21/08/2007

Rdv 4ème convention E-Commerce Paris 2007

a31821e6f5ac60779c25bda51b5b14fd.jpgDu 11 au 13 septembre - Palais des congrès Porte Maillot.

300 exposants, plus de 150 conférences pendant 3 jours - thèmes abordés : search marketing, référencement, affiliation, vidéo marketing, e.pub, marketing multicanal, relation client, solutions et services pour l'ecommerce ...

Toutes les informations sur : http://www.ecommerceparis.com/index.php?option=com_frontpage&Itemid=1

20/08/2007

Les journaux américains mettent en scène les nouveaux médias

A lire : "American Newspaper and the Internet : Threat or opportunity ?"

Sur : http://www.bivingsreport.com/wp-content/uploads/2007/08/newspaperstudy_22.pdf

Etude menée sur les 100 premiers quotidiens américains et qui nous donne un éclairage intéressant sur la mise en scène des nouveaux médias dans la presse américaine avec des notions d'évolution entre 2006 et 2007 : utilisation des blogs, de la vidéo on line, des podcast, des flux RSS ...

"The use of RSS increased in 2007 by 21 percent since 2006. Now 96 of the papers we researched are using this technology. Within this group, 93 papers offer partial text feeds, while three offer full text RSS feeds. No papers have begun embedding advertisements in their RSS feeds.

Ninety-two percent of America’s top 100 papers now offer video on their websites. This represents a significant jump from 2006, where just 61 percent offered video. In this group, there is a mixture of local, Associated Press, and original content available on newspaper websites. Thirty-nine papers offer original content, 26 use AP video streams, 13 offer video content from local news outlets, four papers use all three technologies, and 10 papers use a mixture of two different types of video.

The number and quality of reporter blogs also improved in 2007. Now, 95 percent of papers offer at least one reporter blog. Ninety-three percent (88 papers) of these blogs allow comments. In 2006, 80 percent of the papers offered blogs, with 83 percent (67 papers) allowing comments.

One-third of newspapers now allow comments on articles. This represents a 14% improvement on 2006 statistics, when only 19 percent of papers allowed comments on articles.

The number of papers requiring registration increased by six percent from last year’s results. Twenty-nine percent of the nation’s top 100 papers now require users to register before gaining full access to their website. Of this group, three papers required a paid subscription, while 26 papers required free registration."