Archive for the 'internet marketing' Category

Christian Affiliate Marketing

Friday, March 9th, 2007

You like the title of this post? Do I even care? Unless you complain to my advertisers, I will not budge.

Anyways, before we move along, just need to mention that I moved to Seattle. If you watch my YouTube channel, then you already know this from my last clip. If you don’t, then you suck. And there is no hope. That is until you accept upon yourself the oath of the faith of the belief of the religion that is my YouTube channel.

Can you tell I am watching TV as I write this drivel?

So, I was invited to participate on a podcast. The program will be on a frequency called Webmaster Radio. It’s not on your local FM tuner. To get the station, you need to smash your radio with a hammer. Then, take those shards and put them in a blender. Then, sip the liquefied radio mix. At that moment, you will catch the signal from Webmaster radio!

Kidding of course. Somewhat. Looking forward to the show. And meeting Wade.

Check out what was written about me. Me! Nice things. Things I didn’t even know about myself :-)

If you haven’t followed him on Revenews, he is one of my favorite reads in the online marketing space. He’s an interesting dude and a bit of a loose cannon - makes it all the more interesting. I’ll be curious what Shmuly brings to the table. He’s a bright guy and is always at least interesting or provocative in his posts and has a pretty cool sense of humor.

Love you Wade!

Ummm…I am in the NY Times

Monday, February 26th, 2007

Today, my mug graces the front page of NY Times business. Perhaps the day will get even better with the departure of my head congestion!

The article: New Hot Properties: YouTube Celebrities 

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When YouTube Met RSS

Tuesday, February 13th, 2007

As a sequel to “When Harry Met Sally”, “When YouTube Met RSS” is an equally entertaining piece of work.

Here are various media blurbs about this latest installment of this genre:

USA Today: Thrilling!

NY Post: Thriller!

NY Times: Thrillitating!

Time Magazine: Thrills!?

The Michael Dell Email

Monday, February 12th, 2007

The following is the entire email that Michael Dell sent out, after he assumed the CEO position.

Friday, February 02, 2007

From: Corporate Communications

Sent: Fri 2/2/2007 14:57

Subject: Leadership Message from our Chairman and CEO

To: Dell Team Members Worldwide

From: Michael

We held a meeting this morning with our Vice Presidents and Directors. I’d like to share the highlights of this meeting with all of you.

I told our team that I remember the great times and many successes with Kevin Rollins, but now it’s time for a change. We are not doing a COO or CEO search. I plan to be CEO for the next several years.

I remember what it’s like to start a company. We’re moving fast. There is no luxury of time. The competitors are fierce. The difference is this time we have many new assets and some hidden ones that can be brought out.

We have great people . . . but we also have a new enemy: bureaucracy, which costs us money and slows us down. We created it, we subjected our people to it and we have to fix it!

The #1 Tell Dell issue is bureaucracy and getting cooperation from other organizations.

I am asking each of you to look across your organizations and eliminate redundancies, think about what is best for Dell, and provide the clarity and focus of leadership that we need.

Last year, we worked really hard and there were many sacrifices. Thanks!

We had great efforts, but not great results. This is disappointing and it is unacceptable.

The result is that there will be no bonus this year. I know this is a big deal for you and your teams. We’re going to fix that so that our efforts translate into great results and success for our teams.

But we still have great people who made great efforts. It’s important to recognize your hard work, though our results fell short. Limited discretionary awards will be available to all but the most senior people. We can’t cover everyone, but it will be a tool you can use.

And we are also budgeting for above-market raises this year.

For stock awards, we will shorten the vesting period from five to three years for future grants and move to restricted stock units.

And we’re going to set the annual bonus plan against realistic targets.

We have a tough couple of quarters ahead. We didn’t get here overnight and we won’t fix things overnight either.

OPEX (operating expense) grew too fast. We need to grow into what we have, hold cost and eliminate marginal activities. If you have some, please stop them now and if you’re not sure, bring them forward. We must focus and wring out savings.

