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Thursday, September 30, 2010

Are we seeing the downfall of “for-profits”?

very interesting article, from the Fort Lauderdale Sun Sentinel

source (sunsentinel.com)

By Scott Travis, Sun Sentinel

8:50 p.m. EDT, September 30, 2010

More than half of students who attend for-profit colleges leave with a large amount of student loan debt, but no degree, a new report suggests.

Data from 16 for-profit schools shows that 57 percent of students who enrolled between July 2008 and June 2009 left without a degree. These students, mostly low-income, would stay a median of about 20 weeks and amass as much as $11,000 in student debt, according to the report from the U.S. Senate's Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee. Students who drop out are 10 times more likely to default on student loans than those who graduate, the report states.

The report is part of a wide-ranging federal investigation of the for-profit industry, which serves about 141,000 students in South Florida and 3.25 million nationwide.

On Thursday, an employee of Education Management Corporation, which operates such schools as the Art Institute of Fort Lauderdale and South University in West Palm Beach, testified before a congressional committee in Washington that employees inflated salary figures of its graduates and used other questionable methods on job placement reports.


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For example, the school asked graphic design students working in coffee shops to agree they were using skills they learned to make signs for daily specials and menus, said Kathleen Bittel, who is on leave from the Art Institute of Pittsburgh. A residential planning graduate working in a convenience store agreed to say she was using her skills "by arranging the displays of candy bars," Bittel said in a letter to the committee.

"This was rife with abuse," Bittel told committee members. "Employees were expected to convince graduates that skills they used as waiters, payroll clerks, retail sales and gas station attendants were actually related to their course of study."

Todd Nelson, CEO of Education Management, disputed Bittel's allegations, saying she refused to provide specific information that would help an investigation. The company's internal investigation found no evidence of wrongdoing, he said.

For-profit colleges received $4 billion in federal Pell Grants and $20 billion in federal loans in 2009. While the for-profit sector accounts for 12 percent of students in higher education, its students make up 43 percent of student loan defaults, federal data show.

"The farther we take this investigation, the clearer it becomes that many for-profit colleges view students as no more than cogs in the profit-making machine, with little concern for their education or success," said Sen. Tom Harkin said, D-Iowa, chairman of the committee.

The federal government is considering a variety of new regulations for the sector, including ones that could strip for-profit schools of federal dollars if too many students default on their loans or fail to find "gainful employment."

The for-profit industry has been growing fast in Florida, with dozens of new campuses opening every year. Enrollment in the state has skyrocketed from about 135,000 in 2006 to about 300,000 in 2009.

But for-profit schools and their allies say their future could be in jeopardy.

"The potential federal legislation is designed to potentially limit or even eliminate career colleges," said Arthur Keiser, chancellor of the Fort Lauderdale-based Keiser University.

Keiser said that for-profit colleges in Florida produce 65 percent of all the allied health care workers, including those in nursing, physical therapy and radiology.

"Career colleges play a critical role in the communities they serve," he said.

Some Republican members of the Senate committee said they believe the investigation is unfairly singling out the for-profit sector.

"Students are taking on too much debt, loan defaults are too high, and it is too difficult to find jobs or even complete a program of study," said U.S. Sen. Mike Enzi, R-Wyo. "It is naïve to think that these problems are limited to just the for-profit sector."

The Second I-Pad?

Things have been crazy, my sincere apologies for not posting… look for some fresh content this week…

marketmpb

Sunday, September 26, 2010

Enrollment Up At Ohio Universities

A great article (courtesy of the AP) regarding enrollment at Ohio Universities..  enjoy, marketmpb

 

Ohio universities say enrollments are up this fall

 

  • By: Associated Press By: Associated Press

CINCINNATI - Several Ohio universities are reporting increased and even record enrollments at a time when people are struggling to find jobs.
The University of Cincinnati projects a total enrollment of more than 41,000 students -- the highest in its 191 years -- up 4 percent from last year and about 1,500 higher than the previous record from 1980.

Kent State University reported that its more than 41,000-student enrollment is the highest in its 100 years after a record of more than 38,000 students last year. Cleveland State University's first-day fall enrollment reached an 18-year high of more than 17,000. Wright State University reported a record enrollment for the second consecutive year with nearly 20,000, and the private University of Dayton projects its largest undergraduate enrollment since the Vietnam War era with more than 7,800 students.

Higher education officials say the surge in students is due in part to more online offerings, improved programs and a focus on recruitment. They also acknowledge that the tight job market has contributed to enrollment, as more people head to school to make themselves more marketable.

That's a driving force behind enrollments up in graduate programs. Students with bachelor's degrees are heading straight into graduate programs because they can't find work, said Robert Sevier, senior vice president for strategy with Stamats, a higher education research and marketing company based in a Cedar Rapids, Iowa.

"When the economy turns around, graduate enrollment will go down," Sevier predicts.

Ryan Rosensweig is working on a master's degree in design at the University of Cincinnati -- after he graduated with a bachelor's in business administration there in 2009.

"I left undergraduate school feeling confident that I was highly qualified to get a good job, especially with the leadership and co-op opportunities I had at UC, but I wasn't getting strong job offerings," Rosensweig said.

So, now he's hoping to explore new opportunities that combine business and design, and ultimately make him more marketable.

"As the economy falters and unemployment goes up or jobs are hard to find, people look for higher education and we see them returning to school or looking for colleges, but I don't think that's the only thing," said Jacqueline McMillan, Wright State's vice president for enrollment management.

She said Wright State has focused on populations that Ohio's higher education plan says will help the state reach its goal of 230,000 more enrollments by 2017. Those groups of potential students include military veterans and adult and transfer students.

Ohio's strategic plan focuses on education as the key to make the state and its students competitive, says Ohio Board of Regents spokesman Rob Evans. The board is seeing major increases at many campuses although all schools haven't reported back yet, he said.

"The economy has encouraged a lot of folks to go to school, and support from the institutions and from the state has made it possible for them to get in the door," Evans said.

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

F-Commerce

The jury is still out on whether social media can drive sales, but one thing is becoming very clear, sales are happening on social media sites (e-commerce), especially on Facebook (f-commerce). Let us examine the importance of  Social Integration and F-Commerce, along with the importance of Facebook friends sharing items with their friends and asking friends, before they buy something.

Facebook, now being a place where goods are sold will actually help their primary revenue strategy (advertising), as ads on their site will be closer to a potential purchase- with the focus on not just being a marketing tool, but a sales tool as well.

