Internet marketing is leading the massive wave of electronic
commerce, but contrary to what people think, the internet has been
a hard sell right from the start. What were the first critical
decisions for marketers and advertisers that locked internet
marketing on its current path? Steinbock interviewed dozens of the
early key players and finds that the internet had to sell the idea
of itself as not just a new media but an entirely new
marketspace--that is, a space in the consumer and
business-to-business markets both. Covering the entire field,
Steinbock's unique study proves that regardless of what may come
next, it is crucial to understand what came first. His book will be
essential for today's marketing, advertising, and internet decision
makers, and a fascinating read for business and media watchers
everywhere.
Steinbock shows the obstacle and barriers that faced the initial
entrepreneurs and user companies, reconstructing the progression of
internet marketing from the campaigns in the 1970s and 1980s, and
in fact as far back as the 1940s and mid-1950s. He shows that
internet marketing really began in business-to-business marketing,
and only after AT&T and the Telcos argued that the internet was
theoretically impossible and that it would crush American
telecommunications if it ever did arrive. Ad agency execs? They
hardly noticed the internet until the mid-1990s. Steinbock digs
into the proliferation of marketing channels and the details of
browsers, home pages, and web sites. He examines technology
marketing, relationship marketing, and the connection between the
internet, intranets, and marketing channels. In Chapter 4 he lays
out the promise of internet marketing, the story of Zima and banner
advertising, moving from there to the problems of online branding,
online and offline advertising, broadcast hybrids, and online
access to community providers. Steinbock ends with a look toward
global markets and the war for eyeballs--the similarities and
differences between television and the internet. His book is
meticulously researched, authoritative, and well illustrated and
will have special value for students and teachers in college
courses in advertising, marketing, and media studies.
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