Malcolm MacEwen, President and COO, Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage, Arizona discuss the Comprehensive Internet Marketing Strategy for the Coldwell Ban…
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Internet Marketing, SEO
Malcolm MacEwen, President and COO, Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage, Arizona discuss the Comprehensive Internet Marketing Strategy for the Coldwell Ban…
Video Rating: 0 / 5
SAP Guide Introduces Executives to Internet of Things Strategy: Highlights …
"Managing the Internet of Things Revolution," is an interactive guide to Internet of Things strategy from SAP, which will help companies profit from the IoT in its early stages, then transform themselves later. Share on Twitter Share on Facebook Share …
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Google maps an offline strategy
One big reason for this Internet-focused strategy? Most of Google's revenue comes from online ads. If users aren't online, Google can't make money from their eyeballs. And the results of this strategy have been just as obvious: Google has become the …
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Question by Frenchy: Do you know a good site with Internet stocks advise?
Best answer:
Answer by dredude52
http://winners-and-losers.com/
Training & classes
http://bettertrades.com
http://investedcentral.com
You need to do the work first, learn a few terms, read a few books, which you will have to do anyway. Go to the library, and browse through the row upon row of the subject. All of these questions will be answered as soon as you take the first step and read a beginners guide to investing.
Try to determine your time horizon. Short-term, long-term?
Take a look at charting and Technical Analysis for following trends in the markets. Why would you own a stock that is in an obvious decline?
Realize right away there are two sides to the market, not just the upside. What goes up, eventually comes down at least part way.
Learn how to analyze risk, and make this your primary approach, not by compounding profits and erroneously analyzing how much money you can make. For example, most traders don’t make any money at all; more than 80% blow out.
Learn about money management techniques, and maybe you’ll stick around awhile.
Try to find these books:
They say “Buy and Hold” for the long term is better, but that depends on when you get in, and what your definition of “long term” is. The phrase “Buy low and sell high” infers that you buy after a decline; but how much of a decline? If you had bought after a 1000 pt decline in the Dow in 2000, you would still be waiting to get back to even, six years later in most stocks.
How to start trading online:
http://www.bernanke.cn/stock-trade/…
http://www.stock-trading.jims-info.com/….
http://money.howstuffworks.com/……
http://www.investopedia.com/
http://sharebuilder.com/
www.stockcharts.com
Beginner’s Books on Investing
“Which Is Better, Buy-and-Hold or Market Timing?”
“Do You Have What It Takes to Be a Market Timer
The Beginner’s Bible in Technical Analysis is:
Edwards & McGee”Tech. Anal. Of Stock Trends”
Droke, ClifTechnical Analysis Simplified
Kahn, Michael N.Tech. Anal. Plain & Simple
Kamich, Bruce M.How Technical Analysis Works
Lefevre, EdwinReminiscences of a Stock Operator
Lofton, ToddGetting Started in Futures
Lowenstein, RogerBuffet (Warren)-The Making of a Capitalist
O’Neil, William J.How to Make Money in Stocks
Oz, TonyHow to Make Money From Wall Street
What do you think? Answer below!
The 7 Most Common SEO Mistakes
There are many different types of SEO mistakes that people make, and today I am going to outline the most common ones. These mistakes result because there are many different types of publishers out there, with greatly differing levels of knowledge and …
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Practical Tips for Hiring an SEO Consultant
Are you wondering why people aren't engaging with your brand online? Or why customers aren't knocking you your door down, demanding to purchase your products and services? Perhaps your site's search engine optimization (SEO) is far from cutting it.
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Question by : Need a “Target Marketing Plan”?
NOT TARGET THE STORE!!! Target Marketing, as in, zoning in on demographics and such. How do I put this together? Just choose websites and pay for campaigns? Its to drive real estate, its a “getaway” home on a mountian top, so I need a person with money. So I want to target big cities, but what websites?
Best answer:
Answer by Thatguy
Asking where to advertise is the wrong question.
The question you should be asking yourself is – who is my consumer? By understanding everything about your target consumer, you answer lots of other questions. First answer
How old are they
What websites do they visit
Do they spend a lot of time online or would other media be more appropriate
What is their ideal solution
What do they think of your competition
Who are they influenced by – friends, yellow pages, Internet, blogs, etc
If you know the answer to these questions, your choice should be easy.
If you know all this and still want to find a company to serve your ads, I would look to google and Facebook who offer very efficient targeting.
Add your own answer in the comments!
