All posts in Internet Marketing

  • Latin American Companies Should be Social Media Experts

    Latin Americans are "Sociable"

    Today, I had an interesting experience at two prospect meetings.  I was meeting with organizations who are just starting to employ digital innovation strategies in Colombia (one of them is farther along than the other one).  In general, I am truly amazed at the disconnect between the user population in these countries and the companies who actually leverage digital tools to join the conversation with their customers.

    One of the most exciting recent developments within the Internet space has been the rapid uptake of social media tools and, even more interesting, the adoption of these tools on mobile platforms.  Just was with their record-breaking mobile adoption growth rates several years back, Latin Americans are also breaking records for adopting social networking platforms.  For instance, Colombia is number six in the world in terms of the total number of facebook users.

    I just read a post by Shane Gibson, who is currently in Colombia talking precisely about social networks. Incredibly, companies in the region who take advantage of the fact that their customers and prospects are having conversations using these digital tools are few and far between.  What are they waiting for? Instead of spending beaucoup sums of money on traditional media spends, they could be “mixing it up” and including solidly planned online iniciatives to promote their brand, products, services, etc. through direct advertising, community building, word of mouth enabling or other strategies.  An added benefit is the fact that, by doing this in virgin territory, any well thought out strategy strongly executed will be seen as digital innovation by the market place.

    Anyhow, this will all play out as it always does in the region.  The market will await some solid successes and then a mass of followers will dive in head first trying to imitate their models. When this will actually happen is the big question.

  • Adobe Switches from Checkers to Chess

    Yesterday’s announcement concerning Adobe’s acquisition of Omniture signifies the first salvo in a race to establish leadership in what the company calls an “integrated workflow—with optimization capabilities embedded in the creation tools.”  It’s clear that Adobe’s digital innovation vision is to redefine the process of the creation and deployment of digital iniciatives.

    According to Forrester, the market for Web Analytics is set to grow at a CAGR of 17% reaching almost $1B by 2014.  The company foresees a market where analytics and optimization solutions are embedded within marketing applications.  Apparently, Adobe believes this is the case and yesterday embarked on a road to make this vision a reality. Read more

  • What If You Were Running Twitter?

    In terms of gaining entry into the minds of Twitter’s management team, the last couple of weeks have been quite unique.  From the subset of confidential internal documents that Techcrunch recently published to the recent launch of the company’s Twitter 101 site, the company’s vision and a bit of what its leadership thinks about its future have become less murky.  For armchair CEOs, this is an opportunity time to speculate on how they would steward the company, but more importantly, on the direction of the social media space in general.

    New Twitter homepage

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  • Just Wrote Two Articles for Dinero.com

    During the past few weeks, I’ve had an opportunity to read to articles (in Spanish) about the web for a Latin American audience.  The two articles include one about how Colombian politicians are using the web and another one about how people around the world are using the Internet for their news gathering using as a specific example the tragic passing of Michael Jackson here.

    The first article is really designed show how compelling web strategies can be by providing an example close to home of a group of people (Colombian politicians) that need to get something done (get people to vote for them now).  These people are looking for a tangible result and are basically voting with their pesos and choosing to invest heavily in the web for only one reason: they believe this channel is paramount for their getting elected.

    It’s actually quite interesting to be in this type of emerging market (Colombia) where the Internet is just at the very early stages of being taken seriously.  It’s really like Internet circa 2002 in the states.  Online advertising is just over 1% (about USD $20 million) of the total advertising pie, but is expected to represent 8% of the pie by 2013.  That is explosive growth and it’s quite an interesting matter trying to get corporate executives and small and medium business owners to understand the power of marketing over the Internet (if done correctly).