THE GROWING IMPORTANCE OF E-MEDIA 485
Introduction
Mass marketing communications techniques have dominated communications strategies
for decades. Gradually, direct marketing principles have been adopted that allow access to
each member of the target group on an individual basis. Th e current stage in this evolution
is the trend towards real interactivity, i.e. not only is the marketer capable of communicat-
ing with his or her target group on a one-to-one basis, but also individual members of the
target group are capable of responding to, and interacting with, the sender of the message.
Moreover, they oft en start the conversation themselves. Although some direct marketing
communication techniques also allow a certain degree of interactivity, the increasing
penetration of the Internet and mobile phones and the popularity of new interactive media
such as interactive TV and social media are changing the nature of marketing commu-
nications interactivity. Today people’s media attention is fragmenting. At the end of 2011,
mobile phone penetration in Europe exceeded 100% with an average of 120%. Country
fi gures of 2010 reveal that Finland (156%), Italy (150%), Lithuania (147%), Austria (146%),
Croatia (145%) and the UK (131%) have the highest penetration, while the following
European countries are performing at less than the EU average: Ukraine (119%), Norway
(116%), Sweden (116%), the Netherlands (115%), Romania (115%), Belgium (113%), Spain
(112%), Malta (109%), Greece, Slovak Republic and Iceland (108%), Ireland (105%),
Latvia (102%) and France (101%). Th e rest of the European countries have a penetration
less than 100%.^1 So, marketers have to follow them into the new media they are consuming.
Th e Internet is fundamentally diff erent from traditional, and even direct, marketing com-
munications tools: consumers can go all the way from awareness to interest to desire to
action, all within the same medium and within the same session.^1 Its unique characteristics
and current evolutions are further explored in the fi rst section of this chapter. Th e next
sections focus on the diff erent interactive media that a marketer can use for diff erent com-
munications objectives, with specifi c sections dedicated to interactive TV, mobile marketing
and the recent evolutions in social media. Related topics such as relationship marketing
and loyalty marketing using the Internet are also considered. Specifi c ways to measure the
eff ectiveness of Internet presence are discussed in the last section. Although the Internet has
the capability to support all aspects of company processes (including logistics, e-commerce,
e-procurement, etc.), this chapter will specifi cally focus on the use of new media for market-
ing communications purposes.
The growing importance of e-media
Th e Internet refers to the computer network infrastructure that enables the exchange of
digital data on a global scale. Worldwide, 888 million hosts^2 are interconnected through
cable and telephone networks. Th rough historical developments (the Internet was fi rst a
military tool developed to make communication possible in case of nuclear war and was
later adapted by academics to share and exchange information) and intentional eff orts,
nowadays the Internet is a unique, independent medium that is not owned or operated
by a commercial or government body. Although the Internet is also the network serving
e-mail applications, news servers (news groups), ft p (fi le transfer), gopher (pure text-based
information exchange), etc., it is oft en used as a synonym for the World Wide Web (WWW) ,
the interactive and graphical communications medium invented by Tim Berners-Lee, a
physicist at the European Centre for Nuclear Research (Cern).^3 Th e Web is characterised by
the use of hypertext mark-up language (HTML) that allows documents consisting of text,
icons, sounds or images to be shared by diff erent users, regardless of the computer operating
system they use. Th e hyperlinks (text- or image-based) make it possible to navigate quickly
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