Article: Microsoft reveals Office 2010 timing, technical preview

I saw this come over the Alert and thought it was interesting.  Here is the full article by Elizabeth Montalbano.

By Elizabeth Montalbano
Created 2009-07-13 12:30 PM
As expected, Microsoft revealed on Monday a test version of the next round of its Office suite of products, which will be available in the first half of 2010.

At its Worldwide Partner Conference in New Orleans, Microsoft released a preview of Office 2010 and Visio 2010 to all attendees as part of a Technical Preview program. Microsoft SharePoint Server 2010 and Project 2010 are also in technical preview, but to a more limited number of participants, the company said. Another Office 2010 product, Exchange Server, has been in beta since April.

Office remains the de facto standard for office productivity among both businesses and consumers. However, companies like Google and others are trying to challenge Microsoft with free Web-based versions of applications similar to Word, PowerPoint and Excel [5], which make up the core of Office.

What Microsoft didn’t release at the show, and what many expected, was a test preview of Microsoft’s answer to these challenges: Office Web apps, a free, Web-based version of Word, PowerPoint, Excel, and OneNote.

However, Microsoft did demonstrate the online suite at the conference during a keynote by Microsoft Business Division President Stephen Elop, who said a technical preview would be available in August, followed sometime after by a public beta.

Microsoft first unveiled Office Web apps at its Professional Developers Conference late last year. Many had expected Microsoft to reveal its plan for the Web-based apps sooner. However, next to its Windows OS, Office remains a primary driver of Microsoft’s revenue, so the company has a vested interest in keeping Office on the desktop to cater to its install base and keep its dominant position in the market.

Customers will be able to get Office Web apps in a number of ways. It will be free for anyone who wants to use the basic version, and business customers can get a paid version that they can either run on-premise on their own SharePoint Server back-end or as a hosted service from Microsoft.

Microsoft is making the apps available in a variety of ways so hundreds of millions of users will have access to them immediately upon release, Elop said.

7 tips for powerful e-mail marketing

In looking through the Microsoft Small Business site, I came across a really great article on Email Marketing, and I thought I would share it with you. It is by Jeff Wuorio.

E-mail is a groundbreaking invention—except for when it comes to marketing, which can bury a small business rather than boost it.

There can be paltry rates of return with e-mail marketing. Of course, there are annoyed would-be customers who, at lightning speed, delete the e–mails at first glance. Then there’s the potential legal problems of spam.

Still, e-mail marketing can be powerful for your business if you craft an effective campaign. Here are seven ideas to help you succeed:

1. Never buy or rent an e-mail list.

This is a lesson that many businesses learn the hard way. Even though the price may be modest—tens of thousands of names for only a few bucks!—the demographics of these lists may not work for your business. And there’s the risk of being accused of spamming. (For the unaware: sending unsolicited bulk e-mails may carry legal penalties.)

“If you sell golf clubs and you buy or rent a list, how do you really know the people on that list are interested in golf clubs?” asks Jim Sterne, president of Target Marketing in Santa Barbara, Ca. “You never know what you’re really getting. Never, ever, buy or rent a list.”

2. Solicit—but with a focus.

Instead of dropping good money on buying a list that takes you nowhere, there are far better ways to build an e-mail marketing list. If you have a Web site, ask visitors to opt in. If yours is also a face-to-face operation, ask customers whether they’d like to receive e-mail from you when they’re paying at the cash register. (The bookstore where I shop asks that every single time.) But don’t make it a simple request—instead, hone your solicitation by making it clear what’s in it for the customer, be it a bonus for signing up, discounts in the email itself or some other attractive feature.

“When they’re signing up, they want to know what they’re getting,” says Damian Bazadona, president of Situation Marketing in New York. “They’ll want something of substance, something that’s going to be of use to them, so let them know upfront.”

3. Follow through with an offer.

Make sure your e-mail marketing campaign is substantive, exciting. Make your message informative and useful to the person reading it. Offer tips on how to use products more effectively, efficient ways to obtain customer support and other helpful tidbits. “Give people something that’s of use to them, not all this stuff about how fantastic your business is,” says Bazadona. Use the e-mail’s subject line to announce what the offer is. (For example, retailer L.L. Bean waged an e-mail marketing campaign, “Order Now, Earn Double Coupon Dollars.” It made the customer want to learn more about the offer.)

4. Be consistent.

One way to look at e-mail marketing is to view it as an ongoing dialogue between you and the buying public, not a hit and run.

With that in mind, be consistent. Schedule your e-mails weekly or monthly. Just how often depends on what you do—for instance, a product line that’s constantly changing may warrant more frequent contact than service that stays fairly constant—but having customers anticipate your latest communiqué can boost results. “Consistency should also extend to when people can expect it,” says Bazadona. “Treat it like an editorial calendar.”

5. Watch for spam triggers.

These days, an e-mail address without filters of some sort is akin to leaving your keys in a locked car—annoyance is inevitable and disaster possible. While people should protect themselves from unwanted e-mails, those kinds of shields can make your e-mail campaign all the more challenging. Fight back by knowing what sorts of words and terms are likely to kick in spam filters. There are Web sites (such as www.spamAssassin.com) that let you analyze your e-mail campaigns and identify words that may set off filter alarms—and, as a result, keep you from reaching customers and prospects. “There are a number of words your should probably avoid, like ‘free’ and ‘special offer’. It’s important to know what they are,” says Sterne.

6. Manage it effectively.

Still another challenge to e-mail marketing is the mechanics—obtaining and using customer contact information in the most efficient manner possible. Here, software such as Microsoft Outlook with Business Contact Manager can help solve this headache by providing an easy- to- use platform that helps you know which customers to target. Also, check out Microsoft List Builder to create, deliver and track e-mail marketing campaigns.

7. Make it easy to join and share.

Two final tips that can help your e-mail marketing results improve:

• Easy sign up. If you’re signing people up by hand, make the process quick and simple. If you have a Web site, a one-click opt in is better than having to type in an e-mail address.

• Urge readers to share. If you have great content, there’s no reason not to pass along your e-mail. Urge readers to share with friends and family. As Bazadona notes: “E-mail is by nature viral, so encourage people to pass it along.”

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Jeff Wuorio is a veteran freelance writer and author based in southern Maine. He writes about small-business management, marketing and technology issues.

Lucky YOU!

mentoring session

As you probably already know, I have a monthly mentoring session.  I offer others the chance to get monthly sessions with me on Yahoo IM.  I only require that the person send me the information at least 24 hours in advance so that I can have handouts created that they can take and use as reference sheets.

For a LIMITED time I am offering someone a FREE monthly session when you sign up for my newsletter.  I will draw one person’s name and they will receive unlimited mentoring for a month on IM.

To register——> CLICK HERE

Good luck and get your questions, concerns and problems ready!

Introducing your… Virtual Microsoft Mentor

Hi, my name is Rebecca and I am the Virtual Microsoft Mentor.  I have created this site to help you with tips, hints and articles about Microsoft.  I will also have reviews of new Microsoft products, etc.  If you have questions or comments, please leave them for me.

To see a little of my skills–click here