Thursday, July 30, 2009

Online marketing's future in a web-based world

Customers and prospects have taken control of the Internet, dramatically changing the way they find information, search for companies, and make purchasing decisions. Consequently, marketers have less control over and visibility into, how people locate and interact with their brand and business.

It’s difficult to stay on top of ever-changing behavioral patterns, in addition to understanding and mastering the increasing number of online channels such as blogs, RSS feeds, in-game ads and more. At the same time, marketers are still trying to capitalize on the more traditional online mediums such as email and paid search.

Regardless of changing circumstances, the goal remains the same - delivering the right message to customers and prospects at the right time, via the right channel.

So how have marketers responded to the digital revolution? Where will the next breakthroughs be seen?

The industry moved beyond mass marketing tactics quickly when it realized that a little bit of technology went a long way. The discovery of session-based data to get a snapshot of visitor behavior was gold, allowing organizations to send targeted promos for a specific product to particular groups of people: welcome to behavioral marketing.

Behavioral marketing has recently penetrated mainstream companies and marketing departments. Because of increased scrutiny of marketing spend and lead-generation contribution, each time a new technology arrives on the scene, the demands increases for rapid ROI and proof that marketing tactics are effective. Behavioral marketing tools, with the ability to syndicate customer activity data to multiple ad networks simultaneously, eliminates the need to place additional ad network tags on unproven websites.

The future
Contextual marketing, which is the next phase of advanced marketing techniques, requires far more detailed information than session-based data, such as Customer A abandoned buying a shirt. It creates and maintains a detailed profile of the activities of each customer while on your site, noting not only their actions but also the context of those actions in terms of lifetime behaviors.

The context of behavior is what makes the difference in your ability to engage and maintain customers and prospects. It takes into account visitor attributes such as age, gender, or location. For example, Customer A is female, 25-35, is using onsite search with ‘bathing suit’ as a keyword, has looked at sarongs in the past, and is currently in the ‘sale’ section of the site. Such detailed information allows you to then create highly individualized and personalized marketing programs. And it’s only through contextual marketing that you acknowledge that visitors to your site typically have multiple interactions with you and your company over a long period of time.

Here’s another example of the value of contextual marketing: Prospect B found your site by searching for a specific keyword. They view the information about your new software package and then leave. Later that month you decide to send a targeted email campaign to all visitors that looked at the new software package and your behavioral marketing data tells you that Prospect B is in this category. However, if you were taking a contextual marketing approach, you’d know that Prospect B had already returned to your site, purchased your new software package and requested online support. Behavioral marketing does not allow visibility across multiple sessions, so you wouldn’t know that you sent Prospect B the wrong message.

The ability to capture data about all visitors and over their entire lifetime, as well as understand other attributes, addresses these problems. Contextual marketing involves tailoring messages to the specific interests or needs of an individual or group of visitors as evidenced by their onsite behavior and attributes.

When scratching the surface won’t do
By drilling down deeper into visitor behavior and broadening your view of online activity to encompass everyone and every movement, you can achieve multiple perspectives of your data. You can clearly see which links are bringing customers to your site, the campaigns that are driving conversion, the products and categories customers prefer, the onsite search terms used to navigate your site or the revenue visitors generate for you in any given session or over their entire lifetime.

Contextual marketing will also allow businesses to look at the interrelationships of various channels and campaigns to determine the best time to serve a particular ad or landing page. This is where businesses can fine-tune marketing tactics for maximum success - quickly and comprehensively.

Credit where credit’s due
Multiple interfaces come into play in the conversion of a site visitor to a customer. Traditionally, marketers attribute value only to a single influence (the first or last touch) but to truly understand the impact of each campaign you need to attribute conversion across a range of channels and at various times in the customer lifecycle.

