Archive for August, 2011

Countdown

Sunday, August 21st, 2011

All sorts of numbers are showing up in my news feed headlines this morning, so is seems appropriate to post a countdown of sorts. Ready? And …

10 Ways Social Media and the Web Are Moving Gifted Education Forward

9 Ways You’re Doing Internet Marketing Wrong

8 Content Ideas for Business Blogs

7 Ways to Revamp Your Online Registration Form

6 Ways to Increase Lead Generation for Custom Content Publishers

5 Basic Rules of Calculating the Value of a Facebook ‘Fan’

4 Steps Towards Aligning Marketing with Sales and Proving Value

3 Tools for Backing Up Your Google Docs

2 Tips on How to Locate Cell Phone Number Owners

1 Thing That Will Make Your Email Marketing More Effective

Well, those ought to give you plenty of reading for a quiet Sunday afternoon.

Say What You Want About the Tenets of Social Networking, At Least It’s An Ethos

Saturday, August 20th, 2011

Well, this is an interesting experiment: The Big Lebowski is available for rent on Facebook. Mashable reports.

Quote o’ the Day

Friday, August 19th, 2011

“Can anything be stupider than that a man has the right to kill me because he lives on the other side of a river and his ruler has a quarrel with mine, though I have not quarrelled with him?”
Blaise Pascal

Social Media Lessons From “Great Brands”

Thursday, August 18th, 2011

I’m usually not a fan of social media lists (too often they’re packed with fluff) or of posts that talk about what giant brands do online (too often the lessons aren’t really lessons, they’re just examples of what big brands are doing and they don’t apply to anyone in a practical sense).

This list of 23 things great brands do in social media, though, is relatively substantive and has a lot of pithy social media 101 for any business looking to engage customers and potential customers online. Check it out.

(Hat tip to Barbara Pflughaupt for the link.)

Watch It Wednesday

Wednesday, August 17th, 2011

There’s portable, and there’s portable. Back in 1977, a computer weighing 50 pounds was “portable.”