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Posts Tagged ‘advice’

WorldMate Live adds Yelp search for BlackBerry

Thursday, September 24th, 2009

Travelers don’t always get to do their homework about restaurants and nightlife before they leave, and you don’t want to be stuck relying on the advice of someone who winds up sharing different tastes than you.

(Credit: WorldMate)

That’s the theory, anyway, behind WorldMate’s latest update to its travel app for BlackBerry. WorldMate 3.0 for BlackBerry now features a local dining and entertainment search option powered by Yelp.com. Utilizing the phone’s GPS, WorldMate, via Yelp, can suggest establishments nearby or near airports. Clicking to see more details takes you to Yelp’s mobile site; we wish it were better incorporated within the app experience. Right now the supported countries are also quite limited; it will work for cities within the U.S., Canada, and the U.K.

The updated version also equips WorldMate Live’s calendar sync service to keep time zones in mind when populating your schedule. The hotel booking engine acquires thumbnail images and special offers, and can manage train reservations from Amtrak, EuroStar, and TheTrainLine. Version 3 also switches to BlackBerry’s movable map instead of presenting a static map.

With this mostly minimal tweak, WorldMate Live continues to offer freemium services for domestic and international travelers, particularly frequent corporate professionals.

Originally posted at The Download Blog

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WorldMate Live adds Yelp search for BlackBerry

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WMC Interviews: Anne Holland

Monday, December 15th, 2008

Over the past three years, I’ve had the honor of interviewing many brilliant marketers, including Laura Ries, bestselling author, blogger and TV personality; Mike Schultz, president of the Wellesley Hiils Group; and Janine Popick, co-founder and CEO of hosted email marketing platform VerticalResponse.

But last week, I had the unique pleasure of corresponding with Anne Holland, founder of MarketingSherpa and legendary marketing guruess. Though Anne announced her retirement on November 10, she graciously agreed to share some of her collected wisdom and plans for what’s next. Here’s our discussion.

WebMarketCentral (WMC): Thanks so much for your time today, Anne. First off, why do think MarketingSherpa has been so successful, over a long and turbulent period, in a market where so many paid content providers have failed?

Anne Holland (AH): We were always obsessed with market research. We focused on a single primary market (marketing professionals in corporate America with $3 million + year department budgets) and researched what practical information those folks wanted day in and day out. Then we built it for them. In business, it’s all about solving a target market’s pain points. Sherpa’s in an incredibly competitive space, but I suspect we were one of perhaps only two publishers, targeting marketers, who did this kind of ongoing intensive research before developing products and before picking taxonomy for copywriting. We spent hours on the phone with customers and prospects every week in interviews; we conducted multiple surveys every year to different slices; we studied our site’s internal search stat data; etc.

A lot of what businesspeople want is actually good old fashioned reporting. It’s not easy. You’re not rewriting press releases or dashing off opinion columns. Instead we conducted new research projects continually to present the data to readers. We also went out and dug up people to interview for our Case Studies. Every one of our now 900+ Case Studies were exclusive, requiring about $2,000 of staff time just in research, interviews and crafting. Our research reports contained 200-400 charts and tables, compared to about 50 for many fancy research firms. We even spent hours with speakers before our Summits, helping them craft every aspect of their presentations; we didn’t just assume whatever they came up with would be ok. If you’re willing to roll up your sleeves and really slog through that kind of hard work, you’ll please your audience. Very few people really want to work that hard I think though.

WMC: What are the two or three most important pieces of advice you would give to marketers today?

AH: In this economy, frankly your first concern has to be marketing to your boss and your boss’s boss. Few marketers are really comfortable with and savvy enough to market themselves internally in the corporation—I think sales pros are far better at it than we marketers are! Create personas of every person who has power over whether you get the budget you want and the power to execute campaigns the way you want; then figure out them as prospects and market to them. Do you know how to impress the CFO, the CIO and the CEO? Great, then make that happen.

Then focus on your marketplace. Don’t take anyone’s word for who your marketplace is or what they’re all about. Find out for yourself. Meet them in person. Survey them. Review recent demographic studies. Often you’ll find two or more unique demographics have been conflated into one by mistake (such as “the financial services industry” which is many separate demographics who must be targeted separately in campaigns). Or your company’s targeting is fuzzy. Or the taxonomy of your taglines, key benefit propositions, and/or headlines doesn’t match the wording your prospects would use.