With both behavioral marketing now, and contextual marketing in the future, you can accurately measure how these marketing channels and programs contribute to attracting new customers, drive conversions and encourage deep, meaningful sessions. As a result, you can give appropriate credit to all marketing avenues that influence a sale, a registration, a booking or other conversion to get a true picture of the value of each campaign. To offer another example; Prospect Z received an email from you with a link to your website. They followed the prompt, clicked through to your site, looked around for a few minutes and then left. Two weeks later, the same person finds your site again but this time through a keyword search. They spend some time reading your news online and then head to the contact page and email you. To what do you attribute this lead? Most marketers utilizing behavioral marketing data and tactics will attribute this lead generation to the keyword search when in fact the original direct mail played the most important role in getting the prospect’s attention. You can argue that the keyword search was also vital but in fact neither would have succeeded in taking the site visitor to the next stage of the sales cycle in isolation.

Bridging the gap between offline and digital
While many marketers have evolved to take on the digital media world and all its rich opportunities, most continue to operate their offline marketing activities separately.

For many, interaction with your organization and brand takes place offline and online. Facilities such as stores, offices and call centers play a valuable role in driving lead generation and customer satisfaction. But how do you capture offline visitor data and make it meaningful in a contextual marketing capacity? You need to merge online data with offline data sources, such as your CRM database or your customer loyalty database. This is the only way that you can get a clear picture of each and every customer or prospect.

It’s not that difficult to do and by performing analyses across all channels and using data to create customer-centric profiles you can understand behaviors holistically and better target and serve your market.

What’s next?
The adoption of behavioral marketing within mainstream marketing programs and the use of contextual marketing starting to rise, the more sophisticated marketers are acknowledging the value of understanding their customers’ relationship with the brand. Behavioral data in addition to contextual data is what enhances a company’s ability to deliver the right message at the right time in the right way.

As contextual marketing becomes the norm, a new group of thought leaders will emerge. They’ll drive a need for new technology that makes tracking and understanding online visitors even easier. Generating automated but highly personalized marketing campaigns will be a breeze and offline data integration fundamental to day-to-day marketing activity will no longer continue to derail marketing departments.

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

Microsoft's Windows 7 gets released to manufacturing

windows7

Aw snap, one of the final hurdles on the way to October 22nd has been passed: Windows 7 (and Windows Server 2008 R2, too) has been released to manufacturing. A post over on The Windows Blog explains that this build (7600) underwent tons of scrutiny and tweaking before being deemed sufficient for release, and considering that we know you're anxious for details on dates, hear this:
"The RTM code will be delivered to our partners within the next few days who will then start preparing to deliver some amazing new products timed to hit at General Availability (GA) of Windows 7 on October 22nd. As always, current Windows Volume License customers, MSDN subscribers and TechNet subscribers will get first customer access, getting Windows 7 on August 6 (MSDN/TechNet) and August 7 (VL), and Windows Server 2008 R2 the second half of August."
So, there you have it -- now, are you prepared to wait until early August to get your download on? Nah, we thought not. The full announcement is posted after the break.

Update: Looks like some Microsoft employees were so excited by the RTM sign-off that they made a celebratory video. See it for yourself just after the break!



Title: Windows 7 Has Been Released to Manufacturing

Steven Sinofsky, President of the Windows Division, has just announced on the Engineering Windows 7 Blog that Windows 7 has reached the Release to Manufacturing (RTM) milestone.

As I mentioned previously, RTM officially happens only after sign-off occurs. What happens is a build gets designated as a RTM contender after going through significant testing and meeting our quality bar for RTM. Then, it goes though all the validation checks required for RTM including having all languages of that build completed. If all the validation checks have passed – sign-off for RTM can occur. Today after all the validation checks were met, we signed off and declared build 7600.16385 as RTM.

Also happening very shortly, Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer will get on stage for his keynote address to the Microsoft field community at MGX in Atlanta. MGX is an internal Microsoft event held every year. This is where we bring in our folks in the field from around the world and talk about selling Microsoft's latest products. We're a global company and this event is super important to us. As you can imagine, Windows 7 is a hot topic at this year's MGX and we're anxious to hear what Steve has to say, and I will update that here.

Not only is RTM an important milestone for us – it's also an important milestone for our partners. Today's release is the result of hard work and collaboration with our partners in the industry to make Windows 7 a success. We delivered Windows 7 with predictable feature set on a predictable timetable that allowed OEMs to focus on value and differentiation for their customers.

