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The personal professional blog of Pamela Parker -- musings on marketing, advertising, media and technology.

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Pamela Parker

The Not-So-Scary IRS

March 8, 2006 by Pamela Parker

Talk about changing brand perception. I had to steel myself yesterday before placing an important call… to the IRS. We’d gotten a notice from the post office that a certified letter from the much-feared agency had arrived for us, but by the time we went to pick it up, it had been sent back. Much as I longed to ignore it, I had to face up to the situation. So I called.

Surprisingly, I got to speak to a real person in not too long, after a reasonable amount of number-pressing. The matter related to our family business. We’d been late filing paperwork and owed a small penalty. So the woman I spoke with told me how to pay, but added that since we’d never had the problem in the past, we could simply write a note asking to have the penalty removed. “Really?” I asked, incredulous.

While she had me on the phone, I wrote up the note. She gave me her fax number; I faxed it over. She went to check her machine, and removed the penalty then and there. There was actually a moment when I doubted I’d called the right agency. Was this really the IRS?

Amazing how a bit of good customer service (and, I guess, a bribe in the form of penalty removal) has dramatically changed my perception of the IRS. Now if only the INS, or whatever it’s called now (USCIS) could do the same.

Filed Under: Marketing

By the Way…

March 7, 2006 by Pamela Parker

I bought the video iPod and have been regularly torturing people making them watch videos of my 8-month-old son. One question I’ve gotten regularly is how I got these videos to the device. And here’s the answer, for those of you who’d like to bring the same torturous experience to your friends and loved ones.


  1. Capture video on our digital still camera. We use a Canon A95 Powershot. This results in an .avi file.
  2. Use AVS Video Converter ($29.95) to convert the .avi file to iPod format. This has been a great tool in working with video, because it translates nearly every input to nearly any output you’d like. In the latest version, there are special outputs for iPod and PSP. You can also burn onto DVD — even in PAL format, which has been handy for sending videos of the kid to our family in Scotland.
  3. Import the converted files into iTunes and sync.

Now all I need to do is figure out a way to translate my TiVo-To-Go files from my computer to the video iPod. There’s some “official” way to do it via some $60 software, but there’s got to be an easier (read: cheaper) method. Helpful hints much appreciated.

Filed Under: Mobile

SES and The 360

March 1, 2006 by Pamela Parker

I’m in NYC at the Search Engine Strategies show seeing my ClickZ peeps and keeping my finger on the pulse of the ever-changing search marketing beast. It’s my first time away from the baby since he was born, which has been a little traumatic. But it’s also been great to be able to focus 100% on conference-related stuff, which I wouldn’t get to do at home. It’s been nice, too, to be back in New York, even if I’ve only stepped out of the hotel a couple of times. This trip, it feels like coming home again, in some ways, though with the kid in tow (like in December) it’s a completely different experience.

Meanwhile, got word that my ex-co-worker Susan Kuchinskas, a great writer and very smart person, has launched her latest project, The 360 Tech Blog. In only a handful of entries she’s covered an event in San Francisco and also posted on the AAAAs conference in Orlando. She’s off to an auspicious start. (Yes, she still needs to update the “about” page. Gotta give her a hard time about that.)

Filed Under: Current Affairs

The Age of Accountability Beginning to Fade?

February 22, 2006 by Pamela Parker

I love the way Gary Stein puts the Denuo announcement into historical context.

I imagine that the idea-marketplace is beginning to re-emerge. There was a lot of work in idea-creation in the late 90s, but that crashed quickly, giving way to the Accountability Era (which we’re currently in).

Filed Under: Advertising

Gervais Podcast

February 22, 2006 by Pamela Parker

I’m completely behind Fred’s view on the Ricky Gervais podcast. I love love love the podcast. I haven’t been a huge adopter of podcasts, having lost my iPod on a trip last year, but we often listen to Ricky Gervais (and pals) on the computer or on our stereo via TiVo’s functionality. “Monkey News” has become a catchphrase around our household. (Could it be the first podcast-spawned media meme?) But still, I’m not willing to pay. Put advertising on it and make it free, will you? Or at least make that an option. They’ve already been doing house ads for Gervais-related content properties, and that doesn’t detract from the experience at all.

P.S. Should I get a video iPod? (It’s like I need the blogosphere’s blessing before I take the plunge.) Or maybe just a Nano or Shuffle? Too many iPod choices.

UPDATE: I’ve noticed this blog entry is one of my more popular content items, probably because people are searching for the actual Gervais Podcast. And so, by popular demand, here is a link to where you can access both seasons. The page where you used to be able to access season 1, for free, is apparently no longer making it available. That’s lame. Not only do you have to pay for season 2, but they’re also making you pay for season 1, previously available for free. Yuck.

Filed Under: Advertising, Media

Blah Blah Blogs….

February 17, 2006 by Pamela Parker

My journalism school buddy Trevor Butterworth weighs in on the blogging phenomenon (let’s just say it isn’t a puff piece) in the Financial Times. And the paper has set up a blog of sorts to round up comments. Leave it to a Brit to spend several paragraphs musing on whether George Orwell and Karl Marx would have been bloggers, had the form existed when they were alive. While the anecdotes won’t be new to anyone familiar with the “is blogging a revolution?” and “is blogging journalism?” arguments, Trevor is a great writer and it’s worth a read.

Filed Under: Blogging

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