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Off-Site

November 13, 2009

Search Evangelism

A poster seen on a NYC subway for Marble Collegiate Church.

GoogleGod.jpeg

Posted by Anna Maria Virzi at 10:19 AM | Permalink | Comments (0)

November 26, 2008

SEMPO to Ring NASDAQ Bell on Cyber Monday

danatodd.jpgSearch Engine Marketing Professional Organization (SEMPO) chair Dana Todd will ring the opening NASDAQ bell on Cyber Monday, December 1. SEMPO members in the area are invited to join her but shouldn’t just show up at Times Square. Instead, get in touch with SEMPO to make arrangements.

Posted by Enid Burns at 11:38 AM | Permalink | Comments (0)

November 24, 2008

New Use for Digital Billboards: Public Stockade

shoplifterad.jpegIf the mall is today's town center, then the electronic billboard in the Staten Island Mall is the equivalent of a public stockade.

Every six minutes, digital billboards in the Staten Island Mall will flash the photos of five convicted shoplifters for 15 seconds. These ads will appear on eight and nine-foot-tall plasma screens dubbed "Smart Screens," that have a 65-inch digital display.

"I wanted to do something just to warn people who might have ideas about shoplifting," Staten Island District Attorney Dan Donovan told Larry McShane, a staff writer at "The New York Daily News."

The district attorney worked with Adspace Digital Mall Network to create the ad, which will appear on electronic billboards along with other ads promoting mall businesses.

Posted by Anna Maria Virzi at 10:37 AM | Permalink | Comments (0)

October 13, 2008

Tonight in NYC: Talk Search, Have a Drink in Hell's Kitchen

Kevin%20Ryan.jpg
rebecca%20lieb.jpgTogether with my esteemed colleague Kevin Ryan, I'm talking search tonight at a Brandhacker MeetUp in New York at 7:00 p.m. - in my own Hell's Kitchen neighborhood.

Kevin will cover the fundamentals of paid search advertising, while I'll do likewise on the topic of organic search optimization. OK, so this is slightly smaller in scale than Search Engine Strategies or SMX. But at least you won't have to pay thousands of bucks to hear us expound on our favorite topic (unless it's Kevin's second-favorite topic, after "South Park").

Hope to see you there. You can RSVP for the free, pay-for-your-own-drinks event here.

Posted by Rebecca Lieb at 2:04 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)

July 21, 2008

Mobile Demos Skew Older and Older

The most interesting thing about the IAB's mobile forum this week?

It's not just about the kids any more.

In case study after case study, advertiser and marketers spent the day demonstrating how, well....old mobile advertising demos are becoming. Mike Anderson of Live Nation's ConcertVision Program probably put it best when he said that response to SMS promotions at "dinosaur" acts (such as Cheap Trick and Voyager) was all but nil a year ago, and through the roof this season.

Parents, apparently, have learned to text from their kids.

Again and again, we saw case studies from companies such as Jaguar and RIM, which don't exactly appeal to 20-somethings, but are gettign through-the-roof responses to mobile campaigns from older, affluent demos.

Could this mean that one day soon, the oft-promised year of mobile advertising may become a reality>

Posted by Rebecca Lieb at 9:22 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)

July 1, 2008

Redrum Returns!

redrum%20img.jpegY'all have been asking for it, but it just didn't seem right to throw another Redrum Tuesday with co-foundress Dana Todd in Left Coast exile.

Problem solved. Dana's back in New York (it's her Newsforce roadshow), so we're doing it again. Our next Redrum is on Tuesday, July 8, 5:30 – 8:00 pm ET at the usual place, Nolita House ( 47 E. Houston, between Mulberry & Mott).

Newbie? Here are the rules:

You show up.
You buy your own drinks.
You talk with other people who work in interactive marketing.

Here are the other rules:

No schwag.
No speeches.
Yes, you can bring a friend.
Please don't RSVP.
No, there isn't a guest or mailing list you can get on.

We're busy. You are, too. This is our hyper-informal, non-structured, friendly way of getting together with our colleagues and meeting new friends at a safe remove from the world of trade shows in hotel ballrooms.

Hope you can make it if you're in NYC next Tuesday!

Posted by Rebecca Lieb at 10:36 AM | Permalink | Comments (2)

June 23, 2008

ClickZ Live, in NYC and Boston

This week, ClickZ editors will be speaking at three events in New York and Boston.

At 212, New York's Interactive Advertising Club, I'm moderating a discussion tonight that examines trends in online retail marketing with a dynamic group of pros. They are: Matt Bailey of Hanover Direct; Eric Nadler of Danskin.com; Jim O’Brien of Barnes & Noble, and JupiterResearch's Patti Freeman Evans.

Tomorrow, on day two of the Personal Democracy Forum in New York, ClickZ Senior Editor Kate Kaye explains how candidates have found new ways of raising -- and spending -- money online. She'll be joined by Blogads' Henry Copeland, ClickToBlue cofounder Ben Geyerhahn, and A.J. Schuler, a partner at CommonSense Media.

Sarah%20Fay.jpg On Tuesday in Boston, ClickZ and Search Engine Watch is hosting a meet up for interactive marketers. The featured guest is Aegis Media North America CEO Sarah Fay, (left) one of the most powerful people in digital advertising. And she'll participate in an informal "fireside chat" with ClickZ's Rebecca Lieb. This reception is free if you >pre-register here. Hope to see you!

Posted by Anna Maria Virzi at 10:56 AM | Permalink | Comments (0)

May 28, 2008

New York Times' TimesCenter, a Gem But No Juice

The auditorium in the new TimesCenter, part of The New York Times headquarters, left some laptop toting visitors attending the AAAA digital conference hungering for a little power.

Turns out the auditorium has no place for visitors to plug in their laptops and recharge their batteries.

While that's common in older venues, it's surprising for a site built for the 21st century.

On the plus side, there's wireless Internet service.

Posted by Anna Maria Virzi at 3:02 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)

May 13, 2008

Entrepreneurs: Random Musings on Web's Past and Future

kevin%20ryan.jpegA group of top tech entrepreneurs paneled in New York tonight. Talk was lively, if not deep, given the audience ofINSEAD alums hailed mainly from the relatively distant shores of Wall Street.

Discussion encompassed online media and marketing. Some highlights:

Start-up vet Kevin Ryan was anything but bullish on mobile. "Not one single company in mobile is valued at $1 billion. The carriers are blocking all the innovation."

Moderator Henry Blodgett asked the panel how to fix newspapers. Bain Capital Group's Daniel Allen thinks they ought to capitalize on their relationships with local advertisers and teach them the ropes of online marketing.

