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Top 110 Trends in Mobile App Marketing

Smartphones are taking over a lot of the content delivery market.  With embeds such as GPS, it is making the phone a portable computer that makes life and work more immediate.

Apps -- those bite size computer applications that are specialized, and so very global are great for companies and organizations to create or have created if you need immediate interactivity with your clients or prospects.  For instance, if you have a chain of locations... or can deliver information over the phone...those are perfect applications for "apps". 

CIO Zone has listed the Top 10 Trends for Mobile Apps and they are a window into our changing world ... and world of marketing.  Check them out:

Top 10 Trends for Mobile Apps
Money Transfer
Location-Based Services
Mobile Search
Mobile Browsing
Mobile Health Monitoring
Mobile Payment
Near Field Communication Services
Mobile Advertising
Mobile Instant Messaging
Mobile Music

Do you have (or know of someone who has) a company producing green, sustainable, or high performance solutions?

We are launching a "green directory with a difference" -- you get a real opportunity to tell your green solutions story in the listing!  Up to 600 WORDS...and your listing can be included in FIVE categories. 

We also include BOTH Business-to-Business and Business-to-Consumer categories.  IF we don't have the right category for your solution -- let us know and we'll seriously consider adding it.

The SolutionsforGreen.com site is highly "search engine optimized" and the listings will probably appear higher on Google searches than your own company's listings for key word phrases.  We work hard at building a robust platform of sites to help drive traffic to the directory.  We're serious about greening our world...and want to help others who are also serious about the challenge facing us.  And who have solutions!

We would  love to have your company, nonprofit organization...or even public agency list your green products, green services...and green programs.  You don't have to be in the commercial market.  You just need SOLUTIONS!  Employee programs.  Festivals. Innovator groups. The broader the variety of solutions, the better! 

"Necessity is the mother of invention"...my mother taught me.  And we have necessity.  Now it's time to implement some great, innovative solutions.

And then get the word out for replicating good results.  So add your listing, already :-)

SolutionsforGreen.com

Green Businesses Get Listed in SolutionsForGreen.com

Read Those Agreements!

I an an active affiliate marketer for select companies and I have made it a habit of glancing over the Associates Agreements before I commit to adding the company's products to my websites, but I hadn't worried too much about them... until this came up in an affiliate agreement:

You acknowledge that, by participating in the Associates Program and placing any of the above links within your site, we may receive information from or about visitors to your site or communications between your site and those visitors. Your participation in the Program constitutes your specific and unconditional consent to and authorization for our access to, receipt, storage, use, and disclosure of any and all such information, consistent with the policies and procedures set forth in the Privacy Notice on the Amazon Site.
This says to me that Amazon can spy on ALL my visitors, ALL my communications, and they can use ANY information "unconditionally" for receipt, storage, use and disclosure of any and all such information.  OUCH!

I treat my readers with respect and don't disclose personal contact information.  Why would I give someone like Amazon permission to use my readers' information without any disclosure to ME that they are doing it...and carte blanche!????

So,  just a word of warning.  Read those agreement carefully.  They hold hidden "gotchas" that you might not be aware of.

So...you will not be seeing links to Amazon-marketed books or goods on my websites.  I'll work with companies that have caring, responsible people involved.

It is important for responsible marketers to protect their constituents from predatory or unfair practices.  Communications matter.  Information matters... that's why we are in the marketing business.  Our integrity is part of what we offer to our readers and customers, so we must make sure that our "supply chains" also have business practices that match our own integrity.

The heart of sustainable business is that we act with responsibility and integrity.  And we keep honing those skills and actions to build a more perfect union.  I believe our individual actions have an impact on our communities and our nation...and our globe.  Don't you?



Bicycle Billboards for "sustainable mobile advertising"

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Get your exercise while you get your message around town!

Advertising bikes are a new medium of communication.  Bicycle billboards are designed to be   fun, exciting, eye catching and respected by the public for the human power required to ride all day long.

One company in Australia has developed Bicycle Billboards as a sustainable form of outdoor advertising they can be directed to a wide variety of markets.

www.spaceads.com.au

But... sustainable isn't just about the fuel used in the vehicle that drives around town.  Or the vehicle.  It is also about how the signs are made -- do they use environmentally and socially responsible materials and processes?  It is also about the safety of the bikers and the other people on the street.  And it is about the messages on the signs. 

If all those considerations are also carefully and thoughftfully taken into account, bike advertising could be considered respectful messaging.  
ULE will soon test a number a range of products in line for environmental certification, including sunglasses, wind turbines, dishwashers and televisions

UL Environment, or U.L.E., new subsidiary of Underwriters Laboratories that is launching global environmental-standards, has awarded its first product certification to EcoRock, a recycled drywall.

