Conny's and Suzanne's Work Snippets

Monday, March 24, 2008

Sound bites that might come handy one day

Call them widgets, gadgets, or wadgets, but businesses such as Kraft Foods, Nissan, and American Express are building brand identity using these software applications that can be embedded in a Web page or downloaded to a computer desktop.
"Widgets hold an interesting creative possibility to create a conversation with consumers," said Jeff Williams, associate director, creative, at Digitas, while speaking with three other widget experts at a Search Engine Strategies New York panel discussion this week.

While popular gadgets feature games and entertainment (Bejeweled, Tetris) or utilities (personal finance calculators, world clocks), advertisers are starting to build and promote their own applications

"Everything we can do as a Web site can be done with a gadget ad," he said. These tools can serve an assortment of marketing objectives, from lead generation to awareness building. He also offered up some best practices: keep ads under 40K, limit animation to under 15 seconds, create an easy-to-click outgoing link, and underline the link so it stands out.

Said Digitas' Williams: "You want to create an in-page experience as much as possible. Just having a widget that links to your [home] page, that's a glorified link. No one's going to buy it."

from: http://clickz.com/showPage.html?page=3628832

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Kraft Recipe Widget - Idea for Chow

http://www.kraftfoods.com/kf/media/RecipeWidget.htm

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Nissan Live Traffic Google Gadget

http://tinyurl.com/2s4922

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Thursday, March 20, 2008

Widget Idea for UrbanBaby


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Dart Widget - Widget Advertising is Hot

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Tuesday, March 18, 2008

Web 3.0, or the semantic web - the intelligent web

http://venturebeat.com/2007/10/21/what-is-web-30-its-web-20-with-a-brain/

CBS Local Ad Network

CBS Local Ad Network, created by syndicating CBS local news content to local bloggers and social media Web sites. In exchange for publishing the CBS news widgets and links to local CBS video and text news, local sites receive a portion of the ad revenue sold by the CBS stations.

More: http://www.mediaweek.com/mw/news/recent_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1003726377

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Tuesday, March 4, 2008

Widget Worthiness

We suggest four simple tests to see whether widgets are right for you:
• Will your widget reach hunters and not doers? Hunters still exist online; that's why Google pay-per-click campaigns continue to work well. The trick is finding the audience when they are in that mindset.
• Will your viral application reach the right target? A recent "viral video" by the British skin products company Elave showed nude people walking around talking about eczema medication. Provocative? Yes. Viral? Of course. But we're certain the ad reached the wrong demographic: Young men looking at risqué models, not women shopping for skin ointments.
• Does your product lend itself to engaging consumers? For example, if you sell mortgage refinancing, it may make sense to launch widgets that give users a chance to sort through rates with an interactive tool. The key here is getting people to engage with your core message, not just the clever widget.
• Can you launch a widget even if it doesn't go viral? If you can afford to spend thousands of dollars on a widget application and have it go nowhere, fine. But when it comes to turning ad dollars into new customers, the widget may be no more effective than any other form of advertising.

Entire Business Week Article: http://tinyurl.com/3853bp