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May 28, 2009

Samuelson’s Diamonds in The Baltimore Daily Record

Filed under: Local News, Press — Tags: , , , , , , — Samuelson's Diamonds @ 10:08 am

May 28, 2009 – Samuelson’s Diamonds, the premier downtown diamond destination in Baltimore, Maryland was featured yesterday in The Baltimore Daily Record (May 27 2009:)

After 87 years and three generations of selling engagement rings, the Samuelsons are trying real estate development on for size.

Baltimore Street Redevelopment

Baltimore Street Redevelopment

The family-run business, anchored by a retail diamond store at the corner of West Baltimore and North Paca streets, is teaming up with Baltimore County developer David S. Brown Enterprises and Washington-based firm A&R Development to return a key downtown Baltimore block between the University of Maryland and the central business district to its former glory as a “thriving downtown area.”

“People used to get on a bus and come downtown and went shopping at Stewarts’s or Hutzler’s,” said Steven Samuelson, who at 67 still runs the shop with his son Ron, who is 36. “The neighborhood had become something we knew we had to do something about, or else somebody else would.”

Samuelson’s Diamonds maintains its commitment to rebuilding and reinvigorating city life and business on the West Side of Baltimore.

The article, which originally appeared in The Baltimore (Maryland) Daily Record, is also available through BNET: ‘Samuelsons, Brown Enterprises teaming on Baltimore’s West Side | Daily Record, The (Baltimore) | Find Articles at BNET:

May 21, 2009

Samuelson’s Tapped for Social Media Expertise in Baltimore Business Journal

Filed under: Local News, Press — Tags: , , , , — Samuelson's Diamonds @ 1:59 pm

May 21, 2009 – Samuelson’s Diamonds, the downtown diamond destination in Baltimore was tapped today by the Baltimore Business Journal for expertise in internet social media. Rachel Bernstein writes:

Ron Samuelson, CEO of Samuelson’s Diamonds in Baltimore, uses Twitter – a communication service emblazoned with a  bird logo – to spur business and attributes much of his success of the year-old account to the service.

Samuelson also has used Facebook and personal blogging to reach customers who would otherwise see him as just a guy sitting behind a counter, pandering diamonds.

Samuelson’s shop of 10 employees was starting in 1922, far from the days of tweets and Facebook fan pages.

“The crowd I do business with now are very tech-savvy, so we have a full service Web site too, where we drive all our traffic,” Samuelson said.

Samuelson’s Diamonds maintains its commitment to cutting edge communications technology for business contacts and customers.

An image of the article is available here: Tweet your way to free marketing, advertising.

May 8, 2009

Samuelson’s Diamonds ‘Diamonds’ Fan Page on Facebook, Finalist in National Jeweler’s ‘Best of’ Contest for Online Advertising

Filed under: News, Press — Tags: , , , , , , — Samuelson's Diamonds @ 10:52 am

Samuelsons Diamonds, the downtown diamond destination in Baltimore, was runner-up in the National Jeweler’s “Best Of” contest for online advertising (mentioned yesterday, May 7 2009:)

Samuelson’s Diamonds, a Baltimore, Md.-based retail jeweler, was chosen as a finalist in the contest for its use of a viral marketing campaign.

The brand created a Facebook fan page simply called “Diamonds,” so that anyone searching for that term could become a fan, thus expanding the retailer’s exposure to a global audience.

The page currently counts more than 260,000 fans worldwide, with diamond enthusiasts in Asia, Europe, Africa, Australia and everywhere in between connecting with the retailer.

Samuelson’s adds frequent posts, updating its friends on giveaways and photos of new diamond designs that link fans over to Samuelson’s own Web site, SamuelsonsDiamonds.com.

Samuelson’s Diamonds continues its role as innovator in the field of online advertising.

The original article is available here: ‘Delamina’s online ad tops ‘Best Of’ list | National Jeweler

May 7, 2009

Will Technology Make You a Better Person?

