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Archive for November, 2002

Details about Yale blogfest

by henrycopeland
Thursday, November 21st, 2002

Just talked to Rob Heverly who is organizing tomorrow’sBlogs & Law/Journalism at the Yale Law School. Rob says there is an Ethernet connection at each seat in room 127. Users will need to configure for DHCP. (Not sure what that means, frankly.) Some law students contend there is WiFi in the room emanating from some subterranean source, but Rob says there is “no guarantee of a WiFiconnection.” For parking, Rob says there are garages on Grove street. Or you can buy an all-day parking pass at Atticus Books on the corner of Chapel and High streets for $3.40, but parking around the law school disappears fast. Look forward to seeing you there and doing some competitive conference blogging, with reports posted here tomorrow.

Retailers stifle news of future discounts

by henrycopeland
Thursday, November 21st, 2002

Looking for evidence that the Digital Millennium Copyright Act is bad? “Several Internet shopping sites have removed information about post-Thanksgiving sales after major retailers including Wal-Mart and Target threatened legal action” invoking DMCA, Amy Harmon reports in the NYTimes. , [url=]FatWallet.com and all pulled the lists of upcoming discounts after receiving letters threatening lawsuits from Wal-Mart, Target, BestBuy and Staples. Here’s [url=http://www.dealexpert.net/wbb2/thread.php?threadid=16525&sid=f93ee2485ad08f5ff03ef8ce6911656c]the letter sent to DealExpert.com. All hail Wal-Mart’s “intellectual property rights” to its Advertising Circular!

(An additional twist: MyCoupons.com’s CEO recently criticized Pud for re-posting a MyCoupon.com e-mail to clients, says Pud.)

Poobahs unite to dis diversity

by henrycopeland
Thursday, November 21st, 2002

Matt Welch pummels the press poobahs who are busily creating a “publishing mini-genre” lamenting the dire state of American Journalism.

Reviewing books by Bill Kovach, Tom Rosenstiel, Leonard Downie Jr. and Robert G. Kaiser, Matt is nauseated by the “factually uncluttered hyperbole,” unctuous “Statements of Concern,” and, most of all, the whiny poobahs’ self-congratulatory bias against other people mucking around in a business that THEY feel entitled to control by committee edict and academic fiat.

Written by people suckled on and situated in America’s news behemoths, the books fret that there aren’t enough behemoths and take this as a sign of impending doom. They either ignore the explosion of other news resources — niche magazines, blogs, cable channels, “fingertip access to 10,000 faraway newspapers” — or see these as negative.
Go read the whole review.

Small businesses active online

by henrycopeland
Tuesday, November 19th, 2002

Riva Richmond highlights the renewed focus by Yahoo, MS and ALN on serving small businesses online. “An October study conducted for the U.S. Small Business Administration found that 57% of U.S. companies with 250 employees or less, which are estimated to number about 21.3 million, use the Internet. And 32% of those not online today expect to be within the next year. Some 60% of the companies with Internet access had a Web site, and 35% sold products and services online, overwhelmingly to consumers. According to the Yankee Group, 80% of companies with between two and 19 employees have Internet access and 28% have a Web site. Their top reasons for making these technology purchases are to reduce costs, generate more revenue and improve productivity, says analyst Helen Chan.” To reitterate, the smallest companies are the biggest users.

WSJ on blogs

by henrycopeland
Tuesday, November 19th, 2002

Geoffrey Fowler wrote a good overview of attempts to categorize blogs today for the WSJ. He doesn’t manage to crack the age-old riddle — how to explain blogging to someone whose never done it.

Mondo Gizmodo

by henrycopeland
Monday, November 18th, 2002

Testing Nick Denton’s new Vonage line, I called his number and got a crisp connection.

I asked Nick how the tech blog he publishes, Gizmodo, is doing. He said traffic is growing 50% a month and is currently at 6,000 page impressions a day… with no marketing expenditure.

“We’ve sold a ton of Samsung phones” recently through Amazon affiliate links, he said. There are good days but also “long dry spells,” he said. When page views get to 15,000 a day, the site will add banners, Nick said.

Nick thinks Gizmodo could do 100,000 page impressions a day in 12-18 months. At that point, relative to its cost “in the very low thousands per month,” Gizmodo will be a “remarkably profitable little media.” Nick figures that a blog publisher can buy 200 posts for $1000, whereas a print publisher might pay the same money for just three freelance articles.

Based on what he’s learned from Gizmodo, Nick is planning a blog focused on New York high society. Real estate ads will be a prime revenue source. “The advertisers target old money in the New York Observer. We’ll serve the advertisers targetting the young money,” he said.

“We’re getting the formula refined for thin media.” If he could identify the right niches and locales, Nick said, “I’d love to launch one of these a month.”

Blogads in Globe and Mail

by henrycopeland
Monday, November 18th, 2002

Nick loses wallet, finds community

by henrycopeland
Friday, November 15th, 2002

After a harrowing day, Nick Denton is forced to admit “Bloggers may indeed be a community — yuck, how I hate that word.” After Hours? Naw. His odyssey sounds more like some post-post millennial version of “It’s a wonderful life.”

London visit

by henrycopeland
Tuesday, November 12th, 2002

I’m in the UK this week visiting print publishing clients. Lots of fun but no blogging.

The cost of scalps

by henrycopeland
Thursday, November 7th, 2002

Rick Bruner’s got a extensive round up of customer acquisition costs. The most interesting for me: “Most consumer magazines now spend on average $48 in mailings to get one customer (source: Business Week Online, 8/30/2001)” Is it any wonder that journalists are getting laid off?

Yes, in case you missed it, there’s talk of layoffs at Reuters and the BBC, following on the heels of layoffs atBusiness Week, Dow Jones and Forbes. (Via IWantMedia.)

Gee, is demand for information suddenly shrinking? Not for Glenn Reynolds, who pulled 100,000 page views the day after elections.


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