What's hot that should be not? The Ladders co-founder Alexandre Douzet thinks Ning's value lies primarily in co-founder Marc Andressen's name. Indeed's Paul Forster votes for Twitter's lack of a business model.

And while there was general agreement things are about to get a little grim, none of these entrepreneurs believe online is on the verge of a recession that even approaches the severity of the last bubble, or dot-bomb. Ryan laughingly reminisced about a week in 2000 when he went skiing and DoubleClick's market cap soared $1 billion while his out-of-the-office e-mail auto-responder was, essentially, running the company.

Posted by Rebecca Lieb at 9:25 PM | Permalink | Comments (2)

April 18, 2008

Marketing to the Media...Continued

The flurry leading up to ad:tech prompted a bit of a rant last week about best practices for marketing to the media.

That discussion will continue in a much broader context next week at the New Comm Forum in Sonoma, CA. SEO PR expert Sally Falkow and I will be discussing the opportunities -- and the threats -- that online media, search, and the social Web are presenting to the media and other communications professionals.

If you make it to the conference, please be sure to say hello.

Posted by Rebecca Lieb at 12:07 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)

April 10, 2008

Euro RSCG Creating Creative Commune

Brooks.jpgJeff Brooks, who heads Euro RSCG's New York presence, is on a mission not only to un-silo digital from the agencies other operations, but to put digital "at the heart" of every activity and client engagement.

To this end, he's planning to remodel the shop's sizeable New York offices with the goal of putting all the creatives -- from digital to direct to broadcast and print -- on the same floor to foster (or force?) collaboration and interaction.

"There are going to be fights," he admits. "Then they're going to laugh, make up and go out for drinks and dinner together."

Posted by Rebecca Lieb at 1:58 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)

April 8, 2008

Scripps Shoots for "Total Category Dominance"

deanna%20brown.jpgDropped in on the Scripps Networks upfront this morning. Deanna Brown, who's been president of its Interactive Group for the past year, has set the rather ambitious goal of "total category dominance" for the group's five cable properties: HGTV, Food Network, DIY, Fine Living, and GAC.

To achieve that goal, Brown is focusing on what she told advertisers is "new" new media, i.e. mobile and social channels. Given the predominance of contests, shopping lists and other participatory programming on the stations, Scripps is particularly well postioned to leverage social media and has already done so with successful initiatives such as Blog Cabin.

Chatting afterwards, Brown told me that what she's really concentrating on over the next few months is an extensive rebuild of Scripps' backend, particularly the CMS, to bring more Web 2.0 functionality to the networks' numerous sites. "After eight years of the same CMS, it's time for a change," she said.

Users won't see a difference, but will be able to use the sites differently and in deeper, more engaging ways. Methinks this is an issue many media companies are going to have to address -- and invest in -- to remain competitive, retain audience and attract advertisers.

Posted by Rebecca Lieb at 11:04 AM | Permalink | Comments (0)

March 31, 2008

Are TV Networks Measuring What Counts?

Alan Wurtzel, NBC's president of research and media development, is presenting research at the ARF Re:Think conference essentially in defense of network TV. He's claiming TV viewing hasn't decreased as a resut of the Web, rather that people are absorbing more media simultaneously as they multitask.

He's also showing eye-tracking scans taken of views as they fast-forward through :30 spots on DVRs. The graphics are supposed to indicate these viewers concentrate more intently on the center of the screen as the ads whiz by, indicating there's no real conscious absorption of the ad message, but there's nevertheless an unconscious message being conveyed.

This sounds dubious. Sure, networks are bound to conduct research in their own interests -- why wouldn't they? But the message coming through from Wurtzel (who's still talking) is that while consumers certainly are still watching TV, they're significantly less focused on it. In fact, they may even be most intent on the set when they're trying to avoid something rather than watch it.

This raises questions about engagement, something the ARF is still working to define.

Posted by Rebecca Lieb at 10:23 AM | Permalink | Comments (0)

March 10, 2008

Live By the Crowd, Die By the Crowd

The SXSW conference has been all about bottom-up media; individuals and crowds creating, selecting and elevating content above and beyond whats doled out to them by traditional media outlets and corporations.

Sure, Business Week journalist Sarah Lacy's keynote interview with Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg yesterday was a trainwreck, an abortion, went down in flames and every other metaphor for disaster. Why? Because Sarah was all about Sarah, all the time (except when she was dissing her audience). The media took her to task for it. So did the blogosphere and the Twittersphere (to which her "screw all you guys" response bears special mention).

In real time.

Her self-justification in this YouTube interview only makes something bad something much worse indeed.

Ironically, Sarah has, in unifying thousands of conference attendees against her (and providing the burning topic for conversation at last night's parties) become the most valuable object lesson in what's so endlessly discussed here in Austin. The word made flesh.

If you doubt the pundits, experts, panelists and pontificators, the Story of Sarah proves them right. In a highly weird way, it's almost the best thing that could have happened here. Except, of course, for Sarah herself.

Posted by Rebecca Lieb at 11:05 AM | Permalink | Comments (0)

March 9, 2008

SXSW Keynotes - Graphic Recordings

One of the coolest things about attending the keynotes sessions at SXSW is watching Sunni Brown and Marilyn Martin graphically record the proceedings - quickly, compellingly and more succinctly than many of the journalists or bloggers in the vast session rooms.

They manage to get words, images, portraits and the whole flow of the hour-long conversations.

Click on the image to enlarge this amazing map of yesterday's conversation between MIT Media Lab's Henry Jenkins and author Steven Johnson.

Posted by Rebecca Lieb at 3:00 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)

Wiki-ize Your Intranet

li.jpeg"What if you could let anybody talk to anybody in an organization?" asked Forrester's Charlene Li at her talk at SXSW today, entitled "Social Strategies for Revolution."

Charlene proposed a perfectly simple idea and thoroughly smart idea for fostering communication within organizations -- with minimal investment: throw out your Intranet and replace it with a wiki.

In addition to increasing collaboration and the spread of ideas across department, Li advocates the strategy to stem the tide of internal e-mailing. Not a bad idea at all.

Posted by Rebecca Lieb at 1:15 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)

March 7, 2008

Greener Marketing: It's a Brand Thing, Too

cd%20garbage.jpgMarketers need to start thinking harder about schwag for the sake of the environment, as well as their brands.

The sheer amount of conference bag stuff always boggles the mind, particularly at evens as massive as SXSW. Of course, the sponsor fees behind stuffing all this stuff into those totes goes a long way toward making these events possible.

