From: Gregory Alan Bolcer (gbolcer@ics.uci.edu)
Date: Wed Jul 12 2000 - 18:21:54 PDT
There was a company that was funded about 12-18 months
ago on the premise, rather than spending an average of so
much across the whole population, what if you as
an advertiser could accurately find a highly interested
participant and you as the consumer (instead of
getting $.25-$5 coupons) would get $100 or more?
Why do event broadcast companies think
they're going to be any more successful at delivering
interesting events to people who want them than advertising
companies delivering coupons to people who want them?
Jeff Bone wrote:
>
> 1999 $39.46
> 2000 $65.36
> 2001 $95.97
> 2002 $129.38
> 2003 $167.68
>
-- Gregory Alan Bolcer | gbolcer@endtech.com | work: 949.833.2800 Chief Technology Officer | http://www.endtech.com | cell: 714.928.5476 Endeavors Technology, Inc. | efax: 603.994.0516 | wap: 949.278.2805
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