Cannapreneurial Activity Is At All Time High

So far, nine states and the District of Columbia have legalized the use of recreational cannabis, and two dozen states have approved medical marijuana. According to a Quinnipiac University poll released Thursday, support for legalization hit 63 percent in the survey — the highest level of support recorded by a Quinnipiac poll. Support for medical […]

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Brilliant of Reckless? Nordstrom Local Is A Store With No Clothes.

Retail is the point of decision in consumer marketing. When a person stands before a product in the store, it’s decision time. The same holds true for people placing products in an online Shopping Cart. Will the shopper abandon or will she purchase? These are fundamental questions for the country’s greatest retailers to address on […]

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Big Chicken Small Movie

The citizens of Marietta, GA take fried chicken seriously. In 1963, Georgia Tech architectural student Hubert Puckett designed the town’s BIg Chicken landmark for what was then called Johnny Reb’s Chick, Chuck and Shake. According to the Atlanta Constitution Journal, KFC considered tearing down the bird structure in 1993 after high winds damaged it, but […]

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O, Say Can You Swim?

Appearing online, on social media and in swim clubs and organizations across the country, these posters are part of the USA Swimming’s “Swim Today” campaign from Colle McVoy in Minneapolis. As competition for kids’ time continues to increase, the campaign highlights what makes swimming different and encourages kids to join their local swim teams.

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No One Reads Long Copy

Folkoperan, an opera house in Stockholm, is currently presenting God Disguised (Förklädd gud), a lyrical suite composed in 1940 by Swedish composer Lars-Erik Larsson to lyrics by Hjalmar Gullberg. The production features EU citizens who helped promote the show by holding signs about their performance and offering free tickets to passers-by. This is what happened: […]

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Seven Invasions of Privacy We Accept as Commonplace

Advertisers train themselves to gather data. They become such experts at gathering analytics and number crunching that they forget about user privacy. A normal Monday to an advertiser is a user’s breach of privacy, but companies are using that data in new and creative ways. There is a certain etiquette to dealing with user information, and not every abuse is frowned upon.

If you’re interested in this fascinating phenomenon, read on for invasions of privacy that users have learned to turn a blind eye to.

Facebook

Facebook has notoriously acted in favor of transparency on the user’s behalf. According to Facebook, the age of privacy is at an end. The ulterior motive is to categorize user behavior and sell that data to advertisers, who market products based on interest and demographic. Still, users login to Facebook daily to exchange messages in a public environment.

Gmail

Gmail reads our email in order to serve ads to us. This breach of privacy is now commonplace and is accepted as part of the “free” quality of Google apps. Considering the amount of users on Gmail, and other major email providers, it becomes difficult for the individual to shift his email to a private account. He has to deal with spam filters and email authentication tools he may not understand how to configure.

Malware

Malware can compromise a computer and leech data about a user without his consent. These low points of entry are part of any serious assessment of security risk management. Malware drains a computer’s performance, and can create holes for exploits that steal more information. It’s important to have a robust security suite designed to protect your network from intrusion. More than that, you need security that learns from each threat it detects and adapts accordingly.

This type of protection is called deep protection for businesses and, according to experts, “Recent advances in command and communication (C&C) response help you stop suspicious behavior before your intellectual property is compromised. With in-depth intelligence about your attackers, you can shut them down.” (Source: www.trendmicro.com)

Cookies

Cookies track browser behavior and report it to third parties. If you don’t like the idea of someone snooping on your browsing habits, you should surf the web with cookies disabled by default. There are certain instances where cookies can be helpful, like trusted websites, but you should fall back on a third-party password application to manage your login credentials. We commonly use cookies to track our many logins; password management applications remove that issue.

Retail Tracking

Retail stores are tracking more than what people steal from stores. Apple stores will deploy a new technology called iBeacon that triggers events based on a customer’s GPS location. The Apple Store application already knows when users have entered an Apple store, the GPS technology will tell associates where the user is located for more personalized help. This level of retail tracking will become commonplace as time goes on, with apps designed to remind us to use coupons. Soon our shopping lists will tell us in-store locations for items, and help us navigate aisles faster.