UL Environment gave Serious Materials in Sunnyvale, Calif., an environmental certification that will help the company sell EcoRock panels for building projects aiming for LEED certification from the USGBC. 

The company will soon test a number of other products in line for environmental certification, including sunglasses, wind turbines, dishwashers and televisions, said the vice president and general manager of U.L.E., Marcello Manca.

RESOURCE: UL Environment

UL Environment's Database of Environmentally Sustainable Products
Manufacturers may submit their products for UL testing and environmental claims validation.

Video Gaming Trends...and Marketing


Gaming is rapidly becoming the phenomenon equal to the explosion of the Internet on the communications scene. If you're not familiar with the role of gaming in today's business, advertising and public discourse, you might want to click your way through this overview of today's gaming world. Gaming is strategy. Gaming is revenue...in the making for a wide swath of the business marketing and communications sectors.

Green Marketing: Certification and FTC Requirements

Green Products Under Scrutiny

Many manufacturers claim their products are environmentally-friendly, but how green are they? Priya David reports.

Green is the catchword for natural resources conservation in today's marketplace. The short is short and sweet, almost genetic in its core understanding. We love green...the trees and grass and food sources.

But green products and services require a healthy dose of realism and conscience beyond those universal understandings. By one count, manufacturers launched 328 supposedly environmentally friendly products last year, up from just 5 in 2002.

"Environmental" claims such as rcycled content, non-toxic ingredients, lower emissions, etc. must pass Federal Trade Commission standards on packaging and in advertising.

Certifications such as USDA organic, EnergyStar, LEED, and Canadian EcoLogo auditing and verification programs help consumers sort "marketing slime" from verifiable, measurable, specific claims.

The FTC is cracking down on green marketing. They are accelerating review of  aging FTC "environmental claims" requirements ahead of their normal scheduled review. Watch for increased scrutiny...and labeling specifics. Get ready to have your products tested, reviewed, certified and audited if you want to tap into the green marketplace.

Reference: CBS Interactive. May 18, 2008

Meredith Corporation (NYSE: MDP) and NBC Universal (NYSE: GE), two of the nation’s leading media companies, today announced the second in a series of findings from the Meredith/NBC Universal “What do Women Want?”™ survey.


The  findings from the nationwide survey conducted among more than 3,000 women reveal key insights on the female psyche across topics including health and well-being:

When it comes to health, women are more concerned about
diet/weight (56%) and eating right (36%)
than they are about
cancer (23%), cardiovascular/heart health (20%), and diabetes (18%)

  • Many women are skipping important medical examinations, including annual physicals and cancer screenings
  • Less than two-thirds (59%) of all women get an annual physical, even lower among Gen Y women (44%).
  • Nearly one-third of Boomer women are not getting their important annual mammograms, cholesterol checks or physicals.
  • 62% of women regularly give themselves a breast self-examination, while only 14% of all women get a skin cancer screening at least once a year.

Four in 10 women report that they are more than 20 pounds overweight

  • Gen Y women are more likely than Gen X and Boomer women to say they are at their ideal weight (29% vs. 9%, 7% respectively).
  • Relatively few (4%) overweight women say they would consider surgery as a weight reduction strategy; a substantial number say they would consider exercise (76%) and improving their diet (75%) to lose weight.

Still, when it comes to achieving a healthy lifestyle, more women opt for simple strategies like “drinking more water” and “eating more fruits and vegetables” than more disciplined approaches like “exercising three times a week”, “lowering calorie intake”, “watching their sugar intake” and “using portion control”

  • Not surprisingly, women are sensitive about their own weight, with 4 in 10 (40%) who say it’s wrong for a man to tell a woman that she’s overweight
  • However, relatively fewer women think it’s wrong for a woman to tell a man he’s overweight (32%) or a parent to tell a child he or she is overweight (26%).

Most women think the battle of the bulge starts at the schools at an early age; the majority of moms claim that while their child(ren) eat junk food, it’s “not when I’m around”


Top 10 Health Concerns (across all generations)

1. Diet/weight control (56%)
2. Eating well/nutrition (36%)
3. Allergies (27%)
4. Aging process (26%)
5. Mental health (25%)
6. Arthritis (24%)
7. Cancer (23%)
8. Cardiovascular/heart health (20%)
9. Diabetes (18%)
10. Menopause (18%)


Medical check-ups:

  • Less than two-thirds (59%) of all women get an annual physical, while more than two-thirds get an annual blood pressure check-up (67%) and visit the dentist at least once a year (66%).
  • Only 44% of Gen Y women get an annual physical, compared to 69% of Baby Boomer women.
  • 62% of women regularly give themselves a breast self-examination, while only 14% of all women get a skin cancer screening at least once a year.
  • Nearly one-third of Boomer women are not getting their important annual mammograms, cholesterol checks or physicals.

