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- MAP-EXTRA: ADVERTISING ON THE INTERNET
- --------------------------------------
-
- "They all laughed when I sat down at the piano, but oh!, when I
- began to play ..." -- John Caples, legendary advertisement for
- mail-order piano lessons, 1925
-
-
- This lesson is not in the syllabus, but I thought it would be a neat
- follow-up to MAP09: Spamming and Urban Legends.
-
- Things change rapidly on the net, perhaps no more rapidly than in the
- area of advertising, but there are a few general principles that
- are likely to stay put for a while.
-
- First, generally speaking, don't. If you work for a company that makes
- a product, you'll draw more flames than orders if you try to use the net
- to advertise that product.
-
- ADVERTISING THAT'S OK.
-
- There are a couple of exceptions. In some musical groups, very few
- people will object if you advertise a home-made or home-distributed
- recording your band has made (but see below for exceptions). And if
- you have *one* computer or bicycle to sell, it's OK to advertise it in
- the appropriate Usenet newsgroup (e.g., misc.forsale.computers.pc-clone,
- rec.bicycles.marketplace). If you have a warehouse full of computers
- or bikes and you're in the business of selling them, that's probably
- over the line.
-
- A second exception is on the Web. If your company has a homepage,
- websurfers who call it up would be offended if you *didn't* have
- information on your products, distributors, and so on.
-
- A third exception is if somebody asks an technical question such
- as "Who makes an Ada compiler for the MIL-STD-1750A processor?" it's
- generally considered OK to answer "We do" and to give a point of
- contact. Just make sure your posting is information, not ad copy.
- Often the person answering will say something like "Blatant commercial
- plug:" so he's not accused of being deceptive.
-
- DECEPTION.
-
- Deception is another matter entirely. There's a new form of
- advertising that's showing up on some of the musical newsgroups.
- Someone will post a message giving a rave review of the new CD by
- group X. A while later he'll rave about group Y and artist Z. It
- turns out that the only thing he ever has to say are rave reviews
- of new CDs. And all the artists he raves about record for the same
- major label. After not too much detective work it turns out that
- our hero works for (now let's not always see the same hands) the
- record label.
-
- It's not restricted to musical groups, either. A well-known
- scenario has person A ask a question like "what's the best product
- to do W?" Shortly afterward, person B replies that the new offering
- P from R Software solves that problem, is cheap and easy to install,
- and everybody should have one. A while later on another group A
- reappears with another question, and sure enough, product Q from R
- Software is the answer to the world's ills.
-
- I haven't the slightest idea why a company would risk earning a
- reputation for unethical dealings, but if you're sleazy enough to
- think these are good ideas, please be aware that there are folks on
- the net who delight in exposing scams of this sort, and you'll be
- found out in short order.
-
- APPROPRIATE FORUMS.
-
- Sending out email to every listserv and Usenet newsgroup has already
- been covered in MAP09 Spamming and Urban Legends. Don't do it. There
- are companies who sell mailing lists of email addresses. I find the
- prospect of junk-email frightening: there are companies and organizations
- who would pull their workers off the net rather than subject them
- to such misuse of company resources.
-
- And you hardly need to be told that advertising a bicycle for sale
- in rec.arts.marching.drumcorps or talk.politics.tibet is a waste
- of time.
-
- But there's a subtler point. Many of the Usenet hierarchies have a
- special "marketplace" newsgroup. It's safe to assume that any related
- group does NOT want ads. For example, there's a newsgroup called
- rec.music.makers.marketplace and it's a good bet that your offer of a
- synthesizer for sale will not be welcome on rec.music.makers.synth.
-
- There is a List of Active Newsgroups available on news.answers that
- lists the active Usenet newsgroups. Look there to find out where the
- "marketplace" and "forsale" groups are.
-
- When you touch on the sensitive area of advertising it's all too easy
- to earn a reputation for being dishonest, when all you really are is
- ignorant. Save your reputation by knowing what the rules are
- before you advertise.
-
- RESOURCES.
-
- Net policy and attitudes toward advertising are evolving so rapidly
- that his article is virtually guaranteed to be out of date. Two
- articles available on the Unsenet newsgroup news.answers, "swap-guide"
- and "Advertising FAQ", discuss some of the cultural issues involved
- in buying and selling on the net.
-
- A listserv INET-MARKETING has started in the last few months to discuss
- "marketing goods and services in an appropriate way on the Internet".
- To join, send a mail message to listproc@einet.net containing
-
- SUBSCRIBE INET-MARKETING Your Name of Your Organization
-
- Another list at the same site WWWORDER (subscribe similarly) discusses
- "practical issues of World-Wide Web order form implication".
-
-
- PATRICK DOUGLAS CRISPEN THE VIEWS EXPRESSED IN THIS LETTER DO NOT
- PCRISPE1@UA1VM.UA.EDU NECESSARILY REPRESENT THE VIEWS OF THE
- THE UNIVERSITY OF ALABAMA UNIVERSITY OF ALABAMA - TUSCALOOSA
-
- ROADMAP: COPYRIGHT PATRICK CRISPEN 1994. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
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