November 24, 2024

About Contributor Rick E. Bruner

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ExecutiveSummary.com
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Email Rick E.
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Rick E. Bruner is the founder of this site. He has worked as a consultant and researcher in Internet marketing since 1996. He is the co-author of "Net Results: Web Marketing That Works" (MacMillan Publishing, 1998) and is currently the research director for DoubleClick, one of the largest Internet marketing technology services firms.

Posts by Rick E.:

Changes at Six Apart

Posted by: of ExecutiveSummary.com on on 07/16/04
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Mena Trott’s emotionally charged post about handing over her title as CEO of Six Apart, publisher of the popular blog publishing platforms TypePad and Movable Type, to board member Barak Berkowitz says so much about what kind of company Six Apart is and, for that matter, about the whole blog phenomenon. I mean, in what other kind of business could one executive so openly mock another during the ceremonial passing of the torch, even while at the same time making it clear the love and respect is so heartfelt. It’s really a beautiful tribute to the kind of businesses blogs can help foster.

Meanwhile, Mena, who will retain her title as president of the company she co-founded with her likewise twentysomething husband, announced that Six Apart has acquired its French reseller, Ublog, and it has also hired Web VC veteran Andrew Anker.

In short, lots of good news for this terrific company that is really growing into something with potential that several industry big-shots are banking on. (Disclosure or whatever: this site is produced using TypePad, and I’ve met Mena, and she’s very nice.)

SkyBox by Maytag Weblog

Posted by: of ExecutiveSummary.com on on 07/15/04
skybox

Wow.

Okay, for starters there’s the product: a personal beverage vending machine for your living room by large appliance maker Maytag. The product is called SkyBox. I am guessing this product is not targeted at women. In fact, I’m guessing this product is not targeted at men with women in their lives. (I could get a pool table or pinball machine in my livingroom sooooo much easier than a vending machine with my wife, and I couldn’t get either a pool table or a pinball machine in my livingroom with my wife in reality.) Is this like the livingroom bar for the new millennium? Somehow, tacky as the livingroom bar seems, it seems a lot classier than a vending machine….

Anyway, what this product obviously needs is a blog. This is Maytag, mind you. More power to them!

And, again, thanks to Olivier for the link.

Link

Microsoft Community Blog Portal

Posted by: of ExecutiveSummary.com on on 07/15/04

It really is remarkable how cool Microsoft is about blogs. This post on Community Kitchen explains:

We just launched the Microsoft Community Blogs Portal, a searchable listing of blogs by Microsoft employees, categorized by product or technology topic. The project also makes it easier for pages across Microsoft.com to publish lists of relevant blogs and posts from those blogs.

Isn’t this the kind of thing you’d expect from Apple, considering how innovative they’re supposed to be and all (yet, do they actually do anything with blogs as a company?).

Thanks again to Olivier for the link.

Link

Discount for BlogerOn Conference

Posted by: of ExecutiveSummary.com on on 07/15/04
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Those interested in attending the BlogOn conference in Berkeley, CA, July 22-23 can recieve a $100 discount by entering the promotional code “socialtext” when registering here.

Mea Culpa, Mea Culpa

Posted by: of ExecutiveSummary.com on on 07/15/04
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Again, just want to say I’m sorry that I’ve been such a slacker about this blog, but I’m so frickin’ busy these days I can’t believe it. Just got back from AdTech Chicago (well, okay, Tuesday night) where we once again produced the AdTechBlog. Meanwhile, I’m actually writing a couple of blog-related reports fairly soon, as well as other projects that actually pay the bills around here. But enough apologies; I’m actually posting a few important new updates this evening…

HotelChatter

Posted by: of ExecutiveSummary.com on on 07/9/04
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Another example of a blog pursuing an ad revenue model:

HotelChatter is a collaborative web publication for travelers who research and purchase hotel reservations online.
HotelChatter is dedicated to covering everything related to hotels and lodging around the world, we cover hotel deals and reviews, which celebrities are staying where, hotel industry news, tips for booking online, the hotels you should stay away from, the hotels you should book, and more.

