Baby boomers into picture sharing
| One-Quarter U.S. Adults Share Photos Online |
| Thursday, Jun 12, 2008 7:16 AM ET |
| Nearly
one-quarter of U.S. adults shared photos via a
Web site in the last 30 days, while Baby
Boomers made the most use of digital greeting
cards, according to new data from Mediamark
Research & Intelligence.
In the last 30 days, 24.4% of the U.S adult population (46.5 million people) shared photos via an Internet Web site. Of those people, 58.8% were female versus 41.2% male. Millennials and Boomers were fairly evenly represented among photo sharers. Slightly less than 10% of the adult population (9.2%, or 17.6 million adults) sent an electronic greeting card in the last 30 days. The senders were overwhelmingly female (70.3%) and Baby Boomers, at 44.5%, were far and away the largest group of electronic greeting card senders among the generational segments. --Gavin O'Malley |
What the Creators of 'Sex and the City' Know About Marketing That You Don't
VIEWPOINT: Women Flocked to the Chick Flick Because They Relate to Characters That 'Could Be Me'
By Bonnie Fuller Published: June 09, 2008
|
|
I love the
fact that Sarah Jessica Parker wore a recycled designer
gown to the humongous New York premiere of "Sex and the
City." Not any recycled dress, mind you, but a
silver-lame strapless Nina Ricci gown designed by
über-upscale designer Olivier Theyskens. The same
gazillion-dollar dress already had made appearances on
a socialite at the Metropolitan Museum's Costume
Institute gala and on Lindsay Lohan in Harper's Bazaar.
Mortified, SJP told The New York Times that it "was
short-sighted ... unethical and ... disappointing" that
she had been duped.
What Parker didn't get was that this was exactly what
would have happened to her infamous alter ego, Carrie
Bradshaw. And it's exactly because Carrie has always
had so much of the lovable loser inside her, despite
her label-clad appearance, that she has become such a
hit with women.

'Sex
and the City' stars: The audience's old friends.
Lots has now been written about the tsunami of success
that "Sex and the City" has had, with its blowout $55.7
million opening weekend -- the biggest box-office score
for a chick flick. But what I think is really
interesting is why women are dressing to the nines and
flocking with droves of friends to see it and then
whooping it up in the theaters.
For "SATC" fans, it's not just about going to see a
movie; it's about attending a special and meaningful
event. At the non-prime-time screening I attended in a
suburban theater, the cheering began with the credits
and rolled through the film, ending in rousing
applause.
The writers who created the film's central character
did a genius thing: They created a woman who real women
could totally identify with -- a truly authentic
female. Carrie wasn't trying to be edgy or hip. She was
a woman who was cute but not too pretty; funny and
smart but not too brainy; great buddies with her close
girlfriends but repeatedly a loser in love -- so much
so that she endured the ultimate humiliation: being
left at the altar. After all, every woman has
experienced devastating heartbreak even if she hasn't
had her wedding abruptly canceled.
Plus there was Carrie's embarrassing habit of tripping
over her designer clothes. Public embarrassment is
another thing most women can relate to, unfortunately.
The film also won women's allegiance through a factor
not usually valued by marketers who are always on the
outlook for what's next. While it took the lives of its
heroines forward, it triumphed in its celebration of
the familiar. Carrie, Samantha, Charlotte and Miranda
were still the same girlfriends the "SATC" audience had
come to love. After all, the best thing about a best
girlfriend is that you can count on her not to change,
even if it has been four years since you last saw her.
The "SATC" brand recognizes what many marketers don't:
that women connect with and will follow a woman or a
brand that is friendly, relatable and likable vs.
someone or something that is perfect and on a pedestal.
That is one of the lessons I learned while revamping Us
Weekly or transforming Star from a tabloid to a glossy
magazine.
It wasn't really the glamour or the glitz that made
"Sex and the City" a winner, although they helped;
looking at the fashion in the film was just plain fun.
It was the "she could be me" or "she could be my best
friend"-ness of the Carrie Bradshaw brand that worked
big time. And whether it's movies, TV or print ads, or
a new beauty spokeswoman, there's power in making a
female-focused brand friendly, relatable and familiar
to the masses of women who want to be welcomed in
despite their imperfections and not made to feel
uncool, unedgy and unworthy.
HTML May Not Be Good In Emails
Tanya Irwin is Deputy Editor of MediaPost. She can be reached at tanya@mediapost.com.
| Study: Image-Oriented Emails Not Getting Delivered |
| by Tanya Irwin, Friday, Jun 6, 2008 7:15 AM ET |
| It's
back to the drawing board for marketers, whose
image-oriented email campaigns are increasingly
being blocked by default and Web mail clients.
That's according to Jeanniey Mullen, Email Experience Council founder and a chief marketing officer at Zinio. The Email Experience Council, the email marketing arm of the Direct Marketing Association (DMA), released "Retail Email Rendering Benchmark Study." The 41-page study examines the email design practices of 104 top online retailers tracked via RetailEmail.Blogspot, and examines their performance in an images-off email environment. It also includes the results of a survey of 472 marketers regarding rendering issues, conducted in conjunction with SubscriberMail, the sponsor of this study. "The results of this study underscore the importance of proactively designing email to compensate for image suppression," said Jordan Ayan, CEO of SubscriberMail, in a statement. "Specifically, email marketers must design emails to work with and without images present and test to ensure optimal image rendering. Marketers whose design accounted for image suppression reported impressive lifts in key performance areas. Still, a significant percent of email marketers realize this issue, yet fail to take action to address it." The study found that 23% of retailers send emails that are completely unintelligible when images are blocked. Of the 77% that sent intelligible emails, there were significant variations in clarity based on their use of HTML text and alt tags. Only 42% of retailers designed emails that were a good mix of HTML text and images, and only 63% of retailers used alt tags on their images adequately or extensively. A marketer's use of HTML text and alt tags are major determinants of the intelligibility of their emails. By optimizing emails for image suppression, double-digit percentage improvements are possible, said Chad White, the eec's director of retail insights and editor at large, founder of RetailEmail.Blogspot, and the study's author. "So there's ample incentive for marketers to follow the leaders and redesign their templates and alter their design processes." Other findings include: •14% of retailers compose their navigation bars with HTML text rather than images. •3% of retailers used HTML call-to-action buttons rather than images. •88% of retailers include a "click to view" link in their preheader text. •63% of retailers include whitelisting instructions in their preheader text. •The emails from only 21% of retailers displayed meaningful snippet text. |
