privacy policy

Last updated 22/9/2010.

marketme.com.au is committed to protecting your privacy.

marketme does not sell, rent, loan, or give your email address or other personal information to any third party. We do not give out information about our customers and your personal details are protected by your user name and password and our secure servers, our firewalls, our secure premises and data management protocols.  To ensure ongoing privacy we recommend you change your password from time to time, and never give your password to anyone.

your personal information

This privacy policy covers our treatment of personally identifiable information that we collect when you are on our site, and when you use our services. We commit to hold all information you provide to us in absolute privacy. Only marketme employees may access your information and all marketme employees are required to adhere to our strict privacy policies and any employee who violates the privacy policy is subject to termination and other disciplinary measures.

Our policy for dealing with any personal information that you might disclose to us while visiting this website is explained below.

You can generally visit this website without telling us who you are or revealing other personal information and we will not collect any personal information about you except when you knowingly provide it.

The amount of information we collect about you depends on how you use the website and whether you elect to give us any information about yourself by becoming a registered marketme.com.au member, subscribing to our e-newsletters or making a purchase. marketme.com.au may use your personal information to:

(a)   send you direct marketing material by email or post; and
(b)   compile a consumer profile about you to enable marketme.com.au to better serve you;
and
(c)   complete a transaction using credit card information you provide to us.

We do not store cardholder information supplied by you, destroying any references to your cardholder information following the completed transaction. This is a security practice all marketme team members must adhere to. All on-line credit card transactions to purchase marketme products and services, are made on a secure NAB hosted payments facility managed by the NAB. Please see the NAB privacy policy for further information.

If you visit this website to read or download information we record your server address, domain name, the date and time of your visit and the information downloaded. This information is used for statistical and site development purposes only.

We endeavour to take all reasonable steps to keep secure any information, which we hold about you, and to keep this information accurate and up-to-date. Your information is stored in secure servers that are protected in secure facilities. However, we are not responsible for events arising from unauthorised access to your personal information.

You can also play an important role in keeping your personal information secure, by maintaining confidentiality of any user name, password, profile and accounts used on the website. Please advise us immediately if there is any unauthorised use of your user name, password, profile or accounts by any other Internet user or any other breach of security.

Should you wish to review or make any corrections to your personal information you can do this anytime in  'my profile'.

use of your personal information

If you decide to become a marketme member, you will receive email communication from us to confirm your participation. From time to time, members may receive notification of new services, changes to policies or price adjustments. You will be asked if you want to receive marketme newsletters in your profile, where you can nominate the frequency of communications and provide your preferred email account. Special offers are sometimes sent to registered marketme members as well on behalf of third parties. But these third parties do not have access to your information since we alone send out the emails. However, all recipients of the newsletter may opt-out of receiving future newsletters or offers and are given the opportunity to opt-out of these emails at the bottom of each newsletter.

Once registered, you will be asked to nominate your personal email address in your profile, to be cc’ed in all marketme communications through 'my messages' facility. This service is optional.

marketme uses cookies to save your username and password if you become a member and decide to use the "remember me" option. This means you don't have to re-enter this information each time you visit our site. You can always logout which will delete this cookie from your computer.

links

The marketme website contains links to other web sites that are not controlled by marketme.com.au ("Third Party Sites"). Please be aware that we are not responsible for the privacy practices of such other sites. We encourage our users to be aware when they leave our site and to read the privacy statements of each and every website that collects personally identifiable information. The marketme.com.au privacy policy applies only to information collected by this website.

changes to this privacy policy

marketme will occasionally update this Privacy Policy. When we do, we will also revise the "last updated" date at the top of the Privacy Policy. For material changes to this statement, marketme will notify our members by placing information on members’ home pages.

contact information

marketme.com.au is obliged to provide personal information of an individual which has been collected, used or disclosed since 21 December 2001. If you have any queries, problems or complaints relating to your privacy or would like to access your personal information held by marketme.com.au, please contact us at:

