Marketing Trends from the Digital Frontlines
The web and ways to market on the web continue to evolve at warp speed - we see some
positive and negative changes occurring - our observations du jour:
1. Publishers are finally starting to charge for branded content. It's still difficult to do, but we
are seeing many newsletter publishers charging from $30-100 per subscriber per annum. And, most importantly,
many people are finally starting to accept the need to pay for quality content.
2. Contrary to popular opinion, the web's epicenter is not San Francisco, Tokyo, Washington
D.C./northern VA, Seattle, London or Austin. There is no epicenter ... it's everywhere. We now have over 427M
(Dataquest & Nua) people using the web and its truly become a global medium/marketing venue/information
highway.
3. More good news for e-commerce enabled business models. Recent published reports (Boston Consulting
Group & eShop) indicate customer acquisition costs have dropped from $45 per individual customer in Q-4 of
2000 to $18 in Q-1 in 2001.
4. Adobe continues to push PDF format as a web standard. Over 32% of corporate web sites today have
Acrobat PDF-enabling their web sites. Why we will never know (?), as it isn't an HTML standard but was
originally developed to facilitate printing of documents. And, it doesn't work well on many web sites,
especially for those coming in with slow connections or when you are trying to view more than a couple of
pages.
5. Surprise, surprise! Splash pages are still increasing in popularity, with an estimated 18% of web
sites today incorporating them. Let's be clear: we think they are really lame (to use a technical marketing
term). They slow down the user experience and cause many people to click away from a web site in annoyance with
no bookmark and no return visit.
6. Opt-in e-mail continues to grow in popularity and to reflect the web's ability to handle rich
media content. The HTML format is rapidly becoming standard in many e-mail campaigns and we are starting to see
streaming audio and video plug in components (running in the background) and even integrated voice mail, as
just announced last month by YesMail. But, watch those conversion rates fall; opt-in e-mail is in danger of
becoming this year's banner advertising.
7. Newsletters have become mainstream ways to communicate with customers, generate revenue via ad
inserts and drive a brand into the marketplace. Now there are ASP (application service provider) solutions
being brought to market by Microsoft and many others than enable a small or large company to manage all aspects
of newsletter marketing via a browser.
8. No secret the web is maturing. There's been a media firestorm the last few weeks about how only
four companies (AOL, Microsoft, Yahoo and Napster) commanded approximately 50% of the overall traffic on the
web. Most disturbing to those of us not with the aforementioned companies (Sidebar: am sure Steve Case and Bob
Pittman are very happy), eleven companies commanded this percentage about a year ago.
9. Traditional media is experiencing the same market downturn that interactive ad agencies have been
getting. Look at your recent Newsweek, Der Stern, Time, Business 2.0, Upside, Fast Company, or Wired and you'll
see they would do Jenny Craig proud - they've lost a lot of ad weight.
10. Popups, popovers, popunders - whatever the term you want to use for those annoying interstitial
types of ads are still continuing to be deployed on more and more web sites. We think they are just bad
marketing and are being used by sites or companies that can't figure out how to generate revenue with content
(see #1) or, dare we say, real services!
About The Author: Lee Traupel has 20 plus years of business
development and marketing experience - he is the founder of Intelective Communications, Inc., a
results-driven marketing services company providing proprietary services to clients encompassing startups
to public companies. Lee@intelective.com
How to Find Qualified Buyers
Set up accounts with 1 pay-per-click engine listed below, or several. You can submit the same ads and
descriptions to each engine and save time.
Yahoo pay-per-click
advertising
- Reach: With one advertising buy, you can reach up to 80% of all Internet users because you’ll be listed
on some of the best search engines and portals on the Web.
- Targeted Leads: Customers who click on your search listings are pre-qualified, motivated and looking
for what you have to offer.
- Bottom Line Results: You control the cost of acquiring new customers, and you pay only for targeted
leads. This translates into a high return on your advertising investment. Click here >> Sign up with Yahoo Search
Marketing now