The NSA

The reveal that the NSA is spying on citizens at home and abroad stunned the world, but has largely faded from public discussion in America. Perhaps this is due to the public’s short attention span, or maybe it is because the measures are considered critical to national security. Whatever the case, the revelation appears to be a part of culture now.

Google Maps

Google Maps has created a stir in the privacy world as the service has tried to provide a deeper “street view” experience. Map has been the subject of litigation in London and America, where breaches of privacy range from faces to license plates. Some people just don’t like the idea of others having the ability to see their home from the web. Yet we have trained ourselves to use the service for navigation, and would regret the lack of convenience. It’s that convenience that gives way to privacy breaches.

Are there other egriegous security breaches that we have given a hall pass to? What does the future have in store for a population who willingly surrenders its privacy?

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Mediacaddy Puts A Third Screen Right At The Bar

I spent the past weekend visiting friends in Atlanta, and revisiting familiar haunts. So while taking in a little college football at a sports bar on Saturday, I saw a new (to me, at least) form of distraction: A rotating slide show screen housed in a napkin/straw dispenser, courtesy of a company called Mediacaddy.

I’m not exactly sure how the system works, although slides seem to get semi-updated throughout the day with news tidbits, weather reports, and of course…advertising. Admittedly, the ads aren’t quite there yet:

IMG_1414

With 5 Mediacaddys on the bar, I’ll admit I got a bit curious. Mediacaddy is, after all, simply the latest form of interruptive marketing, a modern-day approach to the table tent. But it’s quite in-your-face, so clever POP ad concepts could push sales for the right liquid brand (or taxi service). It’s also a reminder that, in this day of multiple screens to distract the tavern-goer, there’s always room for one more. And there’s always a startup willing to take old-school advertising and slip it into new packages.

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Honda Makes Itself Useful, Launches Perfect Public Service-Like Campaign

Digital disruption is more than an annoying ping in your pocket, and it’s not all good. Take the situation facing hundreds of drive-in movie theaters around the nation–if they fail to upgrade their projection equipment to the tune of $75,000 per screen by the end of the year, they will no longer be able to show first-run films.

Clearly, this is a problem in need of a solution and I for one, am pleased to see a progressive-minded brand step-up with an innovative solution.

Project Drive-In, a newly launched national effort sponsored by Honda to save as many drive-ins as possible, is raising community awareness across the nation, and will supply at least five drive-ins with digital projectors.

“Cars and drive-in theaters go hand-in-hand, and it’s our mission to save this decades-old slice of Americana that holds such nostalgia for so many of us,” said Alicia Jones, Manager of Honda & Acura Social Marketing at American Honda Motor Co.

I’m marveling at the perfect fit here. This is precisely what a car company ought to do and Honda is doing it, with help from RPA in Santa Monica.

As part of Honda’s fundraising efforts, there will be an online auction that features tickets to the Los Angeles premiere of Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs 2 as well as additional film-related merchandise.

Honda will also launch pop-up drive-ins at Honda dealerships across the country to help raise awareness and build a groundswell of support, featuring a free screening of the first Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs film.

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An Agency In Five Days: JWT Pops Up At SXSWi Next Month

Big agency services for startups, at retail, for five days only. WALTER looks to be another great idea from JWT.

Call Us Walter

Next month in Austin, technology startups in town for SXSW Interactive will have the chance to meet with JWT’s “collective of industrious outsiders who embrace uncertainty and invent within chaos.” I take it they’ll leave their suits back home in New York and Atlanta, because this sounds like a roll your sleeves up event.

Startups can submit their elevator pitches on CallUsWalter.com now. If The WALTERS like what they hear, they’ll create a “customized, strategic marketing plan for your startup during SXSWi.”

I like this idea on so many levels. It’s great PR for JWT, but more than that, it allows the big agency people to grapple with a different set of problems, while lending the startups access to expertise that would be otherwise unaffordable (assuming there’s no VC money on the table).

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