eMarketing101.net: Traffic Means Business   Contact UsSite Map

Previous Posts

Archives

February 2012
September 2011
August 2011
July 2011
June 2011
April 2011
March 2011
January 2011
November 2010
August 2010
June 2010
April 2010
March 2010
February 2010
January 2010
November 2009
September 2009
August 2009
July 2009
June 2009
May 2009
April 2009
March 2009
February 2009
January 2009
December 2008
November 2008
October 2008
September 2008
August 2008
July 2008
June 2008
May 2008
April 2008
March 2008
February 2008
January 2008
December 2007
November 2007
October 2007
September 2007
August 2007
July 2007
June 2007
May 2007
April 2007
March 2007
February 2007
January 2007
December 2006

Complete Archives

Categories

AdHack

Search Marketing News

Annoyances

Black Hat SEO Techniques

Other Resources & Links

Blogging & RSS Promotion

Canadian Search Community

Canadian SEM Issues

SEM en Français

Domain Name Issues

eCommerce

Keyword Research

eMarketing 101 General

Francouver

Free Webcast

eMarketing 101 Projects

Google *Stuff*

eMarketing 101 Promotion

En Français

General

Hopstudios Projects

International SEM

Love & Please Share

Link Building Best Practices

Music

Musique (Francophone)

Video Content

PPC Planning

Personal

Search Engines Market Share

Search Marketing Smile

SEM *Must* Read!

Rants

eMarketing 101 News

PPC 101 Education

SEM Best Practices

SEM Events

SEM Glossary

SEM Studies & Research

SEM Whitepaper & Reports

SEM & Usability Experiments

SEM Local Events

SEO Advices for Beginners

SEO Planning for Beginners

SEMPO Canada Updates

SEO Tools

SEO Ranking Factors

Sports (Francophone)

Spectacular SEM Results

Vacation

Vision & Future Trends

ROI & Results

Web Analytics

Web Copywriting

Web Strategy Partners

White Hat SEO Techniques

Category Archives

Blogroll

Out of my Gord - By Gord Hotchkiss

GrokDotCom - By Brian Eisenberg

Link Building Best Practices Blog

Search Engine Watch

SEM Hints: Search Engine Marketing Hints, Tips & Tools For Online Businesses

Search Engine Land - by Danny Sullivan

Virtual Marketing Blog: Internet Marketing News, Reviews and Insights

Search Insider

SEMPO Global Search Marketing Blog

ClickZ Online Marketing News

Pandia Search Engine News

Search Marketing Expo News

SEMPO Canada Search Marketing Blog

SiteProNews SEO Blog

Complete Blog List

Feeds

  Web feed Main RSS feed

  Web feed Jobs feed

eMarketing blog

Search Marketing SmileVision & Future Trends/// Posted by Alexandre Brabant on Thursday, April 24, 2008

Philippe Le Roux: The Internet Has Won its Battle Against Traditional Media

Let me just start this with a statement: the risk of doing Search Marketing is actually not doing it. According to Philippe Le Roux, President of Montreal-based Online Marketing agency VDL2 in an article published today in La Presse, talks about how we have reached a critical point where it shows how the Internet has won its battle against traditional media & how we assist at the beginning of a great media revolution. Many other search marketing specialists around the globe concur with his position, where traditional medias are on the verge to extinction. According to Le Roux, the revolution has officially begun and we can already see that the popularity & usage of the Internet is happening at the expense of advertising revenues for print media, TV and radio. Still, Philippe Le Roux is adamant that traditional media resist with all the energy they have left to preserve their advertising revenues. Conservatism and other factors contribute to accelerate the rate of change. The article also shows that profound changes are happening in the way people seek information and how their comfort level with the Internet and Search Engines increase exponentially. 

What’s in it for you?
Le Roux provides all the examples you need so you understand where to put your advertising dollars from now on and why. (Hint: Some of it is called Search Engine Marketing or SEM)

That is a great article sent by my dad, Carl Brabant, who has always been part of battles that were worth fighting for. Thanks Dad! if you want to read the full article, feel free to send me an email and I will send you the PDF. I can’t seem to locate the link to the article online.