Our customers told us what they want (and expect) and we defined those specific experiences and then built features to support them (like HomeGroup and the Windows Taskbar enhancements). Our customers also told us that "fundamentals" on both the hardware and software side was extremely important. Windows 7 today runs great on the broadest array of hardware types ranging from netbooks to the high end gaming machines. We worked closely with OEMs so that their PCs ignite features in Windows 7 to excite their customers.

Of course, today's release is also the result of the amazing amount of feedback we received from the millions of people who tested Windows 7 – from Beta to RC. We actually had over 10 million people opt-in to the Customer Experience Improvement Program (CEIP). That's a lot of people opting in to help us make Windows 7 a solid release. Through CEIP, our engineers were guided by customer feedback all the way to RTM. We also have had a great group of beta testers who have dedicated a great deal of their time to testing Windows 7 too. A special thank you goes out to all the people who helped test Windows 7.

I'd also like to give a shout-out to my friends over on the Windows Server Team. Today they are also announcing that Windows Server 2008 R2 has RTM'd. Windows 7 and Windows Server 2008 R2 together can help businesses cut costs and increase productivity. Click here to read their blog post on Windows Server 2008 R2 RTM.

The RTM code will be delivered to our partners within the next few days who will then start preparing to deliver some amazing new products timed to hit at General Availability (GA) of Windows 7. And going forward, I expect to be showcasing MANY of these new products here on The Windows Blog.

We continue to be overwhelmed at the community's response to Windows 7 and it has been an extremely rewarding experience to witness. We hope the enthusiasm will continue to grow even more as our partners build amazing experiences with their products and Windows 7.

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Open source Adobe flash Player

Adobe open sources Flash platforms

On Tuesday Adobe launched the Open Source Media Framework (OSMF), a rich media player platform. OSMF was previously part of a project codenamed Strobe.

Adobe also open sourced the Text Layout Framework (TLF), a typography platform for web apps.

"Adobe is committed to providing core Flash platform technologies to the community as open source," said Dave McAllister, director of standards and open source at Adobe, in a statement. "By releasing OSMF and TLF as open source, we are helping facilitate the creation and sharing of best practices for media players and rich text-based web application development."

Adobe announced that it was collaborating with content and application delivery company Akamai on the Open Video Player initiative, which was founded by Akamai. The two companies will also collaborate on OSMF.

Adobe Flash is in direct competition with Microsoft's Silverlight rich-media technology. Microsoft launched Silverlight 3 earlier this month.

Silverlight is based on .NET -- the open source implementation of .NET is Mono. Microsoft has assisted Mono development. The open source version of Silverlight is called Moonlight, which is based on Mono, and sponsored by Novell. Moonlight enables Silverlight content to run on Linux.

This article was originally posted on ZDNet UK

Electromagnetic invisibility a precursor to the real thing?


This could either be that one giant leap, or just another in a long sequence of multidirectional small steps on the Quixotic quest for undetectability. So-called dc metamaterials are the chief culprit for inciting our interest anew, as researchers from Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona have found a way to use them to render metallic objects invisible to low frequency electromagnetic waves. Composed of irregular networks of superconductors, the metamaterials are capable of granting superpowers altering the magnetic field of materials, and in theory, this advance could aid magnetic imaging in medical settings and also help cloak military vessels from magnetic detection. Of course, there's still the whole "oh, now we need a working prototype" conundrum, but hey, at least we've got the gears turning in the right direction.

[Via PhysOrg]

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Find your friends with these services

Social networking is fun. You can communicate with friends. You can share experiences with them. And you can even plan get-togethers. But finding where they are isn't possible with most social networks. You'll need to keep sending messages back and forth to figure out where to meet up.

With the help of location-based social networks, you won't have that problem any longer. All of the following services will allow you to see where friends are at all times. The guessing game is over.

Location-based social networks

Brightkite Brightkite is a great location-based service. After you download the free app onto your mobile phone, you can start finding friends.