Long-term, we will be the technology leader known for strong operating performance, a great experience for our customers and a great place to work!

We will have clear priorities and a focused strategy.

We will grow Small and Medium Business (both with business and public customers) and expand Services.

We will continue to build the enterprise Server/Storage business. In Services, we will build, partner and buy.

Product Group will shorten design cycles, increase speed and innovation/design that create real differentiated value for our customers. We will transition to a light touch ODM (original design manufacturer) model.

We’re going to introduce new brands and products with a focus on Consumer and Small Business. We will ensure quality, stability and predictability for our larger customers.

We will complete our dual processor supplier strategy.

We’ll restore loyalty and continue CE improvement focusing on the activities with the best ROI. We will bring excitement and pride back to our brand.

In emerging markets, we’ll take new approaches and introduce new products.

In Consumer, I believe the dramatic de-scaling is a mistake. We will focus on return on invested capital (ROIC), cash flow and variable costs. We will have a new product cycle, we’ll fix CE and we will not run away from a cost fight!

When I started in 1984, it was just me. But now we are blessed to have an awesome team, many great assets and $11 billion or so. It won’t be easy, we’ll have to make some tough decisions and we won’t be shy about those. Our focus will be on building Dell into the company we all know it can be for our customers, our people and our shareholders.

To summarize, we will differentiate with CE (customer experience); deliver value, but go beyond this with our unique understanding of customers; move to Solutions and Services; use database marketing and targeting for smaller customers; leverage our unique supply chain; regain our cost position; and build some new sources of sustainable profit including using intellectual property to differentiate.

It’s all part of Dell 2.0.

We will unify our leadership structure, from well more than 20 direct reports to 12. I’ll be decisive, but also push many decisions to our leaders. We will speed decision-making and make decisions closer to our customers and have clear responsibility and accountability.

I have asked Paul Bell to return to Austin and lead the new Americasorganization, which will include Small and Medium Business, Public, Commercial and Americas International. We expect to name the replacement for Paul to lead EMEA from a choice of internal candidates in the next few weeks.

Asia Pacific/Japan will continue to be led by Steve Felice.

We are creating a new organization called Global Operations, which has responsibility for all manufacturing and procurement worldwide. We’re conducting a search for this position and hope to complete it soon.

Global Services will be led by Steve Schuckenbrock.

There will be a Consumer group which will also include online, S&P and Brand. We’re conducting a search for this position and we also believe we have a great internal candidate.

Our three Product Groups will remain largely unchanged. The Consumer Product group will be led by Alex Gruzen; the Business Client Group by Jeff Clarke; and the Enterprise, Server & Storage Group by Brad Anderson.

I have asked Don Carty to take on several responsibilities in addition to Finance, including IT, HR, CE and Support and IR and Communications.

Our Legal group will be led by Larry Tu and our Strategy team will be led by Tim Mattox.

We will be bold in our thinking and swift in our action.

I ask you to commit with me to the future of Dell. Show confidence with your teams and our customers. We will fix this business and take it to new heights!

All the Best,

Michael

Nicole Miller Gets Intimate with BareNecessites.com

Thursday, February 8th, 2007

Nicole Miller is a fashion icon. Fact. Don’t even bother trying to dispute that!

The news is out that Nicole Miller has created a lingerie line. The collection will be sold exclusively @ www.barenecessites.com.

This is a link to the Woman’s Wear Daily article: Nicole Miller Forges Deal With Barenecessities.com
Link to the Nicole Miller Lingerie Collection on BareNecessites.com.

Trust me. This is a trend; an established offline brand partnering with a successful ecommerce company.

Everyone wins; BN is aligned with a solid brand. NM gets immediate online access.

A New Blog is Born

Thursday, February 8th, 2007

That is right. You read correctly. Your eyes are working fine, however, I’d still recommend you continue snacking on baby carrots.

So, many of you, the millions of you out there who read this blog, are aware, of the fact, that I misuse grammar.

