To reach people who have US Dollars:
(i) advertise anywhere, on any medium.
Whatever and wherever the ad was, it would reach only _some_ users and be
unseen by most. It would suffer from the same weakness as an ad on a
market-maker's page.
I'm not exactly sure what you mean there. Someone
Viking Coder wrote:
The main question again is - Why should e-gold bother?
To make money. That's the *point* to being in business.
To *increase* gross revenue. To increase shareholders' value.
They don't need the money, which is usually the primary reason for hosting
advertising.
Huh?
JP, why don't you call Doug and talk to him directly about advertising for
this big Mega Corp you want to sell?
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Do you believe that e-gold should keep it's growth rates slower
than they can be?
No, but there better ways of increasing the growth rate (currently @
~30%/month) than polluting the spend page with advertising.
Untargeted ads is what's needed.
Then create a TV ad, take out full page ads
As I mentioned in another post, why should MegaCorp be alienated when it
cannot directly contact the existing ~95,000 funded account holders? It
has a consumer base of millions that it can push an advertising campaign
of a new exiciting way to buy our product/service without a credit
card
why would merchants push a payment system which delays the sale?
How does e-gold delay the sale?
Viking Coder
Worth Two Cents?
http://www.two-cents-worth.com/?VikingCoder
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On 21 Jun 2001, at 14:15, Viking Coder wrote:
why would merchants push a payment system which delays the sale?
How does e-gold delay the sale?
I guess he meant that the customer must first acquire some e-gold
before he can spend it. A slower process than with a credit card.
As a merchant
why would merchants push a payment system which delays the sale?
How does e-gold delay the sale?
I guess he meant that the customer must first acquire some e-gold
before he can spend it. A slower process than with a credit card.
Exactly. You must first acquire e-gold which is slow. The
PowerClicks wrote:
why would merchants push a payment system which delays the sale?
How does e-gold delay the sale?
I guess he meant that the customer must first acquire some e-gold
before he can spend it. A slower process than with a credit card.
Exactly. You must first acquire
As a merchant myself, I much prefer wiating for sfe e-gold than
taking CC and being charge 3%.
3% uncapped and with the very real possibility that the transaction will
be cancelled at any in the near future.
True, but with egold you are placing all the extra cost and all the risks in
the
On 21 Jun 2001, at 21:12, PowerClicks wrote:
True, but with egold you are placing all the extra cost and all the
risks in the hand of the consumer.
When you underdstand that the greater risk and costs is not with
gold and gold currencies, but with national currencies that are
constantly
On 21 Jun 2001, at 21:09, PowerClicks wrote:
Exactly. You must first acquire e-gold which is slow. The only way to
do this relatively quickly if to fund using a credit card, but then
what's the point?
For e-gold and Goldmoney to reach the masses and replace credit
cards in online payments,
True, but with egold you are placing all the extra cost and all the
risks in the hand of the consumer.
When you underdstand that the greater risk and costs is not with
gold and gold currencies, but with national currencies that are
constantly debased, it becomes very easy to make the good
On 21 Jun 2001, at 14:46, Paul Ewing wrote:
No the risk to the customer is that they have no way to get their
money back from a merchant in the case of a problem.
When dealing with reputable merchant, the risk is almost non-
existant.
Claude
http://www.goldcurrencies.ca
On 21 Jun 2001, at 20:37, Julian Morrison wrote:
Which will annoy the national governments enough that they'll likely
try and legislate GCs into the ground, or at least tie them and
regulate them and require so much snooping on the customers as to
effectively nationalize them by default.
C. Cormier - Ormetal Inc. wrote:
I am betting that we will see a massive move to gold and private
money in the coming decade.
Which will annoy the national governments enough that they'll likely try
and legislate GCs into the ground, or at least tie them and regulate
them and require so much
No the risk to the customer is that they have no way to get their
money back from a merchant in the case of a problem.
When dealing with reputable merchant, the risk is almost non-
existant.
Convince the customers of that. One of the highest fears they have is that
of using a credit
When dealing with reputable merchant, the risk is almost non-
existant.
