The 20-Year Road to Net-Centric Marketing

The Marketing Consigliere would like to take the opportunity at the dawn of 2009 to go down memory lane.  While much fuss is heard about Silcon Valley, the real center of the Internet universe was and still is the Washington DC area.

About 20 years ago, the academic and Federal government curiousity called the “Internet” found its way into the commercial sector.  Among the Internet leadership in the Washington, DC area that began taking advantage of this promising technology were three notable companies.  And AOL is not one of them; AOL used a proprietary protocol well into the Internet era, not TCP/IP.  So before they vanish from even the footnotes of Internet history, let’s remember who they were.

3 Pioneering DC Area Based ISPs

DIGEX, UUNET, and PSINet all were formed within a few years of each other and were some of the leading Internet Service Providers of the 1990s.  With some of the smartest network engineers in the world, they raced to cover the nation and the globe with the routers and switches that would carry packets from your desktop to somewhere else in the blink of an eye.  It was these companies who hired scores of young people to work in call center and help level the playing field for SMBs who needed to grow.

Twenty years later, these three pioneers do not exist as the scrappy startups they once were. UUNET cashed out when swallowed by WorldCom, DIGEX was swallowed by Intermedia Communications and then by WorldCom.  PSINet, compared to the other two, was an arrogant and ineptly managed company – the company went bankrupt in 2001 and its assets were sold pennies on the dollar.

The Marketing Consigliere had the pleasure of working for DIGEX and the displeasure of working for PSINet.  But he definitely is wiser for being at both and looks forward to the next generation of progress towards the network centric marketing world.  So as you trudge forward into this brave new world, remember the companies that helped blaze the trails…

While Leads were Converting Last Week

Last week was very busy for most businesses due to the abbreviated work week, and a noteworthly announcement announcement seems to have been missed by many of the major marketing trade rags.

On December 22, Eloqua announced that their Conversion Suite has passed a Type I Statement of Auditing Standards (SAS) 70 audit.

Eloqua

When an auditor assesses the internal controls of a service organization, they use SAS 70 standards as criteria.  Audits are important to client companies that use outsourcing services which impact their control of processes and data.  The type of report issued, a Type I report, states the auditor’s opinion on the accuracy of Eloqua’s description of   controls that are operating within their applications and the fitness of control design to accomplish the stated control objectives.

Eloqua also mentioned that their applications are hosted at MCI (now part of Verizon), a SAS 70 Type II facility- A Type II is similar to a Type I report, but also includes the auditor’s opinion on whether the specific controls were operating effectively during the review period.  The Marketing Consigliere performed a traceroute to verify this and smiled when he saw his ping go all the way to Ashburn, Virginia, into a datacenter which was once part of UUNet before the telecom consolidation and dot-com implosion.

Congrats to Eloqua for making this step toward maturity and management of their brand; and thank you for providing B2B companies with a higher level of datawarehousing and security.

The Marketing Consigliere has always thought highly of Eloqua but has one question for CEO Joe Payne:  Who was the auditor?