TechJournal South
Header

Archive for the ‘Washington, DC’ Category

Are you missing these tricks in Web analytics?

Friday, September 23rd, 2011

By Allan Maurer

Ted McDonald

Ted McDonald - Web Analyst, Verisign

One of the things Ted McDonald, Web Analyst for Verisign noticed at both his current and his last position, was the amount of junk traffic cluttering up reports with misinformation.

McDonald, who managed the web analytics program at Carfax before joining Verisign and managed web analytics at National Geograpic before that, will be discussing a few unusual tricks of the web analytics trade at the Digital East conference in Tysons Corner, VA, next Wednesday and Thursday (Sept. 28-29).

He is an expert at using Omniture products, like Discover and TestandTarget, and assessing the ROI of SEM and social media marketing efforts McDonald will be joined by dozens of experts, executives, and entrepreneurs in digital media, e-commerce, and the web world at the event.

Traffic that mucks up your data

One of the things he’ll discuss is how to detect that junk traffic and what to do about it.

At Verisign, he says, he has to deal with “A large number of people trying to hack us.” Seeing a lot of Eastern European traffic might be one clue that is happening, he notes.

Another problem he deals with is that of registrars hitting the site dozens of times a day. So to solve that and filter other traffic that isn’t relevant to the company’s consumer report, he looks at IP addresses and domain names.

He has triggers set up in the company’s web analytics program, Omniture, to alert him if a certain IP address is looking at the site’s Whois information a number of times a day and so on.

An allied problem to be on the watch for, says McDonald, is that for some reason, a number of site cruising bots – whatever they are – start visits on a site’s order confirmation page. That can seriously distort results if hits to the confirmation page are being used to count transactions. “It mucks up your data,” McDonald says.How

How many visits result in a transaction?

We asked if there are any metrics people should be looking at they might not be aware of. Mostly not, he says, but added, “There is one metric I like to look at that most analysts don’t: the impact of your pageviews on transactions. What you don’t know from a lot of standard reports – the top pages report, bounce rate, all of that – is of how many of the say 1,000 visits to a page resulted in a transaction five or six steps down?”

That is information that’s not readily apparent and “It’s something I look at that most folks don’t even know is an option,” he says.

McDonald says he’ll elaborate on these topics and others at the conference next week.

Want to monetize social media: hook users on achievement

Wednesday, September 21st, 2011

Rogelio Choy

Rogelio (Ro) Choy - COO, Formspring

By Allan Maurer

A few years ago, the idea of paying for virtual goods online with real currency seemed outlandish to some. “It blew people’s minds,” says Rogelio (Ro) Choy, COO of the question & answer social site Formspring. But game companies such as Zynga, creator of Farmville, among other popular Facebook games, are successfully using that model.

Choy is one of dozens of Internet mavens, social media experts, marketing gurus, venture capitalists and entrepreneurs participating in the upcoming Digital East conference in Tysons Corner, VA, Sept. 28-29.

He’ll be discussing how to monetize social media efforts. He’ll address display advertising, brand advertising, performance advertising, social currency, mobile advertising and virtual currency. He’ll discuss each in some detail based on what he’s learned in a career packed with social media experience.

Choy was previously the CEO of Peerpong, a Q&A service using NLP/semantics for identifying interests and knowledge from social streams. Prior to Peerpong, Ro was Chief Revenue Officer for RockYou and responsible for leading all the business efforts for the company and Director at eBay Motors, leading the online parts business. Prior to eBay, Ro co-founded Cima Systems, a leading VOIP software provider for auto dealers.

Advisor on social media

Choy serves as an advisor to a number of social media focused startups including Applifer, Nanigans, Wildfire Interactive, Project Slice, Adnectar, 500 Friends, Guestmob, Facepad, Replybuy, J2Play, GamesthatGive and Groupcard.

We asked Choy to elaborate on using virtual currency to monetize social media.

“It’s a completely different way of imagining how people can make money on the web,” Choy says. It works because making social media platforms such as Facebook an intrinsic part of the game dramatically reduces the cost of acquiring customers.

In 2011, according to eMarketer, Choy notes, “27 percent of all Internet users were social gamers of some sort and 42 percent of all social networkers play games. In all 62 million people are playing social games of some sort. So a lot of people are playing games in a social network and buying certain types of virtual products.

Those virtual products are consumables tied to achievement in the games, not permanent objects, usually, Choy says.

Hooking people on achievement

“It’s the concept of hooking people on achievement within the broader concept of gamification. You get people used to making short goals,” Choy says. Then you present them with a longer, more difficult goal they may wish to attain, but they may lack the time to complete and want to speed up the process. “That’s where you monetize.Once they’re hooked on achievement, then you charge.”

The concept can be applied to anything, content, e-commerce, any experience that’s social in nature and involves friends, Choy adds.  “Where people want to surpass time or material constraints, that’s where you monetize. Build achievement into how you think about offering your products or services on social media platforms.”

Choy says there are compelling opportunities in brand and performance advertising, social commerce and mobile marketing as well. Social commerce, for instance, “Is probably the least developed, but potentially the most compelling,” he says. We could tell from our interview that you’ll be hearing practical ideas that will get the gears of your mind cranking.

 

GoSteals offers businesses free daily deals, Tremor Video, Apsalar funded

Tuesday, September 13th, 2011

Tremor VideoNew York-based Tremor Video, the largest independent online video technology company, has successfully raised a $37 million round of financing. New York City-based W Capital Partners led the round, which also includes the participation from Keating Capital, Canaan Partners, Draper Fisher Jurvetson Growth, General Catalyst Partners, Meritech Capital Partners, Singapore’s EDBI, Time Warner and SAP Ventures.

Having acquired ScanScout and Transpera in the past year, Tremor Video has extended its market leadership in the interactive video space and reaches more consumers than any other online video advertising company (according to comScore).

“We invest in companies that are leaders in rapidly growing markets, and this is no exception,” said Bob Migliorino, Managing Director of W Capital Partners. “Tremor Video’s performance in the fastest growing segment in online media, combined with Video Hub’s game-changing technology, makes us extremely happy to be working with them.”

Monitor realtime key factors

With the launch of Video Hub in May of this year, Tremor Video has radically changed the network model by enabling brand advertisers and their agencies to monitor in real time the key factors that are driving their campaign performance. VideoHub analyzes numerous video signals and determines which factors are the most important in delivering campaign success, with particular emphasis on the criteria that drive engagement and brand lift.

