Month: June 2006
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Live from Internet Retailer 2006: Yahoo Bows Shopping Blog
In a continuation of its social-networking initiative, Yahoo! has ‘soft-launched” a shopping blog on its Yahoo! Shopping Web site at http://shopping.yahoo.com/blog.
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Online Travel Spending to Jump 5% in 2006: EMarketer
Overall online travel spending is expected to grow in 2006 by 4.8% to %235.2 billion, according to a report released by EMarketer Tuesday
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School Specialty Losses Widen
School Specialty reported a net loss of $32.6 million for the fourth quarter compared to a net loss of $8.5 million last year.
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SEMers With More Than $15MM in Revenue Growing: Jupiter
The number of search marketers with annual revenues of $15 million or more has risen from 25%, in 2005 to 37% this year, according to JupiterResearch.
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Short Cuts
Men and women seeking informative tutorials about hair replacement systems will soon have a new online resource, free of charge. Hair Direct, a custom mail order hair replacement company, will begin launching mini instructional videos in the on its Web …
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Arc Worldwide Names Mark Renshaw to Head One-to-One Marketing
Mark Renshaw has been named senior vice president and director of one-to-one solutions at Chicago-based Arc Worldwide.
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Return Path Slashes Accreditation Fees for Nonprofits
E-mail deliverability-services firm Return Path Tuesday announced it has eliminated licensing fees for nonprofits on its Sender Score Certified e-mail accreditation service.
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Email
Ignorance Has Too Much Sway in the Spam Battle
Not to pick on AOL, but the lack of consumer outreach on Goodmail is a nice example of the current schizophrenia ISPs suffer when it comes to how they treat their subscribers and the companies that mail to them: tell subscribers nothing, yet rely on them to determine whether or not a bulk e-mailer is a spammer.
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Email
This Proposed E-mail Tax Wasn’t a Rumor
French politician Alain Lamassoure last week proposed a tax on e-mail and instant messages in the EU. Unlike the e-mail hoax that periodically surfaces in the U.S. that the postal service is considering an e-mail tax, Lamassoure’s proposals were apparently no joke.