Webinar vs. sales pitch

salespitch.jpgA few weeks ago, someone in our enrollment management department told me about this webinar on “the value of social networking for admissions,” or something like that. The webinar host (who shall go unnamed) was a company our enrollment management department uses, with good results. He and I thought the webinar would be a good opportunity to get not only our staffs, but also some upper-level administrators, some perspective on social networking. Maybe hearing from a third party like this company would lend more credence to the idea. Aside from the work our communications staff has done with blogging, user-generated video, etc., our campus hasn’t taken much of a shine to social networking.

So we sent out email invitations to members of our marketing committee (which I chair) and the recruitment committee (which the other guy chairs). Most of these committee members are mid-level to upper-level admins, with a few faculty and student representatives thrown in for good measure.

Fortunately for us, attendance was sparse.

The “webinar” was a total pitch for some Facebook app the company is planning to launch. And the first 10 webinar attendees to sign up for the app would get it for half price.

As soon as the pitch came — about 20 minutes into the event — the lone marketing committee member (besides me) who bothered to show up stood up and left. After another 10 minutes of Q&A about the app, I told everyone else in the room that we may as well log off, nothing to see here. So we all left.

I’m wary enough of webinars as it is. I know that companies that offer these freebies have something to sell, and that’s fine. That’s part of the deal. But this pitch was more blatant than any I’d seen.

Maybe I’m just not as accustomed to these kinds of pitches as our friends in admissions. But none of them were anxious to stick around, either.

The more I think about it, the more it irks me.

I’m still sick, by the way. And that makes me crankier than normal.

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Now playing: Various Artists – Four Four Four – Fragile State
via FoxyTunes

Sick day = blog catch-up day

I’ve been fighting an upper respiratory infection all week long, and today I’m staying home in hopes of sending this bug to its death.

But I can’t seem to sleep, daytime TV is too dull for words (except for a showing of A Mighty Wind on Comedy Central this morning), and I’ve got several neglected RSS feeds in need of a severe pruning.

Plus, it’s been a long time been a long time been a long lonely lonely lonely lonely time since I blogged. (For the previous sentence, blame the Sudafed. And too much Led Zeppelin during my formative years.) Anyway, it all adds up to lots of contextless links for your point-and-click pleasure:

A del.icio.us list of iconic icons for web design, courtesy of Seth Meranda.

cheeseburger-in-can-blog.jpgI Can Has Cheeseburger!. In a can, even. Yes, it’s true. Just what the world’s been waiting for, right? Right? Via Snark Hunting.

Wired‘s interactive life cycle of a blog post will just warm the cockles of any bloggeek’s heart. Via (dis)information architecture.

$100 for a link on Digg’s front page? A new low in online marketing?

Meet the new web influentials. They’re not necessarily the most people-connected, but rather the “people who influence the network by leveraging the most powerful force on the web — the link. So says Publishing 2.0. (Note to self: More contextless links in the future.)

Hidden mysteries of marketing revealed! Anita Campbell, editor of Small Business Marketing Trends, asked a bunch of A-list marketing gurus to share their best-kept marketing secrets, and they obliged. A bunch of lesser lights also shared their tips in the comments. Lots of good ideas here. Link via Chris Brown’s Branding and Marketing.

seth_godin_action_figure_6.jpgWhile we’re on the subject of marketing gurus…no aspiring marketer should be without the Seth Godin Action Figure. Now with built-in BrandOMatic © and PurplePower ©. Via the man himself.

Use Hey!Spread to upload several videos at once.

Digital Perspective asks: What kind of tech user are you? And then links to ways to find out. Say hello to an omnivore (according to this Pew Internet quiz).

The rise of open-source mega-universities. “The world’s top universities have come late to the world of online education, but they’re arriving at last, creating an all-you-can eat online buffet of information. And mostly, they are giving it away.”

All the presidents’ blogs. Bob Johnson updates his list of college and university presidents who blog. There are 32 in all.

OK, folks. Sudafed’s wearing off. Time to go.

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Now playing: Cat Power – Lord, Help The Poor & Needy
via FoxyTunes