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    Entries in Spam (4)

    Saturday
    May012010

    Sales Automation & The Curse Of Spam

    If you look through your inbox and chart the mess, his is what a month of spam actually looks like.

    It's the result of emails natural insecurities. Being built in 1982, email didn't have any needs around business or real identity. (Everybody on the web at that time already knew each other.)

    These days the needs are quite different, but the technology is exactly the same. The result, anyone can use the email system to pose as any other individual, leading to spam, phishing and the rest of that lot.

    I think that almost everyone's aware that there's going to be a change needed from email to a different, secure and identity based platform. We're pretty sure that Sendside's sales automation and sales channel analytics is a pretty good way for any inside sales organizaton to seperate themselves from the deluge of spam that's clogging every recipients inbox.

    Monday
    Apr202009

    Channel Insider Review Of Sendside

    Channel Insider has a nice review on Sendside that denotes the business capabilities as well as the environmental and security benefits of the platform:

    E-mail has become one of the worst ways for businesses to build customer relationships, thanks to spam—which is now also blamed for creating 17 million tons of CO2. Sendside Networks breaks the e-mail habit by bringing spam-free multidimensional communications to businesses of all sizes.

    Let’s face it—e-mail has become almost useless due to the growth of spam, embedded malware and a host of other problems. Simply put, businesses can’t rely on e-mail any more for marketing or professional communications. What’s more, spam is not only a drain on productivity, it has now been identified as a contributor to carbon emissions, albeit in a roundabout fashion.

    Salt Lake City-based Sendside Networks took a close look at how businesses communicate with each other and their customers and came up with a new model, which eliminates multiple e-mails, adds multiple communication paths to a company’s Web presence and, at the same time reduces the need for on-site sales calls.

    Originally designed for financial markets, Sendside Networks’ new platform offers businesses measurable metrics to track how customers are interacting with the company and, more importantly, a unified pathway to help close the deal and build a long-term customer relationship.

    Sendside Networks delivers those capabilities with a communications platform that works as a service that aims to combine Web content, audio, video, Flash or existing print collateral and then delivers it as a single multidimensional message, called a package. Those packages allow organizations to prepackage and send important, confidential and complex information to their customer prospects and business partners.

    Advanced reporting and analytics provide the sender with key information on when a package is opened and what content is viewed. The goal here is for businesses to align marketing and sales efforts to deliver a central location for approved content, which in turn facilitates faster follow-up on customer requests.

    The overall result of a package is to create shorter sales cycle, reduce risk, improve efficiencies and meet compliance requirements. The controlled nature of package delivery also helps with DLP efforts. Sendside packages further marketing and sales goals by eliminating the need for multiple steps in the sales process and simplifying the creation of custom sales presentations or complex media kits.

    Advanced reporting capabilities instantly inform senders when packages are delivered, what content was accessed, whether a video was viewed, and what documents have been read and downloaded.

    The product is delivered via a Web-based service that uses Web 2.0 technologies. Users create accounts on the service (the personal edition is free) and then access a communications management console, where they can roll up documents, video, hyperlinks or other content into deliverable packages. Those packages are delivered via the Sendside secure network to targeted receivers.

    In other words, a user creates a package, which is then stored on the Sendside network—a secure link to that package is then delivered via an e-mail to the receiver. The recipient then clicks on the link, which brings them to a secure Web page, where they can interact with the content, send messages, download files and so on. All activity is recorded and archived, which allows users to keep track of who has seen what and also creates an audit trail.

    The platform portal offers a library, message center, reporting, signature tracking, networking and many other features that help to create an integrated communications environment. Users can log into the portal from any Web-connected system, eliminating the need for dedicated software to be placed on an individual PC. That also gives the product “netbook” appeal, where all you need is a browser and an account to stay in touch or deliver critical documents.

    Business accounts range from $20 to $75 per seat per month. For enterprise implementations, pricing is based on the number of unique recipients reached in a given month. Solution providers can sign up as an affiliate to sell the service to their customers and can earn some revenue via commissions and training opportunities, or better yet, by selling mobile systems to leverage the service on the go.

    Solution providers also have the option to become reseller partners, and can rebrand the product, integrate with existing Web pages, develop APIs and create custom solutions. Margins can range from 30 to 40 percent for most partners.

    Sendside helps to solve a critical problem faced by many businesses by providing secure, auditable communications that can be used to create customized packages for marketing needs or to keep proprietary information secure during transmission.

    Tuesday
    Mar312009

    Spam Back to 94% of all Email Traffic

    The NY Times reports that after a brief hiatus last year, spam is back up to 94% of all email traffic.

    “What the spammers have been using to rebuild is more technically advanced than what got taken out and is itself a more resilient technology,” Mr. Swidler said. “It’s unlikely we are going to see another event like McColo where taking out an I.S.P. has that kind of dramatic impact on global spam volumes.”

    Postini is also reporting Tuesday on a new kind of spam called location-based spam. When gullible users click on a link in a spam message, they are directed to a Web page that contains a fake news headline and a purported video describing a nearby crisis, using the user’s I.P. address to identify the nearest major city. When the now curious and gullible users click on the video, their computer is infected with a virus.

    Monday
    May052008

    Spam - the scourge of email - is now 30 years old.

    WIth the 30th anniversary of the first spam message, it seems that there's a never-ending supply of stories that show the ineffectiveness and shortcomings of the public email system.

    iStock_000003564018XSmall.jpgblockquote.gifBBC: Spam - the scourge of every e-mail inbox - celebrates its 30th anniversary this weekend.

    The first recognisable e-mail marketing message was sent on 3 May, 1978 to 400 people on behalf of DEC - a now-defunct computer-maker.

    The message was sent via Arpanet - the internet's forerunner - and won its sender much criticism from recipients.

    Thirty years on, spam has grown into an underground industry that sends out billions of messages every day.blockquoteend.gif

     

     Of course these stories about email will never end since the shortcomings of SMTP can't be overcome inside of the current open and completely anonymous system. So spam and spam filtering of email messages will continue to be an ongoing arms race between security companies who try to isolate and filter email messages (after they're already in your inbox) and the spammers, who are increasingly sophisticated and who are now employing sophisticated techniques that can even target email recipients on an individual level.

    The inadequacies of email won't, and indeed can't be solved inside the current system of SMTP. A new paradigm is needed to jump the curve and address the real needs of both businesses and individuals. A system where spam and malware is stopped on the sending side rather that trying to filter the spam after it's already in the inbox.

    Fortunately, that system's now here, and it's free for individuals.