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Engine Digital is an Interaction Marketing Agency
located in Vancouver, Canada. This is our blog.

Posts Tagged ‘Microsoft’ /

James Riley named Partner & EVP Client Services at Engine Digital

07/14/2010 @ 11:33 am
By: Stephen Beck

Vancouver, Canada., July 14, 2010 – Engine Digital Executive Creative Director Stephen Beck announced today that James Riley, former Global Director of Marketing for Disney Online and CEO of AdCritic.com, has joined the firm as a Partner and Executive Vice President of Client Services

“James is a formidable strategic marketing talent who will bring innovation, new thinking and solutions to our Canadian and US clients,” comments Beck. “Our agency has maintained a solid reputation as a high growth, strategic creative agency in the digital space, and our partnership with James will help solidify our goal of providing deeper value to our existing clients and increasing our reach into the US market to provide services to larger North American brands.”

Prior to joining Engine Digital, James served as Global Director of Marketing for Disney Online where he managed brand and product marketing teams across several countries for Club Penguin and other online Disney properties. Most recently, James was principal of a strategic marketing firm, servicing a broad list of consumer and business-to-business brands across North America. James has also held roles including Category Director at IBM Global Consulting managing the Unilever account; Director of Digital Strategy for a Connecticut based Omnicom agency; CEO of a Los Angeles based digital media agency working with the Hollywood community; marketing manager at Microsoft; and CEO of AdCritic.com, which he sold to Advertising Age.

Get in touch:
james.riley@enginedigital.com / @MrJamesRiley

Will Average Internet Users Say They Binged.It?

01/15/2010 @ 10:00 pm
By: Stephen Beck

Bing-URL-Shortener

Whenever one of the big tech co’s does something even remotely of interest, and even more often when it’s under the radar, the tech blogs light up with speculation and criticism instantly. Even when it’s as insubstantial as the Microsoft Bing.com team’s recent internal use of their new Binged.It URL shortener.

Microsoft seems far less
concerned with an extra
character in their URL
shortener, or even the
prospect of using a truly
short URL than they are
about building a solid and
recognizable brand around
the Bing product.

The service isn’t yet public, and for all we know, it may never be. But with URL shortening becoming commonplace and creating some interesting business opportunities – tracking audience interest for example – it would be surprising if the Google’s, YouTube’s, and Microsoft’s weren’t exploring the space with some level of interest.

Microsoft’s Binged.It URL shortener caught some heat recently on TechCrunch.com, with the blog and most of the commenters jumping all over the fact that Bing’s short URL (Binged.It – 8 characters) is longer than the service’s main URL (Bing.com – 7 characters). Fair point, considering a URL shortener should, er, shorten a URL, right?!

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About the authors /

Stephen Beck
Stephen Beck
Creative Director / Partner

www.mrstephenbeck.com
James Riley
James Riley
VP, Client Services / Partner

James Richardson
James Richardson
Director of Operations

David Look
David Look
Social Media Engineer / Copywriter

Richard Gallagher
Richard Gallagher
Creative Director / Partner

Yaz Jallad
Yaz Jallad
Flash Developer

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