The blogosphere is an odd thing, with a lot of influence. You post one thing, it gets picked up by another blog, and soon it spreads. Then, any where from a month to a few weeks later, the mainstream press picks up on something and runs with it. Many companies still do not realize that there is a lot of potential to get hurt by things posted, and that you ignore the blogosphere at your own peril.
What is an Acceptable Response
Many online marketers work odd hours, with no beginning of the day and no real end. How does this impact support and customer service inquiries?
High Response Marketing With Low-Cost Postcards
Postcards can drive a huge amount of traffic to your web site, generate a flood of new sales leads or produce a surge in any business activity you want. And you don’t have to spend a lot of time or money on them …if you apply these four little-known postcard marketing secrets.
Incidence Response Programme
As the reliance of businesses on their information assets continue to grow so will the number of computer/security incidents. In the protection of their informational assets, most business’s will perform the following functions:
Incidence Response Teams
A major part of any organisations IRP is the team that is responsible for handling the incidents using the process and method outlined in section 1.2.1. Whilst it is strongly recommended that every organisation should have an IRP in place, this is not necessarily the case with an incidence response team. However, each organisation should have an individual such as the corporate security officer who is responsible for the IRP of the organisation.
Running Programs in Response to Sniffed DNS Packets – Stealthily Managing Iptables Rules Remotely, Part 2
Last time we set up a Perl script that would use the Net::Pcap module to sniff the network and print information about DNS requests to standard output. The output looks like this
sourceipaddr -> destipaddr: dnshostname
Response to SCO’s Open Letter
Eric Raymond and Bruce Perens respond to the SCO Group: Mr. McBride, in your “Open Letter to the Open Source Community” your offer to negotiate with us comes at the end of a farrago of falsehoods, half-truths, evasions, slanders, and misrepresentations. You must do better than this. We will not attempt to erect a compromise with you on a foundation of dishonesty.
Ten Things You can do to Increase Visitor Response at Your Web Site
Did you know that folks often make “buying decisions” when they are moved emotionally? Give this your full consideration when thinking about your Web site content. Traditional medias have made the most of these principles and taken advantage of them for many years now, whether it be through a TV commercial or an ad in a magazine.
How to Use Emotional Content to Increase Visitor Response
Did you know that many folks make “buying decisions” when they are moved emotionally? Other traditional medias have made the most of these principles and taken advantage of them for many years, whether it be a TV commercial or an ad in a magazine. People are emotional beings and people make decisions (either good or bad) when they are emotional. If something causes a customer to become upset, they become angry and try and solve it.
How to Use “Upwords” to Increase Response
I once took a media communications course in which I discovered an interesting example of the way the mind works. As part of a given lesson, a videotape was shown of a televised newscast during which a journalist was about to give a live report on a forest fire that was devastating the mid-west. The news anchor in the television newsroom said: “We now take you to Sally Smith — she’s in the station’s helicopter flying above the scene of the fire.”