Tuesday, October 30, 2007

Do consumers really care about online privacy?

Do Consumers Care About Online Privacy?

Critics Say People Don't Understand Data-Gathering, Ad-Targeting Schemes

NEW YORK (AdAge.com) -- As the Federal Trade Commission meets this week to discuss internet privacy and whether the proper controls are in place, the issue sports one glaring question mark: Do consumers really care?

When asked whether they care about privacy, consumers will almost always say yes, but internet privacy and data collection, unlike childhood obesity or pharmaceutical ads, has yet to become a consumer hot-button issue with real ramifications for marketers and media sellers. Even privacy advocates admit there's not as much consumer outcry as there could -- or should -- be.

Ahead of consumer outcry
"I think this is a bit ahead of the real consumer outcry," said Colin O'Malley, director of strategic business for TRUSTe, a nonprofit privacy organization that outlines acceptable practices and certifies online business. Advertisers, not only consumers, usually become more interested in the topic after a privacy matter gets a lot of attention and is embarrassing for marketers, Mr. O'Malley said.

Privacy advocates contend that the time for government to protect privacy is before, not after privacy violations take place, infuriating consumers and sparking outcry. But even that outcry might be hard to come by. In the wake of AOL's release of search data a year ago (that data was not explicit, but it could have been used to implicitly retrieve identifiable information by looking at a user's search log terms) consumers didn't seem overly concerned and it was left to advocates and activist bloggers to make a stink.

But it appears consumers can't be bothered even by serious infractions. Advocates suggest consumers would care more about privacy if they understood data-gathering better. Some advocates hinted that "bombshell" revelations about data-gathering tactics will be revealed this week that could wake a public that has appeared largely unaffected by sophisticated online ad-targeting schemes.

Behavioral targeting
Much of the focus of the workshop will be on behavioral targeting, a tactic in which an ad seller can segment consumers into various behavior categories by following their online surfing behavior across multiple sites. For example, a consumer who looks at hybrid vehicles on an auto site can be tagged as such and targeted with a Prius ad as he reads the local newspaper online.

Such targeting is often not malicious and, in fact, can be essential to the economics of creating quality digital content. Behavioral targeting "helps support free content, and it's growing fast," said Reed Freeman, a partner in Kelley Drye Shannon Collier's Advertising and Marketing Practice Group. "It's almost always -- if not always -- done anonymously." It also helps serve more relevant advertising to consumers, which studies prove are more effective and, often, more palatable.

Still, privacy advocates think consumers need to be more aware that they're being tracked and given more transparency into and control over the process.

Kathryn Montgomery, a professor of communications at American University who was almost single-handedly responsible for Congress passing the Children's Online Privacy Protection legislation, said experience demonstrates that consumers care greatly about privacy issues and will react. She said what is happening now is that they don't yet understand the targeting taking place.

Understanding the 'apparatus'
"It's happened so quickly, that the public doesn't know and people don't understand the way the apparatus works," she said, adding that consumers are beginning to see the implications: "You can go to a library and look up a medical issue in private, but you do the same thing online and the search is tracked and follows you."

The workshop will also take a look at marketers' privacy policies, as many advocates don't think consumer notification about how personal data may be used, as it exists today, is sufficient.

"Consumers fundamentally misunderstand the rules of the marketplace," said Chris Hoofnagle, senior staff attorney at the Samuelson Clinic at UC-Berkley's Boalt School of Law, addressing a perceived apathy toward the subject. He cites studies in which up to 75% of consumers think as long as a site has a privacy policy it means it won't share data with third parties. "They equate the presence of the policy with substantive privacy rules."

The FTC's two-day workshop comes as the agency readies to act on Google's $3.1 billion bid for DoubleClick. Several sources suggest that approval could come as soon as next month, though it's still unclear if the agency will impose any conditions on approval. Final completion of the acquisition may await the European Union's own deal review.

FTC Commissioner Jon Leibowitz, who is scheduled to speak at the workshop, said the extent of deal activity in the digital area and the possibilities for targeting makes the FTC want to take a closer view of what is brewing in the space.

"Clearly it's a white-hot area, where there are a bunch of deals going in a much more granular area for advertising," he said. "I want a lot more in depth understanding of the issues than the heated rhetoric on the extremes of the debate."


With the Christmas season around the corner and consumers already starting to shop online, privacy has become an issue. Most consumers will say that they do care but most people dont take precautions until after they are hurt. this article helps to clear up what retailers are doing to keep consumers information private and make sure the customers are taken care of fully.


Please let me know what you think.

Tuesday, October 23, 2007

Galvanometer

According to Answers.com a psycho galvanometer is an instrument for testing mental reaction by determining how skin resistance changes when a voltage is applied to electrodes in contact with the skin.