Based on Tremor Video’s SE2 technology, Video Hub provides marketers with insight into which environments enhance their brands, what provokes viewer engagement, and why a campaign is successful. Tremor Video plans to continue investing in the continued development and market adoption of Video Hub. It will also use these funds to explore additional acquisitions and expand into fast growing markets internationally.

Apsalar nabs $5M for mobile analytics & behaviorial targeting

San Francisco-based Apsalar, a mobile analytics and behavioral targeting platform for iOS and Android apps, today announced it has closed a $5 million round of funding led by Thomvest Ventures. Apsalar plans to use the new funding to grow the development team, expand its product portfolio and ramp up sales and marketing efforts.

The funding includes participation by Thomvest Ventures, Battery Ventures, DN Capital and existing investors. The new round of funding comes on the heels of Apsalar’s $800,000 seed funding in late 2010 from 500 Startups, Mark Goines, Morado Venture Partners, Founder’s Co-op and Seraph Group. Don Butler, managing director at Thomvest Ventures joins Apsalar’s board of directors.

Apsalar’s comprehensive mobile analytics and behavioral targeting platform gives developers and publishers the tools to understand how their apps are used and to identify and deliver personalized content and offers to their most valuable users.

GoSteals offers free daily deals marketplace for businesses

GoStealsLaunching this week at DEMO Fall 2011, GoSteals is a 100% free platform for every business and consumer worldwide to make daily deals. Built on top of the world’s largest mission-critical web services platform from Mediaspectrum, GoSteals is a self-service business model for the daily deal marketplace.

GoSteals empowers small businesses with a fully automated, self-service portal for managing the entire daily deal lifecycle. Within five minutes, merchants can log-on and structure their deals to advertise. That’s five minutes, to gain free exposure and new customers while keeping all the revenue generated in the process.

Merchants create and schedule their deal, maintaining complete and instant control throughout the entire deal life cycle. GoSteals provides them with real-time information on how many customers have reserved the deal. It even automates customer tracking by providing a unique 2-D bar code on every deal voucher

It’s not just local businesses that benefit. GoSteals is free for consumers as well. They can reserve — or “steal” — any deal they want at no cost. No upfront payment is required. They pay only when they actually cash it in at the participating business. If they don’t use it, they lose nothing. There is no risk involved, only the opportunity for extreme savings.

One of the primary drawbacks of daily deals for businesses is that the daily deal firms take significant cuts of every transaction on top of whatever usually significant discount is offered. Some researchers have questioned the sustainability of the daily deals model.

GoSteals launches this week in 15 core markets globally, with plans for universal reach within 60 days.

What’s the deal with Daily Deals? (Infographic )

Monday, September 12th, 2011

It seems as if a new daily deal site pops up just about as often as their persistent emails pop into our email boxes. While the major players such as Chicago-based Groupon and DC’s LivingSocial have raised more than a billion in venture backing, literally hundreds of smaller regional and niche firms are also fighting for portions of the daily deal meal.

(See: Daily Deal sites grabbed more than $1.69B in funding, 22 financed the last 6 months).

Venture interest in digital daily deal firms may be high, but some researchers have questioned whether or not the business is sustainable over the long term. See: Daily Deal Sites May not have a Sustainable Business, research suggests).

Lab42 asked 500 daily deal users which sites they use much, how often they look, and how much money they spend to produce this “What’s The Deal” infographic:

daily deals infographic

CRE petitions FTC to establish “trade regulation” for Twitter, Facebook, and Google

Tuesday, September 6th, 2011

Capitol BuildingWASHINGTON, DC  – The Center for Regulatory Effectiveness (CRE), a regulatory watchdog, has petitioned the Federal Trade Commission to initiate a public process establishing a “trade regulation” for web-based services.  Through the rulemaking, the FTC would clearly define acts or practices which they consider unacceptable.

Google, Facebook and Twitter have much in common.  All three web-based service firms have pioneered or reinvented their primary area of expertise.  All three companies are American businesses that have changed how the world uses the internet.  All three companies act as platforms bringing together different sets of users. Of particular note, all three companies provide their primary services to consumers for free.

Also of note, all three firms are reported to be either under FTC investigation (Google and Twitter) or the subject of a petition to the FTC to be investigated (Facebook).

Any regulation by the FTC would need to comply with the statutory limitation on the Commission’s authority.  By law, the FTC has authority to ban only acts or practices that cause or are likely to cause “substantial injury to consumers which is not reasonably avoidable by consumers themselves and not outweighed by countervailing benefits to consumers or to competition.”

In the absence of a rule for web-based services, the agency would lack a sound intellectual and legal framework for its work, creating the perception that the agency was interpreting ambiguous rules to obtain a preconceived solution.

A copy of the CRE petition is available at thecre.com/pdf/CRE-FTC%20Petition.pdf

DOJ attempting to block AT&T merger with T-Mobile

Wednesday, August 31st, 2011

TmobileWASHINGTON, DC – The U.S. Department of Justice has sued to block AT&T’s merger with T-Mobile, the $39 billion deal that would create the largest U.S. wireless carrier. The move comes after AT&T stated today it would bring 5,000 call center jobs back to the U.S. if the merger closed.

“The department filed its lawsuit because we believe the combination of AT&T and T-Mobile would result in tens of millions of consumers all across the United States facing higher prices, fewer choices and lower quality products for their mobile wireless services,” said James M. Cole, the deputy attorney general.

AT&T says it will “vigorously contest this matter in court.”

The DOJ complaint, filed in U.S. District Court in Washington, maintains that the merger “places important competitive pressure on its three larger rivals, particularly in terms of pricing, a critically important aspect of competition.”

Here’s AT&T’s statement on the suit:

 Wayne Watts, AT&T Senior Executive Vice President and General Counsel:

We are surprised and disappointed by today’s action, particularly since we have met repeatedly with the Department of Justice and there was no indication from the DOJ that this action was being contemplated.

We plan to ask for an expedited hearing so the enormous benefits of this merger can be fully reviewed. The DOJ has the burden of proving alleged anti-competitive effects and we intend to vigorously contest this matter in court.

At the end of the day, we believe facts will guide any final decision and the facts are clear. This merger will:

  • Help solve our nation’s spectrum exhaust situation and improve wireless service for millions.
  • Allow AT&T to expand 4G LTE mobile broadband to another 55 million Americans, or 97% of the population;
  • Result in billions of additional investment and tens of thousands of jobs, at a time when our nation needs them most.

We remain confident that this merger is in the best interest of consumers and our country, and the facts will prevail in court.

The Communications Workers of America had this to say:

The decision by the U.S. Department of Justice to seek to block the merger of AT&T and T-Mobile USA is simply wrong.

