Lara Nieberding

The Purple Lara

Archive for the ‘marketing’ Category

Oh and let me say this..

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i-Lighted Content Ok so I made a comment on Chris Brogan’s blog post Shuffling Ads Around. Then of course I thought too much about it. I am furious that we the public let cable tv, satelite tv, tivo, etc charge us for their service and subject us to advertising. You know what? If you want to subject me to advertising, then the FCC should make it illegal for you to charge me a subscrition fee. You want to charge me a subscription fee, then the FCC should make it illegal for you to show advertisements. Appears rather straight forward to me. However, I think too much.pile of money & change

Written by The Purple Lara

March 3, 2008 at 11:40 AM

Posted in marketing

Resource for online marketing

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clipped from blog.inc.com

Following the (Virtual) Crowds

Posted by Max Chafkin at 5:11 PM

This month’s cover package, “The New Basics of Marketing,” went live on Inc.com yesterday. As the title suggests it’s a comprehensive guide to what’s new in online marketing—covering everything from social networks to text message advertising. In putting together the package, we frequently wrestled with this question: How much technology is too much? Which technologies are worth considering, and which ones should be left to the futurists, bloggers, and your children?
Should every CEO of every company spend the next few months building up a presence on Tubearoo, WikiHow, Furl and the 47 other must have networks on the list? Probably not. But, as we wrote in this month’s issue, every company should at least understand what social networks are all about. Read our story to find out why and then check out this sidebar for a guide to advertising on a handful of the top networks.
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Written by The Purple Lara

February 2, 2008 at 10:15 AM

Resources for ways to market online

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List of social networks
clipped from www.insidecrm.com

50 Social Sites That Every Business Needs a Presence on

Web sites to help your company network, advertise recruit and more.
If your business limits its online presence to advertising banners and blogging, it’s missing out. The Internet provides powerful networking opportunities that allow users to effectively target their audience by logging on to social sites like LinkedIn, Digg and more. Take advantage of these tools by asserting your company’s presence online and reaching more potential customers, business partners and employees.
Social-Media/Social-Bookmarking Sites
Professional-Networking Sites
Niche Social-Media Sites
General Social-Media Sites
Job Sites
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Written by The Purple Lara

February 1, 2008 at 5:13 PM

Social Networks: Ready to Join the Party?

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Are social networks right for your company
clipped from www.inc.com

Social Networks: Ready to Join the Party?

Selling yourself on Facebook.

Beyond the simple fact that social networks offer advertisers access to tens of millions of potential customers, they present two clear opportunities for more effective campaigns. First, they promise the ability to target customers with precision. If you want to reach baseball-loving twentysomethings who live in Seattle and have a college education, you can find social network groups that fill the bill. Second, social networks encourage your customers to recommend your company to others. Let’s say your company has a Facebook profile, and another user signs on as a “fan” of yours. Facebook will then alert that person’s friends, informing them of the connection. Voil�: textbook viral marketing for free.
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Written by The Purple Lara

February 1, 2008 at 5:11 PM

Posted in marketing

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Facebook Marketing Resources

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Lots of links to information about using Facebook as a markteting tool.
clipped from www.insidecrm.com
The Facebook Marketing Toolbox: 100 Tools and Tips to Tap the Facebook Customer Base
Learn to use Facebook as an advertising platform.
By Inside CRM Editors on January 23, 2008
If you’re thinking of tapping into the Facebook crowd for some high-profile advertising, take a look at this list of 100 tools and tips that will help you maximize all of the applications and opportunities that Facebook has to offer.
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Written by The Purple Lara

February 1, 2008 at 5:05 PM

Posted in marketing

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Even large companies identify a niche

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clipped from blog.inc.com

Find Your Niche and Develop It!
And I’d speculate that your business or industry probably isn’t that different either. It’s a universal truism that all businesses need to find their own niche and align their strengths around it. Aquascape’s strength is in its products, training and education, marketing and brand. Our distributors’ strengths run the gamut, and it’s up to each and every one of them to figure out for themselves how they want to leverage those to service the customer. And the customer, after all, is the only one who truly matters in the end. As for our original distributors who chose to stay on … so far so good! Almost every one increased sales in an open market, further validating that free market economies work. That is, provided you find your niche!
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Written by The Purple Lara

January 30, 2008 at 8:06 AM

Posted in marketing

Duped by Marketing 101

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I saw this headline pop up in my blog rss feed:

“A Team of ”Virtual Assistants,” Awaiting Your Command”

The article is on a reputable web site who’s target audience is entrepreneurs. Maybe I should clarify that to say, it is on a site I consider reputable but now am starting to doubt. Did you notice I did not link the article for you to click and go? I purposely did not link it because the “article” is not worth your time. The title lead me to think I would learn about what a virtual assistant is, what services the virtual assistant provides and how I can keep a team of them at my disposal. Silly me. No. One look at the article only to discover it is four sentences long. The whole purpose of the blog post, because obviously it is not an article, is to direct readers to the web site of a fellow columnist of the author of the blog post. The fellow columnist is a “serial entrepreneur.”

Since I am here, I cannot help myself, I click on the link to his web site. I just have to know if this is where there is a directory of fellow VAs. Silly me. No. There is no information about the virtual assistant industry. He wants you to fill out a form. Lead generation. Well, why not? In the name of research, I forge ahead. I fill out the form. Then, my browser jumps to a web site with oodles of words and no substance. This is internet-marketing 101. I imagine the owner of this poorly formatted junk sitting at his desk thinking, “What is today’s hot topic? What is the current buzz word?” He chose “Virtual Assistant.” His material is the three-ring circus dog and pony show. He does offer one link to one virtual assistant company.

Ok, now I am knee deep into it. I am compelled to click on the actual virtual assistant link. At this point, I am curious to know what his connection is to the virtual assistant. Perhaps this link will lead me to the information I thought I was going to get originally. Silly me. No. The business appears to be legitimate but I cannot tell if the information is current. Some of the links are dead. Some of the web pages do not load correctly. I do not recognize any of the names associated with the business. I do not see any industry associations. I swear it is as if these two got together and said let us give these internet marketing and search engine optimization formulas a whirl.

I have no reason to believe anything negative about the virtual assistant. From my heart, I wish her success. If she wanted media exposure, why did the author of the post not directly mention her? Why go through the “serial entrepreneur?” My criticism is of the original blog post. The article was not about virtual assistants, and the fellow columnist is not a virtual assistant nor do they own a virtual assistant business.

Written by The Purple Lara

November 3, 2007 at 12:40 AM