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We are an Internet publishing and marketing company for establishing an Internet social network. We’re committed to social expression of Latino issues, news, activities and trades (on-line). We’re bridging the Internet-net community to the world & from the Mexican American perspective to the arts. —Founded in 1998 as an independent media group; minority owned network and media arts development company. The company maintains an Internet news bureau and e-trades for the Latino/Chicano community. And, Network Aztlan dot com and Zero1 for providing Internet resources, net-communications, net/art, and technical support services. We’ve recently have started an e-Classifieds section in selling and promoting fine arts, books, posters, memorabilia, business opportunities, events and personals / a free service for the public, business, and non-profit organizations (in offering strategic joint ventures and shared profits). We maintain a Chicano art gallery, literature library, and archives as part of our social network. The company maintains subscriber / membership forums on various topics as we’re associated with Yahoo!Groups, and presently hold-on to four (4) e-Mail list-servers of which four (4) volunteers have been appointed Group Monitor(s). In 2007, Network Aztlan took Transitio_mx’s “Mención Honorifica” sponsored by the Mexican Government, US, Canada and European embassies, Mexico’s cultural and media arts organizations as its “1st. Transnational Award” competition in the premier “Internet Community”. We are seeking private, individual and organizational support. Please speak with a NAC representative by calling 951-402-8069 or by email: aztlannet@yahoo.com | ||||
Contact: Internet Publisher.
If you would like to gain valuable exposure as a sponsor (advertisment). We offer sponsorship programs with components such as content promotion and give-a-ways. You can sponsor by choosing the following: SIZE: (1) Horz: 175 x 80 pixels, (2) Sq. 175 x 175 pixels, (3) Vert: 175 x 270 pixels. SIZE (1) $600 per year. SIZE (2) $1,000 per year. SIZE (3) $1,500 per year. DISTRBUTIONAL FACTS: Monthly unique visitors: 15,000 Business: Web Marketing & Publishing "On-Line E-Commerce We welcome sponsorhip identity, associate programs and affilates promotioning / advertising from business and non-profit organizations. We hold-on to four Yahoo!Groups' email list servs to our member / subscribers. We hold the largest presence for Latino news messaging boards, providing e-mail, calendar, chats, polls, links and database services, the site draws thousands of devoted, intelligent readers week after week. The NAC website has 178 pages to date and a Top Level Domains (Dec 2003) 28% US Commercial, 22% Network, 8% US Educational, 6% United States, 4% Unresolved Domain, 3% Mexico, 3% Non-profit organizations, 2% US Government, 1% US Military, 1% Argentina, 1% Canada, 1% Dominican Republic, 1% France, 1% Germany, 1% Italy, 1% Panama, 1% Poland, 1% Peru, 1% Spain, 1% United Kingdom, 1% Taiwan, 1% Singapore, 1% Argentina, 05% Australia, 05% Brazil, 05% Belgium, 05% Czech Republic, 05% Greece, 05% Guatemala, 05% Estonia, 05$ Finland, 05% India, 05% Ireland, 05% Netherlands, 05% Norway, 05% Philippines, 05% Poland, 05% Portugal, 05%, Russian Federation, 05% South Africa and 05% Sweden. Site Channels: Four (4) Yahoo!Groups 1_News 2_Action, 3_Art and 4_Native-Views: Audience Psychographics: Community and education oriented; intelligent; well read; technologically savvy. Audience Demographics: User profiles: 42% males, 58% female. Average age 23-42. Median income is $50k. Third Party Delivering: Mass mailing: cost per addressee. Cancellation Polices: 30-day notice Rich Media Availability & Specs: HTML-12k, Flash-12k, Real Media-3k, QuickTime-3k, text-12k, Java Script-12k. No pop-up windows. We offer Specialize marketing service to the Latinos Online. By Susannah Fox and Gretchen Livingston More than one-in-two Latinos (56%) goes online, a lower rate than among non-Hispanic whites (71%) and non-Hispanic blacks (60%). Several socio-economic characteristics that are often intertwined, including low levels of education and limited English ability, largely explain the gap in Internet use between Hispanics and non-Hispanics. Among the key findings: 78% of Latinos who are English-dominant and 76% of bilingual Latinos use the internet, compared with 32% of Spanish-dominant Hispanic adults. 76% of U.S.-born Latinos go online, compared with 43% of those born outside the U.S. Some of this is related to language, but the analysis shows that being born outside of the 50 states is an independent factor that is associated with a decreased likelihood of going online. 89% of Latinos who have a college degree, 70% of Latinos who completed high school, and 31% of Latinos who did not complete high school go online. Mexicans, the largest national origin group in the U.S. Latino population, are among the least likely to go online: 52% of Latinos of Mexican descent uses the internet. Even when age, income, language, generation, or nativity is held constant, being Mexican is associated with a decreased likelihood of going online. Some Latinos who do not use the Internet are connecting to the communication revolution in a different way – via cell phone. Fully 59% of Latino adults have a cell phone and 49% of Latino cell phone users send and receive text messages on their phone. Looking at the numbers in a different way, 56% of Latino adults go online, 18% of Latino adults have a cell phone but do not go online and 26% of Latino adults have neither a cell phone nor an Internet connection. | ||||