The biggest question I get asked is about particular types of campaigns. “Does podcasting work?” “Should I be advertising on Facebook?” “Should I zero out my print ad budget?” Etc. This makes me nuts because marketing success is NOT about the tactic or the media channel, it’s about what will appeal to the prospect. What media do they like or use? What types of tactics do they respond to? Every prospect segment is different. Learn your prospect and they will lead you to the tactics and media channels you should use.

That said, sometimes what works is unexpected to everyone involved, prospect included. So you have to dedicate at least 10% of your budget (I’d prefer 20%) to an ongoing regular series of tests. Test media buys first, then test everything else about tactical execution. Set a schedule for testing—weekly, monthly, quarterly—whatever makes sense. But be sure to put it on the calendar or it won’t happen.

WMC: Anything you’d like to say about the future—either yours or MarketingSherpa’s?

AH: It’s been a great, amazing run for me; first 16 years in business media and then nine years founding and building MarketingSherpa. Everything I’ve been able to accomplish has been due to incredible support from the marketing and media communities. I’ve had so many mentors and friends, I’ve lost count. Now it’s time for me to redefine myself, to figure out what to do with the rest of my life.

Marketing and publishing were very, very good to me. But, I have to look outside my comfort zone and try new things. I’ll probably wind up in some field related to gardening and plant nurseries, but who knows? I feel a lot like I’ve just graduated from college all over again with a new liberal arts degree and a blank slate for a career. It’s scary and very, very exciting. If you’d like to keep up (or you’re considering early retirement yourself) I’ll continue blogging at http://anne-holland.blogspot.com.

250,000 (or so) marketing professionals say…thanks Anne.

*****

Contact Tom Pick: tomATwebmarketcentralDOTcom

The rest is here:
WMC Interviews: Anne Holland

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SES Chicago Winds of Change

Monday, December 8th, 2008

SES Chicago

Today kicks off another Search Engine Strategies conference, this time in the windy and bleeping cold city of Chicago. 

Change has been in the air for SES with the naming of Stewart Quealy as VP of content development, responsible for creating conference program content for all SES events and training. Also, Marilyn Crafts (whom I like to call “Super Star”) was promoted to senior program director and will work with program development, speaker selection and event strategy.  

Mr Publisher. Matt McGowan

Then there’s the really big news of Matt McGowan being promoted to VP/Publisher for Incisive Media’s Digital Marketing Businesses which includes the ClickZ network, Search Engine Watch and the Search Engine Strategies conference.

What does this mean for SES?  I hope to find out this week when I attend and get a chance to talk to and congratulate Matt, Stewart and Marilyn in person. While we’re there, TopRank staff will be presenting on two sessions (PR SEO and Blog SEO).

If your at SES Chicago and using Twitter, be sure to use the hashtag #seschicago in your Tweets so everyone can follow the conversation.

Sponsored By: Take the SEMPO Search Marketing Survey State of the Search Engine Marketing Industry 2008

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You Do Not Know, What You Do Not Know

Friday, October 24th, 2008

According to LifeHacker:

A new report shows use of RSS feeds growing from two to 11 percent in the past three years. The key finding, though, is only 17 percent of the 89 percent who do not use RSS are interested in learning how, indicating a possible peak.

I disagree, how can you know whether you want to learn about or adopt RSS if you do not know what it is?

See the rest here:
You Do Not Know, What You Do Not Know

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Blogging Piracy

Thursday, October 23rd, 2008

A blogger accused of leaking songs from the long-delayed Guns N Roses album Chinese Democracy has pled not guilty to violating federal copyright laws.
Kevin Cogill appeared Monday morning in federal court in Los Angeles and entered the plea.
.
Federal authorities say Cogill posted nine unreleased Guns N Roses songs on his Web site in June. The album has been 10 years in the making.

If convicted, Cogill faces up to three years in prison or more if prosecutors prove he did it for financial gain.

Excerpted from:
Blogging Piracy

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