Got an Interactive Marketing Strategy, or Just a Web Site?

February 20, 2009 by OneAccord · Leave a Comment
Filed under: Executive Marketing Strategy 

by Jonathan Gilliam

Just returned from Houston with a new gig helping companies increase their revenue via innovative digital marketing. Having enjoyed a stint at another interactive firm recently, I’m excited about bringing companies a few leaps forward in their interactive efforts.

First thing I did was go to Fry’s to get a printer for my home office, and after gathering product info about the printer I want, I walked out with nothing. Why? I needed to get to my computer to compare shop, of course.

We live and work (and importantly, shop) digitally. You should market and sell to match. Methods of reaching customers are changing radically (see my post ”Please Come Fire All My Salespeople“). A comprehensive digital marketing strategy is essential for our always-on connected world.

So what’s wrong with traditional marketing approaches? Nothing as part of the mix, but modern marketing should lean quite heavily toward Interactive and digital. All roads lead here. Print and top-down broadcast are simply too slow and static for today’s consumers, and analytics and measurement mean the right money is spent reaching the right audience.

Simply prettying-up your web site won’t cut it. Any real digital effort should involve a holistic strategy, experienced implementation, and disciplined measurement and refinement.

Free advice here so ping me!

Jonathan Gilliam is a interim sales executive for OneAccord and is based in the Austin area. Jonathan has a deep background in business development, market analysis, opportunity development, relationship management and C-level sales. He can be reached at 512.775.7566 or Jonathan.Gilliam(at)OneAccordCorp.com. Jonathan also blogs at Business Developments.

Google’s US Share Of Web Search Reaches 63%

December 20, 2008 by OneAccord · Leave a Comment
Filed under: Advertising 

San Francisco (Reuters) – Google extended an already wide lead in the U.S. web search to 63.0% share of the market in August, its biggest monthly gain in five months. Yahoo Inc, the No. 2 player in the U.S. web search market saw its share of the business drop 0.9% to 19.6% from July while Microsoft, the No. 3 U.S. player, slipped 0.6% to 8.3%, according to comScore Inc.

IAC InterActiveCorp’s Ask.com grew 0.3% to retain its fourth-place ranking while Time Warner Inc’s AOL edged up 0.1% to 4.3%, according to August monthly data published by the market research firm said.
Google’s growing share of web search and, by extension, its even larger role in the related market for web search advertising, has lead rivals and some industry trade groups to complain to competition regulators in the United and Europe.

ComScore estimates that the number of searches performed by U.S. web surfers on the five top search engines was virtually unchanged at 11.75 billion searches compared with July. The figure excludes searches users perform for mapping, local directory information or user-generated videos.

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