Facebook has given free reign to leading developers such as to develop commerce apps.  This allows the full social interaction and user contributions to assist in the online buying of products and services. But why is F-Commerce so important?  There are a lot of folks out there who desire a more comfortable, easy shopping experience and in a way wanted to avoid the overcrowded shopping mall.  Online F-Commerce offers a friendly and attractive environment along with polite answers to the customer’s questions.  More specifically, F-Commerce just got a big boost when the announcement was made that Facebook was partnering with PayPal, the world’s leading online payment option.  Also, the sheer scale and weight that 500 million users can leverage is very exciting.  We expect F-Commerce to continue to flourish.

Lets take a look at some great specific examples of F-Commerce.  This first one is

Joseph A Bank Clothiers

This first one is Joseph A Bank Clothiers, a leading provider of menswear for over 105 years.  As you look at the page, it integrates the social aspects (wall/discussion board) with the store.  This creates the full social integration with F-commerce.  People are always more apt to ask their “friends” for a recommendation on a product, versus a salesperson they have never met.

Blombos Cave

The next example of F-Commerce is Blombos Cave, a provider of hand-made jewelry.  This page again integrates the social ability (wall/discussion board) with their store.  Another great thing about this page is that next to the title, it says “find something beautiful, and tell us about it”.  That is a huge key to F-Commerce, get the individual engaged and empowered.

One trend that I have noticed is the popularity of sharing items with your friends and asking your friends before buying anything online.  As a marketer, you place significant value on positive word of mouth.  However this is different and better because “in friends we trust”.   Social actions and recommendations often happen on Facebook, but not advertisers prompting or bribing.  User-generated discussion on walls offers the depth and detail that are traditionally not found in brochures or other media advertisements.  More importantly, it is perceived by the consumer as non-biased because advertisers did not create it.  It is clear to me that shopping is an inherently social experience made better with friends.

The power of the personal referral is clearly the future of F-Commerce.  In “real life”, how do you get a idea for a good restaurant, a good mechanic, or generally what to buy?  You ask your friends,  now with F-Commerce you can ask your 500 friends where is the best place to get a deal on a designer suit or handmade jewelry.  This is done through Facebook users sharing items with their friends and making product recommendations.

Unlike the real world, the advantage of the Internet is that everything can be found and organized quickly in a structured way unavailable in the offline world. But now that our offline relationships have been enriched and expanded online (primarily because of Facebook), the two worlds now have an opportunity to merge. The merging of these two worlds means that we can use our offline relationships to effortlessly get recommendations from our friends, in a seamless and structured way.

That’s the future of social commerce, and it will be here before we know it.

Social Media in E-Commerce

he Importance of Social Media in E-Commerce

We have all seen the explosion of corporations creating online communities, but let us take a look at how easy it can be to connect with your e-commerce customers and how important social media is to your customers.

First, we have to ask the question, how do you take the seemingly limitless social media conversations and turn them into actionable insights?  Also, how can you understand what is being said and the context of those conversations?

Social media in any context offers incredibly good (and free) feedback on a variety of goods and services.  Online Retailers need to use this information to their advantage.  Using it to your advantage means using both the good and bad comments.  Here are some practical tips we can take a look at.  Most importantly, keep the conversation going and make sure your social media content is relevant and current.  Do remember that the end goal is product sales and customer connections.  Also, rekindle the passion for your brand consistently using social media methods.  For example, if you a leading e-commerce website (www.voiyk.com) and you are involved in a social media forum, why not hold weekly or bi-weekly chat sessions about the experiences with ordering product via www.voiyk.com?  You will get invaluable responses from doing something like this.

It is also very important to constantly think about the audience you are trying to go after, consider your age demographics, race, and gender as well.  Who are the most likely people to purchase your products and who do you want to expand to?  These are key points to remember when considering your marketplace.

It is really no surprise that online e-commerce businesses were one of the first groups to use social media to make their brand more social.  They enabled customers to find out what their peers were thinking and provided valuable insight that could be viewed in “real time”.

Building a truly interactive social media community within an e-commerce platform is important as it creates a more efficient retail environment where customer opinions, relevant content and product information are freely distributed. It is only then that “social commerce” can happen.

To accomplish this, retailers must be able to integrate social media elements, such as social networking features and user generated platforms directly into their commerce environments.
As a result of this, online retailers can create and own a unique social experience that would encompass the entire customer lifecycle.  Customers can than enjoy a more integrated shopping experience and retailers will see an increase in unique visitors to their online store that are “predisposed” to their marketing messages.  This will streamline marketing efforts and lead to increased profits and decreased costs.
Social media allows empowering customers by enabling them to establish user profiles that pull in data and relationships to online stores.  At this point customers can interact and provide you (the online retailer) invaluable customer feedback, and bring in potential new customers.

By building and maintaining vibrant communities that address the passion of the retailer’s core audience, and then spreading that passion to the larger social web, retailers will attract loyal and engaged customers, and will achieve better business results.

Social media is absolutely crucial to an online retailer’s success today.  Social media allows you to engage a customer, get new business, and most importantly elicit invaluable customer feedback that will turn into increased sales.

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Marketing Goods and Services With Facebook

by Matt Blum

In running an online business, you have a lot to think about.  It is absolutely essential that you market your products and services, and the best way to do that?  The key is social networking type services, specifically Facebook.  Let us take a look at how we can market goods and services with Facebook effectively.

Facebook’s popularity is such that in January 2010, the United States traffic was 134 million unique users-bypassing the numbers of Yahoo’s results.

A study released in February 2010 found Facebook fan pages can be very effective in increasing sales,  word-of-mouth marketing, and customer loyalty.

How should specifically market your products and services on Facebook?  Well besides basic business contact details, it is important to put the normal “about” type promotional blurbs and some photos, but the real power of the marketing is in the status updates.

It is important to regularly post product promotion and “Facebook only” specials, but you need to be careful to use a “sell, sell, sell” approach all the time, as that will drive people away from your Facebook store.

Another thing to remember is as you go about your day to day business, keep a watch out for news stories that is related to your niche, it is sure to be of interest to your “fans”-these items make for good content as will some internal news items.

Summaries and links are a great way to drive traffic to these pages and generate conversation,  it is about creating value for your “fans” and potential customers.  Make your updates valuable enough for them to appear in their news feed.

