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Does Google’s PageRank Really Count Anymore?

Behold the power of Google’s PageRank! We all want a 7 or 8. We know this will bring us more traffic and traffic is money. Google always tries to downplay their PageRank saying that their algorithms look at 200 different points of criteria in order to give your URLs a ranking. Titus Hoskins wrote a good article about why you shouldn’t count this out. Google Page Rank Logo

http://www.sitepronews.com/2009/10/26/does-google-pagerank-count-anymore/

New Whitepaper Alert! How to Choose an SMS Vendor

As SMS adoption continues to grow at an astonishing rate, more and more businesses are incorporating the channel as a serious form of customer communication. 10 years ago I could barely get anyone to pay for a SMS message, now we get hundreds of leads per month (Google “SMS Marketing”) from companies convinced that mobile is going to play a big part of their revenue stream.sms provider whitepaper icon

As mobile starts to grow, so does the competition. There are all kinds of solutions out there that range from free SMS (with ads tacked on), to mobile agencies planning a complete mobile strategy. We thought about all of the criteria a business should think about before choosing an SMS vendor and have come up with a wonderfully short 30 point check list.

Written in conjunction with my colleague and good friend Marwan Soghaier we tackle the biggest and most important questions a business needs to ask itself before making any decisions.

I think you will enjoy, so please download the whitepaper and don’t be shy in giving us feedback: http://www.mobilestorm.com/resources/digital-marketing-white-papers/whitepapers/choose-an-sms-vendor/

Cheers,

Jared Reitzin
CEO
mobileStorm Inc.


A New Whitepaper by mobileStorm: How to Choose an SMS Vendor

mobileStorm Announces a New Whitepaper: How to Choose an SMS Vendor, a 30-Point Checklist.

White Paper Provides Key Criteria for Selecting the Best Suited SMS Vendor to Reach and Build an Audience

Los Angeles, October 20, 2009 – Celebrating 10 years in business, mobileStorm (www.mobilestorm.com)vendor-success-image today announced its new white paper, “How to Choose an SMS Vendor: A 30 Point Vendor Selection Checklist.” While most types of businesses currently use SMS to capture the awareness of customers or audiences, very few are familiar with integrating SMS into a marketing or CRM strategy. By choosing the right SMS vendor, company leaders will better understand how to strengthen their businesses, generate ROI, and reduce the risk of damaging their brand. mobileStorm is placing its published guide on the company’s web site and it can be downloaded at  http://www.mobilestorm.com/resources/digital-marketing-white-papers/whitepapers/choose-an-sms-vendor/

While the white paper addresses introductory questions such as, “What is SMS?” and “What Should Be Most Important?” [when choosing an SMS vendor], the meat of the guide is the checklist in which mobileStorm defines the selection process and provides valuable criteria in three separate categories: Expert Advice, Technology & Product Features, and Account Management & Customer Service. To ensure a company has thoroughly covered all its bases when making a selection, the goal is to have all 30 points checked off before making a final, educated decision.

“Companies don’t always realize that by not following specific rules and guidelines when implementing SMS into a business strategy, they will not only waste time and money, but their SMS campaigns can have the opposite effect of their intended purpose and actually damage the company’s brand,” said Jared Reitzin, CEO and Founder of mobileStorm. “SMS is an incredibly effective tool to incorporate into a company’s marketing strategy, but taking the time to be educated about the process and the options that are out there is just as valuable, if not more.”

Ultimately the objective is to end up with a performing solution that’s a good fit for the company at hand. To maximize a company’s likelihood of receiving a performing solution, a process must be applied to avoid unfortunate drawbacks. mobileStorm’s checklist is meant to point company decision-makers to the best SMS vendor match available. SMS marketing strategies have proven to be extremely successful in building a loyal customer following and by evaluating the criteria presented in the mobileStorm checklist, the choice will be a clear one.

About mobileStorm

Based in Los Angeles, with more than 10 years of digital marketing experience, mobileStorm’s mission is simple: Provide personalized customer care and expert advice for email and mobile marketers.

Having successfully delivered more than 3 billion messages on behalf of thousands of premier customers such as Overstock.com, Cesar Millan, American Idol, Kaiser Permanente, Qantas Airways, and Ashley Furniture HomeStore, mobileStorm is at the forefront of the digital marketing revolution. As a turnkey, hosted email and digital messaging platform backed by world-class support and expert digital marketing services, mobileStorm has created the most complete digital marketing solution available while providing expert advice, personalized service, and marketing technology that drives ROI and revenue lift for mobileStorm’s customers.

Find out more by visiting www.mobilestorm.com.


Excellent Article on the Future of Email Deliverability

I recently came across a great article on the future of deliverability.