The Privacy Officer
marketme.com.au
210 St Kilda Rd
St Kilda VIC 3182

Phone: 03 9593 5353
Fax: 03 9593 8700

marketme.com.au welcomes your comments regarding our Privacy Policy and will respond immediately to rectify any problems you may have. admin@marketme.com.au
Ask Me

The World is in Your Hands

How mobile phones have changed the planet The power of marketing is now mobile, and it's easier than ever to put your message in your clients' hands. Here are how some savvy companies are leveraging mobile shopping, social integration and brand connection. Maybe there's something you can do too? 1. hail the fashion cab! Glamour magazine launched a totally fabulous way for weary New Yorkers to order their YSL eye saviour. In the back of a cab between shows during NY fashion week, fashion sisters could download an app and swipe the screen to order their Touche Eclat! 2. QR codes are turning up everywhere! Those weird patterns printed on ads and products are starting to take off in a big way. Whilst it's a great way for a reader to get more info from ads, smart marketers are using QR codes to make their shop fronts work 24/7. QR - 'quick response codes' - are graphics, like barcodes, but can hold much more information. You need an app for your iPhone to 'read' a QR code, but they are free and downloadable from the app store. You swipe your iPhone over the code and it links you to the data, which can be just about anything. Want to get people to download your app? A QR code is a great way to send your customers directly to the right place to download it without lifting a finger... Check out Qkies - proving you can have your QR code & eat it too! 3. socialising is what we do! There's no denying that social media is here to stay - in fact, social media is literally taking over the planet. consider this: Facebook has 800 million active monthly users & growing Twitter has 230 million tweeters LinkedIn has 135 million subscribers and everybody's doing it! 98% of 18-24 year olds & 82% of 55-64 year olds use social media think it's a one hit wonder? Social networks reach 82% of the worlds internet population. Nothing else does.... but why? 67% of us use social media to stay in touch with friends 64% use it to stay in touch with our family members But only 5% of us use social media to catch up on what's happening with celebrities, or so we say.. . hot topics on social media 2011 #1 Death of Osama bin Laden #2 The Super Bowl #4 Charlie Sheen #5 Death of Steve Jobs #6 The Royal Wedding #7 Death of Amy Winehouse #8 Call of Duty, Modern Warfare Proof is that to make it big in social media today is to ...... die or kill your career! so what do people want to do on social media? 63% of Facebook users seek out sales & promotional codes 51% participate in polls 62% look for the latest news about their brands on Facebook 61% seek out new product information 58% look for contests & giveaways & if you need more proof... social ad spending will rise by 45% to $8 billion ( a miserly $3 billion in 2011) Facebook will generate $5.78 Billion in ad revenue in 2012 Twitter will generate $259.9 million in ad revenue 2012 money talks!

Do you know what's Pozible?

Clever name, clever idea! Innovative thinking at its best. Whilst crowdfunding is not new, this is a particularly good example of great, easy to use web design that connects interested people to interesting projects. It's what many social networks try to do, and many fall short. So why does Pozible work: 1. it's easy to engage with. You can be a follower and a supporter for as little as $1 donation. 2. there is a wide range of projects - from dancers raising money to get them to an international dance event, to funds sought to publish a comic to lots of great films (check out 'I've Been Here So Long' by my son ;) which all rely on the interest of others to help get their projects off the ground. 3. It has brilliant sharing functionality and SEO. Hat's off to Pozible.com.au - a smart destination for new ideas to garner public support. I pledge to visit it often and toss the value of a bottle of vino in someone's cap each month. All the fun without the hangover. Check it out. It's a site worth everybody's attention to participate in and to learn from. After all, great work deserves to be shared! AnneMaree Fitzgerald

Can Facebook work for you? Hell Yes!