Non-traditional approaches to health & wellness:
To improve health and well-being, some women have taken the following non-traditional approaches: natural herbs and supplements (26%), bought/adopted a pet (25%), meditation (11%), acupuncture (4%), visited a hypnotist (1%).

What Women Want: To Look and Feel Good

Dissatisfaction with physical appearance/energy levels:
While most women like who they are inside and are satisfied with their “identity and development as an individual” (68%), only 4 in 10 women say they are satisfied with their physical appearance (40%) and/or energy levels (37%).

Professionals Women Would Want to Hire*

1. Personal Trainer (47%)
2. Personal Chef (34%)
3. Financial Advisor (31%)
4. Live-In Housekeeper (31%)
5. Professional Masseuse (29%)
6. Nutritionist (28%)
7. Professional Organizer to de-clutter your living space or office (24%)
8. Stylist (19%)
9. Interior Decorator (15%)
10. Career Counselor (13%)

*allowed up to 5 choices

Women’s Lifestyles:
Most women don’t want to work too hard to achieve a healthy lifestyle, opting for simple solutions like drinking more water or eating more fruits and vegetables over the more disciplined approaches like exercising regularly, counting calories, and using portion control (see chart below)

What Women Do to Maintain a Healthy Lifestyle*

    • Drink more water (80%)
    • Eat more fruits and vegetables (70%)Read nutritional labels (49%)
    • Avoid foods that are high in fat (47%)
    • Make a conscious effort to lower calorie intake (44%)
    • Watch my sugar intake (44%)
    • Exercise at least three times a week (43%)

• Women with children are especially likely to say that “it is difficult for me to find time to take care of my physical appearance” (28% vs. 22% total women).


Overweight Women:

  • The vast majority of American women (84%) feel they are overweight.
  • 13% of women feel that they are the ideal weight, while 23% feel they are 21-50 pounds overweight and 16% report being more than 50 pounds overweight.
  • Older women are more likely than younger women to report they are overweight and to join weight management programs
  • More Gen Y women (29%) feel they are the ideal weight, compared to Gen X women (9%) and Baby Boomer women (7%).
  • Gen X women (22%) and Baby Boomer women (20%) are more likely to get involved in weight management programs to improve their health and well-being than Gen Y women (14%).
  • On the other hand, Gen Y women (24%) are more likely to do yoga or Pilates to improve their health and well-being than their Gen X (18%) and Boomer (8%) counterparts.

Among women who feel they are overweight, exercise (76%) and improving diet (75%) are the top two strategies for weight reduction, while taking medications and/or dietary supplements (17%) and undergoing surgery (4%) are less popular methods.

"It is particularly important for marketers in the health and wellness category to have a clear understanding of women's behaviors, motivations and thoughts so that the messaging they create will resonate and have enhanced impact," said Debbie Reichig, Senior Vice President, Market Development, NBC Universal. “We are thrilled to be able to make this information available to them.”

READ MORE

Specificity of Environmental and Advertising Claims

Specificity

An environmental marketing claim should specify whether it refers to the product, the packaging or both, or just to a component of the product or its packaging.

A box of cereal is labeled "recycled package." The package consists of a paperboard box with a wax paper bag inside holding the cereal. By itself, the claim "recycled package" could apply to both the box and the bag. If only the box is recycled, the claim is deceptive. It should be qualified to say, for example, "recycled box."

A steel can that contains vegetables is labeled "recycled." No qualification is necessary for this claim because it is obvious to consumers that the can is recycled-not the vegetables.

Qualifications (that is, disclosures or explanations) pertaining to an environmental claim should be clear, prominent and understandable. Clarity can be achieved through the size of the type face, proximity of the qualification to the claim being qualified, and absence of contrary language that could undercut effectiveness.


The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) seeks to prevent deception and unfairness in the marketplace. The FTC Act gives the Commission the power to bring law enforcement actions against false or misleading marketing claims, including environmental or "green" marketing claims. The FTC issued its Environmental Guides, often referred to as the "Green Guides," in 1992, and revised them most recently in 1998. The Guides indicate how the Commission will apply Section 5 of the FTC Act, which prohibits unfair or deceptive acts or practices, to environmental marketing claims.

Federal Trade commission:  Facts for Business




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