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Posts Tagged ‘NextMark’

How Google is monetizing YouTube

Tuesday, December 30th, 2008

YouTubeGoogle's YouTube is perhaps the fastest growing website on the internet(?). Many have wondered how Google is going to turn YouTube's traffic into revenue. Here's one way: by planting contextually relevant ads on websites throughout the internet that embed YouTube videos.

Yesterday, I embedded a YouTube video "Twitter Whore" in my blog post "Is Twitter just for twits?" On the embedded video in our blog, you will see an overlay of advertisements. The interesting thing is the advertisements are not related to Twitter. Rather, they are related to the content of our website — direct marketing, mailing lists, etc.

YouTube site advertising

In contrast, if you go to the same video on YouTube, you don't see these ads.

This got me thinking… there's got to be millions of websites with embedded YouTube videos (because they've made it so easy). Now Google can insert ads on all these websites without permission and without paying any commission. My hat is off to Google.

What's to stop a competitor from advertising on my website if I have a YouTube video posted? Nothing.

I am guessing that YouTube will introduce a "premium player" that supresses advertisements and plays at higher quality. For a fee, of course. And many would be willing to pay for that. Again, my hat is off to Google!

P.S. YouTube has surpassed Yahoo to become #2 search engine.

ePostDirect renovates website with MarketMax Pro

Monday, December 22nd, 2008

ePostDirect data card

ePostDirect recently completed a website overhaul with the help of MarketMax Pro, which made the data cards piece of this project a snap. They gave us their design template and we did the rest of the implementation. Besides the nice look of the website, they now get instant website publishing, new search and category tools, and built-in search engine optimization. They'll get more exposure for their mailing lists. And it's cheaper than the old system. Can't beat that!

Edith Roman website activated with MarketMax Pro

Wednesday, December 17th, 2008

Edith Roman MarketMax Pro website

Edith Roman Associates just renovated their website. Our MarketMax Pro service was used for the data cards section for the mailing lists they manage. Now, their list managers can update their data cards instantly. The new search engine makes it easy for website visitors to find the lists they need. And the data cards will be accessible through Google, Yahoo, and others through built-in search engine optimization.

I think their design is a nice one. Very professional and simple – just my style. Check it out.

The Benefits of the Direct Marketing Operating System

Tuesday, December 2nd, 2008

In a previous post, I illustrated the need for a direct marketing operating system ("DMOS"). In this post, I'll further explain the benefits of a direct marketing operating system and how the use of NextMark's DMOS facilitates the federation of direct marketing services.

The benefits of electronic commerce can be achieved without using DMOS. Marketing service consumers ("buyers") can interact directly with marketing service providers. However, the problem with this scenario is the number of connections required between buyers and providers which forces the constant "reinvention of the wheel" by both the buyers and providers.

Buyers and providers conducting electronic commerce directly with each other

As shown in the diagram above, each buyer has to establish a separate connection with each marketing service provider. Likewise, each provider has to establish a connection with each buyer. For example, in the case of 1,000 buyers and 100 providers, 100,000 separate connections would have to be established!

These connections are not trivial. Connecting to a web service is not much work. However, establishing a business class connection that is secure and reliable is quite significant.

The alternative to the cobbled together "point to point" approach mentioned above is the use of DMOS to facilitate communications between the buyers and providers.

Electronic commerce with the Direct Marketing Operating System

Buyers need only one connection with DMOS to access all services available through DMOS. Likewise, marketing service providers need only one connection to DMOS to enable all DMOS buyers to utilize their service.

In essence, DMOS makes it easy for buyers and suppliers to conduct business.

But DMOS is much more than a matchmaking service. It provides the infrastructure that makes it possible to conduct secure and reliable business electronically.

Direct Marketing Operating System (DMOS) services

The responsibilities of DMOS include:

  • Directory– provides a registry of services available through DMOS
  • Authentication – validates the identity of parties involved with a transaction protecting against impersonation
  • Authorization – restricts access to services to protect against unauthorized access
  • Confidentiality – ensures that requests and data are delivered confidentially through encryption to protect against eavesdropping
  • Orchestration – coordinates the workflow of many tasks in a business process to avoid omissions and errors
  • Message Delivery – guarantees the delivery of messages and data are delivered to ensure that no critical information is lost in transmission
  • Transformation – transforms requests or data into the format required by the marketing service provider performing the task
  • Monitoring – monitors the availability and performance of services to ensure high availability
  • Integrity – ensures that requests or data is not tampered with in transmission
  • Non-repudiation – provides assurance that an agreement or service request cannot later be denied by the parties involved
  • Auditing – keeps a log of service activity to provide insight and accountability of the service
  • And more…

Without DMOS, you would have to implement all of these services yourself or be exposed to significant security and service risks. This implementation requires a monumental amount of work. The implementation is so big that it often makes projects like this not feasible. This is probably why we've not seen much electronic commerce in the field of direct marketing.

With NextMark DMOS, you get all of these services by simply connecting to DMOS. So, you can focus on your business. Service providers focus on service delivery. Buyers focus on their marketing campaigns (and not technology).

Needed: Direct Marketing Operating System

Wednesday, November 19th, 2008

Direct marketing is perhaps the most powerful form of marketing available today. The Direct Marketing Association states that "each dollar spent on direct marketing yields, on average, a return on investment of $11.69, versus ROI of $5.24 from non-direct marketing expenditures" in its 2008 Power of Direct Marketing report.