There's a lot to know about Facebook and every day there's more and more to learn. Which is great, because it means that the channel has the flexibility to evolve quickly and brilliantly. Are you using facebook to: 1 . Drive new people to your brand? Here's one savvy business owner who is doing it well. Can you think of a Facebook page that might draw a new group to your brand that isn't your business name? eg: "my favourite hairdresser in Sydney" or "Beautiful Teeth in Melbourne?" Like Google, you need to drive people to your site or page by understanding how people search for what you offer. Obviously, if they don't know your brand already, they will search by what you do or sell. See how the image works below to grab attention when searching for a sale page. 2. Sell products online? Why divert friends to your website or Ebay shop if you can seal the sale right here on Facebook? Check out Lady Gaga's merchandise shop and imagine if you could have even a capsule range of products or service vouchers on your Facebook page? Service providers should be offering gift vouchers and promoting them through status posts. eg: ""No time for shopping around? A voucher she'll love in 60 seconds flat!" (hair/beauty/spa vouchers, lingerie voucher, fresh fruit delivery) eg: "all you need to know about the law but were too afraid to ask!" vouchers for a 15 minute telephone conversations about........ divorce, liability, fence disputes........ you name it. It's a great way to introduce a new generation to legal advice. 3.Test drive your new ideas? Facebook polls are a great way to find out what your friends think. Perhaps you're planning a new range of board shorts for your surf shop. Wouldn't it be a good idea to road test your design by asking what would your friends buy.... a: the new shorter shorts Italian style, b: old school surfer boardies, c: bring back speedos please!!! Link the poll to your Facebook page of designs and see the votes roll in.....and sales take off! Just three things to think about for your Facebook business channel - ignore it at your peril! Have a great weekend! AnneMaree Fitzgerald

Is Common Sense The Real 6th Sense?