SXSW sent out a pre-event e-mail to participants with pointers on making the event greener, pointing out opportunities for recycling and other efforts conference-goers could take toward reducing - somewhat - the event's carbon footprint.

But boy, is my bag full. And it's full of stuff that doesn't need to be there. I'll single out Microsoft as an example (because they're big enough to take it, but are hardly the only offender).

Microsoft's extremely cool Silverlight plug-in is a topline SXSW sponsor. That doesn't excuse including a Silverlight CD, encased in a hefty plastic box, in each of tens of thousands of bags. Not when this slim little plug-in is readily available as a fast, free download from the Web.

It's not just a matter of waste (calling to mind AOL's well-publicized earlier excesses), it's also become a matter of branding (particularly in an environment and a city as socially conscious as SXSW and Austin). Microsoft paid a pretty penny to manufacture all those CDs, and more still to get them slipped into bags -- so they could be slipped into the trash. An alternative might have been a simple sheet with information about the product and how to get it for free.

Result? Negative buzz. That's bad for the brand, not just the environment.

Posted by Rebecca Lieb at 2:16 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)

The Worst Viral Marketing Campaign - Ever

sxsw.jpgJust picked up the conference bag and badge. It's exciting to be at South By Southwest, and in Austin, for the first time.

If you're here, try to catch the panel I'm participating in, which promises to be a ton of fun. Henry Copeland, Jeff Jarvis, Steve Hall, Charlotte Selles and yours truly are going to nominated the 10 worst viral marketing campaigns of all time, then award The Suxorz Trophy to the all-time worst.

A snarky good time is all but guaranteed!

Posted by Rebecca Lieb at 2:04 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)

December 14, 2007

Save the Date! "Meatball Sundae" Webcast with Seth Godin

seth_banner_updated_v2_copy.jpgWe know you guys love Seth Godin (who doesn't?). You nominate his blog for ClickZ's annual Marketing Excellence Award every year -- and it's won. Twice.

As a marketer, Seth's brilliance borders on the uncanny. He's an unparalleled public speaker and a prolific author. And we're delighted to announced that on Wednesday, January 23, 2008 at 2:00 PM EST we'll be presenting a Webcast featuring Seth on the topic How Do You Avoid the Meatball Sundae? in conjunction with the release of his latest book, Meatball Sundae: Is Your Marketing out of Sync?

You owe it to yourself to catch this Webcast, so sign up now while you're thinking about it -- before you take off for the holidays.

Posted by Rebecca Lieb at 9:45 AM | Permalink | Comments (0)

December 10, 2007

Stumbling Upon Gaptidings in Action

gaptidings%20truck.JPG
Last week walking around Soho during lunch someone on a street corner asked, "Do you want to send a video holiday greeting?" I had a loose agenda of holiday shopping, so my immediate reaction: "No." But then I turned around to see a truck skinned in the Gap's "crazy stripe" pattern and realized it was a Gap promotion with work from yahoo for the Gaptidings campaign we published today.

Click the present to see my greeting to ClickZ readers. Of course the truck's generator competed with me and won, I think.

View Video Greeting

Posted by Enid Burns at 11:25 AM | Permalink | Comments (0)

November 7, 2007

Party Tips: Offline Marketing for Online Companies

velvet%20rope.jpegIt's ad:tech time, and that means party time here in New York. And if there's one thing online players haven't yet mastered it's the art -- and the common sense -- of hosting offline events.

Take RSVP'ing. You get the e-mail invitation, you respond in a timely fashion, you get to the door, and four times out of five, you're not on the list. Which begs the question of the list in the first place. But OK, a list is necessary.

Who's managing that list? It's astonishing the number of industry players hosting parties this week that don't have a company or a PR representative at the door. Last night at a club, a couple of burly, clipboard-toting doormen were busily turning away executives from ad agencies, major online properties such as YellowPages.com, and yours truly from the velvet ropes.

We'd all RSVP'd.

What did our host gain from the event? A bunch of "guests" huddled in the cold complaining to one another about a bad experience.

If you're investing five or six figures in an event to impress clients, prospects, and the media, protect that investment and those relationships. Assign company reps to work the door. Create a drop-dead list of people and/or companies that get in, no matter what. And above all, don't let a nightclub's bouncers determine who's in and who's out. It's hardly in the venue's interest to serve even more free food and drinks, is it?

Posted by Rebecca Lieb at 10:23 AM | Permalink | Comments (0)

October 25, 2007

Two Views of Advertising's Future

Rushkoff.jpg

David%20Weinberger.jpgAuthor and academic Douglas Rushkoff sounded a wake-up call to advertisers and marketers: your business will be dead unless you work with companies and products that produce exciting products that inspire you.

Likewise, David Weinberger, co-author of "The Cluetrain Manifesto" and a fellow at Harvard's Berkman Institute for Internet and Society, said companies can no longer control and manage product marketing. "Real marketing [that's] people talking with one another," he said, referring to social media. "We need to respect these conversations, honor them. Not intrude."

Rushkoff and Weinberger discussed advertising's past and prognosticated on its future on Wednesday at a ClickZ 10th anniversary dinner and awards ceremony celebrating a decade of innovation and excellence in online marketing and advertising.

Rushkoff exhorted marketers to convince their clients to come up with compelling products. "Teach them how to get back into the business they are in," he said. "Then you don't have to make up a story about them."

While the broadcast advertising model is based on developing one message for many, Weinberger said that's a dangerous model. "By having more generic messages, you end up dumbing down messages. That's disastrous in the political sphere…it's a disaster for democracy," he warned.

Rebecca Lieb, ClickZ's editor-in-chief, looked at interactive's highlights and low points during the decade. Remember when, she said, venture capitalists -- not hedge fund managers -- were rock stars. Or when advertisers had to be reminded to add URLs to print and broadcast campaigns? How about vortals?

"My Dad would get excited when he’d find articles I wrote online. So excited that he’d print them out and mail them to me from his home in Arizona," she said.

On a more serious note, Lieb recognized that the interactive industry survived tough times. "We pulled through. The industry pulled through. You pulled through, too. And now, we're mainstream, not margin," she said.

For "ClickZ Marketing Excellence Awards: The First Decade," Google was named "Innovation of the Decade." Other awards were given for best products, services, businesses, and people who made the most significant overall contribution to the industry.

Posted by Anna Maria Virzi at 1:57 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)

September 28, 2007

Buzz Phrase of Advertising Week

odometer%20needle.jpg
Possibly the most-heard phrase in panels and meeting s of the various conferences this week: "Move the needle." It came up a few times, and while it's relevant to the discussion, it's moving beyond buzz-worthy.

