I shot the picture myself from the 108 th floo...
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I read a post this morning. This post –> What Vegas can teach you about Marketing. The author makes 3 key points about very public aspects of Las Vegas. I’ll reiterate just to make a few conclusions of my own.

1. The “Player’s Card” – A rewards card of sorts which gains points and rewards the more money you spend gambling in a casino. It seems like it works very much like credit cards with rewards programs. I have a credit card which gains points for every dollar I spend. Kind of depressing to look at how many rewards points I have because it directly translates to spent cash but so it goes. The key point in the situation as a marketer is to reward the behavior you desire. Go Pavlov on your customers!

2. “Comps” – Complimentary goods, services, or activities provided to customers. Similar to the Player’s Card in the sense that it is a reward of sorts. Casino give you comps to keep you in the casinos and spending money. Lesson in customer retention. Keep your customers in front of your product/service as much as possible. Do whatever it takes to keep them there, spending as much as you can afford.

3. Entry Points – Las Vegas casinos have at least half a dozen entrances. Make it easy for your customers to find you and to move on. This is my favorite and translates directly to social media.

I see the social media world on the internet as a billion points of light being born, connected, dying, and reborn again and again. By allowing users to enter and exit from as many points as possible gives maximum exposure to that which matters to the user. Even if you are not a destination on the web, being an avenue or conduit to something even better will earn credibility. Essentially that’s the model for teaching, education, the passing on of knowledge. Come into my classroom, take what you will, exit and find something even better.

As a side-note, I have a winter tire experience that I’d like to share with you. I ordered winter tires from a popular company, TireRack.com. I ordered through a phone sales agent because I’d rather talk to a person when ordering something expensive and important. Everything seemed fine until a week later and my tires still hadn’t arrived. Any calls? Nope. Any emails? No… wait… maybe one. Ah on the 7th day I received an email from TireRack stating that I am getting a refund for less than the cost of my tires. What?! I ordered tires because I want them, not because I wanted to receive a refund for less than I paid! There wasn’t even any reason on the email as to why the refund was being initiated. Turns out my dealership had closed mid-week, refused to accept the tires, didn’t call me, TireRack refunded, also didn’t call me, and I am driving around on summer performance tires in snowy, slushy blizzards. Safe to say I was pretty pissed. Talked to TireRack customer service who were very accommodating. Shipped my tires out to a verified dealer, free of freight charges. Shitty part is that I spun out on the highway, cracking my front bumper the very night before I was scheduled to get the snow tires on the car. Now that’s tough luck By the way, I love going to Las Vegas!

Relaxing, semi-ambient, semi-rocking electronic music – Album Recommendation: The Flashbulb – Soundtrack to a Vacant Life

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I despise Verizon retail store layouts! In the past month I've gone to three different Verizon retail stores. I made a purchase ONCE out of those three times. Reason being I was not able to get the item I wanted and make a purchase in a timely manner.

Verizon sets their stores up with an initial Greeter. That person asks the reason you are at the store, reserves you a spot via their check-in terminal, and states that a Salesperson will be with you shortly. This method is great in theory but in my opinion sacrifices a lot of point of sale business.

Verizon has many different products in services that I'm going to lump into a few categories. The first and main being mobile phones. However with the purchase of a mobile phone comes a second, necessary product — the mobile phone service, which Verizon treasures above all as it holds the largest profit margins. Then we have accessory products such as chargers, headsets, holders, software, and the like. The final clump of business for Verizon comes from service plan and phone maintenance.

Most likely each customer who enters the Verizon store wants one of these products or services. There are a select few who just like to window shop and play with all the cool cell phones. I, for example, entered the Verizon store three separate times looking for a car charger for my new Samsung Flipshot cell phone. My fiance entered the store two separate times looking only for a new cell phone. The amount of effort needed to make my sale was minimal. Point me in the direction of the car chargers, I'll pick one out and head to the checkout counter. Hers was a bit more in depth as she wanted to talk with a salesperson, figure out prices on phones, and have them activate it on her service plan.