Quick overview: We all know that when a subscriber clicks the “report as spam” button, the ISP gets data to help them make decisions about what they want to do with a senders email  such as block or send to the spam folder.

ISPs fight spam in a bunch of different ways, reputation, authentication, content blocking etc. email delivery icon

This article talks about how ISPs are starting to use other types of data such as, “subscribers who do not open emails”, to punish senders with poor best practices. Its all coming down to a marketers reputation.

If email marketing is important to your company and drives revenue, I suggest you work with an ESP (Email Service Provider) who can stay on top of changes like this and help you make decisions about the best way to manage your business.

I always say, delivery is as fluid and changing as water. New technologies and methods to fight spam are constantly being developed and innovated.  Think about it, an ISPs entire business depends on making sure their subscribers are not inundated with spam. If they don’t do a good job, people leave, and revenues drop.

Currently 72% of the 320 billion messages sent on a daily basis is spam. It will continue to become harder and harder to reach the inbox if you do not get good guidance and expertise, this is one of the main reasons we created mobileStorm Pro.

Read this great article on the future of deliverability here:

http://www.email-marketing-reports.com/iland/2009/10/future-of-deliverability-1-role-of-user.html

MarketingProfs.com Feature Cesar Millan’s Deliverabililty Case Study

Read the full article here: http://www.marketingprofs.com/short-articles/1425/get-out-that-rake

“Dog Whisperer” Cesar Millan had a problem. With an abysmal delivery rate of 81.29 percent, his email campaigns weren’t getting through to many of the people who wanted them. “The company was constantly getting complaints from its subscribers,” explains a mobileStorm case study. “Consumers claimed they hadn’t received Cesar Millan’s once-monthly newsletter or that they only received it sporadically.” marketingprofs logo

Analysis by mobileStorm revealed the likely cause:

  • When subscribers signed up, their addresses were not verified.
  • The list—which dated back to 2005—contained inactive and invalid addresses, making it especially vulnerable to spam traps.

To clean up the list, mobileStorm used tactics like these:

  • Identifying subscribers who had never opened or clicked on an email message
  • Removing obviously non-engaged subscribers
  • Sending the rest a message asking them to confirm their subscription, and letting them know their address would be removed if they didn’t respond by a certain date

Finally, the case study reports, “confirmed users were added back in along with known good addresses. Suspect addresses, opt-outs, and non-respondents were removed.”

After the company cleaned the list, the delivery rate shot up to 99.7 percent. ‘Nuff said.

The Po!nt: Time for some fall raking. To help ensure your holiday emails get the most response, clear your lists of “fallen” addresses. A timely clean-up could pay off.

Source: mobileStorm. Read the full case study here.

Telephony Online Article on Mobile Marketing – mobileStorm CEO Interview

CTIA IT: Bad economy gives mobile marketing a boost

Oct 9, 2009 2:15 PM, By Sarah Reedy

Mobile marketing vendors are achieving growth as brands reevaluate their ad campaigns with a focus on mobile

SAN DIEGO, CALIF. – Mobile is coming out ahead as brands reevaluate their advertising budgets. The mobile telephony logoadvertising and marketing market has been a long time in the making, but vendors at the CTIA IT & Entertainment show say it is making progress – thanks in large part to the bad economy. The recession has helped make a case for mobile as brands move away from generic campaigns to more personalized, relevant marketing tactics.

According to the Mobile Marketing Association, no company spent more than $200,000 to advertise on mobile last year, but that has quickly begun to change. As of March, Land Rover and Jaguar became the first to invest in multimillion dollar mobile campaigns and many other brands are following in the car makers’ footsteps and exploring new forms of mobile interaction.

“The majority of campaigns run in messaging today,” said Kristine van Dillen, director of industry initiatives and partnerships at the MMA. “Messaging is where brands are spending most of their money then banner ads then applications.”

There is lots of interest in applications, created by the iPhone, van Dillen said. The distribution has become easier as has discoverability with new storefronts popping up. In-apps are still a challenged form of mobile marketing, however, as fragmentation and unsteady business case affect the industry. Ads within apps aren’t always the best experience too, David Ko, senior vice president of Yahoo Mobile, acknowledged in a CTIA Keynote address. They often open the browser and kick a user out of the app they were using. As part of its expanding mobile strategy, Ko said that Yahoo is taking advantage of HTML and its relationships with advertisers to integrate ads into the apps in as seamless and unobtrusive a way as possible.

While developers are still working out the kinks with app ads, search and SMS are two areas that continue to grow. Google this week expanded its mobile search platform, AdSense, enabling it on a slew of new handsets, including the iPhone, Android and Palm webOS phones. According to Google, the goal is to enable mobile publishers to earn money and fund more web content and mobile-specific sites.