Now that you have the page/store live, its time to get the word out!  It is always good to set something like this up right before a large print or email newsletter is to go out.  In this letter, come up with a great promotion to launch your page and include the link in the newsletter to go out.

Here is a good example:  Exciting News- We Have Launched our New Facebook Page!  We plan on updating it regularly with news from our company and the industry, also look for our “Facebook only” offers.

A great example of a store that markets well is Prosperity for Kids ( http://www.facebook.com/pages/Prosperity4Kids-Inc/144249442254079?v=app_112965568718470&ref=ts).  Prosperity4Kids offers award winning products, information, and resources which make learning money fun for kids and easy for parents. The companies goal is to create a generation who can build true wealth and financial security.

If we example the store more closely, lets focus on the wall.  If you look at the postings, there are far more suggestions on how to talk with your kids about money than selling products, in fact selling products takes a back seat to providing value.  As a parent myself, I find tremendous value in the the discussions.  I would want to engage this company more, and eventually purchase product.  If you provide value first, you can sell later.

Another great example of a store that markets well is http://www.facebook.com/SaludCookware?v=app_112965568718470&ref=ts#!/SaludCookware?v=photos&ref=ts.  Salud Cookware is a leading manufacturer of cast-iron cookware.  On this link, lets take a look at the photo page, the company placed photos out there of product but they also posted photos that were submitted by fans.  This is very important because it shows fans of the product in use and this shows potential consumers and new fans that these products work well, and comes across as very unbiased.

In order to market your goods and services effectively, create a dynamic Facebook page/store, get the word out,  and provide valuable content  that fans and potential customers see as important enough to add to their newsfeed.

Sunday, September 19, 2010

Bizarre Sports Story

I say, let the guy keep the helmet!

in the Sunday night game… enjoy

marketmpb

(source: yahoo.com)

Brandon Jacobs throws helmet into the stands in Indianapolis

By Chris Chase

New York Giants running back Brandon Jacobs(notes) threw his helmet 10 rows deep into the stands at Lucas Oil Field on Sunday night during his team's blowout loss to the Indianapolis Colts. The errant helmet didn't injure any fans, but did cause a commotion in the stands when the fans who retrieved it refused to hand it back to Colts officials. According to NBC's Cris Collinsworth, someone associated with the Colts eventually got it back by ripping the piece of equipment out of their hands.

NBC's Andrea Kremer reported that Giants officials said Jacobs had thrown the helmet in rage after getting pulled from the game but intended to hit the bench with it. It slipped out of his hand and landed almost 10 rows up into the stands.

Yelling ensued after the throw, first by angry and frightened Colts fans toward Jacobs, then by Jacobs toward them and finally from Tom Coughlin directed toward his running back. The Giants coach loudly chastised his player on the sideline and didn't put him back in the game following the incident. Jacobs, who lost his starting job to Ahmad Bradshaw(notes) this year, had four carries for nine yards in the game.

Kremer later said the NFL will investigate, but that Jacobs' actions already are considered to be an accident. 

Accident or not, Jacobs put dozens of fans into harm's way by carelessly flinging his helmet and is fortunate nobody got hurt. That lucky break notwithstanding, he needs to be dealt with harshly by the league, likely in the form of a suspension. The NFL can't afford for fans paying hundreds of dollars for prime seats to feel that they're in danger. (Perhaps that's also why the league has been so quick to term this an accident. They don't need the media firestorm that surely would ensue if Jacobs did this on purpose.) 

No video has surfaced yet of the throw or of the helmet being retrieved, but NBC's online Sunday Night Football Extra had a live feed of the altercation in the stands. Unfortunately, the camera panned away the instant a policeman became involved:

Presumably there's a video of the incident's resolution somewhere and, if it surfaces, Brandon Jacobs better pray his story proves true. If not, he might not have a helmet to throw around for a very long time

Tough Sunday

As most of my readers know, I am a huge Notre Dame football fan, and a very tough loss to Michigan State last night has made for a tough Sunday.

I am grieving today :)

marketmpb

Saturday, September 18, 2010

Edgier Higher Ed Marketing

a great article, courtesy of the Associated Press….

source: Associated Press

Drake University hoped a bold, blue "D+" on a direct-mail piece and its admissions website would grab the attention of high school kids inundated with same-old, same-old college recruitment material.

What looked like a pretty bad grade was supposed to entice teenagers to take a closer look at the pluses of attending the school in Des Moines, Iowa.

Drake officials didn't anticipate their daring idea getting ridiculed on advertising blogs, angering alumni who complained on Facebook that their degrees had been devalued, or inspiring a local store to market "D+ student" T-shirts to amused Drake students and underachievers alike.

Consider it a cautionary tale for colleges embarking on marketing and branding campaigns designed to set themselves apart in the cutthroat competition to gain prestige and grab their share of a shrinking student pool.

Fifteen years ago, the term "branding" was virtually unheard of in higher education. The idea of selling college like a luxury vehicle or an expensive cup of coffee was viewed as antithetical to the academic mission.

Although pockets of resistance remain, it'd be difficult these days to find a four-year school that hasn't gone through the institutional soul-searching and subsequent marketing blitz that typically goes with being a "Brand U."

The new challenge may be this, as Drake has learned: When everyone is trying to stand out, colleges can no longer expect to meet enrollment targets by playing it safe. And pushing the marketing envelope carries risks and rewards.

"Historically, folks really have taken a fairly conservative approach," said Robert Moore, president and CEO of Chicago- and Washington-based marketing firm Lipman Hearne and author of a book on higher education branding. "We are seeing a bit more out-of-the-box stuff, and I think the jury is still out."

Drake officials asked for edgy and out-of-the-box when they hired Cedar Rapids, Iowa-based Stamats Communications, which specializes in higher education marketing, to help craft a new marketing campaign to high school students.

The D+ was intended to introduce a more conventional campaign touting "The Drake Advantage." As Drake officials saw it, their recruits are smart enough to recognize Drake's reputation is better than a D+ grade.

"The idea was to catch prospective students' attention with a symbol that was mildly ironic, that would create a little bit of cognitive dissonance, and inspire them to go further with it," said Fritz McDonald, vice president of creative strategy at Stamats.

In July, the material was mailed to tens of thousands of high school students, officials said. The D+ went up on the admissions website, as well. The school said it had reason to be optimistic: Surveys of more than 900 high school students found the campaign both captured their attention and got across the concept that Drake would give them a leg up.

