
Sung to the tune of “Let It Snow.”
Oh, your email campaign was frightful,
And your sales department’s spiteful,
Because the leads you give them blow,
S-E-O, S-E-O, S-E-O!
Marketing Automation Services, Demand Generation, and Lead Management | Allinio

Sung to the tune of “Let It Snow.”
Oh, your email campaign was frightful,
And your sales department’s spiteful,
Because the leads you give them blow,
S-E-O, S-E-O, S-E-O!
eMarketer fanfared the results of a MailChimp survey result this week. There are millions of users of “free” email through providers like Yahoo!, Google, and Microsoft with Yahoo! Mail, Gmail, and Hotmail, respectively. AOL is included in the report, although its services are not free; the email is part of the overall package. Of those users, however, which are the most “engaged” with their email?
Change is happening in the Federal government, and there is definitely positive change happening in the US Department of Commerce regarding the 2010 Census.

Marketers don’t think about it much, but it truly is an immense and impressive marketing research effort that has no peer. While it is obviously a governmental effort to determine things as varied as legislative representation and budget allocation, the primary research that will be available to marketers will be significant. With this data, Marketers will have the business intelligence to better understand the demographic changes which are transpiring in the United States. Important decisions impacting things like site locations, sales territory design, quotas, and product development will be made in the future based on the Census.
Two companies in the Washington, DC area are approaching a time honored business ritual – the exchange of business cards between two professionals – in slightly different ways.
DubMeNow of Vienna, Virginia has a smart phone based application that allows people to quickly text or email their contact data to another user with the application loaded on their smart phone. The data appends directly to device’s address book and whenever contact information changes, it is automatically updated. At the time of this blog, they are live for Google Android and the BlackBerry – next come Apple iPhone and Windows Mobile devices.
Mingle360 of Fairfax, Virginia has developed a USB based device they call the “MingleStick” which wirelessly communicates to another Minglestick when they are pointed toward each other and both users press a button. Along with a contact manager called “MingleManager,” a user can manage their identity by assigning “need to know” type privileges to contacts.
Both solutions intend to make obsolete the need to share, sort through, enter or amend printed data on those little analog rectangles. On one hand, the Marketing Consigliere still has a few boxes of business cards ordered from VistaPrint that he wants to hand out:


Look at them. They’re artistic (OK, they’re VistaPrint templates) and you can write extraneous notes on them, stick them in your pocket, and quickly type the data in in less than 30 seconds if you’re coordinated. Perhaps that’s a big if. While the Mingle360 may be useful at trade shows, there are a plethora of existing technologies that are being implemented, albeit at trade show rip-off prices.
Even if either of these products take off, once the novelty works off, where’s the impact known as “First Impression?“ A business card, with the right messaging (title, logo, tagline, etc.) , contributes to that along with the obvious human factors such as appearance, handshake, eye contact because it’s visual.
The Marketing Consigliere is old enough that he may “bitterly cling” to his business cards and conduct “old fashioned” social networking, but on the other hand, he does like gadgets. However, he doesn’t need another proprietary device if one gadget can already do the trick. And he’s not crazy about what amounts to be a proprietary CRM app. So he opts for the the DubMeNow capability. He just wishes they’d please release the Windows Mobile version. It’s been two weeks since their launch party when this photo was taken:

With Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) and a headsets or microphone, users will be able to place free calls to U.S. and Canadian phone numbers over their computers – the catch?- Pudding Media‘s voice recognition powered ad serving system will deliver ads during the conversation on their computer screen.
Similar analytics are already in use with textual data; Google’s Gmail delivers advertisements upon analyzing text in the Gmail user’s correspondence. While the voice recognition is not perfect, there will probably be improvements with time from the contextual perspective.
Currently, Pudding Media does not record conversations nor make a central list of the keywords extracted, but advertisers will probably be wanting a collected log of words used and analysis of the context in which they are spoken. Given the desire of advertisers for ROI on their investment and their power over content providers, this seems inevitable and privacy advocates probably will not be able to fight such a volunteer system.
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