Squarespace in the News

Nice article today in today's Washington Post about Squarespace. This is the service I use to create and host this site as well as Lisa's
. Anthony Casalena's story is quite remarkable.
Nice article today in today's Washington Post about Squarespace. This is the service I use to create and host this site as well as Lisa's
. Anthony Casalena's story is quite remarkable.
With all the talk about outsourcing, along with the realities of
globalization, it's nice to find a well reasoned article on the topic.
The New York Times featured this story
yesterday about Paul A. Samuelson's dissent with the popular view that
the benefits outweigh the potential harm. I am certainly no economist,
and I admit that parts of the story were a
bit more than my marketing and sales mind can digest. Nevertheless,
the article cuts through the headlines and the mind-numbing clutter
that we are fed via political rhetoric and daily sound bites.
The article drives two points home for me. First, unchecked
outsourcing could become too much of a good thing. As Mr. Samuelson points out, "a low-wage nation that is rapidly improving its
technology, like India
or China, has the potential to change the terms of trade with America
in fields like call-center services or computer programming in ways
that reduce per-capita income in the United States." Could this really
happen, though? Mr. Bhagwati points out some important limitations. As
has been discussed before , the actual number of jobs being outsourced is much more limited than the media buzz would have us believe.
The second interesting point is that economists on both sides of the
issue seem to be united in their concern about protecting displaced
workers and/or industries in the short term. "Mr.
Samuelson and Mr. Bhagwati agree that the way to buffer the
adjustment for the workers who lose in the global competition is with
wage insurance programs." I wish they'd defined what "wage insurance
programs" are, but knowing these guys, it certainly isn't welfare. What
I read between the lines is a concern about the speed of change versus
the time it takes the US economy to re-invent itself and cast workers
profitably and productively in a new direction.
Another observation: Mr. Samuelson sure has a lot of Karl
Marx books on his shelf (see the lower left corner of the image).
That's a little disturbing, though I'm sure every good economist has
studied Marxism extensively.
Ed Yardeni, legendary economist and my favorite source of economics statistics, has joined Oak Associates . Very cool... I think. I will be forced into mourning if Dr. Ed's Economics Network
ceases to exist. Nevertheless, having him so close to home is wonderful
and a coup for Northeast Ohio. Hopefully, it also bodes well for Doug
and his colleagues.
I enjoyed the opportunity today to participate in a panel discussion at the Web Association
meeting in Cleveland. It was a good experience, though it has been a
while since I've done anything like this. I'm pretty sure this is the first time
I've spoken publicly on internet marketing. Have I really become an
expert at this stuff?
I met Cleveland Plain Dealer
technology reporter Chris Seper at the event. I have been an avid
reader
of Chris's Monday column for as long as I've been reading the Plain
Dealer online. In fact, his column is probably the single biggest
reason I
subscribe to the PD's email newsletter. It's refreshing
to find a business journalist who knows what he's talking about and
obviously has some passion for it. (It also doesn't hurt that he writes about stuff that interests me.)
Here are
some juicy tidbits from an article in Internet Retailer that got my attention recently:
Among the interesting demographic data that Nielsen/NetRatings reports for the Top 10 sites are:The fact that women are more than half the traffic on Target.com, Walmart.com, Amazon.com and Yahoo Shopping (among others) is a yawner. What amazes me is that men are over 50% of the traffic at eBay. Wow! I wonder why this is. Are women more intimidated by the auction format? Is it because men tend more to be collectors and are, therefore, drawn to eBay in larger numbers?
Travel sites do well with consumers 55 and older.
Among the Top 10 shopping and travel sites, women dominate.
- 31% of Orbitz's traffic falls in that age group, as does 30% of Expedia's and almost 29% of Travelocity's.
- Dell does well with the older crowd also, with 34.5% of traffic 55 and older.
- Wal-Mart and Target are least popular with the older set, with just over 17% of traffic to those sites in that age group.
- 55+ traffic at the remaining sites are: 22% at eBay, 25% at Amazon, 27% at Yahoo Shopping, and 29% at Overstock.com.
Not surprisingly, travel sites have the highest percentage of upper-income consumers.
- Women are more than half the traffic at eight sites: 71.57% at Target, 62.46% at Expedia, 62.33% at Travelocity, 60.58% at WalMart.com, 56.48% at Overstock.com, 55.51% at Orbitz, 55.25% at Amazon and 53.19% at Yahoo Shopping.
- Men are 51.59% of traffic at Dell and 51.31% at eBay.
- Households with income of $100,000 and above were 26.37% of Travelocity's traffic, 24.83% of Expedia's and 21.89% of Orbitz's.
- Also scoring well with high-end consumers were Amazon, where 21.96% of visitors have incomes over $100,000 and Target, with 21.61%.
- WalMart.com and Overstock scored the lowest with $100,000+ consumers, at 15.97% and 17.8%, respectively, but Overstock did better with the ultra high-end consumers, $150,000+. They represented 7.54% of Overstock's traffic, a percentage exceeded at that level only by Travelocity's 8.19% and Expedia's 7.9%. Orbitz's $150,000+ traffic was 7.38%.
According to an article
in the June 26 issue of Time magazine, Root Beer potentially causes
less tooth decay than other types of pop (i.e., soda). Pretty cool
since I love root beer.
