2013-05-19

BlueGlass Interactive, the Huckleberry of Online Marketing



In news from Tampa, Florida, the world of Internet marketing may have just changed. A business mashup, BlueGlass Interactive, headed by seven of the world’s leading online marketing experts, was announced yesterday. The news is significant for a number of reasons, but primarily because of the fragmented nature of marketing approaches and services out there. The formation of BlueGlass could alter the way companies engage the social web, let me explain why.

Online Marketing Metaphors and Six Shooters

If we think of business on the Internet as the wild west, and marketing as Tombstone, then it is feasible to say the Earps just rode into town. Excuse the metaphor, but given all the players, this is not a bad visual to sustain. This new BlugGlass company is comprised of maybe the best “gunslingers” in the online marketing and strategy consultants in the world. Basically, players who never got gunned down by their individual competitors, with skill sets and connections across the spectrum of the space. Without getting into more metaphoric and nebulous characterizations, let’s take a look at the partners.

At the head of BlueGlass sits Chris Winfield, founder and visionary behind 10e20, one of the most successful search engine and social media firms in the business. If Winfield is Wyatt Earp, then Dave Snyder is the veritable Virgil for organic search strategy, a deadly online linking strategy expert. Walking down the boardwalk of managing partners, the Morgan Earp of this team is Brent Csutoras, one of the most respected viral marketing names out there – the metaphoric “scattergun toter” of the bunch. Just like the Earps needed Doc Holiday’s skills, so too BlueGlass has their Loren Baker – another of search’s pioneers who will head their PR and media aspects. And “oh the connections.”

Moving on, BlueGlass brings a supportive cast of “Young Guns” to the shootout. Jordan Kasteler for gripping marketing content, Danielle Winfield an operations and design guru, Jake Matthews for business development across the spectrum, and last but not least Tony Wang, CTO and “sure shot” for all things software and technical. A formidable team, to say the least if you know anything about the Web past the “2.0″ frenzy.

BlueGlass Interactive

Like the line says - real, clear results - the first sign of knowing

BlueGlass Interactive’s coverage extends far afield from our European and international niche here in Germany, but no one has really grasped the significance so far. The New York Times posted a blurb comparing this collective to the “rollups” of the Dot Com era, which shows why companies like BlueGlass are imminently necessary these days. The NYT wouldn’t understand social media or SEM if it blasted the editors in the face. Sorry, but it’s true. For an accurate (if somewhat overstated) analysis of this move, Neal Rodriguez of the Huff Post nails this new conglomerate down sufficiently. Save one key are of course, “in the trenches” experience. Let me clarify.

When the Competition is Weak

We needn’t talk about the ongoing corporate struggle to come to grips with online engagement. Suffice it to say the vast majority of large corporations know peanuts about the online game still – let along the thousands of smaller entities. The reason BlueGlass Interactive offers up an edge is the people and experiences behind them. Let’s hammer down on some players with a foot in this space. Taking Inc.’s top marketing and advertising list as a gauge, it does not take long to find Tombstone’s “Cowboys” lacking in key areas. Starting with Glispa, the top dog, just ambling past a flash site that won’t load cuts them out of the herd as one I would not use.

Running down the list, RedVentures has been considered one of the best these past few years. No doubt they have a fantastic team too, but their claim to Internet marketing fame is small time comparatively, they are simply not nearly as engaged. A Twitter following of 800, for a super rich company supposedly “linked” is fairly mundane. Loren Baker alone has over 5,000 without trying. Sure this is trivial, but remember we are in the same business – it’s indicative – a sign. We won’t even go into how AdBright needn’t be in the space,  they just cover the poverty level advertising niche for me.

Likewise, Trace Communications doesn’t play the game, nor does Pepperjam for similar reason – except they try to master everything, which is impossible. Bouncing down the list of the world’s top online marketing firms, only MediaWhiz enters the fray with similar strategies to those of BlueGass Interactive – but a dead Twitter profile and a hand full of Facebook pals is a red flag in branding – a virtual empty revolver if the O.K. Corral is imminent.