When you become friends with someone, you can see their location as they travel away from home. You can also find folks who are in close proximity to you to get to know them a little better. Brightkite even lets you take pictures. That picture will then be geo-tagged, so your friends can see where it was taken. Brightkite is a really nice location-based social network. And since it works on any mobile phone, the Web, and an app is available for free in the Apple App Store, it's definitely worth trying out.

Brightkite

Brightkite helps you locate your friends (and communicate with them).

(Credit: Brightkite)

Loopt Loopt is designed specifically for GPS-enabled mobile phones. When you sign up, you need to input your mobile phone number. From there, Loopt will determine your location. You can then share your location with those who request to see where you are. You can even take pictures with your mobile phone and geo-tag them.

If you don't want someone to know where you are, Loopt lets you block access to your location. It's a great privacy feature. Loopt works with practically any mobile phone. It also has an app available for the iPhone. Both versions are free.

loopt

Loopt has an iPhone app you'll want to check out.

(Credit: Loopt)

Map My Tracks Map My Tracks is designed specifically for the person who wants to go outdoors. The service is installed on your mobile phone after you text message Map My Tracks. It then interacts with your phone's GPS to display a map to make it just a little easier for you to determine where you are. As long as you allow access, your friends can find you as you travel.

Map My Tracks works with several devices, including most BlackBerry devices and a host of Nokia handhelds. It's not available for the iPhone. If you want to try Map My Tracks, you'll need to download it from the company's Web site.

mapmytracks

Map My Tracks is for the person who loves outdoor activities.

(Credit: Screenshot by Don Reisinger/CNET)

Moximity Moximity brings location-based functionality to your social networks.

After you sign up for Moximity, you're asked to input your Twitter and Facebook usernames. From there, the free application you download onto your iPhone will help you find areas of interest around your location. Once you decide you want to go somewhere, you can send your location and destination to your social network friends by using the "set as your location" feature in the app. All your Twitter and Facebook friends will automatically know where you are and how to find you.

But before you run out and start using Moximity, know that the service is only available in Austin, Texas. The company has promised that more cities will be made available soon, but no timetable has been set. So, consider it an option in the future if you don't live in Austin. Even with limited availability, it's a neat idea.

moximity

Moximity isn't available to everyone just yet, but it's a neat idea.

(Credit: Screenshot by Don Reisinger/CNET)

Plazes Plazes reminds me of Twitter with a location-based element.

Once you sign up for the site, you'll be asked to input where you are (a city or specific location is fine). If the service can't find that location, you can add it to the database. From there, you'll add what time you'll be in that spot and what you're doing there. It can then be added to your public timeline for all your friends to see. If you'd like, you can also keep it private, so only specific people know where you are. Plazes limits what you can say, but still allows you to be descriptive about your location and what you're up to. It's a neat service. With more users, it could be even better.

plazes

Plazes is Twitter with your location built-in.

(Credit: Screenshot by Don Reisinger/CNET)

Rummble Rummble is designed to help you find places of interest around you while you're on-the-go. If you want to share some of that information with friends, the app also allows you to let them know where you are and share it.

Rummble works both online and on your mobile phone. Based on your location, it will help you find places around you. You can even set the app to warn friends when you'll be in their area. When you get close to them, they will receive an alert telling them of your presence. Since Rummble works both ways, you can also see where friends are who decide to share their location. It's available on a variety of phones via its mobile site, but you can also use the company's free iPhone app.

rummble

Rummble helps you find places in your area.

(Credit: Rummble)

Sniff Sniff is much different from more popular services, like Loopt. Instead of providing you with an app to interact with, Sniff asks that you send it a text message. From there, you can sign up for the service on its mobile Web site.

To get it to work, Sniff asks that you text "invite" plus your friend's number to ask for permission to see their location. If they accept by replying to the text, you can find your friend's locations by simply text messaging "sniff" plus the friend's name. Sniff will only work for Sprint users. Standard text-messaging rates apply, plus 25 cents paid to Sniff for each text message you send through the service. Sniff is also available as a Facebook app.

sniff

Sniff is also available for Facebook.

