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            <title>Can Lurkers be useful?</title>
            <link>http://intuvision.yolasite.com/blog/can-lurkers-be-useful-</link>
            <description>&lt;div class=&quot;snap_preview&quot;&gt;&lt;p&gt;These
people make up 90% of the online population (sometimes even 99.9%
depending on the site); either way they are a huge majority – the mass
of the unknown. Companies obviously like to make money from their
websites – simple – but have found it hard to do so with these
“listeners” as they don’t participate and therefore you don’t know what
they like or what they don’t, how they think etc etc… &lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;These people can only be tracked via a click, that’s their only
trail. So can you make money by simply knowing that a person was there?
Well in the internet world you can – ok not directly, but you can use
the information gathered from these people. &lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Take Amazon as an example: even if you just surf around Amazon,
without logging in you leave a trail – cookies – and Amazon can find
out what you liked. Yes they don’t know what age and gender you are for
sure, but if you look for women’s’ clothes you are far more likely to
be a woman or if you look for technology you are more likely to be a
man. Therefore they can optimise their site according to people who
don’t even participate.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Nasa has taken this one step further. Using the great unknown mass of people, they came up with the idea of &lt;span&gt;click-workers&lt;/span&gt;. The &lt;a class=&quot;&quot; href=&quot;http://beamartian.jpl.nasa.gov/&quot;&gt;idea&lt;/a&gt;
behind it was simple – Nasa had recordings of the Mars surface and
needed to find and classify meteorite craters. It would have taken a
scientist many months of hard work to look at all the images and
identify the craters and categorise them. So one clever scientist came
up with an idea: to upload these images to the internet and then for
the public to do the work for them. The theory was that it would take
the public less time to complete the task, than one scientist. The
unpaid workers were named &lt;strong&gt;click-workers&lt;/strong&gt; and in the end they managed to find 271,211 craters and categorise 76,003 of them. Genius idea!&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;So there are ways to make money from lurkers/listeners, be it the
Amazon way, or the more sophisticated Nasa way, the problem today is,
that clicks alone are not enough anymore. Amazon can use the clicks as
guidance, but today’s clients want their customers to be engaged and
what to know more about specific groups. Clients want ever more
information to tailor the advertising campaigns, but where is the
limit? How much information is enough? Is the gathered information
actually useful, is it being used at all? &lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Lurkers will always exist and I believe that they will always be the
majority. I think clients have to understand that, but also agencies
need to find a way to tell their clients that although most of the
people on their websites will be lurkers, there is a way to categorise
them/make money/make sense of them!&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Lennard&lt;/p&gt;
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            <pubDate>Sun, 24 Jan 2010 18:23:56 +0100</pubDate>
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            <title>First blog</title>
            <link>http://intuvision.yolasite.com/blog/first-blog</link>
            <description>Hello blog world,&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;this is IntuVisions brand new blog! Feel free to leave any comment (keep it clean people!) be it about the advertising world or about our work.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Best Regards,&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;IntuVision&lt;br&gt;</description>
            <pubDate>Fri, 22 Jan 2010 18:03:52 +0100</pubDate>
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