Seth’s Blog: Sometimes, the best part of buying something…
David Thiel on Apr 22 2008 | Filed under: Checkout
A short, sweet insight from Seth Godin. Etailers take note:
“Sometimes, the best part of buying something…is the buying part.”
David Thiel on Apr 22 2008 | Filed under: Checkout
A short, sweet insight from Seth Godin. Etailers take note:
“Sometimes, the best part of buying something…is the buying part.”
David Thiel on Apr 14 2008 | Filed under: JARGON
Sweding is a term coined in the movie “Be Kind, Rewind” (see the wikipedia entry about the movie.) It’s best described as when fans “take classic films and remake them into short films using videotape, a virtually nonexistent budget, amateur actors, and insane amounts of creativity.” (quote from alwayswatching.org).
The movie’s makers have capitalized on the sudden enthusiasm around the concept of “sweding” in the real world and have created an excellent YouTube channel which promotes the film and shares sweded materials from regular people around the world.
So here it is: a film invents a word, Internet users run with it, and the filmakers run with the Internet-users’ idea and turn it into a fantastic marketing vehicle. Genius.
(And oh, btw some of the sweded film submissions are hilarious!)
David Thiel on Apr 01 2008 | Filed under: Branding, Customer Acquisition, Digital Marketing, Email Marketing, Etail Customer LifeCycle, Guerilla/WOM, Social Media
Gang,
Attached to this post is a diagram I use quite a lot to describe the online media landscape and the etail customer lifecycle. It continues to evolve, but I thought I’d share it. Click for the full size version. Some key points and takeaways:
Ultimately, this means we need to think a bit differently about online marketing. While technologies like behavioral targeting might make it easier to identify buying signals and place customers at the appropriate stage in the sales funnel, the reality is that most marketers won’t be employing such sophisticated (and expensive) techniques. For the have-nots (e.g. you and I!) it’s important that we consider these factors during offer and creative design, and that we — above all — insist on consistency and clarity in brand messaging.
David Thiel on Mar 14 2008 | Filed under: Checkout, Email Marketing, Profile Information, The Shopping Cart
Most of the things we do wrong in etail are jeux slot machinejeu de casino gratuitsinternet blackjackjeux de casino gratuiinternet casinobonus casino 770jeux la rouletteblack jack downloadjeux casino lignecasino on net,reponse casino on net,casino on net mode gratuitesjeux de la roulettetélécharger un casino gratuitesregle jeu roulettejouer au casino gratuitementles crapsjeu casino gratuitscoupons bonus casinojeu blackjack gratuitesmeilleures promotions en lignetop casino en ligneastuce pour gagner au casinojeux de casino gratuitementcasino en ligne netjeux de roulette russecasino gratuites a telechargerjeux casino machines a sousbonus sans dépot casinoenquete casino on netgeant casino en lignewww jeux casino gratuitescoupon bonus casinocasino bonus sans depotjack blackwww banque casino frjeu gratuites casinoroulette anglaise jeuxjeux casino sur internetjeux du casino gratuiteslocation jeux casinoloterie en lignejeux flash casino gratuitescasino en francaisla roulette au casinotelecharger video poker gratuitescasino francais avec bonuswww jeu casinokeno gamecasino gratuites sans telechargerroulette au casinocertificat bonus casino770 actually the simple things we don’t do at all. For example: 69% of companies do not email checkout dropouts (via E-consultancy.com)
David Thiel on Mar 07 2008 | Filed under: Search Marketing
I’ve attended numerous presentations on Search Engine Optimization lately (at least 10 in the last month). They’ve all been “okay,” but honestly a bit repetitive. It seemed to me that they kept making the same points and each/all the presentations could be streamlined into a series of sensible and descriptive bullet points.
Which is why I was delighted, but not surprised, to find this page on Google’s Webmaster Guidelines which basically summarizes all the presentations I’ve seen on a single page, in easy to understand language.
Print this one out and tape it to your monitor. Save your conference budget and simply do what Google tells you to ![]()