 

In today’s sinking economy, where millions of Americans are looking for work, the DOJ has filed suit to block a merger that will create as many as 96,000 quality jobs.  In the U.S., where too many Americans, especially in rural areas, don’t have access to the tools of Internet technology, the DOJ is looking to block a plan to build out high speed wireless access to 97 percent of the country should be opposed.

In a nation where workers’ rights are routinely violated, as occurs everyday at T-Mobile, the DOJ apparently believes that workers should be on their own instead of having a fair choice about union representation.

The DOJ’s action would put good jobs and workers’ rights at the bottom of the government’s priorities.  Just yesterday, AT&T announced that it would return a net 5,000 jobs to the U.S. on completion of the merger. That is the kind of corporate responsibility that more employers in the U.S. should demonstrate if we are ever to have an economic recovery.

Instead of acting to block this merger, our government should be looking to support companies that create, keep and return good jobs to the United States.

 

Here’s the New York Times report

Survey shows age & gender affect Facebook click-through-rates

Tuesday, August 30th, 2011

FacebookWASHINGTON, DC – Results from a survey by Facebook-focused Social Code, show that for ads with a ‘Like’ button, older Facebook users have a higher click-through-rate while younger Facebook users will tend to click ‘Like’ directly within the Facebook ad.

SocialCode, a DC-based full-service Facebook agency working with global brands and agencies to translate their marketing goals on to Facebook, disclosed the results from a new Facebook advertising research study. The research examined over four million data points across over 50 clients from a wide variety of industries to get a better understanding of how age and gender affect click-through rates (CTR) and ‘Like’ rates on Facebook.

“In general, younger Facebook users are more comfortable using the ‘Like’ button than older users at this point,” said Laura O’Shaughnessy, CEO, SocialCode. “With inline fan ads on Facebook, older users have a high level of interaction and curiosity about the ads as evidenced by their high CTRs, whereas younger users have a higher propensity to click the ‘Like’ button right in an ad on Facebook.”

He added, “We assume that while older users are adopting Facebook at a high rate, they are also the newest subset to join the social network, meaning they may not have high friend numbers so ads are less likely to have social context in advertisements.”

AGE FINDINGS

The SocialCode study found that while age has a strong positive effect on whether a user will click; it oftentimes has the opposite effect on the likelihood of the user becoming a fan of a page.

  • 50+ year-old users, the oldest segment in the study, are 28.2 percent more likely to click through and 9 percent less likely to ‘Like’ than 18-29 year-old users, the youngest group observed
  • Versus the rest of the younger population on Facebook, 50+ users see a 22.6 percent higher CTR and 8.4 percent lower ‘Like’ rate

GENDER FINDINGS

When broken down by gender, age has a much more pronounced effect on CTR for women than it does for men, whereas for men there is a stronger effect on ‘Like’ rate than women.

  • Overall, women are 11 percent more likely to click on an ad
  • ‘Like’ rates are almost even for men and women; men are actually 2.2 percent more likely to ‘Like’ an ad than women
  • For women, CTR is 31.2 percent higher for the 50+ age group versus 18-29 year olds, men only see a 16.2 percent difference between the age groups
  • Versus all age groups, 50+ women’s CTR is 22 percent higher versus a 16.4 percent difference for males
  • The oldest male segment has an 11.7 percent lower ‘Like’ rate than the youngest segment, and 9.5 percent lower ‘Like’ rate versus all age groups. Women only see a 7.2 percent and 7.9 percent difference respectively

The age and gender research study conducted by SocialCode examined over four million data points for ads containing a ‘Like’ button across over 50 clients in different verticals for the past ten months. While performance varies greatly based on multiple variables, this study looks at the aggregate trends for

Time Warner Cable preparing for Irene to hit the East Coast

Friday, August 26th, 2011

Hurricane Irene

Hurricane Irene bearing down on the East Coast

With Hurricane Irene bearing down on the East Coast, Time Warner Cable is taking steps to prepare for the impact of the storm.  Time Warner Cable has more than 5.9 million residential and business customers from the Carolinas to New England.

Time Warner Cable has Business Recovery Unit trailers in place in key locations along the East Coast so restoration efforts can begin as soon as it is safe to enter potentially impacted areas.  The trailers hold everything from fiber, generators and chainsaws to emergency supplies for crews, such as tents, flashlights and water.

“By positioning equipment in strategic areas before the storm, Time Warner Cable is able to quickly respond to those communities that sustain the most damage,” says Mike Munley, president of residential services, Time Warner Cable East.  “We know our residential and business customers rely on our digital phone, Internet and cable services to stay connected to information and each other, particularly during severe weather and we are committed to getting customers back on line as soon as it is safe to do so.”

With more than 17,000 employees throughout the East, Time Warner Cable takes the following proactive measures to ensure that we are ready to help customers in the event of severe weather:

•       Technicians have extra equipment and fuel on hand
•       Generators have been tested and backup power equipment is prepared for deployment
•       Additional technicians, maintenance, construction and customer service representatives are scheduled around the clock
•       Call center employees up and down the East Coast are ready to answer customer calls, online chat and Tweets from impacted areas
•       Work-from-home representatives will take customer calls from their living rooms
•       Technicians across the East can be quickly mobilized to provide support to the impacted areas that need the most help.  In addition, Time Warner Cable can call in employees from other states to help if needed.

Time Warner Cable’s 24/7 robust automated phone system tells customers if we know about an outage in their area.  If the customer hears information about the outage, customers don’t need to take any action. If they don’t hear about the outage impacting their neighborhood, they can report it by telling the system their services are out.  They can also follow the steps to talk to a customer service representative.  The number for residential customers to call is 1-866-4-TWCNOW.

In addition, outage information is available at www.yourtwc.com/storm.   You can also follow the latest developments on Twitter, @TWCCarolinas.

For customers of Time Warner Cable Business Class, the 24/7 support team is available to assist by calling 1-877-892-2220.

Use social media to create a “halo effect” of excitement around your brand

Thursday, August 18th, 2011

Jamie Grove

Jamie Grove of Thinkgeek.com

By Allan Maurer

WASHINGTON, DC – While tracking social media related to your business and participating in discussions is important, “You shouldn’t obsess over either,” says Jamie Grove, vice president of Evil Schemes and Nefarious Plans (aka Marketing) at ThinkGeek.com, the site where you can satisfy your geek lust with such things as pizza slicers shaped like Star Trek’s Enterprise.

Instead, when done right, social media create a “halo effect” around a brand in which customers create excitement around your brand.

