• Peekaboo, I See You
    It sounds a little creepy, but effective. The content on a Web site that prompts people to open their wallets and spend more than $2,500 to design a closet showcasing Jimmy Choo shoes and Tory Burch shirts should give marketers a confidence boost by providing the tools to target very specific consumers. This technology digitally records every keystroke, click, and scroll up or down the page site visitors make. While Omniture and Webtrends count clicks, Clicktale records the movement, collects the raw data, and turns it into a segmented heat map. The data becomes searchable by specific criteria.
  • IBM Buys Into Madison Avenue: Tales From A Unica Customer
    Breanna Wigle received a heads-up from her Unica rep early this morning that IBM would acquire the analytics firm. The CRM manager relies on Unica to support marketing automation and campaign management on Military.com, a division of Military Advantage. When it comes to marketing automation and campaign management, Unica can handle processes, she says, but the Web analytics platform remains a bit new to the process.
  • SEO Gets Rating System In Retailer Rankings
    Internet Retailer recently published its annual Top 500 Guide. The findings, which now rely on Conductor's metrics to rank, suggest Hewlett-Packard, Amazon and ProFlowers are among the companies using search engine optimization most effectively in 2010. Did I write "search engine optimization?" Why, yes. Yes, I did.
  • Is Google Playing Games?
    Google quietly held a gaming conference, ThinkGaming, earlier this week to show analysts and marketers its view on the future of video games and opportunities in search and advertising to drive traffic and engagement.
  • Facebook Looks For Gaming Team Leader
    As Google strengthens its focus on gaming to enter the social network space through a variety of acquisitions and Android development kits, Facebook has put out a call to find an executive who can spearhead deals with game publishers and development studios.
  • How Wowd Digs Into Facebook's Hidden Ad Treasures
    Now that Facebook has a real-time search engine pulling in data on its 500 million members through an API built by the social network, brands will soon have an opportunity to target ads based on search terms and keywords in status updates, something Facebook execs claimed the social site would never do. Think of it as a treasure hunt for new customers.
  • In A Scenario Without Net Neutrality Does Google Pay Or Charge?
    It's not often that Google execs get so disgusted with the press that someone publicly denounces a news report of a speculative event. That's what happened Thursday on Twitter (not Buzz) after The New York Times reported Google and Verizon nearing an agreement that would allow the telecom carrier to speed some online content to Internet users more quickly if that content's creators paid for the privilege.
  • Google Slides Closer To Social Game Platform
    We're not quite at checkmate, but Google made moves Wednesday that resembles a strategic chess game. The Mountain View, Calif., tech company shut down services and made strategic acquisitions in everything from social sites to development tools.
  • Where Does That Short URL Lead?
    How many spam emails do you get daily? Spam emails account for approximatively 88.9% of emails sent in June, down 0.4 percentage points, sequentially. One in 306.1 emails got blocked as malicious, down 0.04 percentage points, and 17.1% of email-borne malware contained links to malicious Web sites. That's the rundown from the MessageLabs Intelligence Security Report, July 2010.
  • The Facebook Group Targeting Facebook's Use Of Coal Power
    Search for Greenpeace International on Facebook and you'll find a Fan page protesting the social network's use of coal power, along with about 477,000 "friends" who would rather see Facebook power its new data storage facility with renewable resources. Facebook is building a server farm in Prineville, Ore., to support its 500 million members. The center will use 30 MW of electricity, enough to power 30,000 homes, to support Facebook's 500 million members. Facebook says the environmentally friendly facility will have all the latest technology, but evidently Greenpeace doesn't see it that way.
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