Also, campus visits in July and August surpassed 720, a 23 percent increase from the previous year, officials said. The school reported 4,856 inquiries from prospective students in those months, a 66 percent increase.

"Everyone is trying to do something different," said Debra Lukehart, Drake's executive director of marketing and communications. "It isn't just a gimmick. It's a very strategic, well thought-out program — and it has worked with our target audience."

But six weeks after its uneventful introduction, the D+ caught the notice of a different audience: unsympathetic bloggers on the website The Awl and Adweek, as well as some students and alumni who turned to social networks and blogs to complain that it sent the wrong message about the university.

"I love that the school is getting attention," said '97 graduate Jennifer Jahde Bedell of Leawood, Kan. "But is it the right kind of attention? I'm going to pay a lot of money for a college education, and I'm going to be known for a D+?"

The furor prompted school officials to send an e-mail to faculty and staff apologizing for catching them off guard and explaining the thinking behind the campaign.

Across higher education, some faculty and administrators cringe at precious financial resources going to marketing, especially in down times.

Earlier this year in the trade publication Inside Higher Ed, a Northeastern University official warned colleagues against seeking a quick fix from higher education's "Mad Men" — recession-battered retail branding consultants eyeing colleges and universities as an untapped market. Others voice similar concerns.

"The creative-driven branding is all about just grabbing attention, that any publicity is good publicity," said Bob Brock, president of Parker, Colo.-based Educational Marketing Inc. "That really doesn't work with higher education because of the serious mission. It's not like the selling of a reality show."

Those who work in college marketing say branding is not a logo or a gimmick, but an identity — a distinctive personality based on core values and promises that can be delivered.

When American University in Washington approved a strategic plan in 2008, branding was part of it. Not well known outside the Beltway or some academic circles, the school was hoping to boost recruiting, get alumni more involved and build a stronger research reputation, among other things, said Teresa Flannery, executive director of university communications and marketing.

The team at American came up with the catch phrase "American Wonk" to communicate what it identified as its distinguishing traits, including politically and socially wired students and location in the nation's capital.

Being a wonk — "know spelled backward" — no longer means just being an insider working behind closed doors, but has broadened to mean someone who is smart, focused, and passionate, said Flannery, citing the school's research of the term.

Students arriving back on campus this fall snatched up free T-shirts with 18 versions of the wonk motif, including Green Wonk and Global Wonk. Others used felt pens to write in their own wonky labels on the shirts — like their residence hall floors.

But not everyone was charmed. Complaints under an online article last month in the campus paper said "wonk" called to mind a goose being hit over the head with a shovel or a sexual act.

Flannery said the university expected a range of reactions. She said most have been positive, and American has worked to explain the campaign before taking it off campus, including involving students and holding campus luncheons.

The recession has taken a bite out of many schools' marketing budgets, officials say. But many are pressing forward all the same, believing it's a worth the investment as the number of traditional-age students entering college is forecast to decline sharply in the next 10 years and eroding state support and endowments elevate the importance of private giving.

While it's too early to take full measure of Drake and American's efforts, other edgier campaigns have found success.

In 2005-6, the University of Northern Arizona launched a marketing effort with a new logo, a greener color scheme to capture the spirit of its earth-friendly courses and grabber ad copy such as "Mountain Air Makes You Smarter."

The school's enrollment has subsequently grown, but spokesman Tom Bauer emphasized that "marketing is only partially responsible for our success. The fact that the institution also had to live up to its promises is more important."

The rise of for-profit colleges and their huge investment in marketing and recruitment has made branding more competitive, too. For-profit University of Phoenix, the nation's largest university, recently introduced a new, sleeker logo. One notable change: the school's namesake bird rising from the ashes is now facing forward, not backward.

By the second week of "D+"-gate, Drake officials had heard enough. The school revealed that the symbol would remain on printed material sent to would-be students, but disappear from the website where it first attracted wide notice.

Or sort of disappear. The admissions site now features a digital slide show that opens with "Drake" in white letters against a blue background. The "D" then shines a brighter white, and a "+" sign appears on the next slide.

"We are an educational institution," Drake president David Maxwell wrote in a Sept. 9 letter to the university community, "and we learn from our experiences."

Friday, September 17, 2010

Back from Vacation!

I just wanted to let all my readers know that I am back from vacation safe and sound.  The trip was an interesting one, had a little stomach bug the one day, fell off a chair, but all in all had a good time in Destin Florida and Atlanta, Ga.

look for fresh articles soon!

marketmpb

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

International Student Recruitment

(a popular article I wrote for articlesbase.com)

The Chronicle of Higher Education stated it very well this morning... "all schools want to internationalize".
But how do you do it? How do you market out to prospective international students?
First, continuously reinforce your university's image through consistent messaging, using various media outlets. Next, focus on your international demographic audience, whoever that may be.
It is very important to showcase your campuses cultural diversity, especially targeted at the countries you are going after. For example, if you are targeting China, India, or South Korea, make sure there is a strong online presence of these students on your website and with any advertisers you may use (petersons, zinch, etc...).
Do consider marketing to the fastest growing countries, which are China, Vietnam, Korea, India, and Kuwait. It is very interesting to note that the Kuwaiti government is now providing full tuition for a student who wants to study English as a second language. Kuwait is a very oil rich nation.
Higher Ed marketers might have also noticed in the last couple of years that the role of agents has exploded. A couple of years back you would have not thought to use or not trusted to use an agent. However, today the game has changed, and agents are playing really a vital role to your international recruitment strategy. My advice here would be to talk to a vendor who works with a network of agents in the countries you are interested in targeting.
It certainly makes sense to lay out a strategic plan and involve senior leadership in all advertising allocations. Here it would be important to consider a branding initiative (placements on international websites), and purchasing international leads from a reputable vendor. Do ask if they are shared or single source leads as well.
It is also important to have all of your dedicated "international" student sections on your website up to date and again showing cultural diversity, international students want to feel as if they part of a community.
Lastly, consult with others in your field who have had successful international marketing campaigns or feel free to email me, I would be happy to answer any questions you had, free of charge!
contact me at: marketmpb@rocketmail.com

Monday, September 13, 2010

Perspective on Social Media

 

