Posted on August 28th, 2008 in youth, youth marketing | Comments Off
Note from Anastasia: I think our comments feature may be buggy on Ypulse Books, but we are giving away three free copies of Kaimira: The Sky Village to the first three commenters who let us know their thoughts on YA sci-fi. You can leave your comments here. Also, we're gone through Monday, back on Tuesday - have a great Labor Day weekend!
Direct to students (retailers are setting up pop-up stores on college campuses) (WSJ)
- Gen X & Y (worried about money, according to a new survey. And Google to target Gen Yers who appear to be embracing Google Apps in the office) (TechLand)
- Facebook got this guy elected (showing its newfound power in politics. And coming soon: Aaron Sorkin's Facebook: The movie.) (ReadWriteWeb) (New York Magazine)
- Can JoBros. break out of the teen pop bubble? (is the question over at MTV News - hmmmm....I'm skeptical they'll last beyond a couple of years given the fate of so many other boy bands...And AskKids.com keeps kids away from creepy search results.) (ArsTechnica)
- ESPN rebrands Rise (teen sports mag now ESPN Rise. Plus an interview with the folks behind Kiwibox - btw - CEO Lin Dai will be speaking at the Ypulse Mashup in Boston) (Folio) (PromotionWorld)
- Cellphones making headway (in the classroom. And Global Kids launches a new educational game focused on Hurricane Katrina) (BusinessWeek)
- Celeb wake-up calls (part of The Army/Ad Council's BoostUp initiative to keep kids in high school)
P.S. Check out this story about a pretty smart teen entrepreneur in Oregon - yours truly quoted. More on this after the holiday.
Posted on August 28th, 2008 in youth, youth marketing | Comments Off
Generation Y is the most self-indulgent, Generation X is the most innovative, and Boomers are the most productive, while the “Silent Generation” and the “Greatest Generation” are the most admired, according to a recent survey by Harris Interactive.
Conducted for Charles Schwab and Age Wave, the study asked almost 4,000 Americans age 21-83 what they [...]

Posted on August 28th, 2008 in youth, youth marketing | Comments Off
Google Sites commanded the strong majority of searches conducted in India, a rapidly emerging internet market, but the frequency of searches there lags behind the global average, according to a comScore study.
Top Indian Search Properties
Google Sites ranked as the top search property in India with more than 1 billion searches conducted in June, representing [...]

Posted on August 28th, 2008 in youth, youth marketing | Comments Off
A new feed_item entry has been added: Mobile Youth Report 2008 If you haven't done so already, Teach, check out the mobile youth report 2008, with a.
Url : http://www.technologyquestions.com/technology/showthread.php?t=251390&goto=newpost&s=fb441b75d35562828bc120baf109dc4d Cache
(Ranked #19)
Posted on August 28th, 2008 in youth, youth marketing | Comments Off
Aug 27, 2008 ... That's the size of the mobile youth market according to mobileYouth's latest 2008 research - the mobile youth report. Let's see, now. ...
Url : http://tabletpceducation.blogspot.com/2008/08/mobile-youth-report-2008.html Cache
(Ranked #9)
Posted on August 28th, 2008 in youth, youth marketing | Comments Off
If you haven't done so already, Teach, check out the mobile youth report 2008, with a free download. 1.1 billion consumers aged under 30 with a combined spend on mobile of a quarter of a trillion dollars ($270 billion)! ...
Posted on August 27th, 2008 in youth, youth marketing | Comments Off
Penguin Books is one of the best known book companies in the world. They publish a wide variety of books - classics, fiction, reference - that are sold throughout the world.
Nick Hornby has written several bestselling novels that have been made successfully into films, including About A Boy, Fever Pitch and High Fidelity.
When Penguin launched Hornby’s latest novel SLAM - his first to be directed at a teenage audience - they used a very innovative mobile approach to reach this target group. (more…)
Posted on August 27th, 2008 in youth, youth marketing | Comments Off
Organizations will work tirelessly to de-personalize every communication medium they encounter.
Radio ads used to be live, personal and spoken by an individual.
TV ads used to feature actual people, demonstrating something, usually live.
Phone calls involved a live speaker, talking, with permission, to another person.
Email used to be honest interactions between consenting adults.
Facebook pages (and Wikipedia, too) were built by people, not staffs.
Twits came from real people, and so did instant messages.
One by one, the mass marketers have insisted on robocalling, spamming, jingling and lying their way into our lives. The pronoun morphs from "you" to "me" to "us" to "the corporation" ...
The public works tirelessly to flee to actual interactions between real people, and our organizations work even more diligently (and with more leverage) to corporatize and anonymize the interactions.
The irony, of course, is that an organization with guts can go in the opposite direction and win.
My name is Seth Godin and I approved this message.