Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Video Games and Internet Marketing

By: Kyle Woods
 
 

Until now, I have never really thought about how quickly Microsoft, Nintendo and Sony were with using their consoles and various devices to market nearly anything. This is more so applicable to Micorosft and Sony with XBOX Live and the PlayStation Network, as these are generally run with ads, applications and of course video games. I don't think many companies are considering such a large and growing market that each network currently has. Using XBOX Live as an example, Microsoft provides space within the console's dashboard for ads, games, apps, among other things. Most consoles work of the same general idea as well.





One of the largest factors in Internet Marketing is finding the right community to market to. Within gaming, you'll find a seemingly endless amount of communities in relation to nearly anything that the game or console encompasses... and have you ever met a gamer? They can be quite passionate about their interests, as well as extremely adversarial. This kind of thing could be vastly helpful with marketing a specific product or service. Gaming consoles... I can see them becoming almost just as common as it is to have a computer. I would get started on marketing on gaming platforms very, very soon. There isn't much more time until they become cluttered with marketing like the web has!

How Technology as Revolutionized the Way We Cook

There are so many different ways that technology helps us in and around the kitchen these days that it is impossible to name them all. I will just list as many examples as I can in hopes that you will see my point. The first example is air conditioning. You may not cook with it but imagine cooking in a kitchen without it, sounds pretty unbearable if you ask me. Another example would be mechanical timers that we lazy Americans use to tell us when to pull our food out of the oven so we don't burn it. Oh, and lets not forget that we would not even be able to cook that meal if it wasn't for the internet supplying us with the recipes and cooking processes that made us able to make it in the first place. God forbid we figure any of those things out on our own. Also, messes would be in a whole new realm if it wasn't for the non-stick coating for pots and pans that we use called Teflon. Believe me it's not very fun cooking without it.





Lastly, no kitchen would be complete if it were not for a few modern marvels we use these days known as the microwave and the dishwasher. The dishwasher literally does near EVERYTHING for us when it comes to clean up in the kitchen. Just pop the dirty dishes in and clean ones come out. What more could you want? I'll tell you. What about a machine that lets you heat, re heat, or re re re heat a meal whenever you want? The micowave is truly one of kitchen technologies biggest contenders and is used billions of times a day by households across the globe. It is true that there is no better time to be alive and have a desire for an easy cooking experience than now.

-Aaron Adams


Do Video Games Help with Hand-Eye Coordination

      Sports have always been regarded as the best way to improve hand-eye coordination, but recently it has been proven that videogames may improve it just as much, if not more than sports. A study was taken where a surgeon would play a certain video game before performing surgery for a certain amount of hours per week and see how quickly and precisely they could perform the procedure. The study found that surgeons who played video games for at least three hours a week made 37 percent fewer mistakes and performed the procedure 27 percent faster than those who did not play video games at all. Now, mainstream sports are still better for improving general coordination and balance, but video games are shown to improve motor skills, such as stbaility for delicate maneuvers.
 
While playing a videogame (a First Person Shooter for example) you have to watch the screen, scan the screen for enemies or objects of interest, use your thumbs to move the analog sticks to navigate on-screen by maintaining the right pressure on the stick in the direction you would like to move, move your thumb off the analog sticks to press other buttons, and perform a lot of small adjustments while watching the screen. While playing sports or other such activities require you to be more coordinated in general, playing a videogame requires you to use your eyes to adjust the amount of force each individual finger is using while your eyes analyze what each individual movement has done; the process then repeats itself as the gamer makes corrections or sees a new target.
 
In short: Video Games rule.

                                         -Aaron Adams



Monday, December 9, 2013

Car Manufacturers and the new "Always Connected" Era

By: Kyle Woods

Amazingly, Nissan has broken into the SmartWatch business before not only any other car manufacturer, but Apple as well. In what seems like the next step for technology within vehicles, they have focused its features on being connected to the car (of course). I would sooner expect for there to be Smart-technology elsewhere than someone's vehicle, but its only a matter of time, right?
Sadly the watch is only currently available to those that drive Nissan's "Nismo" line of high-performance vehicles. I do feel that soon enough this might turn into a trend that the rest of the vehicle market follows, as having everything connected seems to be the way of the future. However, this watch can do and tell you a lot by being connected to the vehicle, as well as being on your wrist.