Filed under: Opinion, Technology — Tags: , , , , , , , — Garth @ 11:01 am

koyaanisqatsi patchwork

These days, the self-help book is ubiquitous. Everyone’s got a solution for everyone else – or at least a significant enough portion of everyone else to convince a publisher to lay out money for a printing. But our attraction to self-help goes deeper: we are made to believe by various popularizers that various technologies and products will solve our problems. (Bowflex, anyone?) Since when was technology ever something other than a technique – a means – to attain a particular end?

Well, it’s not right to say we’re made to believe it; there’s no argument. We’re presented what we may assume are the results.

And so in the world of image it might seem that all it takes is an allergy pill to move us into that eternal spring day (how this works in January is not discussed.)

Not to be overly facetious (too late by three paragraphs) but,  Everything that competes must also compete in how it sells itself. From this we remember – ’sex sells’. This is not ‘the whole bill of goods‘ as they used to say, though. Sex sells is simply a part of selling you the better you; the you that you want to see or be. (What do you think the appeal of Poetry.com was?)

So here’s the doozy: Do you think that we are being sold the internet (for recall that even though the internet is essentially free, a computer and an internet connection are NOT.) on the premise it will make us better people?

Watch a Comcast ad; a Verizon ad, see Dell and Mac. Do you suppose that people who have computers and the internet are better overall – because they are connected to information they would not otherwise have, can communicate faster, can buy things that might have been out of their reach, and so forth?

Doesn’t the fact that we’re racing to get computers cheap enough so that most people in the ‘3rd World’ can have one say what we refuse to say explicitly, the elephant in the room? Have you ever recommended to someone, based on their circumstances, that they NOT use the internet, that they AVOID purchasing a computer? For reasons other than budget?

If you’re reading this entry, probably not. In fact, if you’re reading this on a Mac, you can probably add style and sophistication to the benefits of that technology you would consider recommending.

Okay, take the Bowflex that I mentioned earlier. Anyone with enough money can buy an exercise machine and let it sit in their basement, unused. That is to say, the lazy man is still lazy. The technology does nothing to change that. What the machine can do is allow him to make a better use of his time exercising. But the machine will not make him that ripped gentleman who is always curling his bicep – and who wears more body oil than a medieval king.

What about the Internet? Does it really make people better? I can get an invitation digitally over Facebook instead of in the mail, and each message is ‘free’, but that is only if I have all of the things necessary. Facebook is faster, but those who don’t want to respond, or can’t make decisions, still fail to say ‘yes or no’ to your invitation. You know it!

The gossipers still gossip; the oddballs still are oddballs. The jerks find a way to keep being jerks; people keep their secrets secret. Sure, books get published online, and news gets spread faster via blogs and people get called out for corruption.

But has corruption in DC ceased because of the internet? Have the budgets been balanced? Have men come together in like mind? The fact that newspapers are dying because they gave their content away for free will be a lesson for future newspapers (and still existing ones.) – the lesson? Don’t.

Has anything really changed?
Come Together
Nope.

Facebook and Twitter will not make you a better person. They might not even make you a better-informed person. Heck, they could just make you a more distracted, less focused person. So for whatever reason you use a new technology, consider it a means to an end.

The question we should ask always is, “What does it do?” and “Do I want to do that?”

With the use of Twitter and Facebook around the world rising, clearly there is a market for “being distracted every 5 seconds by random conversation around the world.” Of course, we call it the ‘Status Update.

Sounds hypocritical, maybe, that the technology guy is writing like a Luddite!

To be fair, I prefer to get my distraction by reading and writing blog posts.

Humor and self-deprecation aside, my point is that the world of the internet is not any different than the world outside of it. The more it is used and the easier it is to use the more it will look like the rest of our society.

So no, technology won’t make you a better person. It won’t make you a worse person either – it will just change the means by which you do what you already do.

And that’s worth thinking about.

 

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