5 Random Highlights Of Mutual Fund, ETF Websites

Can we agree that mutual fund and ETF Web sites have more similarities than differences? For that, give the credit or blame to American Funds, the mutual fund company whose products are distributed by the highest percentage of financial advisors. If an advisor has already mastered American Funds’ site, so the reasoning goes, who are we to buck the tide and risk the advisor shunning our site because it dares to be different?

It’s a user-friendly call that we suspect has nonetheless had the effect of suppressing creativity or even brand differentiation. That's why when a Web site offers something special, the discovery is an unexpected pleasure. Here’s a random list of what we’ve tripped across in my recent travels on asset management sites. Well done!

A question to the managers of these sites: Are you leveraging them as the link bait you should in order to draw visitors to your site, first to that page and maybe to explore the rest of your value proposition?

1. Fidelity Investments’ Historical Yield Curve
Of all the gorgeous, exciting visualizations of data to be found on the Web today, this isn’t one of them. But it’s a true gem, very, very cool. A site visitor could spend minutes on this page learning. Marketing managers, when it’s time to hire again and you have a green marketing communications staffer, park them in front this.

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At Last: The Largest Mutual Fund Company Is Blogging

Congratulations to Vanguard Investments which launched a real-live blog in mid-March, continuing a tradition of online leadership that dates way back to its early work with America Online.

Never mind that more than 100 million blogs have preceded Vanguard, and more than 300,000 blogs are about investing alone, according to Technorati. Check out this widget that tracks the use of investing terms on all blogs—with its blog, Vanguard joins lots of others talking about the business it is so dominant in.

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A Belated Valentine For 10 Sites You Could Learn To Love

Work and some recreation kept me from posting this in time for St. Valentine's Day. Hate when life keeps me from the computer. Without further delay, the sites I love and think you will, too:

1. Quantcast.com
Quantcast is a free service established for marketers, agencies and publishers to serve as a basis for media planning. If you're buying online ads, you may already be familiar with its data about media sites.

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Financial Advisors Are Still Out There Swinging—What Are You Pitching?

Even though I didn’t plan it that way, can we think of this as Part 2 to my last post Fresh Ways to Explain the Financial Crisis? In that post I highlighted some innovative props for explaining what the heck has been going on these last several months. But there are other ways to look at how the crisis is being communicated about, and that’s to “listen in” on what financial advisors are saying to their clients.

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