The first time we went in they checked us in to their system and had us wait for a salesperson. 20 minutes later we walked out of the store with nothing in our hands and none of our money in their hands.

[Late posted this one. I wrote this back in August . . . sorry. Now that I've increased my time and changed my schedule I'll get back into writing and maybe some Vlogging as per a friend's request.]

Amazon deserves to be as usable as possible
so I think they should develop their Lists and MediaLibrary services a little more. Of course, my hope is that this is already in development or being implemented.

Amazon has created YourMediaLibrary which is a sort of online bookshelf. You can add books, music, and videos to the MediaLibrary and keep it in your Collection. However, there are only two ways to add products to your Collection.

  1. You must click, the "I Own This" box under the items under your Recommendations.
  2. You must manually search through YourMediaLibrary for books to add to your Collection.

My concern is that I should be able to do this from the Amazon search bar. Instead of having to go an extra step to purposely add media to my Collection, it should be usable throughout normal website use, i.e. shopping and the like.

Also something I noticed is that the only way to hide items from your main Collection view is to put them in the Trash. The items I wanted to hide were books I have sold. I wanted to still keep the record that I had owned them but keep them out of my current Collection. I thought I could Tag the books with "sold" and therefore separate them from my current Collection. The tagging was simple and straightforward but there was no way for me to hide the items from my current Collection. I had wrongly assumed their tagging system had an archive or hide function. [Spending too much time on Gmail's organizational platform.]

Other than this small quall I had, the overall service of YourMediaLibrary seems very useful and interestingly styled so that it looks significantly different than that of Amazon’s main site. Maybe they want to branch off into an affiliate partner. I could see the YourMediaLibrary taking over Amazon’s main site digital content sales. However, it may be just as simple to leave all of the commerce on Amazon’s main site, so that YourMediaLibrary remains a purely social network.

[These thoughts will be merged with fancy pictures and keen looking graphs later . . . maybe. 8-]

I’m slacking in the process
of learning and experiencing new things that have been released over the last couple years. I think I can attribute this "slack" to working third shift at the bar, while going to school, and trying to get daily errands done. However! Big things are to come for me. I’m always on the lookout for projects I can use as learning tools and as publicity tools. I’ve found one marketing plan project recently that could get me some good experience, helpful contacts, and a few extra bucks in my pocket! I will definitely be spending a good amount of my time on it.

I will also be putting extra time into learning AJAX and FLEX programming markups because I enjoy the AdobeAIR platform which uses both. I’ve been trying out smaller scale applications such as the Spaz twitter desktop client, Twhirl twitter desktop client, the Pownce desktop client, etc. My goal is to take AdobeAIR and use it to develop an efficient contact aggregator. I mean to create an application that will integrate my contacts from various social networks into one place, as well as integrating the different methods of messaging into one place. It is similar to Plaxo, but I just do not like the interface or the few shortcomings with Plaxo. I’ve also thought about working to integrate everything into my Gmail account but I don’t know how well that will go over. In fact, speaking of slacking, that is another area I just have not kept up with- Google’s development section. I talked to a friend at school who has experience programming and he is willing to embark on this project with me.

A computer upgrade is definitely going to happen soon. My old IBM laptop has kept up with me so far, but now that I need more HD space, more memory, and more processor speed… there is not much else it can push out. I don’t have enough to even have the programs I need to be running, such as Dreamweaver, Photoshop, a fully-tabbed Firefox, multiple Word docs. The need for space and speed is dire! I’m looking into Dell for now as well as pulling a Mac into the home for Mac specific projects.

All in all, I miss San Francisco- I need a new computer- I have a LOT to learn this semester!
[Look at that bunch of young guns! 8-) ]

Sanfran_pt1_037

What can I say… Again I am impressed.