Archive for May, 2006
Time and Life

Have you ever wondered if people who say things like “she needs to get a life” and “he has too much time on his hands” are merely jealous of the people about whom they’re speaking or ashamed that they themselves aren’t doing much with their own lives?

Welcome to America: A Gated Community

So the question becomes this: Are the walls being put up to keep out illegal aliens or to keep in Americans?

Al Gore to the Rescue!

The Value of a Customer

I just ran down to the local sub shop to pick up lunch. In front of me was a very old man, ordering a sub. When it came time to pay, the man behind the counter said, “You know what, sir, this one is on us.” The man, who couldn’t even stand up completely straight, was very thankful and left smiling with his free sub.

What is the value of a customer to your organization? To the guy at Quiznos, he understood the value is sometimes far greater than the $5 sub. That guy is going to tell his family how nice those kids at Quiznos were. I’m certain the results will be positive. Hell, I just wrote about it giving them positive PR.

Are you counting the value of your customers in dollars and cents?

Pay to Skip Ads?

On my other blog - EngineBlog - I posted an idea about offering users a chance to pay to avoid seeing advertising. It’s an interesting discussing point, so I will post it here as well. I would love to hear your opinions.

Would You Pay to Skip Ads?

I have been running Gmail and Yahoo Mail side-by-side for the last month. I have found them both to be great email solutions, each offering great benefits. I’m curious to see who steals the more innovative features from the other first.

Both services advertise as part of the offering, but Yahoo lets you buy your way out of seeing ads. For $20 a year, you get several enhanced mail features plus a completely ad-free environment.

I started to wonder if users would be willing to buy themselves out of ad networks in other areas – mainly on search.

Both companies make an enormous amount of money serving pay-per-click ads as part of their search results. But would users be willing to pay to not see them?

A majority of users click on an organic link, not a paid one. But the paid links are clearly useful to many people, based on the growing profits of Google and Yahoo.

Maybe the question can be taking to a larger realm. Advertisements are finding their way into nearly every channel – including video games.

Would you be willing to pay to not see them?