Link

Blogs.Sun.com/Jonathan

Posted by: of ExecutiveSummary.com on on 07/8/04
jonathan-schwartz

Jonathan Schwartz

Jonathan Schwartz was appointed president and CEO [make that COO; d’ho!] of Sun Microsystems just this past April, and by June the 38-year-old, ponytailed executive started a blog.

Bill Gates, take note.

Link

Economist.com: Weblogging, The Trees Fight Back

Posted by: of ExecutiveSummary.com on on 07/7/04
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Frankly, I’m not sure this is worth posting, as the observations about blogging are rather 2002, but it’s in the Economist, so, there you go.

Economist.com: Weblogging, The Trees Fight Back

Microsoft Business Solutions: The Four-Letter Word That Can Get People Excited About Your Products

Posted by: of ExecutiveSummary.com on on 07/7/04
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Okay, okay, we get it, Microsoft loves blogs. Yet another advice piece from them for small businesses for blogs.

So, where is Bill’s blog, anyway?

Microsoft Business Solutions: The Four-Letter Word That Can Get People Excited About Your Products

Seattle Times: Election 2004 Backyard Blog Project

Posted by: of ExecutiveSummary.com on on 07/7/04
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The Seattle Times is looking for a 20-something political blogger.

Are you interested in this year’s elections? Know your community? Like to talk politics with your friends, colleagues and neighbors? Want an opportunity to blog about your observations?
Apply to join a grass-roots campaign coverage effort by The Seattle Times. We want fresh thoughts and perspectives about the elections from places and people not often found in newspapers — your neighbors, your favorite cafes and other local hangouts.
We’re looking for contributors under age 30 who are following the ’04 campaigns ‚Äî national, regional and local. Each participant will be given a blog on seattletimes.com and periodically appear in The Seattle Times.

And so on.

Seattle Times: Election 2004 Backyard Blog Project

Anil Dash Wins ‘Nigritude Ultramarine’ SEO Contest

Posted by: of ExecutiveSummary.com on on 07/7/04

It’s a long story. The Search Engine Guild sponsored a Search Engine Optimization Challenge to see who could achieve top ranking on Google for the peculiar phrase “Nigritude Ultramarine.” Popular blogger (and director of business development at blog software company Six Apart) Anil Dash decided to enter the contest, making a blatant appeal to his thousands of daily readers to link to his entry, hyperlinking on the term “nigritude ultramarine.” It worked: he won. See for yourself: search ‘nigritude ultramarine’ on Google.

Another good example of the power of blogs.

UPDATE:
Tig Tillinghast of MarketingVox had a better write-up than mine, so I figured I’d just rip it off to clarify more of the story (I tipped him off to the story, anyway, so I feel like I’m within my rights):

A contest held to see who could garner the best search engine rankings for a made up phrase (“nigritude ultramarine”) was taken by well-known blogger Anil Dash. His strategy seems to have consisted of appealing to his many readers to link to his page “in order to prove that real content trumps all the shady optimization tricks that someone can figure out, and because I figure I deserve an iPod at least as much as the Star Wars Kid.”
The contestant with the highest ranking site over a three-day period wins the “Stayer” prize, considered the more prestigious of the two prizes given out. The initial award went to Brandon Suit, an online community administrator.

Sifry.com: Technorati tracks 3 million blogs

Posted by: of ExecutiveSummary.com on on 07/7/04
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trackinggraph-06-2004

UPDATE: I’m now linking (in the headline above) to the original source of this data, Dave Sifry’s own blog, the guy behind Technorati. He notes, “We’re currently seeing anywhere from 8,000-17,000 new weblogs created every single day.” Thanks to Olivier Travers for pointing me to this link.

