Well, yes - we all know that Internet Advertising is growing every year, but a new study just released by the IDC Group puts numbers behind it.
"Internet advertising in the United States will continue to grow fast even as the current economic woes will lead to a contraction in ad spending overall, essentially accelerating the transfer of marketing budgets from the traditional media into the new. During the forecast period, Internet advertising will grow about eight times as fast as advertising at large. IDC finds overall Internet advertising revenue will double from $25.5 billion in 2007 to $51.1 billion in 2012."
The media share of search ads will continue to grow and remain the number one player in Internet advertising.
The whole 40 page report from IDC is pretty pricey - but you can read the press release for free. MediaPost's Research Brief blog outlines the high points.
Wednesday, June 11, 2008
Tuesday, June 10, 2008
CAN-SPAM new rules
In addition to SEO/SEM - I also handle the email marketing at our place. At SMX last week, someone called Matt Cutts (the head of Google's webspam team) the moral compass of the SEO industry. Well, I'm the moral compass of our email marketing. And as that - I do boring things like actually READ the CAN-SPAM legislation.
The FTC just (well, last month and in government circles that amounts to "just") approved a new rule provision.
The two big things I gleaned from this -
Second point . . .not so much a good thing. To me allowing private mailboxes to meet the physical postal address requirement opens up another way for Spammers to hide. Hiding = not good in this gal's book.
There is a good bit more of the legal-speak in the link above. Any discussion or questions, comment and I'll do my best to translate the legalese for you!
The FTC just (well, last month and in government circles that amounts to "just") approved a new rule provision.
The two big things I gleaned from this -
- You can't make it hard for folks to opt-out. And you can't require any information other than the email address to opt them out.
- A commercial e-mail send can now use a post office box or private mailbox to satisfy the "valid physical postal address" requirement.
Second point . . .not so much a good thing. To me allowing private mailboxes to meet the physical postal address requirement opens up another way for Spammers to hide. Hiding = not good in this gal's book.
There is a good bit more of the legal-speak in the link above. Any discussion or questions, comment and I'll do my best to translate the legalese for you!
Labels:
CAN-SPAM,
commercial email,
eMail marketing
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