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| Group type: | Public |
|---|---|
| Started on: | 2008-04-01 |
| Interests: | |
| Category: | Computers & Internet |
| Bookmarks: | 149 |
| Discussions: | 2 |
| Members: | 13 |
| Visits: | 126 |
| Last active: | about 19 hours ago |
all about online marketing, email, rss, call to action, online reputation, social media marketing, etc ...
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| Topic | Author | Posts / Visits | Last Post |
|---|---|---|---|
| Search engine marketing internet marketing sem seo | carlodanie jenne | 2 / 13 | Frederik Van Zande on 04-08-2008 |
| Affiliate marketing affiliate earn how marketing you | carlodanie jenne | 1 / 7 | carlodanie jenne on 04-08-2008 |
Group Bookmarks View All Bookmarks»Are you a Google AdWords advertiser using Google Analytics? STOP! You MUST read this post because you are losing money daily and we are going to help you stop the bleeding. There is a problem with the default functionality of Google Analytics when used in conjunction with AdWords. Google Analytics (GA) doesn’t report the actual phrase a shopper entered into the search bar, only the keyword phrase you are bidding on.
more from www.getelastic.com
As email marketers, we never know what mindset email recipients will be in at any given time. So a good idea is to design your copy and creative to speak to all personality types/buying modalities: competitive, spontaneous, methodical and humanistic. If this makes you go “hmmm?” make sure you check out our explanation of the buying modes in our personas webinar and webinar recap.
more from www.getelastic.com
example of context for clothes. a tool that allows you to dress a doll, to see possible combinations
more from www.stardoll.com
A few days ago, I wrote about the power of the word “New” to get our attention - if there’s a more potent attractor out there, it’s almost certainly “FREE!” For years, advertising gurus have listed “free” on every compilation of powerful headline words. Now, research conducted by Dan Ariely (a Duke behavioral economist, previously at MIT) shows us that “free” is far more effective than “almost free.” Indeed, a preference for “free” seems to be another feature hardwired into our brains.
more from www.neurosciencemarketing.com