Web Interaction Optimization Software

Scenario_builder It's been fun seeing how focusing in on customer conversion rate optimization has become the 2006/2007 Rallying Cry for Marketers, according to independent research firm Forrester Research Inc. In a report titled, "Marketing Technology Adoption 2006," June 2006, Forrester interviewed 371 marketing technology decision makers and influencers, and more than 40 percent say their organizations "have plans to implement Web interaction optimization software by the end of 2007."

We are glad to see the market catching up with what we have been preaching since 1998 and are looking forward to releasing more features of our Persuasion Architecture MAPTM suite of software and releasing little micro apps to make the software available to many more interested customers in 2007.

Online Auctions

Bob Hughes, Wall Street Journal reporter who's covered the auction market and author of the novel "Late and Soon" (published in October 2005 and worth reading), was discussing online auctions with us. We asked him if he would share some of his thoughts.

"Way back in the last millennium – 1999, to be exact – the world of big-money art auctions meeting the online world looked pretty grim. Sotheby’s, the renowned auction house, joined forces with online heavyweight eBay to offer fine art. Four years later, the joint venture was dissolved, at a loss of about $100 million to Sotheby’s. Buyers just weren’t ready to spring for five- and six-figure art online. In fact, more than a dozen high-end art sales Web sites began and faded around the same time.

 This seems funny, in a way, since people are willing to spend a lot of money online for cars, computers, even homes. But something about high-priced art caused people to think twice. Auctioneer eBay still sells art online, as do other, smaller sites, but there isn’t a site where a connoisseur might plunk down $10 million for a Monet. Back at the time of the dissolution of the Sotheby’s venture with eBay, Sotheby’s chief executive William Ruprecht said there were not as many people “prepared to buy authenticated fine art online as we had hoped.”

 That’s still the case, but perhaps not for much longer. As more people become comfortable ordering online. On the day after Thanksgiving, U.S. shoppers spent $305 million on online purchases, excluding travel, a 22% increase over the comparable day a year ago, according to comScore Networks, a Reston, Va., market-research firm. Nielsen//NetRatings reported that the volume of Internet search queries grew to more than 5.1 billion in October 2005, up 15 percent from five months ago. While that kind of interest may not translate into sales of Picassos and Renoirs immediately, it’s bound to open the market for lesser-priced but still quality works.

Indeed, the auction houses themselves are now embracing the Internet as never before. Sotheby’s and Christie’s – the two main auction houses in the world, with about 95% of the business – now publish their auction results online. Sotheby’s also makes its catalogs available online (these can cost $40 or so apiece for the bound versions), and both of the Web sites for these houses have excellent search tools, too. Another art site, ArtNet, is a valuable resource for art news and for tracking the price histories of certain artists – something that collectors once relied exclusively on their dealers and the auction houses for."

What’s missing still, though, is the kind of publicity that the auction houses can drum up, the scholarship and provenance research that auction house can bring, as well as their reputations. Not to mention the excitement of the auction floor for the big sales. (In my novel, “Late and Soon,” I give readers an insider’s view of just such an auction.) Some auctions permit live bidding online during an auction, so there are strides being made. But as the blogosphere grows, who knows what kind of universe may await interested collectors in the next decade?"

Waste Five Minutes Or 551,000 Years

From AdAge.com "What Blogs Cost American Business"  -- Blog this: U.S. workers in 2005 will waste the equivalent of 551,000 years reading blogs.

About 35 million workers -- one in four people in the labor force -- visit blogs and on average spend 3.5 hours, or 9%, of the work week engaged with them, according to Advertising Age’s analysis."

Have you checked out our new podcast of GrokDotCom.com; it will only take about five minutes? We are waiting for iTunes to approve the us and it will be available there too. Here's to more time wasted!

Winning Results with Google AdWords

Google_adwords_goodmanAndrew Goodman just released a new book. We just ordered it and we will be reviewing it. Knowing Andrew it will be worthwhile owning.

Here is the description on Amazon.com:

Don’t get lost in the digital haystack! With thousands of links for every search, the chances of your products being found online are slimmer than a needle. But there’s good news: you can pinpoint your marketing message with help from Andrew Goodman's newly released Winning Results with Google AdWords. You'll discover AdWord essentials, how to bid for and win the keywords you want, how to track your results, and much more. Create a profitable ad campaign using online marketing, paid search, targeting, and leveraged branding.