Posted by Enid Burns at 5:03 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)

September 25, 2007

Reach & Frequency: RIP

Sarah FayShuttling back and forth between MIXX and OMMA during New York's Advertising Week has been more hectic than rewarding (two simultaneous conferences in the same city is bad for the industry, guys, not to mention speakers, exhibitors and vendors).

While it's impossible to catch everything, overall the discussions at both events has largely underwhelmed. Too many "it's about the user" and "the consumer is in control" platitudes.

So it was refreshing to hear CEO of both Carat and Isobar US this morning with a more tangible take on the state of the industry. Reach and frequency are over, said Sarah. "I do not believe an agency can succeed by putting a good media plan together." Rhetorically, she asked, "what is YouTube, creative or media?"

Bottom line, Carat is saying that the brands that will win are the ones whose consumers tell the best stories. Instead of mere B2C advertising, the new model, she argues, should be B2C + C2C (consumer-to-consumer) campaigns. As an example, she cites client Adidas' MySpace page, engendering 21.5M brand encounters per month (page visits, downloadable media, etc.).

This following an audit of one year of adidas advertising from which it was determined yielded a total of 6 minutes of contact with the target consumer. "That didn't make any of us feel happy."

None of this is earth-shatteringly new, of course. What's impressive are the data Carat is using to back up their claims.

Sarah closed her talk with an example of regression analysis. Paint a house, and like an advertising campaign, its value starts going down from Day One. C2C advertising is "more like planting a tree."

Posted by Rebecca Lieb at 4:25 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)

September 20, 2007

Google Scooter Etiquette

google%20ny_scooter-o.JPGThis morning Google's New York office opened its doors to media. A pre-session conversation with Tim Armstrong, Google's president of advertising and commerce, revealed a certain scooter etiquette practiced around the NY office, after a few incidents. He said because the hallways are so long, people really pick up speed. The perfect storm occurs when someone walks out of a room, which has a sliding door and is not so easy to detect when wheeling down those hallways. Armstrong also said there are parking racks for scooters. A few people upgraded to motorized scooters, which is no longer allowed.

Posted by Enid Burns at 2:52 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)

July 13, 2007

ClickZ Online Video Conference Next Week

Nice that our ClickZ Specifics: Online Video Advertising conference in New York next Thursday, July 19 is very close to sold out. But some tickets are still available.

When we introduced this event last year, it exceeded all our expectations. It was the first conference dedicated to online video advertising and marketing. This year we have a stellar lineup of speakers from companies such as (in no particular order): OMD Digital, Ogilvy, Yahoo, Microsoft, Digitas, Organic, Tribal DDB, AKQA, R/GA, VideoEgg, Nielsen/NetRatings, Tremor Media, EyeWonder, Special Ops Media, Advertising.com, Deep Focus and 24/7 Real Media.

If you manage to attend, please say hi - hope to see you there next Thursday!

Posted by Rebecca Lieb at 12:21 PM | Permalink | Comments (2)

July 3, 2007

Talkin' Yahoo on NPR Today

logo_npr_125.jpg
National Public Radio's All Things Considered asked me to discuss Yahoo on this evening's program.

Topics Laura Sydell raised include the company's ability to compete with Google, its ability to overhaul its ad sales operations, and the overall online advertising climate in terms of search, display advertising and audience.

Check your local listing and give it a listen if you're near a radio or Web steam, or download the podcast later on.

Posted by Rebecca Lieb at 2:38 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)

May 18, 2007

Eric Schmidt at Personal Democracy Forum

google_pdf.gifThe house at Pace University near City Hall, NYC this morning was packed. Web consultants, bloggers, techno politicos, issue advocates and lots and lots o' press were there to listen as NYTimes writer and book author Tom Friedman chat with Google CEO Eric Schmidt, kicking off the annual Personal Democracy Forum conference. The show has, in just a few years, achieved status worthy of attracting other influential speakers like Seth Godin, Esther Dyson and Larry Lessig. The goal each year is to help move the worlds of politics and technology closer, and analyze the current state of those colliding spheres.

Considering all the great minds present, you'd think the audience could stop browsing the Web, reading e-mail, IM-ing, chatting and Blackberrying for a moment and pay full attention. But I digress.

So, the event doesn't typically delve too deeply into the ad/marketing world, and even though Google has set up a DC-based arm to reach out to political advertisers, the discussion between Friedman and Schmidt touched on lots of big ideas on Google's effect on individuals and world governments.

Take the Google-effect on recruiting and hiring employees. "At the age of 21, it should be OK to change your name," quipped Schmidt, alluding to the trails of reputation-corrupting blog posts, images and videos many young people are wishing they could delete when it comes time to impress potential employers.

Another thing discussed was censorship. Schmidt mentioned the "Great Firewall" set up in China to block content the government deems inappropriate for Chinese citizens. One interesting note on Google's appeasement of China's blocking requests: According to Schmidt, Google tells citizens in China what was removed from their results.

As for the more recent Pentagon request to block access to YouTube and other sites by military personnel, Schmidt stated plainly, "We would prefer that they not [restrict access.]"

Oh, and here's something that media folks who cover Google may find amusing if not infuriating: Schmidt claimed more than once that the company is more transparent than ever. "We try very much to tell people what we're doing and why we're doing it," he said, adding, "We're trying to use YouTube as much as we can to document." Indeed, there is an official Google channel on YouTube.

Posted by Kate Kaye at 2:36 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)

April 30, 2007

Ticket Winners - ClickZ Specifics: Web Metrics

Congratulations to Kate Farber, Adrienne Doss, and Joe Tedd, winners of a free pass to our conference this Wednesday in New York, ClickZ Specifics: Web Metrics.

Of course, there's still time to register if you didn't win a pass!

Posted by Rebecca Lieb at 9:17 AM | Permalink | Comments (0)

April 24, 2007

New Hot Topic for Our Web Metrics Conference

Face-to-face. It's a good idea sometimes.

I just ran into IAB SVP and General Manager Sheryl Draizen and realized that with that body's recent call-to-action on the Web metrics front, we had to have her speak at our Web Metrics conference in New York next week. I asked, she accepted, and we've added a new session entitled "A New Era of Measurement Transparency" (I can get it on this blog faster than it will take to get it on the event site).

Sheryl will discuss why the IAB just issued a call for audience measurement to adhere to newer and stricter standards, such as independent audits, accreditation and non-panel based measurement. This is one of the burning topics in the industry right now. Should provide for some pretty fascinating discussion on May 2 at the NY Hilton.