Grove, who has worked online at places such as CompuServe before the Internet boom and as VP of e-commerce at Highlights for Children, has also been architect of several eCommerce websites and created iPhone apps, will talk about how retailers can use social media at the upcoming Digital East Conference at Tysons Corner, VA, Sept. 28.

Thinkgeek does things differently

“We do things a little differently at Thinkgeek,” Grove tells us. Once marketers “get hold of something, they tend to ruin it,” he says. “Most brands are trying to control the social media conversation. Many firms have poured resources into social media and now they’re scratching their heads trying to figure out how to make money from it. Our approach is more about participating in the community and celebrating it.”

That is a direction we’ll see more companies taking, he predicts, noting that it’s based on a really simple idea: treat your customers the way they want to be treated.

Slashdotted

A top 200 online retailer, Thinkgeek focuses on fun gifts and toys. The 12-year-old firm has revenue of about $100 million annually. The company describes its genesis this way on its website:

“ThinkGeek started as an idea. ThinkGeek started as a way to serve a market that was passionate about technology, from programmers, engineers, students, lovers of open source, to the masses that helped create the behind-the-scenes Internet culture.

“Three out of the four founding ThinkGeek members started an ISP in the Northern Virginia area way way back in 1995. We couldn’t afford Solaris, learned about a free UNIX-like OS, and spent almost an entire day downloading it onto over 50 floppies for installation on an old 486 laptop with no cd-rom (thanks Slackware!). After a few years with the ISP gig, the ThinkGeek idea popped into our heads, and, operating out of a spare room at the ISP office we setup shop and launched the site on Friday the 13th, 1999.

“A month or so later we were Slashdotted. Promptly thereafter, ThinkGeek was acquired by the good folks at Andover.Net who through an acquisition and a bunch of name changes, is now known as Geeknet. So we’re part of a cool gaggle of sites including slashdot.org, sourceforge.net, linux.com, and freshmeat.net.”

Grove says the first thing a retailer getting into social media needs to consider is “what are you going to talk about?” A lot of companies come out “blabbing about themselves all the time basically,” and that’s the wrong way to go. “People like to associate themselves with brands,” Grove says, “But they don’t want to hear about them all the time.

“Stop trying to use social media as an acquisition channel.” In fact, he says, company’s would be better off putting their social media into the hands of staff responsible for customer satisfaction rather than acquisition. “Put it in retention, not acquisition,” he says.

What brought the customer to you in the first place?

Be careful before you outsource your social media functions, he warns. “A lot of large firms outsource to PR companies or corporate communications. Those folks are not always in touch with your brand, so that may not be the best strategy. Find someone in your company who uses social media and is passionate about your brand. That’s the type of person you want handling your social media.

He suggests, “Think about what draws that customer to you in the first place.” In Thinkgeek’s case, he notes, “We’re a geeky company and we celebrate the geeky product line we sell. We share our geekiness with others. So, conversations revolve around topics such as “Star Wars,” or “Star Trek,” gadgets, computer stuff, or other things that bring its customers to the site. “Get into it,” he says. “Interact with followers. Point out other people in the community.”

Thinkgeek has done that with a variety of approaches. “We’re the granddaddy of Internet pranksters,” he says. “We create fake products. Last year it was a Playmobile Apple computer store.” Sometimes the company will actually makes and sells them if they’re popular enough, such as the iCade, a retro game arcade cabinet for the iPad it launched this year.

Grove says you should do as much tracking as you can, but don’t obsess over it. “We’re very heavily into paid search and affiliate marketing so it’s in my nature to collect a lot of data and analyze it. But don’t obsess. Build tracking in where ever you can.”

It’s probably a mistake to look at social media just for ROI, he notes. “When you’re really good at social media, you get a halo effect,” he says. “Social media sharing creates deep interest in a brand. People get excited about what you’re doing and share it, creating excitement around your brand.”

 

 

 

Mobile Digital TV on track to reach two-thirds of American homes by 2012

Thursday, August 4th, 2011

OMVCMobile Digital Television is on track to reach two-thirds of U.S. households by early 2012, as dozens of TV broadcast stations are now installing new transmission equipment that will allow live, local TV signals to reach viewers wherever they go in a local market.

Based on a new survey of member plans, the Open Mobile Video Coalition of America’s (OMVC) broadcasters says that 96 stations are now on-the-air with Mobile DTV and that the total number of Mobile DTV stations is expected to grow to 126 in 48 markets by the end of the year.

In addition, OMVC announced today that its Mobile DTV Trust Authority, managed by Neustar, is now operational and in discussions with several companies developing new Mobile DTV products operating with conditional access. Manufacturers of Mobile DTV capable devices are entering into agreements directly with Neustar to obtain the digital certificates and keys necessary for secure use of Mobile DTV service by these devices.

Dyle mobile TV brand established

Recently, the Mobile Content Venture (MCV), a joint venture of 12 national television station groups, including Belo Corp., Cox Media Group, E.W. Scripps Co., Gannett Broadcasting, Hearst Television Inc., Media General Inc., Meredith Corp., Post-Newsweek Stations Inc. and Raycom Media, all of which are part of the standalone entity known as Pearl Mobile DTV, as well as Fox, ION Television, and NBC, announced Dyle mobile TV, its new consumer brand for services delivered through MCV member stations.

Dyle mobile TV will feature content from NBC, FOX, Telemundo and ION, as well as local news, weather and other local content, across 32 markets, reaching 50 percent of the U.S. population in 2011.

“Our stations throughout the country are now deploying the equipment needed to bring Dyle mobile TV to millions of viewers,” said Erik Moreno and Salil Dalvi, co-GM’s of MCV. “We’re very excited about the rollout of the Dyle service to consumers,” they added.

“OMVC members are making the investments needed to make Mobile DTV available to millions of viewers,” said Colleen Brown, CEO of Fisher Communications and chair of the Mobile 500 Alliance. The Mobile500 Alliance represents more than 400 local TV broadcasters who are planning to add Mobile DTV capability to their digital broadcasts.

“Mobile DTV channels now being transmitted are providing viewers with the latest news, emergency weather information, traffic updates, and their favorite programs,” Brown continued.

The OMVC’s Mobile DTV Forum is working to complete Consumer Electronics Device Profiles for new programming services later this summer. The profiles are baseline technical guidelines that will give CE manufacturers details about how broadcasters will implement new services and the inputs needed to build consumer electronics products that receive Mobile DTV. The Mobile DTV Forum is comprised of TV technology companies, consumer electronics firms, and broadcasters.

