crazyweblist.com crazyweblist.com
   Main About Us Privacy of Info Terms of Use Add Url Add Article
Search:   
 
 

Pay-Per-Click Marketing & Natural Search Engine Traffic

There are pro's & con's to both Pay-Per-Click advertising and optimizing for natural search engi ... - Carrie Reeder
 

Increasing Website Activity Through Email Signatures

Making sure your website has a steady amount of activity is one of the most important aspects to mai ... - Anton Cheranev
 

Top 10 Advantages of Buying a Business List

In today's competitive market, you cannot leave any marketing channel unexplored. To be in the race, ... - Anuja A.
 
 

Pixel Disruption To Cause Nausea From User of Computer Screen

Miss adjusted Pixel settings hurt your eyes, they may also case your enemy to falter? - Lance Winslow
 

Your Common Questions and Answers On Your Inkjet Cartridges Are Now Ready For Your Review

There are so many questions within the printer market which still haven?t been answered. No more mys ... - Joseph Mercado
 
 

Main » Internet & Computers » Email Management Software
 

GMail - The New Frontier

 

Author: Robert Hart

If you have even a passing interest in the topic of GMail, then you should take a look at the following information. This enlightening article presents some of the latest news on the subject of GMail.

Google's email service has stopped playing hard to get.

Google's Gmail, operated on a test basis since last spring, this week dramatically increased the potential number of users of the Web-based service. The move could mean Google is getting ready for a public rollout of Gmail -- a development that would heighten Google's competition for usage and advertising dollars with Yahoo! and Microsoft's both of which offer free Web-based email services as well. Some subscribers to Gmail -- which since it launched has been available only by invitation from Google or current users of the service -- this week discovered that they had 50 invitations to Gmail that they can pass on to friends and acquaintances. Previously, Google has doled out no more than a half-dozen invitations at a time to Gmail users.

A Google spokesman confirmed Friday that some users of the service were getting an increased number of invitations, saying it was part of Google's continuing efforts to expand the service. The spokesman, however, wouldn't provide any information about when Google might bring Gmail out of its test phase into general release.

Even in its limited release, Gmail has already remade the landscape of free email service on the Internet. One of the service's distinguishing characteristics is that it provides users with 1 gigabyte of free storage space. At the time Gmail debuted, Yahoo!, for example, was offering users a maximum of six megabytes of free storage.

Since then, Yahoo! has raised its storage capacity on free accounts to 250 megabytes and has upped storage capacity on paid email accounts to 2 gigabytes.

Now that we've covered those aspects of GMail, let's turn to some of the other factors that need to be considered.

When Google announced acquisition of dMarc Broadcasting, a digital media solutions and services firm, it became clearer Google has no intentions of stopping at the arbitrary boundaries of the Internet. DMarc is in two businesses: technology and a media network that places ads digitally and remotely into rotation on stations with the dMarc technology. The station ad sales manager can specify what radio ad inventory to release to the dMarc radio network.

This acquisition puts Google in the traditional radio advertising business with a platform that's already partially self-serve and runs much closer to real time than existing ways of buying radio advertising. Sound familiar? It's like AdWords with digital audio files, and radio stations, geographies, and dayparts instead of keywords. If you currently buy radio advertising, Google will soon have some new things to offer you. Great news, but perhaps Google will implement its famous auction methodology for radio ads, controlled by its combined system. If that happens (and I'm betting it will) the insertion order (IO) process that guarantees ad rotation will be replaced by an ad-spot auction running in near real time. Soon you'll be bidding for each defined group of ad spots against all the other marketers who want to reach the same audience. In an auction for radio or TV ad inventory, you're fighting every marketer, not just industry-specific competition.

Buying media is going to get a lot more interesting. Most analysts and pundits view this acquisition as Google's lateral expansion into other ad media that can be defined, priced, trafficked, and delivered to the media source digitally. And they're right. If highly valuable, easily definable, scarce advertising assets are allocated in an auction, media buyers and marketers must get used to an entirely new way of buying advertising space in radio, TV, cable, and perhaps print for pre-identified ad placements. Yet there's another fascinating potential facet of the dMarc deal fewer analysts are talking about: the applicability of digital audio/video ad marketplaces to podcasts and streaming Internet radio. ITunes and its competitors distributes paid content and ad-supported, free podcasts. However, most podcast platforms don't dynamically insert the ad into a podcast based on recipient. Wouldn't it be far better if podcast ads were targeted to each listener, making them more relevant? Of course it would. The premise of better targeting and improved relevance is an underlying concept behind the AdWords and AdSense systems. These systems already narrowcast text ads, specifically at users who either have performed a search or are engaged in narrowly focused content.

With digital audio/video ad targeting and trafficking, an advertising system can easily use more than context to target ads. Podcasts or streaming Internet radio shows consisting of news, for example, often provide a poor contextual basis for ad targeting, just as they do in analogue form. But podcasts are often subscribed to on an individual basis, and online radio could require registration. Individual user registration becomes a killer advantage in targeting ads in a more relevant way, even better than targeting at the household level. If Google, MSN, Yahoo, or any other ad server knew I'm about to have my first child (which I am) together with my Zip Code, age, and gender, it could use that data and a podcast's context to serve me advertising so relevant I may actually listen -- or watch.

Suddenly, repurposing audio and video content for online podcast or real-time distribution will have an ad-supported model that provides existing content owners with a new source of revenue and stimulates new content development. If I can spare the time, I'll put together some podcasts of my own as soon as the ad revenue models or pay-per-view infrastructure has proven itself.

Though as history has proven itself those who get in early reap the greatest profits.

This article's coverage of the information is as complete as it can be today. But you should always leave open the possibility that future research could uncover new facts.

Author Bio:
Robert Hart is a eminent columnist. Robert likes to write articles about this subject.
You can also reach this article by using: email list management services, email list management, email management system
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Scheduling Software Can Help You Become More Organized
 
Secrets of Microsoft new file system revealed by Data Recovery Engineer
 
Keyword Research Is Critical To Your Website's Success
 
4 Steps to Laser Precise Ad Tracking & Budget Management
 
4 tips on List Building
 
Select And Register The Right Domain Name
 
What's The Deal With Discussion Lists? (Part Three)
 
DXInOne - Re-Orientation Series Overview
 
Analysing Autoresponders
 
Three Steps To Powerful, Easy And Free SEO For Your Web Site
 
 
 
 

Self Enhancement

 

Medicine & Treatment

 

Science & Research

 

Teens & Children

 

Fitness & Health

 

Tour & Travel

 

Companies & Business

 

Outdoor & Sports

 

Jobs & Employment

 

Automobile & Automotive

 

Property & Estate

 

Music & Entertainment

 

People & Communities

 

Culture & Art

 

Lifestyle & Fashion

 

Internet & Computers

 

Policies & Law

 

Events & News

 

Home & Garden

 

Games & Play

 

Education & Reference

 

Shopping Online

 

Food & Recipe

 

Finance & Investment

 
Main Privacy of Info Terms of Use  
© 2006 www.crazyweblist.com - All Rights Reserved