(some great insight on social media via Scott Monty from Ford Motor Company)

enjoy, marketmpb

This Just In

duhFrom the Not Necessarily the News department: "Teens text more than adults" - or so went a headline from an e-newsletter from MarketingCharts that hit my inbox recently.
Okayyyyy....
The actual article stated that overall, teens text five times more than adults according to the Pew Internet & American Life Project. Again, not all that surprising, but at least we're getting somewhere. It seems that most adults text between 1-10 times a day, both groups are pretty similar in the 11-20 times a day and 21-50 times a day categories. But teens are twice as likely to text 51-100 times a day and more than three times as likely to text over 100 times a day.
Check out the graph of the number of texts per day, adults vs. teens:

One other bit of information about texting: 57% noted that they received unwanted or spammy text messages.
What conclusions can marketers draw from this for the future?
First, this is the next generation of consumers, so we need to be prepared for them. While email may become more important to them in the workforce, they're still going to be tied to texting. The challenge is that texting is necessarily a one-to-one (or in some cases one-to-few) experience. There's very little room for interruptive ads.
Second, as you can see from that 57% figure, opting in is going to be extremely important; but even so, I believe that if we're taking up their valuable texting time by shooting them an SMS message, then it should be something that is worth their attention. Some categories or ideas to consider:

  • Funny
  • Entertaining
  • Breaking news about your brand or company
  • Exclusive content
  • Discounts or coupons
  • Contest or sweeps
  • For local businesses: a digital version of "leave your business card"
  • Get them off mobile-only interaction - cross-pollinate to your other properties
Probably one of my most favorite examples of this last category is the Facebook Sign Maker (and its Twitter counterpart) from the good folks at Blue Sky Factory. Text a simple phrase to a number and - voila! - you're a fan of a Facebook page.

They've brought users from text messaging to Facebook fans via an outdoor/experiential sign. Remarkably effective and stunningly simple. Companies that begin to adopt this thinking understand how different marketing practices can leverage each other and that this is how life works - it's not about how we interact with the world around us, not how we simply focus on a single channel.
Here's one final nugget found in the Pew report: breaking some long-held stereotypes, men actually use the phone slightly more than women. Of the women surveyed, 53% make or receive five or fewer calls a day, while only 43% of men could say the same.
Maybe there are still a few surprises around after all.

Sunday, September 12, 2010

Time to start recruiting

a great post by Bob Johnson, one of my favorite marketers!

source:bobjohnson.com

enjoy, marketmpb (returning this Friday from vacation)

Student Recruitment: how green is the grass in your yard?

Sometimes you can't escape reading higher education RFPs for marketing services. And those RFPs provide interesting insight into the marketing challenges faced in both the public and private sectors and what people would like to do to meet them.

In the last 30 days I've read RFPs from a selective (but not Ivy League) private university and a large public university that were both planning to hire a marketing firm for assistance in meeting enrollment goals for traditional, residential students. Their problem: historically strong market areas were not producing as many students now as in the past. Their quest: where is the grass greener?

The goal: new students with more money

These schools did not want just any academically qualified students. The private university emphasized students who could afford to pay all or most of the sticker price costs. The public university wanted out-of-state students who would pay higher tuition levels.

And so with their traditional cultivation areas no longer producing the required crop, each place was about to embark on a search for greener pastures. Expand brand recognition and strength. Generate new inquiries. Enroll students from far away. Make more money.

5 Serious "Greener Grass" Problems

How many problems can we list with this "greener grass" strategy? Here are five that immediately come to mind:

  • Many schools have the same idea. Will California export enough students to meet enrollment goals everywhere else, and especially in the Northeast?
  • Is the budget large enough to support the imaginations at work here? More than one masterfully crafted brand campaign has floundered because the budget would not sustain the long-term effort needed to successfully cultivate brand strength in new markets.
  • Is a focus on "full pay" students realistic? Whatever the proverbial "ability to pay," fewer families are willing to spend on high tuition for anything less than schools with top-tier reputations.
  • Most students go less than 100 miles from home for higher education.
  • Searching for greener grass might mean neglecting the home territory and leaving that open to traditional, near-by competitors.

5 steps for a "greener grass" student recruitment strategy

What elements of a "new" student recruitment enrollment strategy might work? Consider these:

  • First, make sure that the yield from your primary enrollment territory is as high as possible. Strengthen what you can to increase yield without additional tuition discounting.
  • Do a "pull power" analysis for your current academic majors. Calculate the percent of inquiries that apply and enroll for each major. With some exceptions (some majors are less likely to draw students from far away), programs with the highest "pull power" percents are the best bets for enrollment from new market areas.
  • Make sure the high "pull power" programs have really strong website information easily available for students who visit to learn more about them.
  • Starting in the high school sophomore year, conduct very focused searches for "greener grass" students around these strong majors, assuming that these are indeed the ones with open space for new students. The purpose of the search? Get students to visit the website pages for these programs. Make it easy to inquire from the academic pages. You're more likely to get students to visit your website than to become an inquiry directly from your search contact. (Keep the inquiry form simple like this one at Creighton.)
  • Forget "full pay" and go for "lower than our usual tuition discount" scholarship students. Aim to improve the bottom line without creating an unrealistic financial barrier.

Do’s and Dont’s of Social Media

(from entrepreneur.com)

enjoy, marketmpb

Social networks can be great communications tools­­--but make a misstep and you could end up doing your company more harm than good. Perhaps the biggest mistake businesspeople make is posting while in the wrong frame of mind. PR man Cas Purdy of Guidance Software in Pasadena, Calif., has a rule of thumb he says everyone should live by: "Don't Twitter while you're bitter." Of course, there are plenty of other mistakes that social networkers make each day. Here's what to avoid. --Ericka Chickowski

Don't
Do

Push out political rants because something in the news really ticked you off.
Engage friends and followers in political discussion relevant to your industry.

Mingle personal announcements with marketing messaging.
Create separate accounts for personal friends and for business associates.

Focus on hard-selling your company's products or services.
Consider posting relevant opinions, links and photos about your industry that will truly interest friends and followers.

Automate cross-posting of the same content across numerous channels.
Tailor your strategy to the proper channels to avoid annoying Facebook users with Twitter hashtags and Twitter followers with incomplete tweets.

Impulsively air grievances with customers, partners or even competitors on a public forum.
Take time to think before putting up content that could be referred to by search engines even after you've deleted it from your account.

Leave your friends and followers hanging when they comment on your links or give you a shout-out with an @ message.
Make an effort to engage frequently with friends and followers rather than just foisting your marketing message on them.

Let your accounts lie fallow.
Try to offer new content frequently. If you don't have time to commit fully to all channels of social media, think about focusing on one where you can go all out.