In the fall, the OMVC will initiate a model Conditional Access System in the Washington, D.C. market, a move designed to help CE companies test gear that receives, decodes, and displays mobile broadcast signals. Conditional Access is an essential element in Mobile DTV, to facilitate both robust audience measurement and the eventual deployment of subscription programming.

Some states enjoy Internet connections 10X faster than others

Wednesday, July 27th, 2011

PandoTracking downloads by 4 millions users across the country from January through June 2011, a Pando Networks’ study revealed that some states are averaging connectivity speeds as much as ten times faster than those in other cities (see interactive maps at bottom).

The most striking findings were the core differences between the average speeds on a state-by-state basis. The data indicates that the fastest state was Rhode Island at an average of 894 KBps, which was almost three times faster than the slowest, Idaho, which had a dismal 318KBps. Rhode Island and Idaho may stand out as the extremities, but the disparities they highlight reflect more expansive, regional trends. The Northeast and Mid-Atlantic region contained eight of the ten fastest states.

With California, Oregon, and Washington in the top 15, the West coast was also a remarkably a speedy region. On the other hand, the rural Midwest and Mountain-West states of which Idaho is a member comprise nine of the ten slowest states. Middle America’s slow connectivity could be representative of its more widespread populations and a lower demand for high-speed data infrastructure.

Generally, the slower downloading, rural states were also the least likely to complete a download once begun, with some notable exceptions. Users in Hawaii, dealing with a fairly sluggish average of 432KBps, still managed to complete 87% of their downloads. Colorado residents averaged a relatively slow 474KBps, but managed to complete 86% of their downloads.

Bucking the trend in the opposite direction, the District of Columbia enjoys an average of 759KBps but only completes 80% of downloads. Such findings suggest high-speed internet users may not necessarily hold the most stable connections (or be the most patient internet users). Culver City, CA, the headquarters of Pando Networks client Riot Games, had the highest average completion rate at 98%.

More interesting findings are visible when the data is broken down to the city level. The fastest download averages tend to be concentrated in fairly affluent, metropolitan suburbs. Topping the list is Andover, a suburb of Boston with a median income of $114,000 and average download speeds of 2,801KBps.

Other notable, high-average suburbs include Burke, VA (an average of 1,674 KBps) outside of DC and Santa Monica, CA outside of Los Angeles (1,428KBps, with an average completion rate of 96%).

Keeping with the statewide trends, the slowest downloading towns tend to be in rural areas with low incomes. Taking the bottom spot is Pocatello, a small community in Idaho with a median income of $34,000. Other notably slow communities include Yuma, AZ (290KBps) in the Mojave desert and Mission, TX (270KBps) near the Mexican border.

Also notable are the wide margins between the various major ISPs. Excluding business and private networks, the data puts Comcast Cable at the top spot, averaging download speeds of 890KBps. Other notables near the top of the list included Verizon (788KBps) and Cox (757KBps). At 673KBps, Road Runner was the slowest of the major broadband providers.

Such wide gaps also exist amongst the providers of wireless 3G and 4G data plans. Topping the list are AT&T with an average of 416KBps and Sprint with a respectable 391KBps. T-Mobile turned in an average of 364KBps, Verizon Wireless had an average of 216KBps and ALLTEL was the slowest with an average of 155KBps.

More specific city and ISP-related data can be requested from pando@triplepointpr.com.

Average Completion Rate by State (%)

Average Download Speed By State (Kilobytes Per Second)

Just plugging in 1M electric cars would boost energy costs significantly

Tuesday, July 12th, 2011

Elettrica

Elettrica, an electric car with lithium ion battery tech

Simply “plugging in” one million electric cars could add $750 million in annual wholesale energy costs unless “smart charging” is adopted, according to a joint study conducted by PJM and Better Place, released by Better Place today.

Similarly, consumers who choose to leverage time-of-use pricing can see some price relief – less than 10 percent annually – however; the wholesale energy business would still feel the impact of ad hoc charging.

Conversely, “smart charging” one million electric cars via a central network operator can cut in half the increase in wholesale energy costs compared to simply plugging in or time-of-use pricing while reducing driving costs by one-fifth.

The joint study conducted by PJM and Better Place analyzed the impact of one million electric cars on the MidAtlantic States’ grid. The study modelled the market and pricing impact of one million electric cars and related charging infrastructure.

The greater Washington – Baltimore area was selected for modelling because it already experiences transmission congestion issues and is a targeted area for electric vehicle adoption.

“Because of the ad hoc nature and unpredictability of when each electric car would be plugged in, the extra $750 million in annual costs would be borne unequally by market participants and consumers,” said Hugh McDermott, Vice President of Utility and Smart Grid Alliances for Better Place.

“With smart charging, a central network operator is able to leverage dynamic wholesale energy prices to optimize the entire fleet’s charging at the lowest possible cost and impact to the grid and the consumer. Our customers and utility partners around the world stand to benefit from smart charging.”

Smart-charging possible via centrally dispatched grid

“Smart charging is possible when there’s real-time coordination through a centrally dispatched grid, which will facilitate prioritization and varying charging rates,” said Chantal Hendrzak, PJM’s General Manager Applied Solutions. “Flexible load benefits of EV charging are captured more easily by RTO, ISO and Utility operations through integration more directly into existing operations and practices.”

Sam Jaffe, Research Manager at IDC Energy Insights, commented: “Most electric vehicle drivers will want to be able to plug in according to their own needs, but unmanaged charging on a large scale will be costly for everyone—the driver, the utility and the grid operator. A centrally managed model can result in significant cost savings and improved grid stability, without impairing the fueling needs of the EV owners.”

“While many of the advantages of electrification of transport are well known, such as the diversity of domestically available fuels, price stability and spare capacity, the Better Place – PJM study reveals that managed charging can optimize the relationship between EVs and the grid, minimizing capital expenses and maximizing grid reliability,” said Robbie Diamond, President and CEO of the Electrification Coalition (EC). “The US should work to maximize these benefits to make EVs a true asset to our economic and national security.”

Full study

Federal agencies joining Tumblr blogging platform

Thursday, July 7th, 2011

TumblrMore U.S. Federal agencies are joining Tumblr, the free blogging and social networking service, according to Federal Computer Week. It says the General Services Administration was the first to tumble. Now, the Peace Corp., the State Department and the National Archives have also joined the increasingly popular blogging platform.

Tumblr, founded in 2007 by David Karp, has raised funding from  Union Square Ventures, Spark Capital, Martin Varsavsky, John Borthwick (Betaworks), Fred Seibert, and Sequoia Capital and other investors. It has about 21 million users, up from 15 million in March.