You also know that I to a lot of YouTube stuffs.

Anyways, I created a new blog that is solely dedicated to my YouTube clips. The site is shmuly.wordpress.com.

There’s an RSS option of course.

The Original Endless.com?

Tuesday, January 16th, 2007

We have spoken. In the past. About the new shoe and bag site from Amazon, endless.com.

Just from poking around the blogs, it appears that people are somewhat confused about this move by Amazon.com.

Well, newsflash. Anyone who doesn’t get this is not very well versed with ecommerce. However, those enmeshed are aware that shoes and luxury goods (handbags) are like the best stuff to sell online.

These categories continue to grow in online sales. And the margins are good, in contrast…to loose diamonds and engagement rings.

Last night, whilst snooping for endless.com insight, I stumbled across another endless.com.

The domain is actually miss-endless.com. And the site just happens to be an adult fetish site.

I wonder if they are experiencing an unexpected increase of traffic. LOL.

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Filling the Gap

Friday, January 12th, 2007

Out of the goodness of my lungs, I created a new product for the Gap.

It’s tres cool. At least IMO. Did you know that IMO stands for “in my opinion”.

Taking this abbreviation to further lengths, my friend uses the term IMHO as in “in my honest opinion”. Wild! It is a super time saver, especially if use the expression quite often.

The new product can be viewed on this clip.

P.S. You can also check it out at www.thegapvomitbag.com!

Amazon Employees Read (blogs)

Friday, January 12th, 2007

In case you needed more proof that Amazon is on a mission to divide and conquer the spoils of ecommerce; I have some for you.

Keep in mind that Amazon is not new to the scene. They predate pretty much everyone on the web. Which means they’ve got more know-how and experience than Walmart and myself put together….JK.

Anyways, yesterday, after a long dry-spell of blog-relief, I wrote about the new shoe and handbag site from Amazon.com. The site is called endless.com.

Guess what? Nope. I am not pregnant. Close though. 29 Amazon employees read my blog post. The very same day I published it.

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What’s the big deal? Well, I have a tiny blog. Sort of like a mini-me blog. Yet Amazon still managed to FIND my post and share it with the fellow suits. Compare this to Gap where most employees there are of the belief that a blog is a mild medical condition.

FYI, for the Amazon peeps reading this; I have a cool idea for a viral video clip about endless.com. Want to assist me with this?

An Idea For the TV Networks

Thursday, January 11th, 2007

This morning. Me. Breakfast table. In my hands is a newspaper so fresh that the ink is dripping into my protein shake.

The paper no doubt is the WSJ. From the start of 2007, the paper is much slimmer, which makes me suspect that Dow Jones hired Rachel Zoe as creative director.

The section? That would be the Personal Journal. Usually, not much for me in this area. Many articles on retiring, investing and other things I can only wish for.

The article was on the front page of the section. It discussed the TV programming available on the web. For whatever reason, the article chose to focus specifically on the TV networks. CBS, NBC, FOX and ABC.

Anyways, the thing is, that the piece mentions that some of these sites update shows on an ad hoc basis. Basically, there lacks a consistency of web programming. Especially when compared to the old fashioned television, which has a TV Guide magazine, programming channels and that annoying friend of your who calls you every time 24 is on the tellie.

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My hero!

So, I am here to offer a solution that will enhance the online TV viewing experience of web browsers. Here’s what the networks need to do:

1) Set up a simple email notification process; whereby if I visit CBS to watch episodes of CSI, I can enter my email address and receive an email notice whenever CBS uploads a new episode. Simple, eh?

Keep in mind that this is also a kickass opportunity for the interactive ad departments to build an email databases…and sell newsletter ads on a CPM basis.

2) Another option is to offer an RSS feed. Again, it would mean setting up an RSS feed that would update each time a new show is unleashed. Duh.

Wake up fellows! It’s 2007. Do you really want Apple Inc. to consume you for breakfast!

Get on this ASAP.

xoxo,
Shmuly