Posted by Rebecca Lieb at 3:45 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)

Ad:Tech - Industry's Leading Lights Are in the Dark

The ad:tech keynote was really, really awful. aQuantive President and CEO Brian McAndrews (who's anything but devoid of original ideas) spouted platitudes such as "social media is certainly here to stay" to his interlocutor, FastCompany's less-than-lively Lynne Johnson, who sat slumped in her chair and said "yknow" a lot. The audience quickly moved from rolling eyes at their neighbors to in-session SMS messages trashing the session to colleagues elsewhere in the vast room.

Now I'm in a session with some real industry luminaries: P&G's Ted McConnell, Motorola's Barry James Folson, and Publicis Chief Creative Officer Bob Moore, all discussing the state of the interactive advertising industry.

Pity no one can actually see them. The session room, dimmed for PowerPoint projections (only at this session, there aren't any), has literally no light shining on the speakers at all. About 300 people are sitting here staring at black silhouettes.

Enlightening speakers deserve a little light. Hope this gets dealt with.

Posted by Rebecca Lieb at 2:07 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)

April 23, 2007

Win a Pass to ClickZ Specifics: Web Metrics in NYC on May 2

web%20metrics.jpg On the Web, everything is measurable. The trick is knowing what to measure -- and how to measure it.

Web metrics is an enormous, constantly evolving challenge for many marketers. ClickZ Specifics: Web Metrics is an intensive, one-day conference we're holding in New York City on May 2 to help interactive marketers come to grips with, and make intelligent, informed decisions, about this often prickly topic. We have a great line-up of speakers for the event, including many of our own columnists on the topic.

And, we're offering one free ticket to a reader of this blog. Just e-mail your name, affiliation and full contact information to: raffle [at] incisivemedia.com by 5:00 p.m. EST on Wednesday, April 25. We'll pick one entry at random (and, of course, protect the personal information and privacy of all entrants).

Good luck -- and look forward to seeing you at the event!

Posted by Rebecca Lieb at 5:32 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)

March 30, 2007

Comment Loop

clio%20mobile%20tablet.jpg
Today at the Mobile Entertainment and Advertising Summit held by the GSM Association, an interactive element was distributed to attendees. Several tablet-like computers called Clio were left on chairs in the audience. Between sessions, attendees were asked to type in comments about the discussion, as well as answer questions posed like, what’s the best/worst mobile content you’ve seen. Comments were posted anonymously. It can also be used to ask questions for panelists and speakers. It’s added an interesting element to the conference, but also demonstrates engagement and audience participation able to be used at other events.

Posted by Enid Burns at 11:20 AM | Permalink | Comments (0)

March 16, 2007

No More Calls, We Have A Winner!

Congratulations to Cece from San Francisco, the lucky winner of a ticket to our ClickZ Specifics: Video Advertising conference on Monday in the City by the Bay.

Looking forward to seeing you there (plus a few hundred other agency, vendor, and media people).

Posted by Rebecca Lieb at 9:33 AM | Permalink | Comments (0)

March 7, 2007

Enter to Win A Pass to ClickZ Specifics: Video Advertising

rafflepic.jpg Our hearts are often in San Francisco, but with the exception of one editor, most of the bodies working for ClickZ are planted on the East Coast. It's in New York where we do the occasional fun outing with our friends and readers like Redrum.

Fun, tinged with guilt. We love getting together offline, and despite a worldwide audience circumstances compel this NYC bias. Here's an attempt to make it up to at least one person in San Francisco.

I finagled a pass to our ClickZ Specifics: Online Video Advertising conference in San Francisco on Monday, March 19. We're going to raffle it to one lucky reader of this blog. Send an e-mail with your full contact info (name, title, company, address, e-mail address and phone) to:

raffle [at] incisivemedia.com

(no worries - our privacy policy fully applies to your personal information)

We need your entry (one per person, please) by 9:00 a.m. PST on Wednesday, March 14th.

Good luck! Look forward to seeing you there.

Posted by Rebecca Lieb at 4:13 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)

March 6, 2007

Rrrredrum Rrrreminder

It's going to be about the coldest night of the year here in Gotham, and that just calls for a show of interactive marketer fortitude.

So don't forget to join us at Redrum tonight (you can always make yours hot buttered rum - after all, you're buying your own drinks).

See you at Nolita House between 6-8.

Brrr!

Posted by Rebecca Lieb at 1:44 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)

March 5, 2007

ClickZ Specifics:Video Comes to San Francisco

testpattern.jpeg Last summer, ClickZ ran the first conference dedicated solely to the topic of interactive video advertising. The hyper-focused, one-day event was a smash, so we're taking the show on the road.

That, plus the fact that online video becomes more topical every day.

The San Francisco conference on Tuesday, March 19, boasts an impressive lineup of speakers from companies including (in no particular order): Google, Yahoo,OgilvyInteractive, Organic, MTV Network’s, Atom Entertainment, Scripps Networks, MediaVest Worldwide, BET Interactive, Heavy, Nielsen//Netratings, comScore, Tribal DDB, and a host of others.

If you're involved in interactive advertising and weren't able to make the New York event, I really hope you can make it to our Bay Area reprise.

Take a sec to register -- and while you're there, please don't forget to introduce yourself!

Posted by Rebecca Lieb at 3:31 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)

February 27, 2007

Hey, New Yorkers -- Rrrredrum Rrrreturns!

redrum%20img.jpegY'all have been asking for it, but it just didn't seem right to throw another Redrum Tuesday with co-foundress Dana Todd in Left Coast exile.

Problem solved. Dana's back in New York (if only for a visit), so we're doing it again. Our next Redrum is on Tuesday, March 6 from 6-8 at the usual place, Nolita House ( 47 E. Houston, between Mulberry & Mott).

Newbie? Here are the rules:

You show up.
You buy your own drinks.
You talk with other people who work in interactive marketing.

Here are the other rules:

No schwag.
No speeches.
Yes, you can bring a friend.
Please don't RSVP.
No, there isn't a guest or mailing list you can get on.

We're busy. You are, too. This is our hyper-informal, non-structured, friendly way of getting together with our colleagues and meeting new friends at a safe remove from the world of trade shows in hotel ballrooms.

Hope you can make it if you're in town on Tuesday!

Posted by Rebecca Lieb at 4:03 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)

February 26, 2007

Does Silicon Alley Know Its Strengths?

siliconalley.jpegThe New York City Economic Development Council, together with Polytechnic University, sponsored a panel discussion this morning on Silicon Alley 2.0. The purpose of the event was to foster growth in New York's tech sector.

