Gary Sheynkman dot com

Thoughts, ramblings, finds, and other shenanigans by Gary Sheynkman

Monetizing the masses

What makes the web great is that it is measurable. Marketing on the web is very effective (when done right) because you can gauge how effective your targeting is.

I would like to talk about a metric that the typical model of “get a ton-o-users then monetize” often overlooks: revenue per user. As your number of users grows, the revenue per user drops drastically.

Why does this happen? 2 reasons:

  1. Infrastructure is not free. Storage and most importantly bandwidth, although dropping in costs, are fat bills that you have to factor in. These are so large, in fact, that companies like Facebook have to invest in creating new compression and storage technologies (like Haystack, for example) to cope with the large volumes of data.
  2. More importantly, a bigger body of users is much harder to target. Once you step outside of the realm of interconnected communities, you are screwed. You might target males between the ages of 23 and 34 who live in Chicago and love Electronic Music, but you are not guaranteeing that they interact with each other or interact communally with your brand.

Read on to see what sites get the aforementioned issues.

[Read more]

Amazing Asics origami promo video

Finds like these usually reside in my Tumblr, the RSS feed for which is to the right of this post. This, however, is too good not to give some additional light to.

Just about everything about this video is amazing. From the quality of video itself to the fact that this brand gets the value of producing videos that make me want the product. As with my BMW Films post, I applaud Asics for coming out with a creative way to make consumers sit down and learn more about the brand and its values.


Origami In the Pursuit of Perfection from MABONA ORIGAMI on Vimeo.

Not loosing market share in a down market

I dislike news. It’s always bad. It seems that every day I see another ad agency close up shop or lay off employees. That only means one thing: companies are cutting marketing costs, hard.

I understand. You make widgets. You sell widgets. You can’t stop making them, nor can you stop selling them… so you stop advertising them.

Hi. Hello? Anyone there? If no one knows that you make and sell widgets, who is going to buy them!?

If you are overleveraged and are going into bunker-mode, ok… I get it. But companies that have money to spend on marketing, now is the time!

THIS is the opportunity you have been waiting for. Your competitors are not advertising. You need to push HARD and grab market share, because it is there for the taking. Don’t want to spend money on that costly online re-imaging of your company? Think community advertising is a waste of time? Think your website can limp on for a year or two?

What … people are spending less time online? This reactionary trend is silly if you sit back and look at what your customers are doing.

… Just a thought ;)

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