Nissan Europe’s general manager of marketing communications Gareth Dunsmore mentioned that "Wearable technology is fast becoming the next big thing and we want to take advantage of this innovative technology to make our Nismo Brand more accessible." at a Motor Show in Frankfurt this past September. The device to my knowledge seems to be geared toward the high-end vehicle driver, as is specifically for Nissan's Nismo series of vehicles and from the information it is tasked to display. The SmartWatch can analyze a vehicles performance while also providing other pertinent information such as current/top/average speed, heart rate of the driver, fuel efficiency and other biometric data through a bluetooth connection.
 
Though, the biggest aspect that the watch has going for it might be the social media integration. Nissan's SmartWatch will allow a user to be notified of messages to their various accounts and devices, as well as be able to compare, post and share their logged data to their social media account page. The device will even give you tips and alerts based upon the local weather!
In my own humble opinion, the focus on the connection between the user and the vehicle allows Nissan to offer a lot to new drivers. I cannot forget to mention that this is only at the development stages of this type of technology, so once the ideas start flowing I'm sure there is going to widespread interest and use of technology like this. Good job Nissan, and thumbs up for continuing to step up the game!
 
Images: via Google Image Search

Sunday, December 8, 2013

Top 10 Internet Marketing Trends of 2013



Social Media Integration

Have a Facebook account? Check. Twitter? Check LinkedIn and Pinterest? Check and check. Ok, now what? Activity that happens on social stays there. This year, integrating social media behavior and data into the rest of the marketing mix (and database) became crucial in order to reach customers with relevant messages in real-time.

Be Mobile or Fall Behind

In 2013, marketers finally list mobile as a major line item on their marketing strategy. Not only though continued investment in mobile-optimized websites and email, but mobile taking a more important role when integrating with marketing campaigns. Mobile has become a more strategic and must-have channel for many businesses.

Social and Content Impact SEO

Over the years, good search engine optimization (SEO) was all about knowing the tricks of the trade. SEO now is less about having the right H1 tag or the right keywords on the page and more about creating really good, original content that is socially consumed and shared. Overall, SEO has drifted further and further away from on-page SEO, and focuses on the various components of off-page SEO that came together for a powerful SEO strategy.

Marketers Embrace “Smart” Content

The first time Amazon introduced me to the perfect book for me via their recommendation engine, I was completely awed. The idea that a website could not only recognize a return visitor, but also discern their interests and alter their site experience accordingly, felt like nothing short of magic. Since then, data-driven personalization, or dynamic content, has become more common, though not entirely pervasive in the marketing space. During 2013, we started to hear more about adaptive, ‘smart’ content. As context becomes increasingly important in any inbound marketing strategy, dynamic content enables marketers to serve highly personalized messages to the right audience at the right time.

Email Lives On

No, email is not dead. In fact, email will continued to be an important part of the marketing mix during 2013. Marketing emails became less “batch and blast” and instead more personalized, relevant and targeted based on real-time data. There was increased importance in opt-in marketing instead of opt-out marketing and buying lists became a less-used practice.

Marketing Technology Evolves

In 2013, we saw two major changes in the technology landscape:

• More investment in technology solutions that solve for inbound marketing, social media management, and marketing measurement, attribution and ROI. More importantly, software and services that are integrated and unified with other channels, departments, and databases is the key. Marketers spend more on unified, integrated technology solutions that eliminate data silos.

• As more widgets, gadgets and devices enter the market, marketers figured out how to use each platform in the best and most appropriate way. Taking an old advertising model onto new technologies won’t fly.

Content Curating

Content is king, whether you like it or not. Creating more and more content is among the top priorities for marketing teams throughout 2013. In addition to the increase in allocating budget to content creation, increasingly more curating services and “content marketplaces” helping marketers deliver more in a content-heavy world.

