Top 3 Media Annoyances

Posted by vlad on April 20, 2008

Everyone has their media annoyances. Here are some of mine.

Misrepresentation of audience composition as pageview composition. The fact that a site may be predominantly reaching women, for example, does not mean that the actual pageviews (and hence impressions) generated by women are in the same proportion. A site may very well reach 80% women, which may only generate 10% of impressions on the site. In other words, a minority demographic may account for the majority of impressions. If you buy the site you end up with 10% of women and not 80% as per reach.

Last click syndrome. Most advertisers still attribute all actions to the last impression or click. If a person has been exposed twice to a creative, spent 10 minutes on a site but then a week later ended up searching on Google and buying, that last click usually accounts for the conversion. Non-click conversions, offline spend, and all other channels need to be part of standard reporting. Otherwise you end up using Google’s report which tells you to spend more with Google.

Social media marketing. Not sure I grasp the idea of marketing being the act of emailing your blogger friends so that they post about something your client is paying you to promote. The whole area of “social marketing” still feels like an awkward infomercial where brands try to get people to talk to them about how much they love the products (or at least mention the products), while other people are supposed to care. We need better tools, better understanding of audiences and better ways of fair, transparent advertising that would actually allow big brands to support micro-publishers and their readers. Let’s develop those instead of talking about blogging and how important blogs are and how it’s changing the world, shall we? It’s 2008, let’s move on.

That’s some e-Cards

Posted by vlad on April 15, 2008


Newsflash: cartoons don’t have to be drawn by hand on the back of a business card. In fact, it’s much better if it isn’t.

Awesome content, but they should make these things embeddable. It’s like a forum macro anyway, why not add a js tag in there?

someecards.com

Information is Not Knowledge

Posted by vlad on April 02, 2008

THE BEST-INFORMED PERSON I EVER KNEW was a friend of my grandfather’s back in the Bronx, where I grew up. Every morning of every day of his life, this elderly man — his name, as I recall, was Boris — would dress impeccably in a suit and waistcoat and shuffle to the public library, where more than a dozen of the day’s local and out-of-town newspapers were threaded through bamboo poles and hung from racks. One by one, Boris would read them all, front to back; at dusk, he would walk home alone. This daily pilgrimage was conducted with ecclesiastic solemnity, a quiet, dignified homage to the majesty of knowledge. Even as a little boy, in that intuitive if primitive way that children comprehend important things, I understood the fundamental truth that Boris was, in some clear but compelling way, a douche bag.

Washington Post: Cruel and Usual Punishment