I attended because the panel was largely comprised of media companies and ad-supported startups:. Present were President of Hearst Interactive Media Kenneth Bronfin, Jason Rapp, who heads M&A at IAC and UPOC Networks head Steven Spencer.

The event turned out to be notable because of the lack of discussion of the city as a hub of media, marketing and advertising. In introductory remarks, New York City was lauded as a hub that can attract tech startups thanks to its strong academic, legal, financial and fiber optic infrastructures. At the same time, the morning was filled with East vs. West laments, particularly numerous wishes that "the next Google" would incubate in New York, alongside laments that local VCs wouldn't have had the vision to fund a YouTube.

Yet the VCs and city agency made nary a mention of what attracted Google to establish a major New York outpost in the first place (not to mentions its rivals such as Yahoo and MSN). It's because this city is the ground zero of advertising and media -- the financial engines that power the lion's share of the Internet economy.

Marketing New York means identifying its differentiators. The city appears far from that most basic element of crafting a message. There are plenty of places with universities, lawyers, banks, VCs, and broadband. Madison Avenue doesn't exist anywhere else, ditto New York's concentration of broadcasters and publishers.

Posted by Rebecca Lieb at 10:37 AM | Permalink | Comments (0)

February 13, 2007

today_tcm2-18439.jpgThe newspaper industry is in decline in the U.K., as it is in the U.S. and elsewhere.

Nevertheless, over here in London, the number of people reading a paper while waiting at the tube stop was really astonishing. At 8:00 a.m. yesterday, I was the only person waiting on the platform without my nose buried in a broadsheet (I did peruse "The Guardian" and "The Independent" over breakfast).

When I mentioned this to people here, they dismissed it, saying commuters are reading free papers. But these weren't free - they were the usual roundup of national dailies.

In New York, you're assaulted with free morning paper hander-outers at every morning subway approach. The stations are littered with discarded papers, yet actual rider readership (in the trains, at least) is relatively light.

Over here, it's different. And oddly reminiscent of a not-too-distant American past.

Posted by Rebecca Lieb at 6:11 AM | Permalink | Comments (0)

January 31, 2007

Steve Forbes: Online Ads Are Fun!

forbes.jpeg At the AlwaysOn conference, publisher and former presidential hopeful Steve Forbes is talking about online advertising.

"It took several years for marketers to wake up to the fact that people were eyeballing sites during the day," he said, adding that when they did, Forbes.com got a nice little shot in the arm. "The nice thing about online is that properly done, the viewer can take as much or as little as they want. With print it's more of a leisurely introduction...We're at the embryonic stages, but online can be fun."

Posted by Rebecca Lieb at 1:09 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)

January 29, 2007

Time Warner Looks to Future to Reach Consumers

The upscale shopping destination of the Shops at Columbus Circle, also known as the Time Warner Center, have been host to many product and branding displays, some with interactive qualities. Currently, the whole public space portion of the upscale shopping area is taken over by a Time Warner exhibit, "Home to the Future." The exhibit demonstrates every touchpoint Time Warner makes into consumers' lives. There's a plasma TV with HD feeds, and content on every other screen and device possible. On the side hallways of the center, banks of computers display Time Warner's online properties. It's a way for consumers to explore the company's properties and determine availability.

Posted by Enid Burns at 12:21 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)

January 3, 2007

Yo! New Yorkers! Redrum Tuesday on Jan. 9

redrum.jpeg Join Dana Todd and I for what threatens to be her very last Redrum Tuesday in New York.

What's Redrum, you ask? Why, it's the non-agenda, utterly informal industry get-together Dana and I have been sporadically hostessing over the past year or so. It works like this:

You show up. You buy a drink. You socialize with old friends and meet new people.

No agenda, no speeches, no schwag, no RSVPs -- just come. It's fun.

Hope to see you next Tuesday, Jan. 9 at Nolita House (map) from 6 - 8.

Perhaps we can collectively talk Dana out of moving back to San Diego.

Posted by Rebecca Lieb at 10:51 AM | Permalink | Comments (0)

December 13, 2006

Gnashing Teeth Over Pop-Ups

dentalsoftware.jpg Shortly after reading Seth's little rant about non user-initiated audio ads on Rhapsody.com this morning, I found myself in the dentist's chair. Hanging over that chair is the now ubiquitous flat-screen monitor displaying the day's appointments, dental records, x-rays, and all that other important dentist stuff.

Only today, the screen was displaying something I'd never seen before: a pop-up ad for a Rhapsody MP3 player. I didn't even know those things were connected to the Web, but apparently they are. The ad pretty much obliterated my appointment and records.

Seth, you're not the only one who's peeved. So's Dr. Cho, her technician, and yours truly.

Posted by Rebecca Lieb at 9:26 AM | Permalink | Comments (1)

December 11, 2006

Power Points Ranging

ipod%20minis.jpg My holiday this year was a bit more off the beaten track than usual. I can't say Laos provided any great revelations about interactive marketing -- it's nowhere near that point of development. What was mesmerizing was the never-ending display of brands -- and off brands -- in the local markets.

I wish I'd spoken enough of the language to learn whether or not the YongWei iPod mini headphones were outselling "Apple's" version.

And I'll long regret being way too big to fit into this Power Points Rangers t-shirt for my next conference presentation. If you're in the audience, would you please just pretend I've got it on?

pp%20rangers.jpg

Posted by Rebecca Lieb at 10:31 AM | Permalink | Comments (0)

December 5, 2006

Calacanis to Sequoia

calacanis.jpeg"We had an arrangement that I could leave at any time," said serial entrepreneur Jason Calacanis this morning in his keynote discussion with Danny Sullivan at Search Engine Strategies Chicago, of his arrangement with AOL. "I was there for just over a year."

It was just over a year ago that Calacanis sold Weblogs Inc. to AOL, and remained at the company where he also helped revamp Netscape.

"Today, I figured since I don't have a job, I've accepted a job at Sequoia Capital as entrepreneur in action.

"Now, I just have to figure out what to build."

Posted by Rebecca Lieb at 10:08 AM | Permalink | Comments (0)

November 6, 2006

ad:tech's SRO -- Much Too SRO

sardines.jpegA reported 10,800 attendees are at squashed into New York's Hilton Hotel for ad:tech this week. Everywhere you go, you feel like you're trying to squeeze in the same room with all of them.

At the event's opening this morning, new Chairman Drew Ianni warned delegates this year would be a "tight squeeze." He wasn't kidding. I'm at a session now at which over half the audience is forced to either stand or sprawl on the floor.

Everyone hates New York's much larger, and very inconveniently located Javits Center. But c'mon ad:tech. It's time to make the move in New York, as you did into San Francisco's Moscone Center on the West Coast.

