The Message is simple: You!
Bring it back to the message! Bring it back to the message!
This is what I keep hearing myself repeat during my Plain Language Workshop. Now, stop! Let’s think about this for a second!
Bring it back to the message! Bring it back to the message!
This is what I keep hearing myself repeat during my Plain Language Workshop. Now, stop! Let’s think about this for a second!
If you are a business or someone who represents a commercial entity, and you don’t have a website, you could be missing out on many of it’s benefits. From increased customer service to an increase in profits, giving yourself a virtual image is a great to extend your business to the online world and gives a more modern image to your customers.
I like to keep the places I visit for information simple; these three sources fit the bill. Where do you get your news?
Lately, I’ve been asked to explain, “What is Twitter?” So instead of repeatedly performing my short tutorial on Twitter, I’m sharing my collection of links below to help the new Twitter users (”Tweeps”) get started and be on their way to cyber-stalking their internet celebrities.
A mother and a daughter were about to start preparing their pot roast dinner in the kitchen. The daughter asked her mother, “How do you make pot roast, Mom?”
Are there further benefits to joining or keeping the other social sites, like: Brightkite , FriendFeed or Plaxo? I mean, there is no functionality I need that I cannot get from the three websites I’m currently with. So why bother with the rest?
How do you go about sending email or marketing yourself online without crossing into the “SPAMmer” category?
When you think about your customer-focused messages on your business web site, have you ever chosen to focus on how these messages benefit customers? This blog entry encourages you to consider the potential benefits of using a different approach for your web site copy, the opposite of what some business strategies recommend.
Before you can send out an e-mail campaign to customers, you need to have a list of existing or potential customers. If you don’t have one, no worries. Here are some easy-to-do ideas to create or expand your e-mail marketing list.
Whether your company is brick-and-mortar or click-and-mortar, you can implement low-cost and highly effective e-mail marketing strategies as part of your marketing mix; and, best of all, no experience is necessary. Here are six must-do practices to create successful e-mail marketing campaigns from the start.