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FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Kathy Grannis or Ellen
Davis (202) 783-7971
grannisk@nrf.com
or
davise@nrf.com
ARTS Announces New Formats to
Simplify Online Advertising
New York , New York,
October 10, 2006 - Standard data
exchange formats designed to simplify online advertising were announced today in
New York City at the annual convention of Shop.org, the online division of the
National Retail Federation. These standard formats will allow advertisers to
send detailed product-level information to search engines more efficiently.
The new standards were
developed by a diverse committee working with the Association for Retail
Technical Standards (ARTS). Committee members included representatives from
search engines including Yahoo, AOL, Microsoft; from online retailers including
Target, Penney’s and REI; and from online marketing agencies including Mercent,
Channel Intelligence, The Rimm-Kaufman Group, and MARS.
“Standard data formats
help retailers and search engines by providing a common language for describing
product data,” said Richard Mader, Executive Director of the Association for
Retail Technical Standards, a division of the National Retail Federation. “This
in turn helps consumers by ensuring product data on the search engines is more
complete, timely, and accurate. ARTS is pleased to be working with a diverse
set of search engines and online advertisers on this important standard.”
“The current situation is
a digital tower-of-Babel, where different online shopping search and shopping
engines take SKU data in different formats. These specs allow advertisers,
engines, and agencies to exchange product data more efficiently,” said Jay
Heavilon of MARS, who chaired the committee.
The data formats are
specified in XML, the data language of the internet. One format allows
retailers to submit detailed product information to the search engines including
product name, price, URL, image, description, color, size, in-stock status, and
shipping fees. Another format allows search engines to send back standard
acknowledgements and/or any appropriate error messages.
The first beta test of the
standard occurred on October 5th, when engineers at marketing firm
Channel Intelligence used the format to submit product information from their
client Circuit City to the AOL Shopping platform.
“Circuit City sells 9,000
great consumer electronics products online,” said David Mathews, President of
Circuit City Direct. “Standard data formats will help us get our product
information out to our search engine partners with more speed, accuracy, and
consistency. Our goal is to help online shoppers get better information when
researching and buying consumer electronics.”
According to Shop.org and
Forrester Research, online sales will top $200 billion this year.
The
Association for Retail Technology Standards (ARTS) is an international
membership organization dedicated to reducing the costs of technology through
standards. Since 1993, ARTS has been delivering application standards
exclusively to the retail industry. ARTS has three standards: The Standard
Relational Data Model, UnifiedPOS and IXRetail. Membership is open to all
members of the international technology community- retailers from all industry
segments, application developers and hardware companies.
www.nrf-arts.org.
Shop.org
is the network for retailers online. It’s where the best retail minds come
together to gain the insight, knowledge, and intelligence to make smarter, more
informed decisions in the evolving world of the Internet and multichannel
retailing. Founded in 1996, Shop.org became a division of the National Retail
Federation in January 2001. The association’s membership includes interactive
executives from store-based retailers, catalog-based retailers, Web-based
retailers, and retail solution providers.
www.shop.org.
The
National Retail Federation is the world's largest retail trade association,
with membership that comprises all retail formats and channels of distribution
including department, specialty, discount, catalog, Internet, independent
stores, chain restaurants, drug stores and grocery stores as well as the
industry's key trading partners of retail goods and services. NRF represents an
industry with more than 1.4 million U.S. retail establishments, more than 23
million employees - about one in five American workers - and 2005 sales of $4.4
trillion. As the industry umbrella group, NRF also represents more than 100
state, national and international retail associations.
www.nrf.com.
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