Archive for May 17th, 2008

All newspapers need to jump on online video

Saturday, May 17th, 2008

The Newspaper Association of America (NAA) has released a report about the increase of online video (11.5 billion videos viewed in March, according Comscore). Its title is “Zooming In on Online Video: A Development & Growth Guide for Newspaper Web Sites.” Here is the download link.

Main conclusion: everyone needs to jump on online video. “While still a small percentage of total and local online advertising, online video represents an enormous opportunity for newspapers to grow revenue and audience,” says the report.

“As competition heats up for online video mindshare, newspapers have an excellent opportunity to leverage their skills and content and capture an even larger share of online advertising spending.”

Local online video advertising was a $400 million business in 2007, according to Borrell Associates.

The survey shows that online video is not solely the domain of the Web department. Although online editors and producers are involved in shooting, editing and publishing video for the newspaper’s Web site, reporters and photographers are also heavily involved.

Start-up’s founder presses on after snafus with seam and Web site

Saturday, May 17th, 2008

Everything’s ready to go. Piles of 11 different kinds of shirts and pants for girls ages 5 to 12 sit stacked on shelves in RealKidz’s office in Ypsilanti’s Depot Town. Boxes, envelopes, tissue paper and clear plastic bags are nearby.

As of Friday, the company had made only one sale, to a Michigan woman who bought a pair of capri pants and a T-shirt. Though the company’s Web site, www.realkidzclothing.com, went live the evening of April 30, it has been plagued with glitches.

Only since Monday has it been operating trouble-free. Initially, the Web site will be the key driver of sales for the company.

Getting to this point wasn’t easy.

In late April, after an Illinois manufacturer had shipped the clothes, Guerra discovered that the inside bottom seams on one product, a pair of crop pants with cuffs, had not been sewn correctly. That meant sending back 100 pairs of pants.

Then, every time she thought her Web site was ready to go live, Guerra found things that needed to be fixed.

Late one evening, her babysitter called to tell her that the site had opened for business and was selling clothes for $0. Guerra frantically called a local Web site development company RealKidz had hired. Thankfully, no one had placed any orders.

And shortly after Guerra had sent out 219 e-mails to potential customers, someone tried to make a purchase and got an error message instead.

The Web site trouble “has been the big frustration of the last few weeks,” she said with a sigh. “I’m really frustrated with my Web developer.”

But the mishaps haven’t got the best of Guerra, RealKidz’s founder and chief executive. She plans to look for a new Web site development company and a new manufacturer.

“It’s stressful,” Guerra admitted in early May, days after she had graduated from the MBA program at the University of Michigan.

Aside from a onetime eBay sale of an outfit her son wore at a wedding, the 37-year-old has never sold any clothing online. Like other entrepreneurs, she is learning firsthand that simply putting up a Web site doesn’t mean customers will come.

To generate sales, RealKidz put flyers touting its clothes in the packets picked up by nearly 800 preteen girls who ran in a 5K Girls on the Run race in Grand Rapids on Thursday. Many participants were plus size.

RealKidz would like to develop a line of clothes for Girls on the Run, an international organization that helps preteen girls develop self-respect and healthy lifestyles through running.

The company also has begun to advertise on Google’s search engine, a marketing tactic used by many businesses.

So far, only a small number of people are landing on her Web site, but those who do are clicking on it.

In the long run, Guerra hopes the Internet won’t be the company’s biggest sales avenue. She plans to set up a network of independent sales representatives for her brand, which she said she believes will generate higher profit margins than going the wholesale-to-retail route.

Guerra knows network marketing. She worked as an Amway sales representative for five years and currently sells Silpada jewelry. She sees RealKidz’s clothes as a good fit with this sales method.

“My product has an extremely high emotional connection with people,” Guerra said, referring to the common struggle with weight issues. “Products that have an emotional connection work best.”

She dreams of the day when her network will be creating business opportunities for women, helping to change lives.

“I can’t wait to see stories like that,” she said.

Guerra is now trying to develop a compensation agreement for an experienced network marketer in Grand Rapids. The potential hire may become the company’s director of consultant development.

By June, Guerra hopes to begin recruiting sales representatives. Her business plans call for 18 representatives by the end of RealKidz’s first year.

To get her network off the ground, Guerra would like to hire a California consulting company that helps start-up network marketing companies with financial models and compensation agreement materials.

But the firm’s service initially costs about $10,000, money that RealKidz can’t afford to spend right now.

Guerra continues to hunt for more capital for her business. In mid-April, she spent 5 1/2 hours talking to the lead investor at BlueWater Angels, a group of wealthy individuals in the Midland area interested in investing seed money in promising start-up companies.

She met again with this investor Monday. This week, she will travel to Midland to make her second presentation to the group, hoping to persuade it to invest $200,000 in her business.

On Wednesday, Guerra met in Ypsilanti with a Chicago-based group of angel investors that focuses on women-owned businesses and is interested in RealKidz. But she’s uncertain whether they will be able to reach an agreement.

“I’m still stressed. It’s definitely hard for me to shut my brain at night,” Guerra said.

“But every week something really big and exciting happens that will help move this business forward.”

The company’s cash cushion has shrunk to $12,000. To keep her business going, Guerra hopes to quickly sell at least 200 pieces of clothing. That way, she will have enough cash to order more clothes and possibly add a line of shorts.

Her shirts sell for $22.50 for a short-sleeve T-shirt to $32 for a mock turtleneck jumper combination, with the pants going for $30 to $32 apiece. These aren’t Wal-Mart prices, but Guerra said she thinks mothers will be willing to pay a little more for clothes that fit their daughters.

Will she be right? Consumers are already reeling from soaring prices at gas pumps and supermarkets.

