|

Partners
Tell A Friend about us
Contrary To Popular Belief There Is An Alternative To E Mail
Get Rid Of Spam
Spam Filters
Free Spam Blockers Vs Paid Ones
Are You Sure You Are Out Of Malware
Phishing Scams Why They Work And How To Protect Yourself
The Problem Of Demoting Spam On The Internet Yahoos Trustrank Approach
Methods To Fight Spam
Is Your Junk Mail Folder Turning Into Your Inbox
A World Wide Web Of Spam

submit your articles HERE


Anti-Spam Software Articles
Anti-Spam Software Links

Social bookmarking
You like it? Share it!
socialize it

Download Free Spam Blocker

Freeware Spam  


 

AntiSpam Guide

 

Further Proof That Blogs Rule The World

from: Matt DeAngelis

Thumbnail example
No one I've ever met is neutral on Wal*Mart. Let me begin by saying that Sam Walton is one of my heroes. He was a humble genius who as a multigazillionaire still rode to work every day in his pickup truck and frequently took his dog with him.

I don't go to Wal*Mart. I like to buy American where I can and in Wal*Mart I can't. I'd rather go see my friend Dan Sorrentino at Newtown Hardware for my sundries than some guy I don't know that I have to walk the length of a football field to find. But I know a lot of people who visit Wal*Mart on a regular basis. FYI, Wal*Mart has an affiliate program through LinkShare that is okay. Wal*Mart also has a blog, called Wal*Mart Facts.

Since it is the largest retail outfit in the world, Wal*Mart has a pretty big target painted on its back. It's always taking a beating for its employment practices or lack of this or corporate that. Being a PR person for Wal*Mart must be pretty tough. According to the Strategic Public Relations Blog, Wal*Mart is trying to soften its public face. To this end it has hired the venerable public relations firm Edelman in Chicago.

According to the Modern Marketing blog, Edelman and Wal*Mart set up a program they call Action Alley. Action Alley was set up to practice what Modern Marketing calls Outside In marketing:

Traditional marketing has been built around the idea of creating a central set of messages and sending them out into the marketplace.

This can be thought of as an 'Inside-Out' approach, where the communications infrastructure required to manage brands and image (cameras, editing suites, media, design & creative personnel) is held inside large organisations and used to distribute information out.

However, as savvy consumers filter out unwanted advertising information using PVRs, adblockers, SPAM filters, RSS feeds, subscriptions and customer communities, the Inside-Out approach is becoming less and less effective.

Not surprisingly, some companies are looking around for new ideas. Open Source Marketing is one idea that people are turning to as they realise that the values behind the Open Source Movement can be applied to industries beyond technology.

The Open Source approach can be described as 'Outside-In'. It recognises that in a distributed environment a lot of information and content about a company or brand is being produced outside of the organisation by consumers and other stakeholders. And that companies need systems that allow them to react to this information.

It also recognises that frequently this information is more influential than the spiel produced by a company or brand. For example, someone looking to book a hotel will probably place greater value on a customer community such as virtualtourist.com than a hotel website.

Having lived a lot of my life around marketing weenies, I can tell you that outside-in marketing scares the living hell out of marketing people, because it means they've lost control of their brand and their message, and they're not just pulling levers and watching what happens.

Getting back to Wal*Mart, the marketing weenies there perceived that what was being said in the Blogosphere was nibbling away at their brand. They're probably right. The job of Action Alley is apparently to help -ahem- steer those out in the Blogosphere toward writing more positively about Wal*Mart.

According to the Motley Fool a guy named Brian Pickrell wrote a blog article suggesting that the State of Maryland telling Wal*Mart how much employee health insurance they have to provide might be a bad idea. Without reading the article I would probably agree with him. According to the Fool, his article sounded a lot like a press release created by Edelman.

So the rigamarole seems to be about Wal*Mart's conspiracy in feeding news stories to influential bloggers to try to influence what they write. Of course they do. So does everyone else, and to say otherwise is either naive or stupid. That is what public relations are all about.

While I was laughing at this whole thing something very, very cool struck me -- all the hubbub is because a company that earns $30 million a day is trying to influence a bunch of bloggers, rightfully believing that they have a lot of influence on the brand, and wrongly believing that they have any influence over them.

We bloggers aren't stupid, you know. We may use your marketing tripe propoganda, but the marketing weenies have to understand that the only reason we use it is because we agree with it. And while the purists can squawk, I don't see any problem with that.

So all of us nobodys as a group can turn a ship the size of Wal*Mart.

Blogs Rule.

About the author:
Matt DeAngelis runs AffiliateBlog.com. Matt is the former CTO of Modem Media, a pioneer in the Internet ad space. As a foot soldier in the Internet revolution, Matt devised the technology behind many of the most successful ad campaigns of the time.



For permanent link to this article click here.



Related story:

The 5 biggest SEO Myths Debunked

from: Burke Ferguson

Search Engine Optimization or SEO, has a bit of a reputation for having a lot of hype or scams associated with it.

Why?

Well, particularly because people want the results of what the service does, which is rank your website very high and in prominent ranks within the search engines.

The following are the most common scams within the SEO industry, the amounts within the titles can be any amount, so I have inserted an "X" to signify the numbers.

Ok,...

SEO Myth #1 -- "If You Build It, They Will Come..."

Did you see the movie "Field of Dreams"? Well, this is very much like it.

You develop a site or pay someone to develop one for you. And after its all finished, you tell all your friends to go ...

To read the rest of this story click here.



 

Freeware Spam News

No relevant info was found on this topic.