ORIGINAL POST: Jeff Jarvis of Buzzmachine notes that Technorati has just passed 3 million blogs tracked. I don’t know where he got that graphic; I’d link to it directly on Technorati if I could find it, but anyway, Jeff’s a nice guy, so I’m happy to link to him. Note, this doesn’t mean that 3 million is all the blogs there are, but that’s how many Technorati tracks. It’s certainly one good measure, anyway.

Sifry.com: Technorati tracks 3 million blogs

Estate Vaults Blogs

Posted by: of ExecutiveSummary.com on on 07/6/04
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Jill Fallon

Jill Fallon

Having a good niche is the secret the success of many businesses, and blogs are a great way to market to that niche. Jill Fallon has embodied that with her business Estate Vaults and its companion blogs, Legacy Matters and The Business of Life. I’m not entirely clear what the difference is between the two blogs (in general, I’m not a fan of multiple blogs for a single business author, but maybe there’s some good reason for it), but her “About the Author” page clearly describes the business proposition:

When she was essentially widowed for the second time, Jill Fallon was inspired to create EstateVaults‚Ñ¢ to help people take care of the business of their lives more easily and securely and at the same time keep their affairs in order for their families.
She believes that boomers ‚Äì her target users of EstateVaults‚Ñ¢ – are the bridge between their non-digital parents and their totally digital children and grand-children. Boomers are at the time of life when questions about mortality loom larger even as life gets sweeter. With the proliferation of tools, they can create digital personal and family legacy archives to connect generations past, present and future, if only they get their act together.

Link

InformationWeek: Are Blogs The Next Internet Marketing Phenomenon?

Posted by: of ExecutiveSummary.com on on 07/6/04
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The question keeps getting asked. Nothing in this answer strikes me as particularly insightful, but I’m glad to see the issue is getting fleshed out more in the popular and industry press. This article is part of IW’s SmartAdvice series from consulting firm The Advisory Council, which, I can’t help but to observe, does not appear to have a blog of its own.

Thanks to Olivier Travers for the link.

InformationWeek: Are Blogs The Next Internet Marketing Phenomenon?

Global PR Blog Week

Posted by: of ExecutiveSummary.com on on 07/6/04

B.L. Ochman writes about this new project:

It’s 28 people who blog about PR all getting together next week to blog about making blogs part of the marketing mix. Being PR people, they’ve turned it into a big academic thing for the most part. I am sticking to practical stuff, examples only, no theory, as is my wont.
:>)

The New PR Wiki is an accompanying wiki.

Link

MichaelMoore.com

Posted by: of ExecutiveSummary.com on on 07/5/04

Lefty documentary maker, director most recently of the super popular and controversial Fahrenheit 9/11, now blogs. His first entry was made, ironically enough, on July 4.

Link

Raging Cow: The Interview

Posted by: of ExecutiveSummary.com on on 06/30/04
raging-cow

I suppose a site dedicated to business blogs simply has to mention the whole Raging Cow fiasco, since it continues to be touchstone in the minds of many on the whole subject of business blogs. For those of you lucky enough to never have heard of this whole tempest in a milk bottle, the basic background is this:

Dr. Pepper / 7 Up came out with a new flavored milk product called Raging Cow, which it sought to give hip legitimacy to by reaching out to blogs. It did so, via its online marketing agency Richards Interactive, by creating its own blog and by inviting a group of young bloggers to be briefed on the product, whom it encouraged to blog about the product. As best as I can tell, where it fell afoul of the blogosphere was that it then asked those young bloggers not to mention that they had been briefed about the product, as if their sudden new enthusiasm for flavored milk was purely their own idea.