Saturday, September 11, 2010

Graduate Level Research

 

a great post by Julie Bryant on the new Noel Levitz blog, I am a big, big fan of Noel Levitz  thanks, marketmpb

(also:  GO IRISH, BEAT THE WOLVERINES!)

What do we know about the satisfaction levels and priorities of non-traditional students? These students include students 25 years of age an older (often referred to as “adult students”), students in graduate-level programs, and students enrolled online. These populations may make up the primary population you serve or be a population that you are currently interested in learning more about.

Three new research reports from Noel-Levitz highlight the satisfaction levels of non-traditional students regarding their educational experiences. They also reflect the priorities of these students and what they consider to be the most important issues when it comes to institutional improvements.

You can download these reports at https://www.noellevitz.com/nontraditional. There are three:

  • The National Adult Learner Satisfaction-Priorities Report on adult students at the undergraduate level
  • The National Adult Student Priorities Report on adult students in graduate as well as undergraduate programs
  • The National Online Learners Priorities Report on students in online distance-learning programs

There are three general findings from these reports:

  1. Students at four-year and two-year adult serving institutions have similar priorities.
  2. Graduate students are generally more satisfied than undergraduate students.
  3. Students enrolled primarily online are typically more satisfied than students enrolled primarily on-campus but also taking online courses.

Do you find any of these results surprising? What has been your experience with your adult and online learners?

Friday, September 10, 2010

Digital Marketing

from one of my all time favorite blogs  higheredprblog.com

thanks, marketmpb

source: higheredprblog.com

Friday Five: the digital marketing life cycle

September 3, 2010

Welcome to the second in an occasional series of Day Tripper Friday Five posts. Today I’m taking the easy way out by sharing a recent post by Ira Kaufman of Social Media Today, 5 Stages of an Integrated Digital Marketing Life Cycle. They are:

Denial

Anger

Bargaining…

No. Wait a minute. Those are the stages of grief, which sometimes can afflict a marketer who is trying to launch an integrated marketing campaign too quickly (so keep that grief link handy, for you may need it).

The real digital marketing life cycle looks like this:

cycle

And it happens over a period of 16 to 27 months.

That’s much longer than most of Kaufman’s clients expect. They’re usually anticipating results within 3 months. But to do things right, it’s going to take 3 months just to do the ground work (the Setup phase in the chart above).

Kaufman’s post may prove valuable for anyone dealing with unrealistic expectations from clients or bosses.

Thursday, September 9, 2010

Humor in Marketing/Sales

a great post by Roger Parker, enjoy! marketmpb

Using cartoons can help brand your marketing and drive home important messages. Although surprisingly inexpensive to acquire, humor can be one of your most powerful marketing tools.

Humor puts your readers at ease. Readers appreciate a touch of humor in an otherwise overly serious world.

Humor operates on an emotional level, driving home your message in a far more memorable way than words alone. Humor makes sensitive topics more approachable while summarizing and reinforcing points that would otherwise be lost.

Different types of humor work best in different contexts. Many speakers begin with a joke to put the audience at ease, or a story about ‘a funny thing that happened on the way to the meeting.’

But jokes and stories are less appropriate for written communications. Jokes can be misinterpreted and depend on delivery and timing for their effectiveness. Stories can take too long to tell.

Cartoons are perfect for print communications. Readers who typically check them out before reading the adjacent articles appreciate cartoons.

More important, cartoons communicate at a glance. A cartoon can attract your reader’s attention and drive home an important point in a memorable way.

The editorial page of any newspaper shows how effective humor can be in simplifying complex subjects and driving home a point of view.

Humor also adds a visual dimension to your marketing, differentiating your message from your competitor’s. Cartoons encourage readers to look at topics they might otherwise skip.

Where do you get cartoons? One of the best sources is the Cartoon Bank, www.cartoonbank.com. Here, you can license reproduction rights to cartoons that originally appeared in the New Yorker Magazine.

You can select from tens of thousands of cartoons. You can search by topic or keyword. After choosing an appropriate cartoon, you can find out how much it will cost to license it, and then you can download it.

Licensing fees are surprisingly reasonable for most business applications. For example, you can license New Yorker cartoons for use in presentations for just $19.95! For other purposes, the cost depends on where you’re going to use it and how many people will see it.

There are, of course, other sources of cartoons. If you see a cartoon you like in a newspaper or magazine, write the cartoonist in care of the publication and ask about availability and pricing. If there is a particular cartoonist whose style you like, contact the cartoonist about a custom cartoon.

This has worked very well for me and I owned total rights to use the cartoon any way I wanted.

Cartoons are great for the home page of your website, newsletters, training materials and presentation visuals.

In each case, the unexpectedness of a cartoon immediately captures your audience or reader’s attention and visually reinforces your message.

Here are some suggestions for marketing with cartoons:

1. When in doubt, leave it out. If the cartoon does not perfectly support your point, leave it out.

2. Always add the copyright information described in the licensing
agreement.

3. Never run a cartoon without first obtaining a license to reproduce it.

4. Optimization. After downloading, resize and sharpen the cartoon in an image-editing program like Photoshop and export it in the proper file format.

 

Be the Bear

a great post by tim copeland, whom I am a big fan of….

enjoy, marketmpb

Someone once said they didn’t know if there were 4,000 colleges and universities in the country or 1 college with 4,000 locations! As we enter recruitment season, consider the following benefits stated by many colleges and universities today: 1) small classes; 2) personalized attention; and 3) quality faculty.

Now Google each phrase and limit the results to .edu web sites.

  • Small classes? Yields over 49,000 results
  • Personalized attention? Over 10,000
  • Quality faculty? Over 22,000

Amid increasing competition and more professional enrollment marketing approaches, colleges and universities are challenged to differentiate their brands. Two institutions have recently taken bold – perhaps controversial – steps to stand out in the educational market place.

Be the Bear – Mercer University

be the bear mercer university ajc Mercer University recently launched their Be the Bear campaign by posing the question, “When do Bears Attack? After Graduation!”

What does it mean to be a Mercer Bear, the school’s mascot and now centerpiece of the marketing campaign?  According to their ad:

  • Mercer Bears don’t just learn. They master.
  • They don’t just accomplish. They thrive.
  • They don’t just compete. They dominate.mercer-be-the-bear-phipps-small

    Beyond the splash ad located on the Atlanta Journal Constitution online edition, the Mercer web site has an entry page for the campaign, however I didn’t see much evidence of the theme carried through to the University’s Facebook and Twitter presence. The admissions office has a separate Twitter handle, however the theme is largely absent there as well.