Funding For Development Of OSU Technologies

Saturday, May 17th, 2008

OSU’s Technology Business Assessment Group will fund four faculty research projects for spring 2008. The group identified these one-year projects from a number of excellent proposals submitted in response to a solicitation earlier this spring. Funding for the program is administered by the OSU Office of Intellectual Property Management, and is generated by royalties from OSU-licensed technologies. These funded projects show a significant probability of having commercial success.

“We are pleased that the OIPM royalty stream allowed us to hold yet another competition for the spring of 2008,” Steve Price, director of OIPM, said. “It’s exciting to be able to continue the trend of developing OSU research into viable commercial products.”

Created in 2005, TBAG funds projects in need of feasibility demonstration and/or prototype development for commercialization purposes. The group is comprised of private sector partners experienced in new product identification and new technology evaluation, representation from i2E, early-stage capital investors, bankers, representation from Meridian Technology Center for Business Development, the OSU Center for Innovation and Economic Development, the OSU Vice President for Research and Technology Transfer, the OSU Associate Vice President for Technology Development and OSU-Okmulgee.

eBanyan Adds Web Portal Into Its Popular Ecommerce Application

Saturday, May 17th, 2008

Innovative, user friendly and one of leading turnkey ecommerce solution provider has announced its latest release that incorporates the added value and benefits of web portal into its largely popular ecommerce web application, eBanyan.

Coupled with eBbanyan’s rich featured ecommerce platform, the portal will allow websites to combine feature-packed solution into a single point of entry for a better users’ experience. Backed by eBanyan’s superior architecture, the web portal is aimed at delivering performance and ease of use, along with a liberty to offer sophisticated Web 2.0 features effortlessly in a programming-free environment.

With bundled features, eBanyan’s web portal is available in range of templates, programming free customization in look and feel and scalability to meet business’s increasing demands.

Commenting on the latest release, Abid Malik, President and CEO of eBanyan said that eBanyan has always made available the most recent technologies for our customers. “eBanyan, offers myriad of must have features for online businesses, which not only enables them to smoothly reap the productivity but also make it possible to embarrass innovating new opportunities coming across.”

eBanyan offers its customers with wide range of features including dynamic online catalog to outfit almost any cataloging requirement, shopping cart, real time pricing, local search for products and services, automated shipping and handling, unlimited product grouping, order tracking, e-mail campaigns, project and task manager, immediate online payment processing, search engine optimization, secure access, import/export, customizable forms and reports, customer relation, outstanding support and so many others to provide its customers’ with ultimate online business solution.

Domain Development is harder than Domain Parking

Saturday, May 17th, 2008

They are also offering No-cost tools to assist webmasters and domain developers. Their most recent offering - Stomper Site Seer - is a web-based tool that you don’t have to pay for. It generates a lot of information about your site in one report.

Even if you don’t sign-up for Stompernet (and most people won’t) their free educational offerings are amazing. This is stuff that you’d pay a lot for elsewhere. By giving away some of their material they hope to get people to sign-up. I plan to stay a member.

One major component of Stompernet is SEO. They provide unsurpassed training to help you rank in Google. Using these techniques I have been able to consistently rank on the first page of Google for the term “Domain Parking.” There is also a lot of training on building Online storefronts using affiliate links or drop-shipping.

Some stompers have built multi-million dollar businesses from the techniques they learned (and others have struggled because of the sheer volume of information available). Faculty members include Jerry West, Howie Schwartz, Andy Jenkins, Andy Edmonds, Dan Thies, Brad Fallan, Dave Taylor, David Bullock, Don Crowther, Leslie Rhodie, Sherman Hu, Mike Stewart, Paul Colligan, and Ed Dale.

Stompernet includes professional coaching and face-to-face conferences several times a year (at no extra charge). The conferences usually last for three days on a Friday, Saturday, and Sunday.

The last few have been in Atlanta. I attended the last two and found them to be at least as valuable as T.R.A.F.F.I.C. or Domain Roundtable, but with a different emphasis. Many of the attendees are small business owners with mediocre domains. They learn from people like Brad Fallon, who makes millions every year with the site MyWeddingFavors.com.

The video that you view at the site has a playlist button that will allow you to view all other free videos, such as their Going Natural 3 - Video 1. This video will teach you how to design an AdWords campaign, using a real-world example that occurred when Google dropped an ecommerce site from their rankings.

When you finish reading this, go check out the video and try their tool on one of your developed or semi-developed domains. Stompernet will probably be closed again by the time the June NameMonetizer newsletter comes out, so I want DomainNameWire readers to at least have a chance at this training.

New York Web Standards Meetup Group

Saturday, May 17th, 2008

NY Web Standards May 2008 will focus on Microformats with attendees from the web design and development fields, expected to attend an evening of comprehensive discussions and networking.

Microformats are a set of simple, open data formats built upon existing and adopted standards. They are intended to solve simple problems and were developed by examining current behaviors and usage patterns demonstrated by web content creators.

NY Web Standards group will introduce microformats and discuss their usage. “During this event, the audience will learn what microformats are, why they were created, and how to use this simple technology to make data on webpages more easily indexed, searched, and cross-referenced,” said Jeffrey Barke, senior developer at theMechanism – New York.

In addition to attendee introductions, web-standards discussions and optional ‘show and tell’ sessions, the event will also highlight keynote speaker, Jeffrey Barke, senior developer at theMechanism.

As a monthly event, the NY Web Standards Meetup is focused on bringing valuable information, trends, insights and best practice development techniques to the web development community.

“theMechanism strives to be a leader in the practice of web standards and accessibility,” said Dave Fletcher, Founding Partner & Creative Director of theMechanism. “Facilitating the New York Web Standards Meetup Group at our Manhattan office is one way for us to lead by example while encouraging an personal and professional sodality among like-minded designers and agencies in the greater New York area.”

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