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Showing posts from February, 2011

Brian Fuller nails it.

The redoubtable Brian Fuller posted a great column on EE Life today and I just had to share it with you.  I think it closes the door on whether engineers are or will embrace social media.  Anyone who doesn't see this is destined for the unemployment line.

It's not just the Semi industry that's clueless

I got an invitation to attend a webinar on best practices for Facebook pages from an organization I have often communicated with and considered a good information source.  So I signed up. That's 30 minutes of my life I'll never get back. Yes, you should provide interesting content on your page.  Yes, you should encourage engagement on your page.  Yes, you should post consistently and often.  Yes, you can do demographic research through the ad services for free.  And all the people on the seminar echoed everything being said on the seminar on the Twitter pages.  It made me want to scream. The social media industry is becoming as clueless as those industries that claim social media is stupid.  They are patting themselves on the back and cross-selling to their buddies while there is a huge underserved market out there who desperately want to know how to make it relevant to their audiences.   It's no longer important to show ...

Overheard in the marketplace

Back in the day, I used to haunt a particular dive bar/restaurant on the Sacramento River because I discovered that lots of state legislators... particularly Willie Brown ... used to frequent to do back room deals.  i would sit at a table in a dark corner and keep my ears open.  I wasn't a well-known journalist and my paper was kinda small, but I was able to get a lot of juicy tips on what was going on in Sacramento. Last week i did a stealth drop in at public watering hole last week, found a secluded spot and logged on with my new iPad, all the while keeping my ears open.  Boy did I hear a couple of great statements from some semi execs that were pounding a few Buds. Regarding Magma: "Magma's idea of marketing is to send Rajeev out to talk to his buddies and sign them up for a core technology.  Then they build a product for the customer around the core that works great for the buddies, but isn't transferrable to anyone else." Regarding Cade...

Catharsis

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Following up on my last post this morning , I needed to vent.  This is what I came up with. The kind of marketers available to the EDA world   Their reward for their efforts   EDA executives discussing what they really want in a marketing program after they have punished the marketing team and/or cut its budget. Where EDA executives go to look for marketing and PR to replace laid off marketing teams or fired agencies   The type of customer EDA executives are trying to reach  The type of customer that would respond positively to the message the executives come up with  How EDA executives view the power of the messages How EDA customer view the messages EDA executives produce I feel better now

I.... just ... can't.... take .... it.....

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From the depths of EDA comes a common cry. Innovation!   John Cooley posted a kudo to an East Coast company from "West Coast EDA," praising it for an advertisement that was stolen directly from a four-year old, and very tired, insurance company campaign.  They even stole the face of the spokesperson for the company.  And "West Coast" called in an innovative concept.  Unbelievable.