Numbers will do the trick
Posted: Mon Jan 06, 2025 8:49 am
With this explanation of the definition I immediately tie in with the presentation of Sander Duivestein , trend watcher New Media at ViNT (Exploration Institute New Technology), the research institute of Sogeti. In his presentation the three V's of big data are discussed extensively.
ts electronic music. This week, after a long radio silence, new material has finally been released. In this article I want to highlight a completely different quality of 'the robots', namely that of brilliant marketing experts.
ct a decline in cross-border trade because Europe's competitive position is deteriorating. While the economic growth that the European Commission predicts for 2014 is partly based on increasing international trade through a trade agreement with the US.
The new privacy rules
Europe is working on new privacy rules. The proposals are far-reaching for marketing, as I wrote before . But it goes further: every company will be required to keep records and appoint a privacy officer. Publishers wonder how the 'right to be forgotten' will take shape for comments or quotes in news articles. And all that at the expense of a fine of 2% of your annual turnove
“ Data is wonderful, but it's always what happened in the past. ” (@jeanniecw). Collecting data is all well and good – and especially as an online entrepreneur, obvious and easy – but don't get bogged down in metrics. Chris Brogan now only focuses on 1 metric: email subscribers. Maybe a few Email marketing is more important than you might think in this age of social media. Sonia Simone and many others confirmed that they also generate their revenue from the subscriber base. Tools that were mentioned in this context and sounded interesting were politemedia.com and infusionsoft.com (combination of CRM, lead south africa phone data generation, email marketing etc. with an impressive user-friendly interface).
The mantra of speaker @stevefarber remains strong and applicable, whether it is about 'leadership' or about providing good service: " do what you love in the service of people who love what you do ." Successful online entrepreneurs distinguish themselves by listening carefully to what their customers want and changing based on that. Often in this business this comes down to an investment in technology, but not always. @chrisbrogan is a shining example of this in my opinion, because of the way he uses his e-mail newsletter . Different than usual and thought from his target group.
Online entrepreneurs generation 3.0
The phenomenon of 'online entrepreneurs' has been around for quite some time. Opportunities abound, but competition is fierce. Whether you earn money with knowledge products, market yourself as an author and speaker, sell apps and software or use online media to sell (offline) products and services and find customers: there is always someone with the same idea and sometimes even better executed.
Successful online entrepreneurs showed during #SOBcon that the only way to move forward and continue to grow is to put yourself in your customer's shoes and to continue to innovate from that customer perspective. Innovation is most successful when it happens from the need that you signal in your target group - not from the need that you would like your customers to have.
ts electronic music. This week, after a long radio silence, new material has finally been released. In this article I want to highlight a completely different quality of 'the robots', namely that of brilliant marketing experts.
ct a decline in cross-border trade because Europe's competitive position is deteriorating. While the economic growth that the European Commission predicts for 2014 is partly based on increasing international trade through a trade agreement with the US.
The new privacy rules
Europe is working on new privacy rules. The proposals are far-reaching for marketing, as I wrote before . But it goes further: every company will be required to keep records and appoint a privacy officer. Publishers wonder how the 'right to be forgotten' will take shape for comments or quotes in news articles. And all that at the expense of a fine of 2% of your annual turnove
“ Data is wonderful, but it's always what happened in the past. ” (@jeanniecw). Collecting data is all well and good – and especially as an online entrepreneur, obvious and easy – but don't get bogged down in metrics. Chris Brogan now only focuses on 1 metric: email subscribers. Maybe a few Email marketing is more important than you might think in this age of social media. Sonia Simone and many others confirmed that they also generate their revenue from the subscriber base. Tools that were mentioned in this context and sounded interesting were politemedia.com and infusionsoft.com (combination of CRM, lead south africa phone data generation, email marketing etc. with an impressive user-friendly interface).
The mantra of speaker @stevefarber remains strong and applicable, whether it is about 'leadership' or about providing good service: " do what you love in the service of people who love what you do ." Successful online entrepreneurs distinguish themselves by listening carefully to what their customers want and changing based on that. Often in this business this comes down to an investment in technology, but not always. @chrisbrogan is a shining example of this in my opinion, because of the way he uses his e-mail newsletter . Different than usual and thought from his target group.
Online entrepreneurs generation 3.0
The phenomenon of 'online entrepreneurs' has been around for quite some time. Opportunities abound, but competition is fierce. Whether you earn money with knowledge products, market yourself as an author and speaker, sell apps and software or use online media to sell (offline) products and services and find customers: there is always someone with the same idea and sometimes even better executed.
Successful online entrepreneurs showed during #SOBcon that the only way to move forward and continue to grow is to put yourself in your customer's shoes and to continue to innovate from that customer perspective. Innovation is most successful when it happens from the need that you signal in your target group - not from the need that you would like your customers to have.