Last week, Nandor Fejer and Alison McNeill attended the Back to the Future – Beyond Web 2.0 event in Silicon Valley while I attended DEMO 07.
Moderator:
Jeremiah Owyang, Director of Corporate Media Strategy at Podtech.net
WebProWorld
Last week, Nandor Fejer and Alison McNeill attended the Back to the Future – Beyond Web 2.0 event in Silicon Valley while I attended DEMO 07.
Moderator:
Jeremiah Owyang, Director of Corporate Media Strategy at Podtech.net
2006 brought us strategies in online marketing that went beyond traditional SEM tactics.
The field of Web Design is one of the most rapidly growing areas in the world of commerce.
The significance of effective web design, emphasizing user experience, content quality, easy navigation, and the importance of feedback.
As Rod Boothby points out, there are a lot of definitions flying around for similar things when it comes to Web 2.0 and the Enterprise.
The W3C (World Wide Web Consortium) was established by the inventor of the web as we know it today, Sir Timothy Berners-Lee in 1994 to create a uniform set of standards for the internet and its continuing development.
When we think about using paid search to market our products or services, our predominant focus is often the two major players – Google and Yahoo! (in that order).
“Six Sigma has galvanized our company with an intensity the likes of which I have never seen in my 40 years at GE.” Jack Welch admitted this in the year 2000 annual report of GE.
The words people type into a search box are not always the words they like to read when they click on the search result. Here’s why.
While bidding war tactics are intriguing to learn about, the costs of engaging in bidding wars are high, and these costs extend beyond the extra money marketers must pay to the search engines to engage in them.