We recently tried it out ourselves. Tumblr is extremely easy to use, share posts by others you follow or post photos, videos, audio or text. It’s also a lot of fun for casual browsing. It or its users may eventually face some copyright violation problems similar to those YouTube deals with, but since almost everything comes from the Web and sources are generally acknowledged, much of it may be deemed fair use.

The GSA jumped aboard in March with its USA.gov blog on the Tumblr platform. It offers news and tips from various federal agencies.

The National Archives is using the Tumblr blog to present images from its collections, such as old maps, photos and illustrations. Most of the Tumblr blogs are visually oriented.

Going by our own experience with the Tumblr platform, we suspect it will just continue to gain popularity. Businesses that use it properly may also find it effective, but as one Tumblr exec has pointed out, agencies or businesses or organizations will need to monitor and respond to feedback, not just post their own items. Social media experts who attend TechMedia’s annual Internet focused conferences (next is Digital East in Tysons Corner, VA in September) say again and again that listening is essential and as important as pushing out fresh content.

Some agencies may be wary of the Tumblr platform because of the ease of commenting and interacting. The FCW article notes that many agencies are using another blogging platform, WordPress, which is what TechJournal South uses.

 

 

 

 

DC venture capitalist launches million dollar idea competition

Tuesday, July 5th, 2011

Michael C. Hill

Michael C. Hill

Venture capitalist Michael C. Hill thinks our plummeting economy can be turned around and this July, he’s doing something about it. And it could make you the next Mark Zuckerberg or Steve Jobs.

Hill is a venture capitalist in Washington DC, and founder of a dozen businesses ranging from construction to medical services and technology.

On July 1, Hill’s Million Dollar Idea Competition opened for submissions.

Participants submit their best business plans or ideas, and one million dollars in seed money will be awarded to the best one. Runners up will receive thousands in grants to start or grow their own businesses.

“We are proactively seeking the “idea people” who do not yet have a business plan to shape their ideas into salable businesses, says Hill.  “We are not only looking for the next Apple or Facebook. We are looking to help the next neighborhood retailer, carpenter, plumber, or accountant.”

The Million Dollar Idea Competition, which is funded by Hill’s company NLS Venture Capital, awards those with innovative business plans in addition to raising awareness about how small businesses create jobs. Hill emphasizes that he is hoping people without formal business education or prior experience will submit proposals because extraordinary ideas can come from ordinary people.

“It can be a loosely formed business idea, or a well-thought, highly detailed business plan,” Hill says in regards to what can be submitted. “I am expecting to see a wide range of submissions.”

It’s a win-win for all involved:  the entrepreneur wins because he or she is now in the game. NLS Venture Capital wins because they now own another piece of success. The country wins because new businesses mean new jobs.

As the head of NLS Venture Capital, a firm focused on seed and early stage venture capital investment, Hill is determined to support small business ventures across the country in order to create more jobs and boost the economy.

For more information see:  www.youreinbusiness.com.


Funded: Atlanta, Digital Assent and Renewvia; Maryland, Regent Education, more

Monday, June 27th, 2011

Digital AssentAtlanta-based Digital Assent, provider of the award-winning PatientPad self-service patient check-in and patient education solution, has received $7.5 million in a Series B funding round.  The lead investors were Sanan Private Equity, the BIP Opportunities Fund and Buckhead Investment Partners (BIP).  Imlay Investments and BLH Venture Partners, who led the Series A funding earlier this year, also contributed.

The PatientPad is a wireless touch-screen solution that automates the patient check-in process and delivers targeted health information and advertising to interested patients while they sit in their healthcare provider’s waiting room, exam room or treatment room. This funding will fuel expansion of the company’s sales, marketing and product development efforts.  Since January, the company has sold nearly 1,500 PatientPads to 175 practices in 25 states.

Atlanta’s Renewvia beams in $2.26M for solar tech

Atlanta-based solar power firm Renewvia has beamed in $2.26 million of an equity raise targeted at $6.15 million, according to a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. The company raised a bit over $1 million in a round aimed at $2 million in June 2009.

The company develops, installs, owns and manages solar powr plants for commercial property owners and developers.

Regent Education raises $4.5M for college financial aid automation tech

Frederick, MD-based Regent Education has chalked up $4.65 milion of a $5 million equity offering, according to a filing with the SEC.  The company previously raised about $1.85 million.

It sells SaaS solutions for colleges and private education institutions to automate financial aid processes. It caters to schools with non-standard or non-term offerings. It processes more than 1 million students a year.

Grotech sells LivingSocial stake for $200 million

PE Hub reports that venture firm Virginia-based Grotech has sold its stake in group local buying firm DC-based LivingSocial for $200 million. PEHub’s Jonathan Marino reports that Grotech did so without using secondary markets, instead making private sales to investors in multiple blocks.

Virginia-based MANDIANT closes strategic investment wiht One Equity Partners

MANDIANT, which sells detection and response solutions and services says it has closed on an equity investment from One Equity Partners. The amount of the financing was not disclosed.

Headquartered in Alexandria, Va., with offices in New York, Los Angeles and San Francisco, MANDIANT provides products, professional services and education to Fortune 500 companies, financial institutions, government agencies, domestic and foreign police departments and leading U.S. law firms. MANDIANT comprises one of the industry’s largest incident response and forensics forces.

“Over recent months the importance of knowing whether your network has been breached has become alarmingly clear. MANDIANT is the global leader in helping major corporate and government entities answer this question and execute an effective response. With the experience and financial resources of MANDIANT’s new investors, we are confident MANDIANT will prosper in the years ahead,” said OEP’s Jody Gessow.

Foursquare locates $50M

Foursquare, the location-based mobile platform and social network that helps members gain points for sharing information about local venues and brands, has raised $50 million in a round led byAndreessen Horowitz with participation from Spark Capital and O’Reilly Alpha Tech Ventures and Union Square Ventures. TechCrunch says the company’s pre-money valuation is $550 million.

Foursquare co-founders Dennis Crowley and Naveen Selvadurai met in 2007 while working in the same office space (at different companies) in New York City. Working from Dennis’ kitchen table in New York’s East Village, they began building the first version of foursquare in fall 2008, and launched it at South by Southwest Interactive in Austin, Texas in March 2009.

Foursquare has about 10 million users globally and 3 million check-ins daily. More than 400,000 businesses are using its Merchant Platform. Headquartered in New York, it has about 70 employees.

