SMM - 10 Biggest Facebook Marketing Mistakes of 2011 - Bruce Clay - 3 views
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1. Overestimating the Importance of Facebook Pages
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2. Caring Only About Numbers of Fans
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3. Thinking You’ll Get Enough Fans from Your Email Lis
How Google Tweaked Its Search Algorithms In December - 1 views
Inside Facebook · Study Finds Marketers Misunderstand Their Facebook Fans - 0 views
Reflections on CRM in 2011 and what to look out for in 2012 | CustomerThink - 0 views
Majority of Technology Marketers Plan Budget Increases for 2012 | IDG Knowledge Hub - 0 views
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As might be expected in a difficult economy, lead generation topped all digital budget categories with almost 27% followed by display/banner at just under 20% and search at almost 19%. As to what is driving digital media investments in 2012, audience composition, ROI and measurement capabilities, audience reach, and data targeting were selected by more than three-quarters of the respondents.By a wide margin, click through rate is the most important factor in campaign success with cost-per-engagement and interaction rate almost equal in importance.
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Content marketing, which includes white papers, case studies, videos, custom websites, video and white papers, is among tech marketers’ top five spending priorities for 2012. Led by collateral at 71%, followed by webcasts/virtual events at 61%, videos at 59%, research at 55%, and articles/features at 54%, marketers are investing in a wide variety of content marketing or custom programs. Agencies are much mo
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s for social media, YouTube and Facebook lead all platforms with LinkedIn, Google+ and Twitter not as popular. Among BtoB respondents, 53% found social extremely/very valuable for finding relevant technology content on the Web, which is double the 2010 figure. Not surprisingly, 18- to 34-year-olds are most active with social media. According to all users in the IDG survey, 60% rely most on tech sites, 46% peers or colleagues, and 43% independent tech journalists/bloggers.
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Facebook Leads in Social Media Effectiveness for SMB's - 0 views
Put Cloud CRM to Work | PCWorld Business Center - 0 views
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"Four out of five U.S. adults are involved in a social network," Band adds. The result: Businesses are increasingly trying to follow their customers' social networking updates. It's a logical extension of CRM, which is designed to help businesses broaden their understanding of customers' interests, needs, and concerns. Many business relationships today begin on the Internet, as customers increasingly find businesses from Google searches, Facebook fan pages, and Website visits, adds Brent Leary, a CRM and small-business technology analyst. So it makes perfect sense to track and build those relationships using cloud CRM services, especially if they offer social network monitoring.
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• Highrise is a cloud CRM system that many small businesses like. Along with its CRM features, the system provides various third-party customer service applications, such as MailChimp, an e-mail marketing campaign service. Highrise offers a free plan for two users with up to 250 contacts. Beyond that ceiling, monthly plans start at $24 for up to six users.
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