Here are a few excerpts from the article: (en français)

Personne ne sera étonné d’entendre, en 2008, que le phénomène Internet bat son plein et que la Grande Toile est devenu le principal média des Canadiens de moins de 35 ans. Et personne ne sourcillera en apprenant que cette révolution se fait au détriment des journaux quotidiens, de la télévision conventionnelle et de la radio. C’était écrit dans le ciel, dira-t-on. Pourtant, les grands médias s’accrochent, résistent, cherchent des voies de préservation pour leur assiette publicitaire. Hier c’était TQS. Qui sera le prochain ? Pour comprendre davantage la situation, j’ai rencontré Philippe Le Roux, président de la firme montréalaise de marketing interactif VDL2, qui, en janvier dernier, annonçait dans le bilan de ses tendances 2006-2010, qu’Internet avait gagné et que les médias ne seraient plus jamais les mêmes.

“Aux États-Unis, affirme-t-il, les recettes publicitaires des quotidiens ont chuté de 8,7 % en 2007 et celles de la télévision et de la radio ont diminué de près de 2 %. Mais en même temps, elles continuent de croître du côté Internet à un taux annuel de 15 à 30 % suivant les marchés. À un point tel qu’en Grande Bretagne, elles devraient dépasser celles de la télévision dès l’an prochain.”

Malgré la distribution grandissante d’exemplaires gratuits ou vendus à fort rabais, la chute de la diffusion des quotidiens continue à se faire sentir. Paradoxalement, alors que “cette uniformisation en cours va à contre-courant de la société de l’information dans laquelle les nouvelles technologies nous plongent, les grands médias ne veulent voir que la relative croissance à court terme du trafic de leur site web”, soutient-il. Le cri du tyrannosaure ? À terme, “cet état de fait risque que de provoquer une rupture radicale entre ces médias et la population”.

Or voilà que cette utilisation croissante du Triple W s’accompagne de facteurs de renforcement qui ne font qu’ajouter au mouvement d’accélération. Une commodité en appelle une autre; plus on en utilise, plus on en utilise ! Un bel exemple est le phénomène communautaire, avec, en fond de scène, une effervescence de gens de plus en plus présents sur le Net pour chercher leur information, confiants de la trouver.

Peut-on parler d’une tendance lourde ? “ Lourde, documentée et inéluctable ! Nous sommes au coeur de la révolution médiatique, celle qui se prépare depuis des années. Les mois à venir vont être riches en rebondissements, réorganisations, remises en question. Cela, quoi qu’en disent, quoi qu’en fassent les grands médias qui, présentement, s’accrochent, résistent et cherchent des voies de sauvegarde pour leur assiette publicitaire. Le mouvement s’accélère et le conservatisme peut être dangereux.”

Tout un programme en perspective!

Comments

  1. Bonjour Alex, Voici le lien pour l’article que je t’ai envoyé en PDF:
    http://blogues.cyberpresse.ca/technaute/dumais/?p=1002622

    Bonne journée!

    Posted by Carl Brabant on 04/25 at 10:47 AM
  2. i like dinosaurs :D

    Posted by Special K on 06/03 at 05:54 AM
  3. I love traditional media!

    Posted by Abaddon on 06/05 at 08:48 PM
  4. Alexandre,
    The fat lady isn’t singing yet, but if I was investing in stock, you’d have a hard time convincing me to put it into a traditional newspaper company.
    I think the internet is the future of marketing, not the whole future, but a big part of it. We sell trade show displays, and we only use online advertising. I can’t see any reason to advertise in local newspapers. We considered advertising our trade show displays in magazines, but the cost-benefit analysis just doesn’t add up. Several years ago, many of the airlines’ in-flight magazines had ads for trade show displays, but I don’t even see those any more.
    Shhhhh… does anyone hear someone singing? ~ Steve, the trade show display guru

    Posted by trade show displays on 06/23 at 01:19 PM
  5. Internet perfections david powell is currently under investigation for fraud. I have reason to believe that the search marketing group is another of his scam sites.

    Posted by Online Tax Refunds on 03/01 at 02:49 AM