-
The Week in Review
Headlines from the industry. To receive daily updates please visit the Digital Moses fan page
-
Facebook, Games Lead the Way for Mobile Apps
According to the latest stats from Nielsen, mobile applications in the games category are the most popular for both smart-phone and feature-phone users, while Facebook is the most used app on two of the three major mobile operating systems.
-
Hulu Takes a Step Back, Vevo Sees Big Growth in Online Video Viewership
While Hulu had a fairly bad month, Google held its leadership position in the realm of online video and Vevo gain a whole bunch of viewers in April, according to comScore.
-
More Than a Quarter of Mobile Web Users Clicked on Mobile Ads
According to ABI Research, 27 percent of mobile phone users who accessed the mobile Web clicked on a mobile banner ad or text link in February, up from 21 percent in December 2008.
-
B2B Lags Behind B2C in Social Media Marketing, but Maybe Not for Long
According to White Horse, a Web marketing, design and consulting company, B2B companies are lagging behind their B2C counterparts in the use of social media marketing. However, there are signs that B2B spending on social media efforts will boom shortly.
-
Threat to Debt
Debt lead generation is threatened by potential changes that will cause a drastic overhaul of the industry. This week we take a look at the threats to debt lead gen by placing proposals into context and…
-
Threat to Debt – Part 2
Since the beginning of time, people have paid other people money to negotiate on their behalf. When that negotiating involves ones unsecured debt, it falls into the category of…
-
Agencies
The Sweat/Soup-Shelf Connection
A sheen of perspiration and small eye movements recorded among a group of consumers helped lead to the redesign of the Campbell Soup Cos. popular gravity-fed
-
Monetizing the Unmonetizable
Walking by the Post Office today, it was hard not to appreciate just how much the Internet has changed the way we live. I’m not talking about bringing out our compulsions, ala Foursquare but something…
-
Old School vs. New School
Not long ago, AOL, now aol, turned 25 years old. The company is now older than a large number of people working in the performance-based industry. There are mini-moguls of our space who wouldn’t…
Author