    I did see a prominent banner recently displayed (on right) in one of the atriums at Phipps Plaza, a high-end shopping mall in the Atlanta Buckhead area.

    D+ – Drake University

    drake university d + campaign

    Your potential + Drake’s Opportunities = The Drake Advantage. This new equation is generating buzz in higher education for it’s bold, yet controversial message. In a recent blog post for Inside Higher Ed, Jack Stripling asks the question, Does the Drake Ad Pass?  The story has now been picked up by the national media through Yahoo!.

    The campaign attempts to move beyond the expected (small classes? personalized attention?) and define a message that is uniquely Drake. According to the article, when viewed in context, the “D+” is meant to be part of an equation, suggesting Drake + you equals something, well, awesome. That said, Drake officials aren’t running away from a campaign they say they knew was “edgy” for the very reasons some are now criticizing it.

    The “D+” graphic is part of a larger campaign dreamed up by Stamats Higher Education Marketing. The firm anticipated some might first view the logo as a grade, but the graphic was always intended to be paired with prose that would deliver a positive message about the Drake experience, said Fritz McDonald, vice president of creative strategy at Stamats.

    The online pundits commenting on the post offer the following:

    “Reminds me of a bright idea I had for a mailing to 150,000 prospective students. To encourage them to open the envelope I put "What kind of place is (institution name)? Unfortunately, right next to that question was something for the Post Office; THIRD CLASS.”

    “Well, real universities do not need to resort to this type of silly marketing to promote themselves. Marketing is fluff. Quality universiites (sic) have substance and the substance is with the faculty. Facts are students select a university because of the faculty. It is the faculty that bring the name recognition and distinction to any university including public or private.

    “This is a genious (sic) marketing strategy that has people talking about D and has increased traffic to their website. It may not get many scholars to seriously consider D but will sure get those C and D student who will interpret to be welcomed and appreciated. Since this seems to be their goal then those consultants are worth every penny and administration will be recognized for thinking outside the box.”

    As the commenters are anonymous, it’s hard to know if we are hearing the thoughts of other practitioners … or competitors of Stamats.

    The Relationship of Risk and Reward

    Whether the campaigns or good or bad, only time – and results - will tell. However, both institutions are to be commended for taking a risk to not only stand out, but in a way that seemingly speaks to their values and missions.

    If your institution is pursuing a branding initiative, consider the following:

    1. Be prepared for the long haul

    Branding efforts must be sustained over the long term. Make sure the institutional will – and resources – are there at the outset.

    2. Deliver it

    Nothing sinks branding efforts faster than not delivering upon what you claim.

    3. Market internally

    If I visited the Mercer campus today and asked a random student what it means to the “Be the Bear”, would they know?

    Marketing to Women Online

    a great piece by marketingtowomanonline.com

    enjoy, marketmpb

    (as a sidebar: I am taking a couple days vacation, so you will see other articles on the blog until I return next week),  thanks!

    matt

    Women have longer checklists

    When making a buying decision, women have a longer checklist of things that matter to them. 

    In Re-Render the Gender, Tom Jordan shares an example of his father buying a condo.  Look at the different checklists of what a man and a woman look for when buying a condo.
    Re-render the gender slide for selling to women presentation

    The guy takes a look around, makes sure he's getting a good price, and he's pretty much ready to buy.  But you can see that the woman has a longer checklist of criteria that matters to her when buying a condo.  Until she's satisfied everything on the list has been addressed, she's not ready to buy.

    Women are more risk aware

    Notice I didn't say women are more risk averse.  They are simply hard-wired to plan ahead to try to avoid bad outcomes.  Think back to hunter-gatherer days when men were focused on the short-term outcome - hunting their pray to bring home that night to eat. Women were focused on longer-term objectives, like having enough food to last the winter.  

    In a study on how men and women make investments, they measured brain activity in the subjects as they made investment decisions.  In men, the reward center of the brain lit up.  In women, the reward center lit up, but so did the consequence center.

    When making buying decisions, she is planning ahead, wondering what will happen down the road, and wondering what might go wrong and who might be affected.

    How to speed up a woman's buying process

    At this point, sales people have a better understanding of her decision making process, but still want to know if there's anything they can do to speed it up - to get her to "yes" faster.

    There are three things you can do to speed up a woman's buying process

    1. Address her concerns and objections.   It's important to find out what her concerns and objections are as early as possible.   If a woman says no, it's usually because she has a concern that hasn't been adequately addressed.  
    2. Use testimonials.  Have you worked successfully with women in the past?   Get those women to write you a testimonial.  Better yet, have them record a video.  Let those women share, in their own words, what they like about working with you.  Let the women sell you rather than selling yourself. The second reason why you lose a sale with a woman is because she does not trust you.
    3. Sell with stories, not facts.  Don't just list out features and benefits.  Share a story about how someone in a similar situation used the product or service. Stories are more memorable and make that emotional connection that motivates women to take action. (And just FYI, stories are a great selling technique for men as well.)

    If you care about client retention, you want women clients.

    Because women are more deliberate, because they put more time and research into their decisions, they tend to be more confident in those decisions.   Women are more loyal to individual service providers (aka financial service providers) than men

    If you care about referrals, you want women clients.

    Women refer more often than men do.  Ask any woman how she found her financial adviser, pediatrician, hair stylist, and she'll tell you, "a friend recommended him/her."  

    When you do a good job with women, they notice, especially if it's an industry, like the financial industry, where she feels she's been ignored, or misunderstood.  If she has a good experience, she's going to share it with her friends and family and recommend you.

    The choice is yours.  You can view women as indecisive and not waste your time with them.  But chances are a smart competitor is out there making a serious effort to sell to women and seeing the financial rewards because of it.

    Wednesday, September 8, 2010

    Amazing Cruise Ship Video

    a little break from marketing this morning, an amazing look at the inside of a cruise ship going through a huge storm!

    enjoy, marketmpb

    Tuesday, September 7, 2010

    Google’s Adword big spenders

    a great article from adage.com

    source: adage.com

    enjoy, marketmpb

     


     

    What Big Brands Are Spending on Google

    From BP's Boost in June to AT&T's Massive IPhone Outlay, Internal Doc Reveals What Marketers Drop on Search

    by Michael Learmonth
    Published: September 06, 2010

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    NEW YORK (AdAge.com) -- Before BP could stem the oil gusher at the bottom of the Gulf of Mexico, it unleashed $100 million in ad spending, largely on network TV, to stem the damage to its image. But it also started spending heavily where it had never spent much before: buying ads in Google's search results.