(Credit: Screenshot by Don Reisinger/CNET)

My top 3

1. Brightkite: Combining social networks with location, Brightkite is second to none.

2. Plazes: A great premise should be celebrated. Plazes is worth trying out.

3. Loopt: Its iPhone app is great--just like its service.

Tuesday, July 7, 2009

Find your favorite clips with these video search engines







If you're having trouble finding the right video online, video search engines are a great place to start your search. From professional content from major networks to user-generated clips, they will help you find just about anything you're looking for.

You won't find Google, Yahoo, or Bing in this roundup. The following list of services are designed specifically for those who want to find video. Since the aforementioned search engines will find anything on the Web, they don't fit into that category.

Find your videos

Blinkx: Blinkx is an extremely well-designed video search site that helps you find clips on topics ranging from tech to sports. According to the company, it currently has more than 35 million hours of videos cataloged. Judging by the outstanding selection, I'm inclined to believe that figure.

I liked Blinkx's search. Simply enter a keyword you're interested in and it will search sites like YouTube, Hulu, and major television networks to find what you're looking for. Unfortunately, the search results page is a little confusing. I also didn't like that the site automatically plays the top result when you get to the results page. It's an annoying feature that shouldn't be on by default. Other than those two issues, I liked Blinkx. It's one of the better video search engines on the Web.


Blinkx automatically starts the top video result.

(Credit: Screenshot by Don Reisinger/CNET)

CastTV: CastTV finds television shows and cool videos on the Web. I was impressed by its selection. From new to old, you're likely to find at least one clip of your favorite show.

Unlike many of the other services in this roundup, CastTV relies heavily on popular video sites like Vimeo, blip.tv, and MegaVideo. Because of that, you might find some clips on CastTV that you won't find on "professional" sites like Hulu. For example, a full episode of "24" is currently listed in the site's search results. If you click that link, you'll be brought to MegaVideo to view it. Also, beware that some videos you click on might ask you to install a toolbar. It doesn't pop up often, but CastTV does require you to download its toolbar for some videos. In those cases, don't do it and move along.


CastTV has a bunch of television shows available.

(Credit: Screenshot by Don Reisinger/CNET)

Pixsy: Pixsy is a video and image search engine. It sifts through the Web finding all the content related to your query.

Pixsy is designed well and for the most part, its search results are spot on. But even though it has content from a variety of service providers, I wasn't too impressed with the quantity of results. I was also displeased with the site's results pages. They had too much content in too small a space. Pixsy is worth checking out, but with a better design, it could be much better.


Pixsy has some jumbled search results.

(Credit: Screenshot by Don Reisinger/CNET)

Truveo: Truveo is a fantastic video search engine. Regardless of what you're looking for, the site looks through videos on sites ranging from YouTube to CBSNews.com. I was really impressed by its selection.

Searching through Truveo is a treat. Simply input a keyword into its search box and the site will take care of the rest. You can browse by channels, television networks, or topic. You can also filter your results by rating, release date, or views. The search was fast. The number of results it listed was impressive. If you're looking for video, Truveo is definitely worth checking out.


Truveo shows off some great results for Harry Potter.

(Credit: Screenshot by Don Reisinger/CNET)

Veoh: Veoh allows you to search for online videos, television shows, movies, and music. Regardless of what you're looking for, you can simply input a query into the site's search box and it will sort it out.

I was pleased with the number of results Veoh returned. The site provided better results than most of the sites in this roundup. In fact, a simple search for "The New York Yankees" returned the most relevant results of any of the sites I tested. Veoh will require you to sit through a commercial to watch a video, but it's a small price to pay given the sheer number of videos it has. I really liked Veoh. I think you will too.


Veoh delivers in a big way with a bunch of great videos.

(Credit: Screenshot by Don Reisinger/CNET)

My top three

1. Veoh: Veoh will help you find anything you desire.

2. Truveo: With such a great selection of clips, Truveo is worth checking out.

3. Blinkx: 35 million hours mean Blinkx is ideal for video lovers.

Popular Hybrid Mobile App development frameworks

Popular Hybrid Mobile App development frameworks Hybrid Development Technologies List of best Hybrid App Development Frameworks ...