I attended an Anthill entrepreneurs night in Melbourne this week, 60 people in a room all with big ideas and trying to wrestle them into a success story. Some were gorgeously young and naive, some of (us) were a little older, more experienced and a lot more circumspect. What we heard from the young and enthusiastic 'entrepreneurial speakers ranged from: "the key to success is (wait for it)....being prepared to work hard" ....to...."if I was launching a restaurant today, I'd artificially inflate the price of a meal and then discount it on Spreets", because "traffic is everything." Entrepreneurial experts? Should we be worried? I think the audience was smart enough to know that sometimes even the most 'clever' of us say some pretty stupid things. Let's look at "traffic is everything" first. The dynamos of online and social media spruik that instead of talking to a prospect 'one to one', we should find ourselves talking to a mass audience. That can be great if we're selling chicken nuggets or diabolical if we've had a glitch in our booking system (Jetstar). The scale of opportunity today is very much the domain of the mass marketers. Is that you? It's certainly not me! How much traffic volume does your business need? I can't see the rationale for driving the masses to your website or Facebook page if you're selling to up to 500 clients a month, why focus on talking to millions? Of course, 500 clients a month demands a steady flow of prospective clients and therefore convertable traffic to your business. The volume of which has to do with your conversion rate. The less enquiries you can convert, the more you need. Should you concentrate on improving your conversion rate, or simply drive through more traffic? I fear that driving through more and more traffic, you get caught up in the task rather than focus on the true business objective. And driving SEO and social media to the masses is indeed an onerous task that takes time, time and even more time. Time you could be doing something else more targeted - using SEO and social media - talking to the people who matter to you most. Is that everyone? How do you use Social Media to talk to the 200 people you want to reach now? That my friends, is really the $64 question. 1. Cultivate a quality database 200 of the right targets is of far more value to you, and enables you to manage the task of personalising and targeting your communications so more effectively. Go to the effort of ensuring your database is truly valuable to you. The right people, their right details and their particular area of interest as it relates to your business. How on earth have I got on the mailing list of a dozen specialist accounting software companies? Obviously to some companies, wastage is just the cost of volume marketing - they don't care. But I do. You do harm every time you send an ill targeted communication. And when you do it over and over again - I'd call that harassment - or that's how it feels. So you're unlikely to get my business - but you're also unlikely to get my referral. I liken poorly targeted online marketing to the 20 telemarketing calls we get a day for switching telecommunications providers.........%$#@!?% 2. Think 'exclusive' rather than 'inclusive' An 'off centre' posting from one of your 200 fans on Facebook does more harm to the credibility of your page than you'd think. Keep the conversation relevant to your business and your 'real' customers. Linkedin forums have found a way to manage the focus of the discussion by ensuring only the right people can join. Those forums are the best for coherent exchange without stupid, irrelevant distraction. Consider this simple management protocol for your own Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn 'forums' - don't invite everyone to the party - just the ones you want to be friends with. 3. Fashion your message Don't be dragged into the trend of driving your business to meet the needs of the masses. A more targeted approach is likely to be more successful. Make sure the message you are sending is at least of interest to the recipient, and at best, a real solution to their problem. You can do this is you take the time to manage to whom you are speaking. Old fashioned? Or just common sense? How does this get lost in social media marketing today? Now, for the second piece of mischief - lack of authenticity. When you set your prices, do so with some respect for your clients. Artificially inflating a price to make the discount larger and more appealing is short term thinking....and best described as malevolent marketing. Your customer is not stupid. Price is traditionally determined by demand and settles into position according to competition. Margins are smaller when there are more competitors in the market. However, burning customers who purchase a product or service in good faith, is certainly not the right foundation for the making of a successful business. So beware of the temptation that Spreets and Groupon etc offer. Get involved when it makes sense for your business and be authentic with your customers. How much margin is right? Despite its hefty price tag, the real margin on a Louis Vuitton handbag is no where near what you'd assume. Hand finishing, selective materials and the rarified, highly skilled and manufactured environment where you buy it make the $2,000+ bag a big investment surely. However, it is likely to outlast your $100 Target special by a lifetime. You just have to like the design for a lot longer! That's also what you pay for - longevity. Does your product or service offer longevity? Your product must be priced correctly to enable you to deliver it well to your customer and follow it up with good after sales service. A client must be able to see the value in the price - which is often only really discovered when something goes wrong in a week or 6 years. Your steak undercooked? Your goods damaged in transit? Your widget came off the wodjet? Your advice following a campaign? What do you want - the response from a company that doesn't have the margin in its goods to provide adequate training and customer service for its customers? If that margin instead goes into the owner's pocket, or there just isn't the margin in that cheap price, then you have a problem. You need enough margin in your price to ensure your customer will return and purchase again. Have a look at your prices and consider if you have included in that squeezed profit margin, enough money to ensure if something goes wrong, you have your client's back. And lastly....... To be fair, you do have to work hard to be successful. Some of us have to work harder for longer than others though. That's why we're still in the room ;) AnneMaree Fitzgerald - www.marketme.com.au

Close the Loop!

It's a foolhardy business owner who will fund an advertising campaign without first checking that all other aspects of the marketing loop are covered. Why would you put hard earned money into a proactive 'push' without ensuring that it had the maximum chance to pull in the bucks? Plenty do. Before you press 'GO' on the spend, ask yourself the following questions: 1. Is there stock/capacity to meet demand +5%? +10%? + 25%? (basic, but often overlooked) 2. Is there anything in-store (digital or brick) that promotes your campaign? (help people find and understand it) 3. Have you strategised a 'what if'? the customer may want something different (a cluster offer) 4. How well are your staff informed about what you're doing? (before customers arrive) 5. Have you populated all your channels with your offer? And set up a way to monitor which channels perform best? 6. Have you strategised to launch/communicate with your VIP's first? (they expect it) 7. What additional 'push' factors will you implement? (EDM, sampling, editorial, experiential, viral, social) Closing the loop will maximise your success - so take the time to build a REAL campaign first. AnneMaree Fitzgerald - marketme.com.au
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