    How much did BP spend on search? In two months, BP went from spending very little on search advertising -- about $57,000 a month -- to becoming one of Google's top advertisers, dropping nearly $3.6 million in the month of June alone, according to an internal Google document obtained by Advertising Age. That pushed BP into the upper echelon of search advertisers, in a league with Expedia, which spent at least $5.9 million in June, Amazon, which spent at least $5.8 million, and eBay, which spent at least $4.2 million.

    This is a significant outlay, even for BP, which spent $94 million on advertising in 2009, and $78.7 million in the first six months of 2010 alone (excluding search), according to Kantar Media. Search advertisers only pay when their ads convert or get a click, and in June the crisis was still at full-boil, driving clicks on BP's ads. But if BP kept spending at this rate, search would've become one of its bigger advertising line items by the end of the year, up there with network, cable or spot TV.

    While the search-spending document obtained by Advertising Age is not a complete list of advertisers on Google, the accuracy of its data was verified by multiple sources with direct knowledge of spending levels. It's a revealing cross-section of Google's business that gives some clarity to one of the most opaque areas of ad spending, and the lifeblood of many American businesses.

    BP's increase underscores how important Google has become for reputation management, and in the battle for public opinion. In the wake of the spill, Google was a natural first stop for people seeking information, and BP bought up dozens of keywords associated with the disaster such as "oil spill," "leak," "top kill" and "live feed" as it vied for clicks with news stories, images of oiled wildlife and plaintiff attorneys trolling for clients.

    "Google has become the remote control for the world; it's the first stop, not TV," said Will Margiloff, CEO of Innovation Interactive, a unit of Denstu. "More than any other media, that messaging is requested; people are seeking BP's answers out as opposed to waiting to be told."

    The steep acceleration of spending indicates BP opted for "broad match" keywords, meaning many combinations of "oil" or "spill" would trigger a BP search ad. BP also bought video search ads, which directed surfers to BP videos. BP declined to comment for this story.

    Because it controls 65% of U.S. web searches, Google's complex algorithms determine more than any other factor what information is surfaced on the web. Google keeps a tight lid on its technology to keep people from gaming the system. Similarly, search ads are a black box; anyone can buy an ad on Google, but it is very hard to know how much anyone, let alone corporate America, spends there.

    The exception to that is when Google starts its sales pitch. "The primary tactic Google uses to increase ad budgets is to show them what others in their category are spending compared to what they're spending," said Kevin Ryan, CEO of Motivity Marketing, a digital marketing consultancy.

    Our review of $574 million of Google's U.S. billings over the first half of 2010 shows plenty of global corporations spending millions each month on search advertising, as well as a great many huge corporations that spend very little, if anything, at all on search.

    "We can't comment on these figures because we haven't seen the document in question or determined what these numbers represent," said Dennis Woodside, VP of Google Americas Operations. "We're now looking into the possibility that someone improperly disclosed confidential information about our clients, and [we] will take all appropriate action."

    At the time of the rig explosion in April, BP barely registered on Google, but neither did its big-oil peers; Exxon Mobile, the world's largest corporation by market cap, spent just $43,000 on search ads in June.

    By comparison, one of Google's top advertisers that month, AT&T Mobile, spent more than $8 million on AdWords in June, a big month for the company, which was supporting the launch of iPhone 4. (AT&T is the third-largest U.S. advertiser, according to Ad Age DataCenter; it spent $2.8 billion on measured media -- almost $1.3 billion on TV alone -- in 2009. The company declined to comment on its search spending.) Other big June spenders included Apollo Group, the company behind The University of Phoenix, online travel site Expedia, eBay and Amazon, which all spent over $5 million apiece on search.

    The data obtained by Ad Age includes huge brands such as GM, Walt Disney, Eastman Kodak and BMW, which appear to have spent less than $500,000 in June. Tech rival Apple spent just under $1 million on search during the month, as did chip maker Intel.

    Among Google's biggest spenders are businesses that depend on search traffic, including those that resell AdWords or simply buy Google traffic to resell to their own advertisers, including Hungry Machine, which does business under the name Living Social, which spent $2.4 million in June, and Yellowpages.com, which spent $1.2 million.

    As a snapshot, it's also remarkable that Google's biggest advertisers, big monthly spenders like AT&T, Apollo Group and Amazon, individually accounted for less than 1% of Google's U.S. revenue in June. The top 10 advertisers in the document collectively accounted for just 5% of Google's U.S. revenue during the month.

    The accounts listed are distributed broadly in terms of spending levels. The document shows 47 advertisers that spent more than $1 million in June; 71 that spent between $500,000 and $1 million, and 357 that spent between $100,000 and $500,000. These are direct-billed customers only, not the many thousands of small self-serve advertisers that make up Google's long tail, a key component in its $23 billion global annual revenue.

    The Importance of F-Commerce

     

    The jury is still out on whether social media can drive sales, but one thing is becoming very clear, sales are happening on social media sites (e-commerce), especially on Facebook (f-commerce).   Let us examine the importance of  Social Integration and F-Commerce, along with the importance of Facebook friends sharing items with their friends and asking friends, before they buy something.

    Facebook, now being a place where goods are sold will actually help their primary revenue strategy (advertising), as ads on their site will be closer to a potential purchase- with the focus on not just being a marketing tool, but a sales tool as well.

    Facebook has given free reign to leading developers such as (www.voiyk.com) to develop commerce apps.  This allows the full social interaction and user contributions to assist in the online buying of products and services.

    But why is F-Commerce so important?  There are a lot of folks out there who desire a more comfortable, easy shopping experience and in a way wanted to avoid the overcrowded shopping mall and possibly rude, snooty saleswomen.  Online F-Commerce offers a friendly and attractive environment along with polite answers to the customer’s questions.  More specifically, F-Commerce just got a big boost when the announcement was made that Facebook was partnering with PayPal, the world’s leading online payment option.  Also, the sheer scale and weight that 500 million users can leverage is very exciting.  I expect F-Commerce to continue to flourish

    Saturday, September 4, 2010

    Some weekend marketing humor

    Good morning, are you enjoying the long holiday weekend?

    enjoy, marketmpb