Have you checked it out yet?

What Is A Chief Evangelist?

Bryan and I asked each other that question when we first met Betsy Weber. We thought it might be a "cute" title then; now we know better. Betsy is a relentless evangelist for TechSmith; a software company that publishes three programs we find invaluable in our work 1) SnagIt  2) Camtasia 3) Morae; she never misses an opportunity to make them look good. Betsy is always spreading the word. I don't know what they pay her or how they measure success but in this humble blogger's opinion it's not enough.

When she emailed this morning her signature line indicated that TechSmith had started a blog. I have really high hopes for it.

Google is poised to trump Microsoft in its potential to invade privacy...

Peep "Google is poised to trump Microsoft in its potential to invade privacy, and it's very hard for many consumers to get it because the Google brand name has so much trust," said Chris Hoofnagle of the Electronic Privacy Information Center." This is only a small extract; read the entire article on CNET News.

This should come as no surprise. I've told many of my friends who don't spend as much time online as I do that "privacy" is a quaint notion; we no longer have any privacy. If you add the ability to append offline data to email addresses and a credit bureau request we're wide open. We can simply hope and pray that our private information is handled responsibly.

The Sun Will Come Up Tomorrow; doh!

ClickZ.com stats is reporting the obvious: Wireless Users Want Local Content

Business Blogs: A Practical Guide

Blogcvr0504

 If you blog for busines, or are thinking about it,  then you need to read this book. Bill Ives and Amanda Watlington have done a great jog; not only does this guide contain the 'how-to" information you need to make blogging work for you but it also contains the collected wisdom of dozens of successful bloggers who were interviewed for this book. This is not a fluffy light read, its serious stuff at approximately 600 pages. Get your copy now.

Web Analytics For Retailers

The all seeing, all powerful Bryan Eisenberg just wrapped up a 3 week ClickZ Article series on Web Analytics.

Pour some coffee, find a comfortable reading nook, and click these 3 articles. Oh yeah, clear a little room in your wallet, you will probably need it.

Part One Part Two Part Three

Nigritude Ultramarine

Anil Dash just got added to my list of mini-heros. (I don't throw around the term 'hero' lightly, thus the 'mini' addition)

The beloved blogger just won an international search engine placement contest with a single post to his blog.

Sweeeeeeet!

The organizers of an international search engine placement contest crowned their champion Wednesday. In the end, the victor was a popular blogger who got his readers to do his work for him.

Anil Dash won the second, and final, round of the two-month SEO Challenge, which called on webmasters and site owners to use any method at their disposal to score the top Google ranking for a made-up term, "nigritude ultramarine." Read story.

Dash comments on his victory... "A page that's read by people instead of robots is going to do better"

We are not surprised.

You see as much as we like robots around here at Future Now, we prefer people much more.

A Wonderful Mess

Well, well. Aren't we Internet worker bees causing quite a stir...again!

From BusinessWorld Online...

E-Biz Strikes Again!
The Internet has rewritten the rules for books, music, and travel. Which industries are next? Here are six

As the Internet boom turned into bust, corporate America could be forgiven for allowing itself a small sigh of relief. When all was giddy, and the stock market giddiest of all, big companies feared the disruptive power of the Net. Look what happened to Barnes & Noble (BKS ), they fretted, as Amazon.com (AMZN ) changed the game of bookselling. Or how Expedia Inc. (IACI ) overran travel agents. No one wanted to be the next to get "Amazoned." Read more.

But we shouldn't let our dot com heads get too big, we didn't really rewrite the rules of entire industries, we were just able to follow them more specifically.

The Internet just gives saavy customer centric companies a way to follow the rules much better. We are better equipped to do a superior job giving our customer exactly what she wants, when she wants it,and how she wants it. She responds in kind by tossing more and more of her cash our way.

And giving the customer what she wants, when she wants and how she wants it has been the only relevant business rule since the first cave-dude traded some firemaking flint for a slab of mammoth rump roast.

Dot Coms forgot that rule during bust numero uno, and if I can do anything about it I wanna make sure we don't do that again.

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