Content Crowd-sourcing Expands

Socially-generated content, where your audience help builds content for you (usually through a contest), has been done for years. There is an even bigger opportunity for crowd-sourcing platforms that contribute to new marketing ideas. As the social footprint grows, marketers find more ways to leverage crowd creativity by building interesting and viral pieces of content with their network of fans and followers.

Marketing Gets Gamified

The convergence of marketing and gaming has been prominent throughout 2013. Marketing became more interactive in how it’s deployed and consumed. “Gamificiation” helps increase the stickiness of content through its entertainment value, reward, and learning abilities. Through gamification, marketing can actually be enjoyable instead of avoided.

Context is Content’s New Best Friend


To do marketing better throughout 2013, marketers went beyond simply creating content to creating a personalized experience for their target customer that’s seamless across multiple interactions. These experiences leverage context to make a company’s marketing jive with the searcher’s proclivities – the things you've learned about your leads over months and years of talking with them. The things they do, the things they say, the sites they like, the products they purchase, their happiness level with your company - all to have deeper and more meaningful relationships and better results.

Work Cited:

By: Laila Entenman

Friday, December 6, 2013

Does Technology Work?


If you have at least paid half of your attention to the world lately, you have probably noticed the massive increase in technology around us. In fact its almost impossible to ignore: people are integrating technology into every aspect of our lives. Everywhere you look, a new machine is filling a position that a human once filled or a new gadget is pushing the limits in order to appeal to a new tech-savvy generation. Different media like music and books are now available in a digital form and are at the click of a mouse – or tap of a touch screen. Even as I type these words, a new technology is being distributed that would record my voice and render it as text!

Dilbert.com, 3-23-13 @2013 Scott Adams Inc.


As a college student, immersed in this digital playground and as a thoughtful human being like many of you out there in cyberspace, I took a step back to ask a few questions. For starters, is this “technology” thing working? Specifically I wanted to address the matter of schools and technology. Here in Panama City, we are beginning to fund the use of smart boards for the teachers to replace dry erase. Schools at a k-12 level are introducing a new BYOD policy (Bring Your Own Device) where students are encouraged – rather than scolded or punished – for bringing and utilizing their own electronic device. This shows that both the educational legislation and the student bodies show support in bringing new technologies into the classroom. That, however, is just k-12 students. I was more concerned about how technology would affect college campuses and graduation rates.

After doing some research, no true poll has been done to try and draw a connection between technological advancement and college graduation rate, but we can pull some other statistics and come up with a theory. For starters, four-year college graduation rates are going up nationwide and so is the amount of technology we have at our disposal. With most colleges having websites as well as books and actual curriculum online, more people have access to a college education today through their computers than in past years. This is supported by an increase of college attendance, but not on campus; rather, more people are signing on and learning via online classwork.

Research conducted by “SLOAN-C” online education provider:

What are your thoughts on how the technology age is bringing a change to the title of “student”? Does all of this technology help or hinder learning? Feel free to respond.

Kyle Polk

Thursday, December 5, 2013

Cyber Monday



Cyber Monday has come and gone. How many of you took advantage of the sales? The great advantage of Cyber Monday is not having to fight the crowds but people are still "fighting" to get to the deals first before the stores sell out of the number they are offering. My sister-in-law was online at walmart.com as soon as their sales started. She selected the items she wanted and put them in her "cart". There were so many customers shopping that the site was bogged down. By the time the site was working well, some of the items she had put in her "cart" were already sold out.

Many stores offered special deals and let people know early what was going to be on sale. Some stores even started their Cyber Monday sales on Saturday. This youtube video, http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_u_UyPG5jxE, discussed the deals many of the stores would offer and how the sales would work. This way customers can be prepared with what they want to buy that is going to be on sale but there could still be the problems of the site being overwhelmed with customers and not being able to handle them all. I still think that it is worth it to shop this way instead of going to the stores and facing the pushing and shoving of people.

Patricia Holzman