Don't Miss a Thing
Free Updates by Email

Enter your email address

preview

powered by FeedBlitz

Search

RSS Feeds



Subscribe with Viigo - for mobile
[-for mobile]

SETH'S BOOKS

THE DIP BLOG by Seth Godin




All Marketers Are Liars Blog




Blog powered by TypePad
Member since 08/2003

« 1918 and more | Blog Home | If everyone had a foundry »

Here come worldwide gimmicks

Stunt Local businesses have always loved gimmicks. Upside down billboards, plush characters with men inside, rude waiters and hot air balloons abound.

It's inevitable, it seems, that with online traffic easily measured and increasingly valuable, that same tactic would move online. And it has, in droves.

A poker site is embracing the tactic with this obviously transparent ploy for traffic. I'm not linking to it here, because I don't want to reward the cheesiness (move along, people, there's nothing to see here, it's just one page), but I want to show it to you as a sign of things to come.

Very quickly, these sites are going to be like car wrecks or rock groups--only the grossest or the loudest (or possibly the most clever) are going to earn the attention of the public. After all, once someone sells the pixels on his site for a million dollars, you don't want to see it again. And once someone cuts off his finger (I think he should have used Photoshop) then what... a head?

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/t/trackback/2123/3843531

Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Here come worldwide gimmicks:

» Liners: "Kate Moss" still a leading search term from Blogebrity
The Toronto Star calls blogging a reaction to "force-fed dumbed-down stories," an alternative to "bad TV, greedy marketing, and more celebrity gossip." Mm, Toronto Star, you almost had me there. A poker blogger pulls a publicity stunt after watching Fo... [Read More]

» Carl Valentine is an idiot from MemeFirst
Seth Godin quite rightly refuses to link to the latest piece of idiocy to hit the web. You can get the gist of the page from Seth's screengrab, however. If we take everything at face value, this chap has set... [Read More]

« 1918 and more | Blog Home | If everyone had a foundry »