To the company’s credit, Raging Cow’s blog and blog-PR initiative was one of the first efforts by a mainstream company to use blogs for marketing purposes (only a little over a year ago, March 2003; why does it seem like a lifetime ago?). But its PR mistep was badly received by the blogosphere, to say the least. Hardcore bloggers, who apparently wear their underpants a bit too tight, went ballistic at this attempt to corrupt their integrity of blogs, and for weeks, even months, it seemed all you heard on certain blogs was vitriol against Dr. Pepper (notably this silly call for a boycott on the product, as if anyone has actually seen Raging Cow in a store).

What irritates me about this whole episode is that it has become the embodiment in the minds of many of the idea that blogs and marketing don’t mix. The problem, if it even was a problem (Richards Interactive never saw it that way; see below), however, was never Raging Cow’s blog itself, which actually wasn’t bad, as adverblogs go (I would link to it, but I notice just now that the site seems to be defunct, which I strongly suspect has much less to do with a boycott among obsessive bloggers than the fact that sugary milk can’t compete with sugary fizzy water among teen tastes). [UPDATE: I guess it was just down when I checked it when I first wrote this post. I now see it’s back, though it’s not apparent that the blog is still being updated.] The problem was bad PR: imagine asking a reporter for the NY Times or even a lowly trade magazine to write nice things about your product but not to mention that you had briefed them.

Anyway, in an effort to get the complete story on the episode, I asked journalist Kate Kaye last year to interview the folks at Richards Interactive for their side of the story, as part of our report Business Blogs: How Successful Companies Get Real Results With Weblogs. (Kate, incidentally, maintains a site called Lowbrow Lowdown, which although quite blog-like she proudly proclaims has been “blog-free since 2000,” which I gather means only that she codes the whole thing by hand and archives it via FTP for God knows what reason.)

So here for posterity, excerpted from our 2003 report, is the email interview she conducted with Todd Copilevitz, Director of Richards Interactive about the Raging Cow Blog Campaign:

When did the Raging Cow campaign launch?

The buzz campaign, which included the blogger elements started March 1 [2003]. The branded campaign launched with five markets March 15.

What was the objective of the RC campaign, specifically the blog component?

We were working with a product that had a short window for launch, and limited distribution initially. So we had to develop a strategy that increased awareness in key markets and seeded awareness in markets where we did not have distribution. To our advantage we had a strong defined character in the raging cow. As we started working on telling the cow’s story it became very obvious there was something compelling about the humor.

At the same time we did not want to try to force our way in front of teens with a typical advertising message. We know they are far more likely to respond to a message that offers some recognition of their habits and is willing to entertain. So our blog component was simply intended to make people aware of the cow — not even to mention the product. If teens recognized the cow when they saw the product or branded advertising that was all we could hope for.

The branded campaign, and the branded web site, had the broader responsibility of raising awareness of the product and increasing attendance at sampling events. At the same time the wild postings of posters on the streets were tasked with increasing sampling attendance and driving people to the web. In short, all the pieces were intertwined.

Is there a blogging software platform used to run the RC blog? If so, which one?

We licensed Moveable Type. A great product from people who know their stuff, and an amazing community of developers creating add-ins. And, yes, we paid the license fee.

Did the campaign involve any other components (ads or marketing strategies)?

Spot radio, sampling teams, street posters and extensive online advertising using page-crossing units and other large-format ads.

What did the advertiser and agency hope to or expect to achieve through the blog?

Beyond what I said earlier, we believed the blog network offered a unique and organic opportunity let teens tell other teens about the product. Of course we realized that was fraught with risk, since we had no control over the message. But to its credit, DPSU was willing to accept that.

Describe how the campaign was received, particularly by the blogging community. What about it was praised, what was panned?

Among the target audience we had incredible response. We had numerous links to the site with extensive tracking. A brand tracking study tells us that we moved the needle in every critical factor, all positively.