Posted by Rebecca Lieb at 11:43 AM | Permalink | Comments (0)

November 1, 2006

Word-of-Mouth in New Hampshire

millsfalls.jpgThe New Hampshire Travel Council asked me up to beautiful Meredith, NH to keynote their Fall conference on marketing. My online marketing talk centered on the importance of user-generated content and participating in the conversations consumers are having about your business.

But the best lesson came from a member of the audience following a brief talk by the owner of the Inns at Mills Falls, Rusty McLear, and Alex Ray who runs the Common Man restaurants operated on the hotel properties.

Rusty and Alex alluded to contributing to the community and doing well by being good business citizens, but they didn't refer to specific initiatives. Then, a member of the audience raised his hand and told the audience that when his August wedding had to be canceled due to unforeseen circumstances, the hotel and restaurants forgave all his contracts for the event.

The two entrepreneurs shrugged off their good deed, but they did note that the gentleman had just told a couple hundred people about his good experience, and likely had related the story several times before. "We're in business to make money," noted Rusty, "but not to take the last dollar."

Strong brands tell stories. Really strong brands know when to sit back and let others tell the stories for them.

Posted by Rebecca Lieb at 2:23 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)

October 30, 2006

IAB Announces Mobile Committee

iablogo.jpegThe Interactive Advertising Bureau (IAB) just announced the creation of the IAB Mobile Committee at their IAB Leadership Forum in New York this morning.

The committee is mandated to build a "more effective and efficient advertising platform through the development and endorsement of measurement guidelines, creative guidelines and best practices." In addition, it will serve as an industry cheerleader for mobile marketing.

Sounds exactly like the Mobile Marketing Association, doesn't it?

Posted by Rebecca Lieb at 9:59 AM | Permalink | Comments (0)

October 10, 2006

Please Register for ClickZ's E-mail Conference!

CZ%20Email%20logo.jpgFour years ago, ClickZ launched a series of truly groundbreaking e-mail conferences. They were the first such events for marketers that seriously educate them on issues such as spam, permission, and privacy.

With the passage of CAN-SPAM, interest in, and furor around, responsibly and effectively using e-mail as a marketing medium dwindled. We hardly think the discussion is over. E-mail trends and tactics change all the time, while issues unheard of just a few years ago, such as deliverability, are posing new challenges.

So we hope you can join us, along with many of ClickZ's Expert columnists, for ClickZ Specifics: E-mail Marketing in New York, October 24-25. Register before Friday for a discounted ticket.

We hope to see you there!

Posted by Rebecca Lieb at 10:20 AM | Permalink | Comments (0)

October 5, 2006

Consumer Control & Marketing - In A Nutshell

At the CMO Council Summit, Dean Harris of Kayak, Josh Brooks of MySpace, and Page Murray from Palm are talking brand building.

The panel is just discussing the trend of consumers' increasign control over marketing efforts, and what marketers should do about it. A nugget of wisdom just dropped from Page's lips that sums it all up better than anything I've yet heard or read on the topic.

Page said: "Go with god."

Amen.

Posted by Rebecca Lieb at 2:09 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)

October 2, 2006

Google's New New York Office

Google moved into stylish, cavernous, and very Google-y new digs in New York this morning. Some cameraphone shots of the new Chelsea offices.


Picture291_02Oct06.jpg
Auditorium.

Picture294_02Oct06.jpg
Playroom

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one of many scooters help speed getting down the city-block length hallway

Picture298_02Oct06.jpg
one of several mini-kitchens where employees can grab free snacks and hang out

Picture299_02Oct06.jpg
...one perk still to come.

Posted by Rebecca Lieb at 2:19 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)

September 25, 2006

Monday Morning: The IAB & Naughty Lingerie

Maybe it's just an early Monday morning thing, but sitting at the IAB's MIXX event, I can't help but think that the logo and overall visual identity: languid, swirling, suspend liquid, is awfully reminiscent of the flowing inky black stuff that weaves through Agent Provacateur's not-particularly-worksafe Web site (this page is OK, though).

Maybe I'm wrong. Both might just be taking that water drop that was so ubiquitous c. 2001 another step forward.



mixx%20logo.jpg

agent%20prov.jpg

 

Posted by Rebecca Lieb at 9:56 AM | Permalink | Comments (0)

September 22, 2006

You Know You're Working Too Hard...

SEO.jpg...when you can't even walk by a sushi bar without thinking about search.

Posted by Rebecca Lieb at 3:51 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)

September 19, 2006

Talking Yahoo On CNBC

125px-Powerlunch.jpgI'll be talking about Yahoo's bad day, and whether it's an ill portent for online advertising overall on CNBC's "Power Lunch."

The segment airs live some time around 12:45 on Wednesday.

Posted by Rebecca Lieb at 9:39 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)

September 5, 2006

Reminder: NYC Drink Tonight

Summer's over, unofficially at least. But Red Rum Tuesday isn't.

So don't forget to come lift a glass after work tonght if you're in New York City.

We'll be at Nolita House from 6:00 to 8:00.

Hope to see you there!

Posted by Rebecca Lieb at 12:29 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)

August 9, 2006

Eric Schmidt, Measureable Advertising & AJAX

schmidt.jpegIn addition to his keynote discussion with Danny Sullivan today at SES, the press were granted an unusual additional hour of Q&A with Google Chairman and CEO Eric Schmidt.

We're going to have lots to tell you about what he said, but one of the more interesting points was when I asked him about how new technologies such as AJAX (which he'd earlier touted as being developed thanks, in no small part, to advertising dollars) would influence advertising going forward. For all Google's support of measurable advertising, isn't this a instance of technology that's going to freak advertisers out -- again?

"It is true that AJAX is a change in pageview modeling," Schmidt replied. "In many ways you're seeing the old model falls away. {The inability to measure page views] is an example of something I hadn't started thinking about, but I certainly will go back and do that."

Fear not, Advertiser. Google's on the case.

Posted by Rebecca Lieb at 3:23 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)

Google Dance 2006 Photos

IMG_2248.JPG
Every year I promise to take a lot of photos at the annual Google Dance, and every year I forget to bring anything beyond my cameraphone.

Well this year I had it more together. And in honor of the fact that Google's Picasa finally released Mac-compatible software, I'm able to keep the shots in the family, so to speak, rather than go to the competition or clog the blog.

Here's the link to the mini-album.

Posted by Rebecca Lieb at 1:17 AM | Permalink | Comments (0)

August 8, 2006

Update: Google Audits Click Fraud Auditors

Breaking: Here at Search Engine Strategies, Google just let it be known they're auditing the click fraud auditors -- and finding fault with their methodolgy.