Kundra, Nanolumens, Petra Solar, Daon, other honored by Tech America awards

Tuesday, June 21st, 2011

TechAmerica Foundation announced today the winners for the American Technology Awards, which bestows the only “Best Of” awards that recognize all technology products and services across the technology industry. Nominations for The American Technology Awards, “The Termans”, were vetted by industry experts and technology companies. These awards were named after Frederick Terman, who is widely credited as being the father of Silicon Valley.

“We had a lot of nominations for these prestigious awards, and we congratulate these companies and individuals for their winning achievements,” said Senator Bob Bennett, Chairman, TechAmerica Foundation. “TechAmerica Foundation is excited to highlight these companies and individuals as they continue to influence technology development throughout the rest of the world.”

The American Technology Awards were presented for each of the inclusive segments of the technology industry: Aerospace and Defense; Clean Tech/Green Tech/Smart Grid; Cloud Computing/Software as a Service; Computers and Peripherals; Consumer Electronics; Cyber Security and Authentication; Electronic Components; Internet Services; Measurement and Control Instruments; Medical Devices; Server & Storage Technology; Software; Technology Consulting; Technology Services; and Telecommunications.

The Government Technology Executive of the Year was Vivek Kundra, the U.S. Federal Chief Information Officer.  The Corporate Leadership Award was presented to Bill McDermott, Co-CEO of global software company SAP. In his keynote remarks, McDermott applauded Kundra’s efforts to reform federal IT management and urged government to harness three “mega-trends” — cloud computing, in-memory computing, and mobility — to save money and improve performance.

“Imagine spending less on IT infrastructure and more on accomplishing the mission, all with unprecedented levels of transparency and accountability.  These goals and many more are possible today, driven by the innovative spirit we see in all of the Terman Award winners,” McDermott said.

The winners in all categories are:

Program Manager of the Year: Christopher Milowic, LBI Branch Director, OIT, Customs & Border Protection, DHS
Aerospace and Defense: Space Exploration Technologies (Space X) – Falcon 9 vehicle
Clean Tech/Green Tech: Petra Solar – SunWave System
Cloud Computing/Software as a Service: Akamai Technologies, Inc. – Dynamic Site Accelerator
Consumer Electronics/Computers and Peripherals: Logitech – Logitech Revue with Google TV
Cyber Security & Authentication: Daon, Inc. – Identity X
Heath & Medical Technologies: ConforMIS, Inc. – iTotal® Knee Resurfacing System
Internet Services & E-Commerce: webtrends Inc – Analystics
IT Services & Consulting: HP – HP NetTop
Semiconductors & Electronic Components: Atmel Corporation – maXTouch™ for Large Screens
Server & Storage Technology: DataCore Software Corporation – SANsymphony-V
Smart Grid & Smart Instruments: Petra Solar – SunWave System
Software: GPS Insight – GPS Insight Fleet Tracking Solution
Technology Manufacturing: 3M ™ – 3M ™ Cubitron ™ II Abrasives
Telecommunications: ViaSat Inc. – ViaSat–1 High-Capacity Satellite System
Breakthrough Technology: Flex Display Technology by NanoLumens

 

Facebook is good for research as well as advertising for politicians, study says

Monday, June 13th, 2011

Facebook logoWASHINGTON, DC -A DC Facebook agency says the popular social network a good tool for research as well as advertising for politicians, providing insights about the issues people care about and that have the most motivating power.

SocialCode, a full-service Facebook agency and subsidiary of The Washington Post Company, disclosed results from a new Republican political message study conducted on Facebook. The study was designed to demonstrate how the world’s largest social networking platform, when used correctly, can be a powerful research tool for politicians and brands.

“We believe this message test shows just how effective Facebook is as both an advertising and research platform for brands and politicians,” said Laura O’Shaughnessy, general manager at SocialCode. “Campaigns like this on Facebook give advertisers powerful insights into specific audiences and messages and allow advertisers to quickly understand what is resonating with a targeted group.”

SocialCode conducted a randomized campaign among Facebook users in Iowa and New Hampshire to gauge the power of specific messages for seven potential contenders for the Republican presidential nomination. Between May 23 and June 4, Facebook users in these critical early voting states were asked to show support by clicking “Like” in response to randomly displayed image combinations of seven declared or prospective candidates (or a GOP elephant) with five common Republican messages.

TOP FINDINGS INCLUDE:

  • On every message former Alaska governor Sarah Palin received the highest “Like” rate in both New Hampshire and Iowa;
  • “Values” rank fourth of the five-item message list across candidates, but it’s a major driver for Palin, who remains a shadow candidate. For Palin, the 2008 GOP vice-presidential nominee, the values-oriented message performs significantly better than does a focus on the economy;
  • Palin is the only one of the seven potential candidates where economic messaging scores last;
  • Across candidates the most resonant GOP message is to tack against the president: of five common GOP themes for winning back the White House in 2012, a straight-ahead anti-Obama message tested best;
  • While President Obama’s re-election hopes may hinge on the fate of the nation’s struggling economy, from a pure policy standpoint it is the president’s health care overhaul that generates the sharpest opposition in this online message test;
  • While some GOP strategists see Mitt Romney’s Massachusetts health plan as his Achilles’ heel in the nomination fight, an “anti-ObamaCare” message performs nearly as well for the former governor as does an economic one, the one he’s made the centerpiece of this bid for the GOP nod;
  • Romney and health care combination performed better online than did a combination of health care and former Minnesota governor Tim Pawlenty.

Rank order of 2012 GOP messages (by “Like” rate)

Message Overall Iowa New Hampshire
Anti-Obama 26% 24% 27%
Healthcare 21% 23% 20%
Economy 18% 19% 17%
Values 17% 17% 18%
National security 17% 17% 18%
  • By State – in Iowa, the health care message rivals the basic anti-Obama meme, but in New Hampshire, the health care message fails to resonate as clearly;
  • By Age – the economy is a stronger message for younger adults in Iowa and New Hampshire than it is for those aged 30 and up. Across the two states, it’s particularly important for those aged 25 to 29. Values-based and national security messages are the lowest performers across all age groups;
  • By Gender – the anti-Obama message resonates far better with men than it does with women.

“If the 2008 campaign proved one thing, it’s that social media works when it comes to reaching voters who are researching issues online, reading blogs and debating issues with friends on Facebook,” continued O’Shaughnessy. “SocialCode’s methodology is focused on getting the exact right ads in front of users, allowing politicians and brands to tailor messages to maximize positive response among different segments of the population.”

SocialCode, a subsidiary of the Washington Post Company, is a full-service Facebook agency. SocialCode’s unique tools are built on a research engine that offers analytics and information for advertisers that far surpasses what they could get anywhere else. With advanced quantitative methods, SocialCode specializes in building targeted communities, engaging those audiences and monetizing potential customers all while conducting research to inform strategy.

