Long live Pine, long live Eudora: Friends Don’t E-Mail Friends HTML [again from Wired News]. Or, as Cam Barrett put it, “HTML-Email Sucks Bad, Really It Sucks Bad, So Stop Using It Already.”
Wired News
A lot of people
seem to have forgotten about RU Sirius, but (as I’ve said before) when he’s on, he’s really on – he has a very deep and layered view of “technoculture” and the ascendence of the Internet. Wired News has published an interview with RU, A Sirius View From the Fringe. It’s very interesting to read how much more serious and even a little disillusioned he is now. He said of his presidential race, “I wind up reaching the same types of outsiders and freaks that I always do.”
Jeff Veen has
a book out now, and the good folks at WebRef have interviewed him about it. If you don’t know, Veen was one of the guys behind Hotwired back in the day, and wrote a lot of the stuff at WebMonkey.
There’s a lot
of hand-wringing about advertising on the net and how to make it work. But the articles I’ve read lately, such as one entitled Web Ads Should Be Seen and Heard in Wired News today, miss the point.
The web is not a broadcasting medium. Period. You can try all you like to import methods from broadcasting and make them work on the web, but as soon as the technique quits being a novelty, it’s dead in my opinion.
The web is narrowcasting. The whole internet is narrowcasting. Look at WAP and other celphone tech – its usage pales in comparison to SMS – a one-to-one technology. It’s practically axiomatic that if a person can increase the granularity of their experience, she or he will do so.
What does this mean for web advertising? To me it means a couple things. First, that if you’re going to advertise, you have to engage in “deep targeting” – putting ads in front of lawyers (for instance) isn’t enough – you have to specify by location, specialty, maybe age/experience level, etc. Don’t advertise to doctors in general – advertise to particular specialties or sub-specialties. Second, and it springs from the first, you have to give that group a payoff. Give them something they want or need – say, educational material they couldn’t otherwise gain access to. You can’t do that without knowing the audience.
It strikes me that very very few companies are remotely equipped to do that – and further that an advertiser really has to buy into the vision, the whole concept. Which can be difficult, given the current climate. But I would turn away a potential advertiser if they weren’t willing to work with me to develop a program that provided a genuine payoff to the users that I have painstakingly attracted – were I at the helm of a content site.
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