Google has introduced a new aspect to its unpopular Print Ads program, writes MarketingVox.
Advertisers may now insert 2D bar codes in the print ads they buy. When photographed on web-ready camera phones, the bar codes bring users to a dedicated mobile website.
Users must add special software to their devices to unlock the ad fruit hidden in bar codes. Nokia offers such software, as does Kaywa. Semapedia provides a similar service, whereby users can read informational articles from bar codes, says CMSWire.
The offering is a tentative step toward making print ads more accountable, since people accessing the bar codes can be tracked.
XM Satellite Radio will air extensive coverage of the 92nd running of the Indianapolis 500 in the days heading up to the May 25 race.
The Indianapolis 500 can be heard on the IndyCar Series Racing channel (XM channel 145)…
Ogden’s Herbs for Health magazine is being folded into big-sister publication the Herb Companion.
A reader survey revealed that the two publications had virtually identical purchasing habits, interests and demographics, said publisher and editorial director Bryan Welch (via Folio). The Herb…
Barnes & Noble is launching a guerilla marketing campaign as part of a larger effort to promote its how-to website, Quamut.com.
The site - which touts itself as the “go to how to” - offers professionally written info that answers how-to…
Fox will air fewer commercials than usual during two of its fall programs, dramas Fringe and Dollhouse. Each episode will run as many as 50 minutes of story, compared to standard dramas which average about 42 to 44 minutes.
The…
Targeting advertising toward African Americans, Hispanics, Asians and Whites requires distinct media plans, because these groups use traditional media differently - and their new-media adoption patterns also vary, according to an analysis by BIGresearch, writes MarketingCharts.
“Understanding how media consumption behaviors…
For the sixth consecutive year, the number of millionaire households ($1MM+ net worth, not including primary residence) in the U.S. increased significantly, reaching some 9.9 million, according to TNS’s annual Affluent Market Research Program (AMRP), writes MarketingCharts.
The number of millionaire households…