way to the next stop on their journey.
About The Author
Jerry Bader is Senior Partner at MRPwebmedia, a website design
and marketing firm that specializes in Web-video Marketing
Campaigns and Video Websites. Visit www.mrpwebmedia.com/ads,
www.136words.com, and
www.sonicpersonality.com.
Contact at info@mrpwebmedia.com or telephone (905) 764-1246.

Printer Friendly Version of this
Article
|
 |