Take a look at Google's AdWord's blog for an overview. We're working on a longer story for ClickZ News. Obviously, Google has a financial interest in discrediting click fraud detection tools, which have been popping up like weeds for the past year or so. Which is all the more reason why the tools themselves require auditing.

Interesting, cicuitous stuff here. Stay tuned for deeper coverage.

Update: Alchemist Media's Jessie Stricciola, a eader in the battle against click fraud, is giving Google a thumbs-down, calling the report a "roundabout attack."

"We've always been very upfront about presenting these reports," Jessie told me. She -- and others -- are upset that Google effectively sprung a 17 page report at a session here with no opportunity for prior review. Moreover, several of the vendors criticized in the report are claiming only a couple of their datapoints were analyzed, rather than their entire methodology.

Posted by Rebecca Lieb at 2:36 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)

Notes on the ClickZ Track at SES

It was a long, crowded, fruitful day at ClickZ's track on broader advertising and marketing issues on this, the first day of Search Engine Strategies in San Jose. Herewith, a few notable quotes and impressions.

At the session on video advertising, AKQA President Tom Bedecarré showed what amounted to his shop's interactive video reel. Waitamminit. Interactive shops now have reels?

IPG's emerging media labs' Brian Monahan shared recent research conducted on who creates video CGM and posts it on the Web. 86 percent are young men; 72 percent are under 25; most spend less than an hour creating the submission and a third post more than a few times per month.

Hans Peter Brøndmo discussed open source marketing and exhorted the audience to "learn how to hate Google."

Gary Stein
on the "clique": "Don't think of MySpace as a group of 300 million users. Think of it as 75 million groups of four people."

Ian Schafer showed a video created by a band for their song "Die Hard." The song plays over -- you guessed it -- scenes from 20th Century Fox's feature film, "Die Hard." Unlicensed, of course. And here's the punchline: one of his account executives plays in the band. Oh, and Fox is a client. They don't know about the video, but betcha they will soon.

Later, in discussion about all the copyright fallout surrounding YouTube, someone accused marketing executives at TV networks and film studios surreptitiously posting videos, then praying legal would stumble over them. PR is born.

TerraPass' Adam Stein wowed the audience by explain how his $0 marketing budget, together with some judicious blogging and e-mailing, led to coverage in both "The New York Times" and "The Los Angeles Times," resulting in a deal with Ford.

Posted by Rebecca Lieb at 12:10 AM | Permalink | Comments (0)

August 4, 2006

ClickZ's Hiring: San Francisco/Bay Area Editor

Are you an experienced business journalist passionate about advertising, marketing and the Web?

We're looking for a San Francisco or Bay-area based news editor/reporter to contribute to ClickZ News -- and to this very blog.

Our ideal candidate is highly Web literate and familiar with most (if not all) the topics we cover, including online advertising and marketing; paid search; Web metrics and analytics; e-mail marketing; rich media; and ad agencies. An ability to multitask under tight deadlines is critical, as are superb writing and editing skills. Three years related experience are required, a journalism or communications degree is preferred.

If you've got what it takes, please send us a cover letter. Please don't forget to paste your resume in the form.

Posted by Rebecca Lieb at 9:28 AM | Permalink | Comments (0)

July 28, 2006

Shave...Geraldo?

shave.jpg Broadcast is really getting obsessed with online video advertising, if all the shows I've been on lately discussing the phenomenon are any indication.

Even Geraldo wants a closer look. I just taped a segment for "Geraldo At Large" discussing TribalDDB's Shave Everywhere campaign for the Philips Norelco Bodygroom. Yeah, I thought Geraldo was unlikely for this story, too, but the questions on what viral video campaigns such as this one mean for the future of media were some of the best I've gotten from commercial television.

The segment airs today. Check your local listings.

Posted by Rebecca Lieb at 12:45 AM | Permalink | Comments (0)

July 17, 2006

NYC Reminder: Let's Have A Drink Tomorrow

bever_01247_t.jpg

Because...why shouldn't we?


The fabulous Dana Todd (of SEMPO and SiteLab fame) and I were chatting about how New Yorkers in this industry never see one another unless they collide at some conference in San Jose, Boston or Chicago.

Action-oriented chicks that we are, we figured we should do something about it.

So we're experimenting with an informal industry get-together/meetup type thing. No agenda, no sponsors, no speeches, and...you pay for your own drink(s). We're going to try to make this a regular event for the duration of the summer and we'll see where (if anywhere) this takes us.

So if you're feeling social, need a drink, want to make new friends or chat up old ones, join us on Tuesday, July 18 from 6:00-8:00 at Nolita House on Tuesday, July 18.

Nolita House
47 E Houston (between Mulberry & Mott map)

Dana wants to dub these get-togethers "Red Rum Tuesdays." She thinks it "rolls off the tongue, sounds vaguely mysterious."

And if you get the hair color reference to us both, it just proves what an industry insider you are!

See you then, we hope.

Posted by Rebecca Lieb at 11:54 AM | Permalink | Comments (0)

July 14, 2006

Talking MySpace on CNBC Tonight

I'll be back on CNBC's "On the Money" tonight discussing MySpace's incredible spike in traffic with Vanity Fair's Michael Wolf.

The show's at 7:00 EST, the segment will run at around 7:15, if you'd like to tune in.

Posted by Rebecca Lieb at 5:45 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)

July 12, 2006

In NYC? Let's Meet After Work Next Tuesday

bever_01247_t.jpg

Because...why shouldn't we?


The fabulous Dana Todd (of SEMPO and SiteLab fame) and I were chatting about how New Yorkers in this industry never see one another unless they collide at some conference in San Jose, Boston or Chicago.

Action-oriented chicks that we are, we figured we should do something about it.

So we're experimenting with an informal industry get-together/meetup type thing. No agenda, no sponsors, no speeches, and...you pay for your own drink(s). We're going to try to make this a regular event for the duration of the summer and we'll see where (if anywhere) this takes us.

So if you're feeling social, need a drink, want to make new friends or chat up old ones, join us on Tuesday, July 18 from 6:00-8:00 at Nolita House on Tuesday, July 18.

Nolita House
47 E Houston (between Mulberry & Mott map)

Dana wants to dub these get-togethers "Red Rum Tuesdays." She thinks it "rolls off the tongue, sounds vaguely mysterious."

And if you get the hair color reference to us both, it just proves what an industry insider you are!

See you then, we hope.

Posted by Rebecca Lieb at 9:59 AM | Permalink | Comments (0)

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