The Galvanometer has been found to be a useful tool for assessing the potential effectiveness of advertisements, direct mail messages, package copy, and other marcom messages.

www.lie2me.net/thepolygraphmuseum/id24.html

Here are some pictures of the Galvanometer.

Has anyone ever been part of an advertisement pretest?


Shelby

Friday, October 12, 2007

Pioneer

As electronic enthusiastic I thought these advertisements we an incredible. They are geared to the ultimate customer as well as showing innovation.


What do you guys think about these ads?










Monday, October 1, 2007

YAHOO !!!

When it comes to searching I think, "Oh Let's Google it !" I do not think "Lets Yahoo it." However when I want to go and get a map I think of Yahoo maps. So I believe that Yahoo needs to advertise their Avataars. Before Professor Sangvhi said something about them I did not know anything about them. I searched around and I found out that they are very easy to manage however, I, as a college student do not have any need for the majority of the Avataars. I feel as though Yahoo needs a little more advertising a little more creative flair to the homepage to appeal to the college consumer.



Shelby Sisco

Friday, September 28, 2007

the holidays are coming

I am an employee at Best Buy and we are getting started for Christmas we have been getting more computers and movies and ipods. The Christmas season is around the corner, for retailers the Christmas season makes up 70% of their fiscal budget. Retailers thrive to make sure that all the customers get what they need, what they do not know that they need and create relationships during the process to improve their business and increase their growth. During most Christmas seasons there is a great deal and of change that occurs and the retailer' job is to adapt and grow with that change. Working for Best Buy has made me more comfortable with change and adapting to it. We plan to make the best out of the Christmas season .


The Retail Christmas Message
By David Martin, Marc Ryan for AdRelevance, a Jupiter Media Metrix Company


The holiday rush is officially on, and the stakes are high for Internet retailers. While a sonic boom of retail advertising signals the Christmas rush, the marketing noise companies make may determine who wins and who loses in the holiday revenue game. With that in mind, it may seem surprising that online retailers have placed a huge emphasis on brand awareness campaigns to lead off the holiday season. Instead of going for the early quick sell with direct marketing ads; retailers are aiming at establishing recognition with consumers that will hopefully come when the need to purchase grows urgent.

Early in the shopping season, brand awareness strategies dominate the market, and few companies see the need to use incentive ads to set themselves apart. AdStrategy data from AdRelevance suggests that in a retail market that is getting more competitive as Christmas approaches, we may see more direct marketing ads intended to win over the last-minute shopper. Over the past five weeks the gap between brand awareness ads and direct marketing ads has drawn closer, and that gap may get tighter as the gift-buying frenzy nears the eleventh hour.

Plenty of time remains in the holiday shopping season, however, and online advertising promotions reflect this with passive branding campaigns. AdStrategy data shows that brand awareness is the dominating tactic for early holiday season retail advertisements, working to establish brand saliency and build long-term recognition.

Disneystore.com and Spencer Gifts currently place a high priority on awareness campaigns, as demonstrated in the ads above. Forty-three percent of Disney banners use brand awareness, while Spencer Gifts utilizes the strategy on 72 percent of its ads. The two companies are clearly marketing toward the Christmas buyer without imposing an undue sense of immediacy early in the shopping season. As last-minute web shoppers scramble for gifts, companies like these may employ more urgent campaigns using direct marketing strategies.

Discount retailers Half.com and Bestbuy.com, are good examples of direct marketing advertisers who use offers or incentives to pique immediate consumer interest. Half.com actually uses more direct marketing ads, at 57 percent of their total, than brand awareness. Their ads are intended to encourage consumers to visit their site and make a purchase. The total number of direct marketing ads such as these has increased steadily since the beginning of the summer, and in recent weeks that number has grown at an even faster rate.

So far, the top four retail advertisers are steering clear of direct marketing strategies. Amazon.com, Barnesandnoble.com, Ebay and Red Envelope Gifts are fueling a huge Christmas surge with awareness-based campaigns, helping to increase total retail ad spending by 35 percent over the last five weeks. Less than a third of retail advertising, however, uses direct marketing tactics.


AdStrategy Breakdown
for Amazon, Barnesandnoble.com, Ebay, and Red Envelope
10/02 through 11/05

In a cutthroat environment where a Christmas slump may mean extinction, it would be surprising to see a lack of heavy price and incentive competition as the big day nears. When consumers start scrambling for last-minute gifts, ads touting free overnight shipping and large discounts will draw the crowds. A convergence between brand awareness and direct marketing ads could be very likely as retailers push to increase site traffic and sales as shoppers find time running out. In the end, the savvy marketers who adopt strategies that win consumer interest will find a large present of revenue under the tree, those who don't may be faced with a lump of coal.




