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Poetic Licence with a website…

This is a really cool idea if you like interactive sites and ever fancied being a web designer here you go . The woman’s shoe company, Poetic Licence, has handed over website design responsibilities to site visitors who, with a set of tools, can craft a personalized version of the site which...

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eBook market heats up with Amazon…

Posted by Happydude | Posted in Business, Media, Technology | Posted on 08-09-2007

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Looks like the time is right for eBook technology. Amazon have just announced the Amazon Kindle, its spec is a 6-inch 800 x 600 display, 256MB internal storage, smallish two-thumb keyboard cursor bar, scroll wheel, standard mini USB port, 3.5mm headphone jack, SD slot, and EV-DO data!

Looks like it will sell for between $400 and $500 and you will get some pre-loaded free content – such as reference books with it. Because of the online connectivity the Kindle will be able to receive RSS feeds from “major” newspapers too, which should add to its daily use appeal.

Orbitz Goes UGC with Airport Advice…

Posted by Happydude | Posted in Business, Technology, Travel, Video | Posted on 07-09-2007

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Orbitz have set up a new service that provides quick, P2P generated travel reports. That means travelers can get information on delays, cancellations, weather and other issues way before official announcements are made.Traveler Update starts with the basics; users have access to TSA wait times, weather information, traffic (pulled from Google Maps), and general information including WiFi access and parking details. Where the service is trying to be different is with the remaining feature: user generated advice.People using any airport in the United States are encouraged to submit airport advice to the site from the airport itself. Tips can be made anonymously or by registered Orbitz members, and the service also includes a mobile version for easy access via cell phone.

[Via TechCrunch]

All things point Locally…

Posted by Happydude | Posted in Advertising, Business, Marketing, Media, Startups | Posted on 06-09-2007

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Small biz is advertising online, begrudgingly. A vast proportion of local ad spending goes into yellow pages directories. While a national yellow pages market exists, it will reach only $2.2 billion in 2007, compared with $12.4 billion going to the local pages, according to Universal McCann.

Internet yellow pages (IYP) might seem to be the most obvious online parallel to the traditional yellow pages, but that is not the way it turns out.

“When people use the Web to look for local retailers and service providers, they tend not to research by business categories as the print yellow pages are organized,” said eMarketer senior analyst David Hallerman. “Instead, they go to search engines, which rely on keywords and are far less structured than a yellow pages index.”

According to “The User Revolution,” a February 2007 report from Piper Jaffray, the offline yellow pages and classifieds market—at $37 billion—shows the potential of local ad dollars. If only 20% of that budget shifts to the Internet, for example, that would add $7 billion to local online ad spending.

US Local Online Advertising Revenues, by Segment, 2006 (millions and % of offline revenues)

Research from The Kelsey Group supports the move from print yellow pages to search engines.

As reported in The Wall Street Journal in July 2006, “Only about 14% of US print yellow-Page advertisers—about 600,000—are currently purchasing online ads from the yellow pages as well … by 2010, the number is forecast to hit 1.2 million advertisers, or about 30%.”

That translates to about $600 million for IYP revenues in 2006, nearly quadrupling to $2.3 billion by 2011, according to Kelsey.

By contrast, local paid search spending will likely reach at least $4 billion in 2011. At that point, some of the distinctions between IYPs and search engines will become increasingly irrelevant as advertisers buy “space” on both types of sites with a single purchase.

US Internet Yellow Pages Revenues, 2006 & 2011 (billions)

Other studies contradict the tendency away from yellow pages and toward search engines.

According to the JupiterResearch report “Local Advertising: Blending Categories to Compete Effectively,” 59% of US local advertisers buy ads in print yellow pages and 45% go the IYPs, but only 26% engage in search marketing.

Types of Advertising Purchased by US Local Advertisers, 2006 (% of respondents)

A JupiterResearch analyst told Ahorre.com that “local marketers are not yet completely convinced about local search.”

The article notes how “in part, this is because local advertisers are used to yellow pages advertising, which requires little work on their part.”

Yellow pages ads have a strange place in local online marketing. Advertisers resist taking out ads, so Internet searchers get incomplete results. This begs a question: If local advertisers have no search ads, will they be found?

“That the target audience for local yellow pages advertising does more of its searching online is clearly a force pushing local businesses to advertise online, whether it be with the yellow pages, search, local directories or newspapers,” Mr. Hallerman said.

Learn how small business ads make for big online sales. Please read eMarketer’s Local Online Advertising: Measuring the Market report.

[Via eMarketer]

Fast Food making a difference Locally…

Posted by Happydude | Posted in Business, Eco, Startups | Posted on 06-09-2007

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In my continued efforts to help promote things locally and promote eco matters, I noticed this Picnick located in New York.

Almost all of the ingredients are sourced from small farms or local business, and any global vendors must meet Fair Trade quotas or adhere to a socially conscious philanthropy.

They are also supporting their local environment, a certain percentage of their profits are going back to Locally run projects.

In an effort to reduce waste, all cups, cutlery, containers, and labels are biocompostable and biodegradable.

Plus, for a few dollars more, you can even have your food packed in natural-wood picnick basket; continue to re-use the basket and save on future meals.

In the future, they also plan on hosting community events that support socially and eco-minded initiatives.

[Via PSFK]