tpiddy's comments

tpiddy | 10 years ago | on: Dear Unicorn, Exit Please

This trend also makes startups just less attractive as destinations for employees. My experience is that startups that have started to scale still don't have as much compensation as larger more mature companies.

Employees join for a number of reasons but stock compensation is one of them. This compensation has always been risky and hard to value but it is now becoming risky, hard to value and even if the company succeeds the compensation won't be realized for a very long time.

tpiddy | 12 years ago | on: The Coach Who Never Punts

In the past couple years VCU presses almost every possession and has had a lot success against great college teams.

tpiddy | 12 years ago | on: Salesforce Buys ExactTarget for $2.5 Billion

I generally agree with DHH's assessment of CRM and think it is ridiculous it trades such a high p/e compared to similar companies like Adobe.

That said, moving email providers is likely a huge pain in the ass for those 6000 customers. They are basically locked in for years and years. There may be potential to raise prices and gain profit from those customers. Internal investment to move vendors is likely in the hundreds of thousands.

Salesforce already has a few of these same clients through BuddyMedia and other B2C offerings, but the cross sell of a marketing suite is what they are envisioning. I expect that outside of a potential Marketo purchase, they will purchase companies with more b2c or general marketing offerings, potentially search, display or other ad related products to compliment Social.com.

tpiddy | 12 years ago | on: Salesforce Buys ExactTarget for $2.5 Billion

something like 90%+ of Marketo's customers integrate it with Salesforce. Of course Salesforce won't just cut them off if they have a competitor tool, due to anti-trust issues, but it doesn't necessarily bode well for Marketo now that Salesforce owns a competitor. Pardot is a fairly small piece of Exacttarget though so potentially Marketo could still be a target at some point.

Larger scale B2C marketing automation is generally much more complex than b2b. Ecommerce databases are generally less normalized across businesses, aren't hosted by an intermediary like salesforce and contain more data. Cross-channel retailers with physical stores track a ton of transactions and customers. I really don't think that any b2b marketing automation platform will make much headway trying to go b2c. Hubspot has some success only because they focus on local and small businesses.

tpiddy | 13 years ago | on: Firefox getting smarter about third-party cookies

sophisticated marketers have done hold-out tests with retargeting shown that it can drive incremental sales at a profitable roi. this includes big ecommerce brands.

granted not every viewthrough and clickhtrough conversion is driven by the advertising, but some definitely are and it is often profitable if a campaign is optimized and run well.

tpiddy | 13 years ago | on: Sick of SEO Scumbags

so you're saying the best website should win without "cheating" right? its not that simple.

you could make the same argument about all advertising/marketing.

the best product should win on its own standards, without advertising, right? for example, wouldn't we all have better insurance rates if geico, progressive and esurance didn't have to spend their money on advertising?

But the truth is these insurance companies are disrupting old school insurance models that are less efficient and bringing value to more consumers faster with their advertising.

companies adapt, consumers adapt, markets adapt, search engines adapt. companies and people are going to work toward their self interest, and SEO is one way to do this. its called capitalism.

tpiddy | 13 years ago | on: Ask HN: What are you planning to learn in 2013?

Español - Estoy aprendiendo hace 3 meses con los websites Duolingo.com, italki.com, anki y otros. Espero que en un año puedo tener buenas conversaciónen con hablantes fluidos.

There are some really interesting emerging ways to learn a foreign language also an emerging community of language learners and polyglots on the internet.

tpiddy | 13 years ago | on: Perfect Audience (YC S11) outperforms Adroll in Retargeting Test

View through conversions are conversions that take place after a visitor has just viewed an ad and not necessarily clicked on the ad. In the case of traditional display, the ad may not have even been visible on the screen it was just served somewhere on the page.

Google Analytics conversions are last touch click through conversions, where all marketing touches compete and the last that occured gets 100% of the credit.

tpiddy | 13 years ago | on: Perfect Audience (YC S11) outperforms Adroll in Retargeting Test

I work for AdRoll. I left a comment on this blog post but it hasn't been approved yet.

We’d really appreciate the opportunity to do a real comparison. In this post, they are comparing a campaign without Facebook Exchange (AdRoll) to a campaign with Facebook Exchange access and using two different definitions for conversions.

It’s a little odd that FBX wasn't included with the AdRoll campaign since unlike PerfectAudience, AdRoll is actually is one of few PMDs that have a seat on FBX ( http://www.facebook-pmdcenter.com/fbx ) and has the most clients running FBX campaigns of any FBX PMD.

PerfectAudience’s CPCs and CPMs are likely lower because Facebook retargeting is cheaper in this regard, and if they ran an AdRoll FBX would likely be comparable.

Also looking at your charts, they never setup conversion tracking in AdRoll. Without this they are comparing (PerfectAudience) view through conversion CPA to last touch Google analytics click through conversion CPA. To analytics and online marketing expert, it should be obvious this is not a fair comparison.

A lot of the UI callouts are valid and AdRoll is working on new features and launching a new dashboard very shortly. If anyone wants to setup a real test and do real analysis of performance, we’d be happy to help.

-Tom

tpiddy | 13 years ago | on: Lawrence Journal-World gets out of the CMS business, losing WordPress, etc

A few years ago, I used to work for a large local newspaper/TV media holding company with about 70 web properties.

In the 1.5 years I was there, they had about 6 CMS in action. IPS(i think?), ExpressionEngine, Day CQ, Wordpress and Ellington.

Smaller TV affiliates and publications are moving to Wordpress because of its price and how easy it is to find support/developers with experience.

If I remember correctly, the company I was previously with left Ellington to develop their own CMS features on top of Django.

tpiddy | 14 years ago | on: Top Technologies Used By YC Companies

AdRoll does have an opt out, through the adchoices links on ads and through, http://www.adroll.com/about/privacy

Most advertisers that do display retarget attempt to build segments and suppress ads to buyers/logins from potential new customers. this can be difficult though with cookie deletion and people using multiple devices/browsers.

tpiddy | 14 years ago | on: Why Does Anyone Tolerate Skimlinks?

Until sites like Pinterest can actually share affiliate revenue somehow down to their users, these sites will "send exactly as much [traffic] without the modified links."

This leaves no incentive for a merchant to allow pinterest to affiliate their links.

page 1