Shelby


Thursday, September 13, 2007

Women in the workforce

I am so glad that I am going to work in the 21st century Before my grandmother passes away we talk about how my generation has so many more opportunities that she ever did. she lived to be 100 years old and we talked almost everyday.

In today's society the men are staying at home and the women are the bread owners and I am so glad to say that I am so living my life in that way. I feel as though most women go to school and start their career before they even think about have children, having a companion or anything else. Women today are comfortable of being themselves and with themselves, they do not need any man/women to make them happy.

I hope that this society can see that women are becoming more self sufficient and we really do not need men for anything that to reproduce.

Shelby

Thursday, September 6, 2007

" Green " Marketing !

Retailers Push Packagers to Think "Green"

Published: September 4, 2007

Filed at 2:13 p.m. ET

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Growing demand from retailers and manufacturers for smaller, eco-friendly packages is pushing box makers and chemical companies to create compact packaging that is bio-based and recyclable.

Most initiatives, although still in their infancy, are being spurred by increasing environmental awareness and looming legislation. But companies exploring smaller and 'greener' packaging options are also doing so with a keen eye on profits.

"I would say that the balance is still probably weighted more toward cost control," but the significance of environmental benefits is growing, said Wachovia analyst Ghansham Panjabi.

At the forefront of one such initiative is the world's largest retailer, Wal-Mart Stores Inc . Last year, the company announced a plan to reduce packaging by 5 percent by 2013, a move that could save it $3.4 billion.

A reduction in the volume of packaging has interesting ramifications said Robert Anstine, vice president of marketing at International Paper Co's Shorewood packaging unit, which is working with Wal-Mart on its packaging reduction program.

"If you go to a smaller package, it means you can put more of them in a shipping container, which means you can get more product on a truck; it lowers the amount of energy and fuel used to transport the product," Anstine said.

However, the chain reaction does not stop there. It also means more products on shelves, a higher probability of customers finding the products they seek and fewer man hours spent restocking shelves.

Bio-based packaging products are also becoming increasingly popular and being used in surprising places.

International Paper for instance manufactures PaperFoam, a starch-based product that can be used in lieu of traditional plastic compact disc trays.

Target Corp , the No. 2 U.S. discount chain after Wal-Mart, recently partnered with bioscience company Metabolix Inc to create a new gift card using Mirel, a bio-based plastic.

Curiously, a rather nondescript packaging product -- brown paper bags -- has begun to gain traction again as cities and municipalities begin to restrict the use of plastic bags.

"We do see that (paper bags) coming back quite a bit and we can produce a paper bag with a pretty high recyclable content," said Don Atkinson, vice president of marketing at Weyerhaeuser Co .

Even, chemical makers that have traditionally manufactured hydrocarbon-based plastics have begun exploring some bio-based options.

Dow Chemical , the largest U.S. chemical maker, is exploring ways of making polyethylene -- a widely used plastic -- from sugar cane. While DuPont Co is producing propanediol, an ingredient used in cosmetics and anti-freeze, from corn sugar.

But the big question is -- will customers pay more for more eco-friendly packaging?

Brian Igoe, chief brand officer of Metabolix, says customers are willing to pay more for cleaner products, but some analysts and executives beg to differ.

"It has to be priced competitively, because, historically, what we've seen is consumers and retailers are not particularly interested in paying more for a 'green' product or package," said International Paper's Anstine.

Analysts and executives concur that customer behavior, more than legislation, remains the deciding factors in the debate.

"Consumers ultimately get to decide. You can introduce all sorts of legislation, but at the end of the day it depends on what the consumer does," said Wachovia's Panjabi.

Monday, September 3, 2007

Overview of the past few weeks

Over the past few weeks I have learned more about fashion than I ever thought that I would know. I did not understand that when it came to learning about retail and consumers that I would have to learn about fashion and designers and things that I did not think I have a lot of interest in.
However over the last few weeks I have really got into the fashion swing of things and really learned a great deal of information. I hope that I will continue to learn about Max Azria and many more designers. This world is full of learning experiences and I am so glad to learn everyday.


Shelby Sisco

Wednesday, August 29, 2007

Apple Ipods

ITunes' rivals may lift Apple

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Moves by Wal-Mart and RealNetworks may mean more iPod sales.
By Joseph Menn and Michelle Quinn
August 22, 2007
As competitors challenge Apple Inc. in digital music, the biggest beneficiary may be Apple.

Wal-Mart Stores Inc. and RealNetworks Inc. on Tuesday strengthened their digital music offerings to better compete with Apple's iTunes store. Wal-Mart began selling songs without anti-piracy locks for 94 cents apiece, and RealNetworks' Rhapsody subscription service announced new partners that would promote it on MTV and distribute it on Verizon cellular phones.