There was another community of bloggers who blew their lid at our presence. They flooded us with complaints, all of which accused DPSU of being deceitful with the blog effort. Ironically there was a DPSU copyright on site. The article in Newsweek was the result of a call from DPSU. So I don’t know how we could be accused of trying to hide our hand. Of even more interest, was the forum for many of the complaints, our site. DPSU said early on that it wanted a broad and deep dialogue on the Raging Cow site, so long as it stayed on target and wasn’t obscene. I found it particularly interesting that a great many of the bloggers venting on our site don’t even offer comment capability on their site.

How has the RC blog changed since its controversial beginnings?

I’d suggest the only controversy was among those who were never our target to begin with. But along the way we eliminated links to external blog sites. In part we did so because we did not have the time to monitor all of them for inappropriate content and didn’t want our link to suggest an endorsement. That became an issue once the number of sites requesting links got unmanageable.

What’s planned for the future of the RC blog? How long will it run?

The blog tells the story of the cow’s shift from placid dairy life to a crusader against boring milk. As such it will live on through the site. While we won’t be updating it as regularly as we did in the spring, it remains a viable channel for communication.

Does Richards Interactive or Dr Pepper plan to use blogs in the future for marketing purposes? If so, would the approach be different? In what way?

I won’t attempt to answer for DPSU, except to note that they have expressed an ongoing interest in the value of grassroots communication tools. Richards Interactive was working with blogs before this and has done so repeatedly since then. We have an active database of hundreds of bloggers of all ages across the country who want to be part of marketing efforts. (You can checkout the signup information at www.projectblog.com.) As for approach, it is always different. You cannot cookie-cutter this type of communication.

In terms of using blogs for business, specifically marketing purposes, what are the challenges or drawbacks from your perspective?

Blogs offer one of the most-effective ways for small companies and companies with a defined point of view to communicate that directly with audiences. Blogs rejuvenate some of the early promises of the Internet, namely a global platform for anyone with something to say and the means to articulate it.

ClickZ: Ads on Blogs, Blogs as Ads

Posted by: of ExecutiveSummary.com on on 06/30/04
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ClickZ’s comely columnist Tessa Wegert has written a three-part series on blogs and marketing (Part 1, Part 2 and Part 3). I might nitpick with some of its points — e.g., “At minimum, blogs should be updated daily” (ideally, perhaps, but I don’t know about “at minimum”; this blog, for example, flunks that test miserably of late), the idea that a blog isn’t a blog if it doesn’t have comments turned on (so Instapundit isn’t a blog?), or the tired old saw of spotlighting Raging Cow as a blog marketing disaster) — but by and large, it’s a sensible advice piece well worth a read.

ClickZ: Ads on Blogs, Blogs as Ads

HackingNetflix.com: Bloggers & Corporate Public Relations Departments

Posted by: of ExecutiveSummary.com on on 06/27/04
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This post on a fan blog devoted to the movie rental service Netflix is a perfect example of how poorly many companies understand the opportunities of weblogs. First of all, it’s painfully obvious that Netflix itself should have a blog. If you have any doubts about that, just check out GreenCine Daily.

But that’s not even what HackingNetflix.com is proposing. HackingNetflix already has the traffic (~1,000 visitors a day) who are interested in Netflix; all the blogger was asking to do was to forward “Ask Netflix” questions to Netflix’s PR department, but their PR department declined.

HackingNetflix’s blogger (identified only as Mike) notes that he gets on the order of 20-30,000 readers per month interested specifically in Netflix news. Yet this is not enough to register on the radar of Netflix as important? And this is an Internet-based company? Sad.

HackingNetflix.com: Bloggers & Corporate Public Relations Departments

Seattle Times: Bill Gates Could Join the Ranks of Bloggers

Posted by: of ExecutiveSummary.com on on 06/27/04
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It was just a matter of time. A month ago, Microsoft founder and richest man in the world Bill Gates raved about blogs in a speech to business leaders. Now, the Seattle Times is suggesting Bill may launch his own blog imminently.

Seattle Times: Bill Gates Could Join the Ranks of Bloggers

 

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