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Searching... | 30000003493958 | HF5145.1265 M66 2007 | Open Access Book | Book | Searching... |
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Summary
Summary
"What's the one thing companies care about? Conversion. Getting potential customers to convert into real, actual, customers. But how do you do that in a world of Facebook, Google, YouTube, blogs, and Flickr? Mike Moran shows you how--by trying lots of little things, studying the results, learning quickly from your failures, and doing it all over again. He gives you a framework for getting over your fears of talking with your customers without a committee to protect your behind. Great book."
Video blogger of the Scoble Show and Co-author of the top-selling corporate blogging book, Naked Conversations Start Fast, Fix Fast, and Fix Again: Marketing for Breakthrough Results For decades, marketers have been taught to carefully plan ahead because "you must get it right-it''s too expensive to change." But, in the age of the Web, you can know in hours whether your strategy''s working. Today, winners don''t get it right the first time: they start fast, change fast, and relentlessly optimize their way to success. They do it wrong quickly...then fix it, just as quickly! In this book, Internet marketing pioneer Mike Moran shows you how to do that-step-by-step and in detail. Drawing on his experience building ibm.com into one of the world''s most successful sites, Moran shows how to quickly transition from "plan then execute" to a non-stop cycle of refinement. You''ll master specific techniques for making the Web''s "two-way marketing conversation" work successfully, productively, and profitably. Next, Moran shows how to choose the right new marketing tools, craft them into an integrated strategy, and execute it...achieving unprecedented efficiency, accountability, speed, and results . The indispensable online marketing guide for every CMO, brand marketer, direct marketer, online marketing specialist, strategist, and entrepreneur Learn more from your customers-and learn it faster Systematically measure online marketing results-and improve them Create deeper relationships with your customers on the Web Leverage podcasting, social networks, wikis, virtual worlds, search, viral marketing, blogs, and other new tools Build a lean, mean conversion machine Preview new innovations you''ll be implementing next year and the year after Overcome the organizational, political, and personal obstacles that keep marketers doing things the "old-fashioned" way Foreward xv Preface xvii Acknowledgements xxiii About the Author xxvii Part 1: That Newfangled Marketing 1 Chapter 1: They''re Doing Wonderful Things with Computers 3 Chapter 2: New Wine in Old Bottles 21 Chapter 3: Marketing Is a Conversation 55 Part 2: That Newfangled Direct Marketing 103 Chapter 4: Going Over to the Dark Side 105 Chapter 5: The New Customer Relations 149 Chapter 6: Customers Vote with Their Mice 211 Part 3: That Newfangled You 253 Chapter 7: This Doesn''t Work for Me 255 Chapter 8: This Won''t Work Where I Work 275 Chapter 9: This Stuff Changes Too Fast 315 Glossary 335
Index 365
Author Notes
Mike Moran has worked on the web since its earliest days, in both marketing and technical roles, including eight years at ibm.com, IBM's customer-facing website. In 2008, Mike retired from IBM to pursue speaking, writing, and consulting, including serving as a senior strategist for the digital communications agency Converseon. Mike is the author of Do It Wrong Quickly and Search Engine Marketing, Inc., Second Edition, and he writes regular articles on digital marketing for Biznology®, Search Engine Guide, ChamberofCommerce.com and All Things WOMM. He's a member of the Search Engine Marketing Council of the Direct Marketing Association and a charter member of the DMA's Interactive Marketing Advisory Board. Mike is a frequent keynote speaker on internet marketing at events around the world, serves as a Visiting Lecturer to the University of Virginia's Darden School of Business, and holds an Advanced Certificate in Market Management Practice from the Royal UK Charter Institute of Marketing.
Mike also has a broad technical background, with over 20 years' experience in search technology working at IBM Research, Lotus, and other IBM software units. He led the product team that developed the first commercial linguistic search engine in 1989 and has been granted 11 patents in search and retrieval technology. He led the integration of ibm.com's site search technologies as well as projects in content management, personalization, and web metrics.
Mike led the adoption of search marketing at ibm.com back in 2001 and pioneered product search facilities that dramatically raised conversion rates. He was named an IBM Distinguished Engineer in 2005.
Mike can be reached through his website, http://mikemoran.com/ .
Reviews 1
Choice Review
Moran (IBM, manager of Web experience) focuses on the importance of speed in today's 24/7, interconnected, wired marketplace. More important than getting it right is getting it fast. Whether introducing a new product, launching an ad campaign, or countering a competitor, marketers need to move quickly--mistakes and all--then fix things, as needed, on the fly. Otherwise, the other guy steals your lunch. Internet marketing is not for perfectionists; it is for tinkers who do the fine-tuning as they go. Moran emphasizes one key thing: "marketing is a conversation." The Internet enables businesses to build a two-way dialog with customers, turning them into champions of the business and spreading the word to others ("viral marketing.") "Customers vote with their mice," notes Moran, and successful Internet marketers know how to get the mice clicking. He offers advice on how to make Web sites more personal and interactive (e.g., blogs, podcasts, and social networks), keep customers coming back, and measure and improve results. Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division and graduate marketing students, faculty, and practitioners. P. G. Kishel Cypress College
Table of Contents
Foreward | p. xv |
Preface | p. xvii |
Acknowledgements | p. xxiii |
About the Author | p. xxvii |
Part 1 That Newfangled Marketing | p. 1 |
Chapter 1 They're Doing Wonderful Things with Computers | p. 3 |
Chapter 2 New Wine in Old Bottles | p. 21 |
Chapter 3 Marketing Is a Conversation | p. 55 |
Part 2 That Newfangled Direct Marketing | p. 103 |
Chapter 4 Going Over to the Dark Side | p. 105 |
Chapter 5 The New Customer Relations | p. 149 |
Chapter 6 Customers Vote with Their Mice | p. 211 |
Part 3 That Newfangled You | p. 253 |
Chapter 7 This Doesn't Work for Me | p. 255 |
Chapter 8 This Won't Work Where I Work | p. 275 |
Chapter 9 This Stuff Changes Too Fast | p. 315 |
Glossary | p. 335 |
Index | p. 365 |