Each year Americans drink, on average, nearly 600 cans of soda apiece... What does that do to their teeth? Professor J. Anthony von Fraunhofer of the University of Maryland Dental School decided to find out. Fraunhofer and dental student Matthew Rogers took 20 healthy teeth extracted for orthodontic or periodontal reasons, cut them into tiny blocks of tooth enamel and exposed the blocks to a variety of popular soft drinks, including Coke, Pepsi, Mountain Dew, Dr Pepper, Sprite, Canada Dry ginger ale and canned Arizona iced tea. All the drinks weakened or permanently destroyed the enamel. Diet sodas were just as bad as regular sodas, and canned iced tea caused 30 times the damage of fresh-brewed tea or coffee. The worst offenders were noncolas like Mountain Dew, which caused two to five times as much damage as the cola drinks. The main culprit in this dental destruction, says Fraunhofer, is the presence of chemicals, such as citric, malic and tartaric acids, that are added to impart tartness to the drinks. Of the soft drinks tested, the one that caused virtually no harm to teeth was A&W root beer. Reason: it has the fewest flavor additives.
Yet more amazing statistics in Internet Retailer about knucklehead customer service when it comes to responding to customer email. I wrote about this a few weeks ago when another study came out. Here are a couple tidbits:
Although more than a quarter, or 26%, of retailers failed to respond to e-mail inquiries from customers seeking to make a purchase, the retail industry outperformed the cross-industry response rate of 41% in a recent study by Benchmark Portal and sponsored by eGain Communications Corp....40% of online-only businesses, a category that includes online recruiters and shopping comparison sites, also failed to reply to customer e-mail inquiries.
This appeared in Supermarket News this morning. It's not exactly earth-shattering news, but it got my attention.
Findings from a new study from Lyra Research here question the widely held assumption that the increase of DVD sales has negatively impacted video rental activity, said the research company. "Flicks for Hire: A Video-Rental Survey" shows that people who own more DVDs also rent more DVDs. The report is based on a survey of video renters conducted in June and July. "We can construct obvious logical theories why consumers who own more DVDs would also rent more videos," said Steve Hoffenberg, principal analyst for the DTV View report series and Lyra Research's director of electronic media research. "For example, the more people like to watch videos, the more likely they are to both own and rent them. But such theories don't jibe with a commonly espoused assumption in the video rental industry that the dramatic growth in consumer purchases of prerecorded DVDs is the chief cause of this year's slump in video rentals. Our findings call into question whether DVD buying is indeed the primary factor reducing video rentals, and they suggest a more complex relationship between rentals and purchases."I find it illogical that DVD sales are putting the damper on rentals. When you buy a DVD, you pay 3 to 5 times the cost of renting one. Presumably, this is because you like it enough that you plan on watching it over and over. This makes sense for children's videos and movies that you absolutely love, but that's been the case for years. We bought plenty of VHS tapes long before we owned a DVD player. Why would the advent of DVD's have a significantly greater impact on the propensity to buy versus rent a video?
I stumbled across this commentary while reading one of my regular Wal-Mart-related feeds.
I'm not disputing Stephen Crockett's points or debating his motivation
for taking a stand against Wal-Mart. That's his business, and his
reasons are well stated, whether I agree with them or not.
What
caught my eye is the startling contradiction, if I may call it that,
that emerges from his statements. On the one hand, he says:
I limited my [Wal-Mart] purchases somewhat as a result [of Wal-Mart's anti-union attitudes] but still bought some things because of convenience... I also limited my purchases there because Wal-Mart hurts many local businesses when it moves into a community.Interestingly, these comments follow this admission:
I bought 20 pairs of the same type of shoe from Wal-Mart over the past six or seven years. Men are creatures of habit.Two things really jump out at me. First, it sounds like Mr. Crockett shopped at Wal-Mart more often than he thinks he did. At the very least, it's safe to say that Wal-Mart was the first place he shopped for shoes. Second, people are indeed creatures of habit.
My primary transportation is a 2002 Volkswagen Jetta station wagon.
Driving it is a drug. The performance is just amazing. Unfortunately,
the quality is typical VW. Little stuff breaks all the time. I've had
no major nightmares, and most of the problems have been covered by
warranty. Nevertheless, there is indeed a trade-off between VW's
performance and quality. (My experiences with the dealer's service
department have echoed this, but that's another story.)
An article
in the Cleveland Plain Dealer this morning tells the same story about
the VW Passat wagon. Here's a company that makes cars that are simply
amazing to drive and are priced affordably. But there's a catch. The
company has a track record for being finicky about how they treat their
customers.
Volkswagen has always had a reputation for occasional
quality problems, but I don't think that's what hurts them the most.
The only thing keeping me from considering another VW is the matter of
whether or not I can trust VW to stand behind the product. Is the
sublime performance worth the risk that I might get stuck paying for
the product's shortcomings?
A remarkable product can be killed
if a company gains a reputation for not standing behind it. People are
willing to take some risk on quality if they know they are protected on
the down side. Once doubt exists, the product's performance becomes
nearly irrelevant. The review in the article would have been glowing,
and I would have immediately put the Passat wagon on my short list of
cars to consider next time. Unfortunately, all it did was confirm my
doubts. Hopefully, VW will turn the corner. I hate the thought of
giving up this wonderful driving experience.