Branding Issues – O.K. Corral Indicators

Don’t take this “quick draw” analysis of top marketing firms wrong, these are extraordinary companies. However, to illustrate the importance of this new “conglomerate, ” as some term it, BlueGlass has more going for truly engaging social and search marketing than any firm out there. How do we know? How do I know? We play the game at the grass roots level too. It is not often one has the opportunity to objectively access in such a way, looking at a virtual competitor.

At the end of the day, such speculations can of course be rendered invalid. However, the tale of the tape here is a little down the road. It ends where your company, in competition with a rival, watches rather helplessly a social media or SEM campaign go successful because the “gunfighters” of your opponent were actually on the street – expertly gunning down your own efforts. Another metaphor, sorry, but it so applies to this latest news. Call it a tip from someone with horse poop and gunpowder all over them, who walks the streets of Tombstone. My prediction for BlueGlass Interactive can be gleaned from the video below.

Ronn Torossian on Brand Angelina Jolie

With Angelina Jolie being lauded as a hero worldwide for her valiant effort to have a preventative double mastectomy, there’s also the BRAND and PR story of Angelina Jolie. Even previous to this, Jolie’s brand has shined – Best-selling PR Book “For Immediate Release: Shape Minds, Build Brands, and Deliver Results with Game-Changing Public Relations” by CEO of 5WPR Ronn Torossian had a section on Jolie.

Angelina Jolie courtesy Gage Skidmore

Small Company Perspective on the FleishmanHillard / Edelman Debate and the Future Direction of Public Relations

Marketing, editors and public relations professionals all have the same goal, but how they develop the messaging is completely different.

public relations

Our World in Pictures This Week: May 12, 2013

From Hot Rod icon Dean Jeffries’ passing, to UK Prime Minister David Cameron’s visit with Russia’s Vladimir Putin, this week had its share of ups and downs. In keeping with our weekly series of photo reviews, here’s the week of May 12th in review.

Dean Jeffries - Courtesy George Barris and Kustomrama

People Switch to Traditional Gifts for Mother’s Day, Moms Prefer Daily Help

As Mother’s Day is getting closer, the rush to purchase a gift already started. But many find that they already bought their moms a smartphone, a tablet and other fancy gadgets their mothers may or may not really find useful. So what’s next?

TheBusinessofGiftGivingOnline-1_zps2d29c62e

Russia the Ally, All Old Soldiers Salute You Today

Today is just another day for most people in the world. But 68 years ago events spiraled ever chaotically and frenzied, into a future our forefather’s could not imagine. As an American, and as a citizen of the world, Russia’s celebration of victory in World War Two today should, I am sure, be all of ours – the people of the world. The so-called Great Patriotic War the Soviet Union and Russia won, was a victory for all of us.

Vladimir Putin reviews the troops.
Phil Butler About Phil Butler

Phil Butler is editor-in-chief of Everything PR and senior partner at Pamil Visions PR. He’s a widely cited authority on beta startups, search engines and public relations issues, and he has covered tech news since 2004. Phil wrote in the past for ReadWriteWeb, Mashable, Profy, SitePoint, Search Engine Journal, AltSearchEngines. Follow Phil on Twitter or send him an email at phil [at] pamil-visions [dot] com.

Comments

  1. Wow it sounds like Chris and his team have some excitement on the horizon, thanks for letting us know!

  2. great writeup! flexing my young guns now! ;)

  3. Thank you very much for not only the coverage of our launch but also the in depth analysis of the where the Internet marketing industry is at this point in time. Excellent analysis!

    • Hi Chris,

      It was my pleasure actually. Being in the space, knowing most of the players, and especially wondering when someone would be smart enough to pull it off – an easy assessment to make. I believe the future for you guys is pretty bright. Of course I minimized a few big players, but I am pretty sure they can take the heat.

      The world expects a lot, as you well know. Stagnancy and chicken little investment in innovation will pave the way for forward thinkers every time. Congrats on a super mashup of talent. Now, if you guys can just get rid of Twitter marketing madness – we will all be thrilled :)

      Always,
      Phil