But the competition might actually help Apple. That's because the Cupertino, Calif., company makes a slim profit on selling songs but cleans up on every iPod music player.

A robust market for digital songs should translate to more demand for the music players on which to play them, and Apple's iPod is the runaway leader.

"ITunes was developed to promote iPod hardware sales," said Susan Kevorkian, an analyst at research firm IDC. "The introduction of services that offer digital music to the installed base of iPod users will help drive more iPod sales."

Wal-Mart, the No. 1 overall music retailer, noted on its online store that the songs in the unrestricted MP3 format would "play on almost all portable media devices, including Apple iPod and Microsoft Zune." The initial batch of MP3s are coming from major labels EMI Group and Universal Music Group.

"Certainly the ability to buy music in more places helps Apple," Pali Research analyst Richard Greenfield said. "They make very little money on iTunes transactions, and they make a good amount of money on iPod transactions."

ITunes is facing new competition, especially from rival download stores. Universal, the world's biggest music label, said last week that it would supply a slew of those, including Amazon.com Inc.'s store.

Subscription services, on the other hand, haven't taken off. Rhapsody claims to be the most successful, but RealNetworks' 2.7 million subscribers include Internet radio customers.

Rhapsody offers those who pay $12.99 or more monthly unlimited listening and the chance to buy tracks for as little as 89 cents each. Without burning them onto a CD and then ripping them back to a computer, though, those songs can't be played on the iPod.

RealNetworks' stock has been pummeled as Apple has prospered. Even after jumping 45 cents to $6.30 on Tuesday, the shares are down 42% this year.

Under the plan just announced, RealNetworks would own 51% of a new company, Rhapsody America, with the rest belonging to Viacom Inc.'s MTV Networks. RealNetworks is contributing cash, employees, contracts and customers.

MTV would invest cash and provide a $230-million loan over the next five years, and the new venture will buy at least that much advertising on MTV channels including flagship MTV as well as VH1 and country music channel CMT.

MTV also plans to transfer users of its Urge digital service, developed with Microsoft Corp., to the new service.

"By putting these services together, they have a stronger service," said analyst Josh Bernoff of Forrester Research. But he noted that songs through the Rhapsody subscription service don't work on the iPod.

Another sign of Apple's growing importance is the participation of cellular service provider Verizon Wireless in the Rhapsody deal. Executives at the three companies said Rhapsody America customers would be able to listen to their songs on their Verizon phones.

With many new ways to buy digital music emerging this year, confusion will be commonplace, said David Card, online music analyst at Jupiter Research.

But all the confusion will probably lead to the simplest solution, which is music in the unrestricted MP3 format popularized by unauthorized file-trading programs, Card said.

And the more MP3s on the market, the better shape the iPod will be in.


This article I found in the LA Times, I believe that this is great for the consumer. I am not 100% sure that this is really going to affect the Apple Ipod sales as much as they think but I could be very wrong.

What do you like?


Shelby

Tuesday, August 28, 2007

China

One of the reason why I put the video and the article is to let people know what is going on around us. There is a great amount of industrialization going on in this world that does not have any limits. People are living in public housing and children are working cheap labor, for what, to improve America. Well I do not believe that making China a labor country helps anyone to feel better about themselves.

Shelby

Saturday, August 25, 2007

China Blue





http://www.pbs.org/independentlens/chinablue/

During my CRS 321 class we talked about the conditions in the different countries. During the discussion we said that the people that make the clothes and the products that we use today do not know that they can have better conditions and there is a better world out there. So I feel as though the world needs to help the conditions in third world countries.



China also has a Dam that was built in Beijing displaces millions of residents into public housing.

China's mega-dam nears completion

January 17, 2002 Posted: 3:19 AM EST (0819 GMT)

BEIJING (AP) - China's massive Three Gorges Dam project has moved a step closer to completion as workers began dismantling an earthen wall that had kept its construction site dry, the official Xinhua News Agency said Thursday.

Tearing down the 81.5-meter-tall (250-foot-tall) coffer dam will take an army of bulldozers and cranes five months to finish, the report said.


The report said the Three Gorges Dam -- the world's largest -- is now complete enough to begin holding back waters of the Yangtze, China's largest river.

When finished in June 2003, the dam will be a wall of concrete 190 meters (590 feet) tall and more than two kilometers (almost one and a half miles) long.


Its reservoir will be filled by stages until it reaches 660 kilometers (400 miles) in length in 2009.

The $24 billion dam has been widely criticized as a throwback to communist central planning that will only damage the environment and displace more than a million residents.


China has a great deal of issues that need to be addressed from jean companies to engineering.

This is something to think about.


Shelby