You also don't have to worry about the merchant doing multiple spends, or
a spend greater than what you authorized, out of your account. You also
don't have to worry about somebody getting your card# and going wild with
So you dump in a wodge of money and use it in small amounts until you
need to refill. And it's useful as a money store and a means to
speculate on gold as well. Hardly rocket science.
So how much do you dump? $100, $1000, $1, more? You are assuming
everyone is bullish on gold. Apart
On 21 Jun 2001, at 22:25, PowerClicks wrote:
So how much do you dump? $100, $1000, $1, more? You are assuming
everyone is bullish on gold.
Long term... being bullish on gold is the only thing that make
sense.
Apart from exchange risk, to use it as a
money store you need the trust
If they want a halfass currency with elastic attached, which they can
jerk back out of the merchant's hands post facto, then the *merchants*
will be quite justified in telling them to take a running jump, once
they see an alternative is available.
DING, DING, DING!!! We have a winner!
The
You're not a happy bunny are you jpm.
I understand your frustration and sympathise with it.
INMHO which I have expressed before, the problem with e-gold becoming more
widely used has nothing to do with major firms or conglomerates using it.
One of the major problems is getting your account
majorbrokerage.com does not give a flying fuck about putting a banner
ad on golddirectory.com (sorry Bob! :) )
It's Craig.
Otherwise, what good is the e-gold webpage, as an advertising venue, if only
a few major businesses can afford to put ads there? So what if those
businesses simply stay
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
(4) i said, Oh, there's no method for reaching egold users
(5) they said what a fucking stupid conversation this is
Suggestion: e-gold should have an e-gold adverts list with a
check-button to autosubscibe you on the account creation pages.
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Suggestion: e-gold should have an e-gold adverts list with a
check-button to autosubscibe you on the account creation pages.
You will see something like that in about 3 weeks from FreedomHound.com.
You can register to receive email solicitations.
The kicker is that the fees paid to send to
At 09:16 AM -0700 06/20/2001, Vince Callaway wrote:
...
I have finished all the work on the mass payment system, I am just
finishing up the interface that lets you subscribe to various marketing
lists.
Yes, yes, but when do we get CHESS? It's the closest I'll ever come to
harnessing sloth, if
Yes, yes, but when do we get CHESS? It's the closest I'll ever come to
harnessing sloth, if my guess is right! ;^)
JMR
Working on it, and there will be games other than chess available.
Although, it's kinda on the back burner right now. I have several other
e-gold related projects that I'm
majorbrokerage.com does not give a flying fuck about putting a banner
ad on golddirectory.com (sorry Bob! :) )
It's Craig.
Sorry! I'd just been writing Bob, Bob, Bob, Bob, Bob, Bob, Bob, Bob
in promoting Bobgold .. I mean Bananagold ...
Otherwise, what good is the e-gold webpage, as an
3) they said so, how do we reach these users, where do we buy the
email addresses of all users or advertise to users
(4) i said, Oh, there's no method for reaching egold users
(5) they said what a fucking stupid conversation this is
This is an amazing thing. Presumably the same brokerage
what good is the e-gold webpage, as an advertising venue
Unless e-gold started data mining the spending habits of their users and
correlating it to the type of business that the spend was made to, the
only relevance that the advertising would have is that they accept e-gold.
No .. no logic
Don't most of the market-makers sell advertising on their web pages? Isn't
_that_ a way of targeting advertising to e-gold users?
I have seen marginal results from banner ads on my own site. I get quite
a bit of traffic to the site, but the people visiting are generally
focused in getting
Unless e-gold started data mining the spending habits of their users and
correlating it to the type of business that the spend was made to, the
only relevance that the advertising would have is that they accept e-gold.
No .. no logic here?
e-gold would be to offer *only* untargeted
To reach people who have US Dollars:
(i) advertise anywhere, on any medium.
Whatever and wherever the ad was, it would reach only _some_ users and be
unseen by most. It would suffer from the same weakness as an ad on a
market-maker's page.
Tried it extensively, more than anyone. A good
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