What’s New in Mobile, the online product magazine for mobile communications, has ceased publication and the web site is suspended. Editor Laurence Marchini cited lack of advertising support as the reason for its demise. Laurence has time available for freelance work in the hi-tech and industrial sectors and can be contacted at whatsnewinmobile@gmail.com.
Archive for February, 2010
Lack of advertising leads to another magazine failure
Author: admin | Filed under: Technical MagazinesEmbedded Systems Design Europe hits the ether
Author: lewistonkinson | Filed under: Technical MagazinesEE Times Group previously told us they were ceasing printed publication of Embedded Systems Design Europe in 2010 and replacing it with a new, digital version. The first issue has been published – in time for Embedded World, Nuremberg - and looks good. It uses the nxtbook platform to deliver a full screen, landscape, digital magazine that is easy to read and navigate. Editor Colin Holland is inviting feedback from readers.
Technical blogs sell more products
Author: admin | Filed under: technical blogsA recent Hubspot survey of 231 marketers shows that companies that blog more sell more. This is especially true for the niche technical market. Even if you only blog once a week and almost nobody is subscribing to it, as long as you have used good, relevant keyword anchors, and made sure you integrate your blog with other activities using good practice in a technical blogs programme you will get great link equity. So the next time someone searches on those keywords there’s a strong chance they will end up looking at your content.
Pay Per Click Advertising – You’re not fired…
Author: admin | Filed under: SEOIn the 1970s and early 1980s a popular expression among the computing fraternity was that ‘nobody ever got fired for buying IBM’. This message was a key element in the FUD (fear, uncertainty, doubt) school of sales and marketing – implying not only that IBM equipment was superior to the competition but that even if it didn’t turn out to be then the purchaser could hardly be blamed as all they had done was go with the conventional wisdom.
In reality the ‘nobody ever got fired…’ concept has been with us since time immemorial – ‘trust me, Caesar, no emperor ever got fired for building a straight road, so leave it with me and watch those Ides on your way out’ – so it should come as no surprise that it is alive and well in the twenty first century. And for marcoms professionals in large and small companies alike, the modern equivalent might be ‘nobody ever got fired for using Pay-per-Click advertising’.
Before I go on I should say that I love the concept of Google AdWords and other PPC products. The idea that, depending on your willingness to pay, you can quickly guarantee to appear on the first page of a search for your chosen keywords is a simple concept to understand and to sell – both for the major search engines and for the marcoms professional looking to impress their boss. What’s more the success is much more measurable than almost any other form of advertising. However, this is no panacea – a successful marcoms campaign does not start and end with PPC.
Why? Because we all know from our own online search experiences that in many cases it is the ‘organic’ rather than the ‘sponsored link’ results that we turn to first. What’s more, research tells that we are a third less likely to bounce away from a website that we reach via an organic rather than a ‘sponsored’ link (though this may have something to do with the companies that plough all of their budget into PPC to the detriment of everything else, being the same companies that put less investment into making their website attractive to the visitor in the first place).
For the vast majority of companies, PPC should be seen as only one element of a diverse range of marketing communications activities. Investment should also be put into Search engine optimisation techniques designed to improve the organic rankings of sites and individual pages in the major search engines, identifying other methods of driving up website traffic – for example direct marketing – and ensuring that once visitors get to your site they want to stay there.
Technology Journalists have a commercial mind
Author: admin | Filed under: Technical PR, technical blogsIn a recent debate on Linked In a question was asked “UK Tech journalists – lazy, complacent or focused correctly on the Big Guys”. In the electronics and industrial markets they are not, but it would not be human nature for them not to keep an ear open for the advertisers, even if it doesn’t result in the advertisers getting loads of coverage every week. In the current climate they have to be commercially minded to safeguard their own existence. A few years ago we did some research and found that in the European Electronics Press over 70% of the advertising was paid for by passives and emech companies but they only got about 25% of the editorial coverage!
Although I think most of the publishers of the controlled circulation press are looking into an abyss with with the demise of advertising – there are just more ways to split the budget – and advertising is only one (not very effective) route to customers.
Whatever your market, social media, search engine optimisation and technical blogs need to be a key part of your mix, if you don’t think so then you are wrong! Unfortunately it is just a commercial fact of life that most SMEs don’t care about brand. Many would rather be on the front page of Google than on the front page of an Electronics magazine.
Dominating the front page of Google
Author: admin | Filed under: SEORecently a client asked us how they could remove certain old stories for a certain search term that were no longer relevant but still ranked well on Google. It is relatively straightforward, if not long winded, to create new content and place it around the technical outlets and web, then social bookmark it, add a few new images and videos on the appropriate sites, like YouTube and Flickr and start to see results. However, my mind went back to a story from a few years ago when Intel launched a new processor codenamed Penryn. Penryn is a lovely little Cornish town that was rated nicely on search engines, until that is, it vanished off the radar by the buzz created by Intel. The UK’sDaily Telegraph covered the story nicely. There are similar stories that occasionally surface, but the moral of the story is that you have to have as much high quality content scattered in appropriate outlets as hopefully these things are rare. Let’s just hope that the future of your company wasn’t based on your new product that you decided to call iPad in a moment of madness!