LivingSocial adds $1.6M to war chest as group buying space remains hot

Wednesday, May 4th, 2011

WASHINGTON, DC – LivingSocial, the DC-based local discount deals firm that is second only to Chicago’s Groupon in that space, has closed on an additional $.59 million equity raise, according to an equity filing. The company raised $400 million in April and a total of $600 million since its founding as it races to put people on the ground in market after market in competition with Groupon and a host of smaller local group buying firms.

LivingSocial investors include Amazon, Lightspeed Venture Partners, Rowe Price, and Institutional Venture Partners, Case Foundation Ventures, U.S. Venture Partners, and Grotech Capital Group.

The latest raise, disclosed in a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, shows that the space remains hot.  Although this raise is minimal compared to previous ones, investors apparently still want a piece of the action.

We previously noted reports in the Wall Street Journal and Bloomberg that the company was considering a $500 million raise at a valuation of around $2 billion. VCExperts says the raise could actually value the company at around $3 billion.

LivingSocial now offers it daily deals in more than 200 markets and putting people on the ground in most is part of what costs so much money.

The company raised $175 million from Amazon and $8 million from its other venture backers three months ago, following a  $950 million raise by Groupon.

In December, LivingSocial said it brings in about $1 million a day.

Some reports have said that LivingSocial could actually overtake Groupon in terms of dealflow by next year if current trends continue. An additional $500 million would likely accelerate their progress.

Although both LivingSocial and Groupon are well-financed and have a huge lead in creating national organizations, both face competition from smaller players, often operating in just a handful of markets. We recently reported on Twongo, one such competitor based in the Research Triangle, which operates in several North Carolina and Canadian markets.

We would be willing to be both Groupon and LivingSocial will start buying up some of the smaller players with viable, successful markets. The question is whether they will keep whatever differences made the smaller players successful in their markets.

TechJournal South is a TechMedia company. TechMedia presents the annual conferences:

SoutheastVentureConference: www.seventure.org

Internet Summit: www.internetsummit.com

Digital East: www.digitaleast.com

Digital Summit: www.digitalsummit.com

Most retailers have mobile strategy, 72 percent plan social network spend

Tuesday, May 3rd, 2011

Shop.orgWASHINGTON, DC – In an effort to better serve multi-touchpoint, always-on, and empowered consumers, a growing number of retailers are experimenting with mobile and social initiatives — some that are paying immediate dividends and some that are still in the speculative phase.

According to “The State Of Retailing Online 2011: Marketing, Social, and Mobile” report conducted by Forrester Research Inc. (Nasdaq: FORR) for Shop.org, 91 percent of retailers currently have a mobile strategy in place or in development (up from 74 percent a year ago).

Additionally, 72 percent of retailers say they will increase their spending on social networks this year over last year. “The State Of Retailing Online” research series, which provides annual industry benchmarks of marketing and business investment and activities, surveyed 68 companies.

Mobile

Retailers report that 21 percent of all mobile traffic is coming from tablets, amazing considering the iPad was launched barely a year ago. Still, the overall amount of mobile traffic and revenue has not increased dramatically, suggesting that investment levels in site optimization may still be inadequate. For example, 48 percent of retailers report having a mobile-optimized website; 35 percent have deployed an iPhone app; and 15 percent offer an Android app and an iPad app, respectively.

Challenges for retailers include differentiating the consumer experience on a tablet versus a smartphone and figuring out features and functionality in dueling app/mobile Web ecosystems.

“After spending the last few years learning how to capitalize on social media and new mobile technologies, one of retailers’ main focuses right now seems to be leveraging the tremendous popularity of tablet devices, such as the iPad,” said Shop.org Head of Research Fiona Swerdlow. “As sales channels continue to blur in retail, companies are creating mobile apps that make their brands seem current, entertaining, or fun, while at the same time creating a unique opportunity to connect with more shoppers than ever before.”

Social ROI muddy, but significant spends planned

Compared with past years, social networks surfaced higher as an investment area among retailers. Social networks ranked fourth on the list of successful customer acquisition sources, up significantly from last year.

Yet the ROI associated with social is muddy: 62 percent of retailers said the returns on social marketing strategies are unclear, and nearly the same percentage said the primary ROI from social marketing is listening to — and gaining a better understanding of — customers.

“The data indicates that significant investments in social and mobile tactics will be in place this year,” said Sucharita Mulpuru, vice president, principal analyst, Forrester Research.

“Retail executives should have modest expectations for the benefits of social commerce. With regard to mobile, retailers should be working to increasingly integrate features and functionality into the physical store experience. While consumers may not be extensively exploring product information yet, basic store information, transparent pricing, and easy checkout capabilities are likely to be the most pressing opportunities for most sites in the near term.”

“The State Of Retailing Online 2011: Marketing, Social, and Mobile,” is available to Shop.org members. Forrester clients will be able to access the report as part of their subscription service one month from publication.

We have a feeling that it’s early yet to gauge the real impact of either mobile smartphones or social networks on retail commerce. We recently used a smartphone to find local merchants for the first time and have found both deals and interesting content via brand sites on Facebook or brand related tweets.

Both are so relatively new, with better tools for marketers and consumers appearing every day, that while we suspect both mobile, social networks and the two together are going to be major players in the retail shopping space, but it will take some time to measure their impact.

TechJournal South is a TechMedia company. TechMedia presents the annual conferences:

SoutheastVentureConference: www.seventure.org

Internet Summit: www.internetsummit.com

Digital East: www.digitaleast.com

Digital Summit: www.digitalsummit.com

Wireless asset tracker Savi names William Clark CEO, president

Wednesday, April 27th, 2011

William Clark

William Clark

ALEXANDRIA, VA – Savi Technology, a subsidiary of Lockhead Martin (NYSE:LMT), has named William Clark CEO and presdent.

Clark joined Savi in August 2010 as senior vice president and chief marketing officer.

Savi Technology sells low-power wireless asset tracking solutions, particularly to the U.S. Department of Defense and military forces worldwide.

Clark, who has served as the acting head of Savi since February 2011, has already directed several important changes inside the organization, including reorganizing its management team, strengthening ties within Lockheed Martin, and recently introducing Savi SmartChain RTLS. Savi SmartChain RTLS is a new wireless tracking option that broadens Savi’s solution set, offering customers yet another way to monitor and track critical assets.

Clark has more than 25 years in a variety of sales and marketing leadership roles in the technology market in both Silicon Valley and the East Coast.

Savi provides organizations with operational analytics.