Multiple vendors are banking on SMS messaging campaigns, one of the first iterations of mobile marketing, as well. The size of the market in the US will grow from $718 million in 2009 to $2.2 billion in 2010, according to Juniper Research. Mobile ad vendor OpenMarket responded to that opportunity with the launch of its SMS-Advertising service this week. The service connects text content providers with a host of targeted ads to embed in their messages.

VeriSign also announced this week that its Messaging and Mobile Media division is teaming up with iLoop mobile to provide an SMS marketing solution directed at enterprises. It already includes HP as a customer using the integrated platform to power mobile marketing campaigns to its 80 million Snapfish users. iLoop Mobile and VeriSign are targeting enterprises of all sizes, as well as advertising and direct marketing agencies, media, entertainment, professional sports and Web entities.

Another vendor, mobileStorm, now in its tenth year of business, got its start in SMS campaigns for the music industry. The company has since moved away from music to focus on a marketing and email campaigns for a host of customers, ranging from Overstock.com to retail stores to Kaiser Permanente. CEO Jared Reitzin said the mobile concept has taken on like wildfire in a lot of industries, while others are still approaching it with caution. mobileStorm does three-month pilot programs with these customers to help them shape their mobile strategy, and Reitzin said there is always an education element in the process. Even so, the company has seen consistent growth in the last year as brands that may be scaling back their overall ad budget move away from standard blast marketing campaigns and towards digital marketing for the targeting and real-time reporting it can provide.

“Traditional media is down so much that brands want something new,” added Lee Durham, CEO of Local Solutions Network (LSN). “There’s a groundswell; it just makes sense.” LSN provides localized content and ads to its brands and partners with all the major carriers to have their content syndicated on mobile. Durham said the company is working with the carriers on adding location to advertisements, but is still in the discussion phase right now.

There are still challenges in the mobile marketing, including the lack of a strong method of tracking mobile ad metrics, but van Dillen said the MMA is tacking this with a two-pronged approach that looks at both ad measurement and industry metrics.

“We have all these mobile marketing channels we are looking at, and different brands care about different metrics,” van Dillen said. “It goes so much further than just an impression. We are working with the [Media Rating Council] to establish the global market guidelines, which will be published mid-next year.”

The guidelines will have a baseline requirements for how to measure basic elements in mobile, including banner ads and click-throughs, as well as technical details on how to measure impressions. Some issues the MMA is tackling include whether impressions should be measured on the client or server side, when a message is sent, delivered or read, and how to best capture and report engagement.

Outside The Inbox with Jared Reitzin: Episode 8

This week on OTI the latest iPhone porn craze, and how Jared struggles with whether to make the Blackberry or iPhone the standard company phone. He also covers ICANN’s new .asia domain, soon be released to the happiness of cyber squatters.

Dedicated Short Code vs. Shared Short Code

Dedicated and Shared Short CodeClients ask me all the time: What’s better for their mobile strategy, using a shared short code or a dedicated short code? Each has its own set of pros and cons. In this post I will set the record straight.

Shared Short Code

PROS

1. Time to market: Sharing a mobile marketing company’s short code is the fastest way to get into the mobile space. For instance, clients using the mobileStorm 4.0 platform can create a keyword like “SHOP” and within 10 seconds, that keyword is live and can receive texts from any carrier in the United States. Becoming a mobile marketer takes seconds, not months. Your time to market with a shared short code is extraordinary.

2. Cost: Short codes are expensive; it’s not like buying a $7.99-per-month domain from Godaddy. If you are sharing a code, typically there are very little additional costs involved other than paying for your messages going out.

Read the rest of this entry »

10 reasons why a marketer should use RSS

Marketer should use RSSYou might have heard that mobileStorm recently launched RSS messaging. That makes us the only company globally that provides 6 ways to communicate with prospects and customers from the same web-based control panel.

RSS, which stands for Really Simple Syndication, is a relatively new web technology that is used to publish frequently updated content such as blogs and news. The first version of RSS was created in March of 1999 for use on the my.netscape.com portal. A 2004 Pew study found that 1 out of 20 people online said they used an RSS aggregator to read content online. So, I can only image how big that number is today. RSS was also the 3rd most searched for “what is” term on Google last year.

All major online portals use RSS to push content to their sites. MyYahoo, for example, is basically just a bunch of RSS feeds. Yahoo lets you customize which news you do and do not want to see. Additionally, Firefox and even Outlook 2007 now have RSS readers built into their applications. This allows you to subscribe to a feed by simply clicking an icon, and the feed is added to your RSS reader.

Read the rest of this entry »

Outside The Inbox with Jared Reitzin: Episode 7

This week, mobileStorm offers new viewers the perfect way to get acquainted with its humorous online news show about digital communications, called Outside The Inbox: Video Edition: A clip show combining some of the best stories of the past six episodes.