Need more proof? Look no further that Barack Obama's recent presidential campaign. His successful campaign "rewrote politics" because he tactically outmaneuvered his opponents by reaching voters quickly and directly through direct marketing — particularly through postal mail, email, and texting — instead of slowly and indirectly through mass media.

This direct marketing is powerful stuff. Why doesn't every organization use it to reach their market? Because it is difficult and expensive. It's a complex manual process known only to industry insiders.

To illustrate how complex direct marketing can be, here's a diagram of the process to obtain a single mailing list:

List-order-process

There are 36 manual steps to this process! Now imagine that you are running a campaign where you are renting 10 outside lists, merging them with a house file extract, printing 200,000 pieces, putting these addresses on them, and putting them into the mail. That's hundreds of manual steps! And a lot of delays and opportunities for mistakes.

With all this complexity, it's a wonder we get any mail out at all. But we do and that's a testament to the hard work and diligence of the vendors serving the direct marketing channel.

However, it's expensive.

All this manual work drives up the cost of delivering a direct marketing program. As a result, the direct marketing channel is only open to those organizations willing to make a very significant investment. Vendors can't afford to service micro-campaigns. It's relatively the same amount of work to send one million pieces as it is to send one thousand pieces.

The reason all this work has to be done manually is because the industry has no infrastructure. The direct marketing process is effectively held together with "bubble gum and bailing wire" – disparate systems, spreadsheets, phone calls, emails, faxes, re-keying orders, etc.

What's needed is a Direct Marketing Operating System.

Direct Marketing Operating System (or "DMOS") is the name we've been using here at NextMark for the last eight years to denote the technology infrastructure that will facilitate the direct marketing process. There are lots of good reasons for the complexity of this process: approvals, privacy and security of data, etc. That intrinsic complexity will remain. What will change is the amount of effort and time required to deliver a direct marketing campaign.

The technology needed for this technology infrastructure is available and proven: web services, xml, service oriented architecture, etc. It just needs to be applied to the direct marketing process. That's what DMOS is all about.

DMOS will enable direct marketing service providers with an easy way to promote their services and integrate their services with the rest of the process. Vendors will operate more profitably than ever before because orders will be delivered electronically and serviced efficiently with button clicks rather than manual re-keying.

DMOS will make it easy for organizations to utilize direct marketing services. Using direct marketing services in a campaign will be about as easy as filling your shopping cart on Amazon.com or your favorite website. You won't need to know about all the supply chain logistics to place your order. And you won't have to wait a long time to get the results.

Don't worry — all the checks and balances will be in place (in fact, improved) and there will be more need than ever for trusted advisors (i.e. consultants, list brokers, list managers, agencies). This is not about disintermediation. It's about integration.

The benefits? The immediate benefit is faster, easier, and more profitable direct marketing. The longer-term benefit is the opening of the direct marketing channel to all organizations big or small. Direct marketing will be more approachable. As a result, the industry could more than triple in size – that's big!

Do you agree that the industry needs an infrastructure? What can we do to deliver it?

Act One Lists unveils new mailing list search tool

Friday, November 14th, 2008

Act One Lists mailing list search tool

Yesterday, Act One Lists unveiled their new list search tool. It allows you to search through their portfolio of ~250 mailing lists under management to find the list that best suits your needs. The website is powered by NextMark's MarketMax Pro service.

McKinsey: Don’t cut IT in tough times!

Friday, November 14th, 2008

Managing IT in a downturn: beyond cost cutting The economy is in terrible shape. Most companies are looking to all departments to cut costs to stay viable. McKinsey & Company recently published a somewhat counter-intuitive study, Managing IT in a downturn: beyond cost cutting, that says you may want to spare the IT budget. In fact, it illustrates how targeted IT investments can increase profits in the short term and set the stage for long-term growth. In this article, McKinsey says:

“Except in the most dire circumstances, turning off technology investments during a downturn is counterproductive. When business picks up, you may lack critical capabilities. Besides, many technology investments can improve profitability in the short to medium term.”

One of the concrete examples they provide is in improving employee productivity:

“Another critical goal during a downturn is getting more ‘bang for the buck’ from employees — for example, by increasing a company’s operating scale, making processes more efficient to reduce rework, and stepping up efforts to automate manual procedures. IT is essential to all these efforts.”

See the full article here.


But what if there’s no cash to make an investment? You will want to keep your up-front capital expenditures to a minimum and retain maximum flexibility. Let someone else make the capital expenditures for you (hardware, software, software development, data center, etc.). Then buy this software as a service. Or, better yet, get it for free.


NextMark is committed to helping you get through these tough times and to come out of it stronger than ever. Despite the rough economy, we are ramping up our research and development investments on your behalf. How can we help you?

Direct Media activates website with MarketMax Pro

Thursday, November 13th, 2008

Direct Media mailing list search tool

Direct Media just relaunched the managed lists section of their website using NextMark's MarketMax Pro data card publishing service. Direct Media supplied the graphic design. NextMark supplied the technology to manage the content. Their ~1,300 data cards are now automatically updated, indexed, and searchable. Direct Media has one of the biggest portfolios of lists available — maybe there's a perfect list for you? Take a look.