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Another Amherst blogger

by henrycopeland
July 14th, 2003


Welcome Lee: “I am excited to have this new facet of identity. I’m also excited to have the forum since, as my family, friends, and acquaintances will tell you, I have more to say than anyone wants to hear.”

Democratic, amazing and so cool…

by henrycopeland
July 11th, 2003


Greg Beato writes: “One of the great benefits of blogads is that they essentially democratize media buying. It’s expanding the number of venues where small advertisers can afford to run ads.”

Oliver Griswold writes: “Thanks for all this amazing technology!”

After ordering an ad, Ginger Mayerson writes: “This was great fun! Blogads are so cool, they need sweaters.”

Crooked lumber: academic grumbling

by henrycopeland
July 11th, 2003


Finally, a blog my father might enjoy: Crooked lumber. Now, if I can find something for Mom.

Adrift in an ocean of tears

by henrycopeland
July 11th, 2003


A message from the past.

Blog love rubs off on advertisers

by henrycopeland
July 11th, 2003


More proof sponsorships running on beloved blogs are a marketing dream come true: “12 percent of High Affinity visitors [ie people who really like a site] recalled online ads for the test brands compared to only 7 percent of Low/Medium Affinity visitors. High Affinity visitors are even more likely to recall online advertising for the test brands when supported by increased ad frequency. At a high frequency (5+), 15 percent of High Affinity visitors recalled seeing online ads for the test brands vs. only 4 percent of Low/Medium Affinity visitors.”

Mega@#$fizzle

by henrycopeland
July 11th, 2003


Overwhelmed by jargon, consumers are slow to buy new technology. The same no doubt applies to sales of online advertising, which is a challenge for us wordsmiths. What is a CPM or a clickthru? This is one of the reasons that Blogads sticks to selling advertisingin blocks of time.

Better than a Honda

by henrycopeland
July 11th, 2003


More proof that advertising can be art. (Via Up2speed.)

CSS explanation

by henrycopeland
July 10th, 2003


Turns out our CSS is less intuitive than we thought. Yes, Blogads CSS is completely customizable. No, if you do it right, Blogads CSS won’t impact your site’s “regular” CSS. Yes, you can have different adstrips with different CSSes on the same page.

Here’s our new explanation of the potential of Blogads’ CSS. Any thoughts? Write Tamas-at-pressflex.com.

Always-On people’s nerves…

by henrycopeland
July 10th, 2003


Just noticed that blog-poseur Tony Perkins has resorted to telemarketing VCs (at 5.30AM!) for his coming Always-On conference.

This tactic seems odd, since the Always-On “blog” — I wish there was some way to capitalize quotation marks — is supposed to already serve all the cognoscenti of Silicon Valley.

Perhaps some blog advertising would be a more effective promotional tactic, Tony?

(Disclosure Part I: Tony was pretty disgruntled when I ragged him back in March for claiming he’d created “the next level of blogging,” which was, in fact, “a last-gasp of print publishing.” Disclosure part II: Tony ultimately apologized (see comments of this post) for his petulance. Disclosure Part III: Always-On still misses most of the attributes, listed in my first critique of the site, that make blogs great.)

Blogads: now horizontal and RSS!

by henrycopeland
July 10th, 2003


After some experimentation, we’ve now got horizontal Blogads running on Ben Hammersley’s blog.

With Ben’s expert help, we’ve also got advertising running in his blog’s RSS feed, which is a first, we believe. (“What’s RSS?” my father will ask. Read Ben’s Guardian artice for a good overview.)

Ben notes, “you’ll have noticed the return of the blogads at the tops of the pages. Hell, a man’s gotta eat, and keep his hounds in the manner to which they have become accustomed. Are dogs meant to be that enthusiastic for brie? Buy an ad, and keep my dogs in fine cheese. Ahem, yes.” Ben’s moving to Florence in a couple days and I’ve promised to visit with some luscious American cheese.

After massaging out any kinks, we’ll make these new gizmos available to all weblog ad sellers.


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