Marketing Strategies for Successful Real Estate Agents
For real estate agents it is important to get an edge on ethical grounds. Those with experience in the business tend to agree that smart strategies have long-term benefits while sleazy tactics result in long-term consequences. A successful agent needs …
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4 Steps To Using Digital Marketing To Improve Your Marketing Strategy
The best digital marketing content strategies start with getting buy-in from the people in your company that have influence over making your plans a reality. What are some of the best ways to include your team and bring them on board with your vision?
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When Old Marketing Terms Hurt New Marketing Strategies
But neither is reducing non-working marketing dollars. In fact, reducing this number may be an indication of being less efficient, and it should be actively discouraged as a strategy for P&G or any other marketer to improve their marketing bang for …
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Marketing plans can seem daunting when you don’t know where to start. This video is the first in a series to help you beat writer’s block and begin your marketing project or initiative. To…
Strategic Marketing Plan – Sample Marketing Click this link to get our book for FREE (limited time): http://www.outlieracademy.com/a/marketing/ strategic mar…
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Question by rannietha4th: What does a marketing plan consists of?
I need some guidelines of what I need to focus on…
Best answer:
Answer by jwishz
The marketing planning process
In most organizations, “strategic planning” is an annual process, typically covering just the year ahead. Occasionally, a few organizations may look at a practical plan which stretches three or more years ahead.
To be most effective, the plan has to be formalized, usually in written form, as a formal `marketing plan’. The essence of the process is that it moves from the general to the specific; from the overall objectives of the organization down to the individual action plan for a part of one marketing programme. It is also an interactive process, so that the draft output of each stage is checked to see what impact it has on the earlier stages – and is amended accordingly.
[edit] Marketing planning aims and objectives
Behind the corporate objectives, which in themselves offer the main context for the marketing plan, will lay the ‘corporate mission’; which in turn provides the context for these corporate objectives. This `corporate mission’ can be thought of as a definition of what the organization is; of what it does: ‘Our business is …’.
This definition should not be too narrow, or it will constrict the development of the organization; a too rigorous concentration on the view that `We are in the business of making meat-scales’, as IBM was during the early 1900s, might have limited its subsequent development into other areas. On the other hand, it should not be too wide or it will become meaningless; `We want to make a profit’ is not too helpful in developing specific plans.
Abell suggested that the definition should cover three dimensions: ‘customer groups’ to be served, ‘customer needs’ to be served, and ‘technologies’ to be utilized Abell, ‘Defining the Business: The Starting Point of Strategic Planning’ Thus, the definition of IBM’s `corporate mission’ in the 1940s might well have been: `We are in the business of handling accounting information [customer need] for the larger US organizations [customer group] by means of punched cards [technology].’ Fortunately, as the name itself (International Perhaps the most important factor in successful marketing is the `corporate vision’. Surprisingly, it is largely neglected by marketing textbooks; although not by the popular exponents of corporate strategy – indeed, it was perhaps the main theme of the book by Peters and Waterman, in the form of their `Superordinate Goals’ ‘In Search of Excellence’ said: “Nothing drives progress like the imagination. The idea precedes the deed.” ‘The Marketing Imagination’ If the organization in general, and its chief executive in particular, has a strong vision of where its future lies, then there is a good chance that the organization will achieve a strong position in its markets (and attain that future). This will be not least because its strategies will be consistent; and will be supported by its staff at all levels. In this context, all of IBM’s marketing activities were underpinned by its philosophy of `customer service’; a vision originally promoted by the charismatic Watson dynasty.
The emphasis at this stage is on obtaining a complete and accurate picture. In a single organization, however, it is likely that only a few aspects will be sufficiently important to have any significant impact on the marketing plan; but all may need to be reviewed to determine just which ‘are’ the few.
In this context some factors related to the customer, which should be included in the material collected for the audit, may be:
Who are the customers?
What are their key characteristics?
What differentiates them from other members of the population?
What are their needs and wants?
What do they expect the `product’ to do?
What are their special requirements and perceptions?
What do they think of the organization and its products or services?
What are their attitudes?
What are their buying intentions?
A `traditional’ – albeit product-based – format for a `brand reference book’ (or, indeed, a `marketing facts book’) was suggested by Godley more than three decades ago:
Financial data –Facts for this section will come from management accounting, costing and finance sections.
Product data –From production, research and development.
Sales and distribution data – Sales, packaging, distribution sections.
Advertising, sales promotion, merchandising data – Information from these departments.
Market data and miscellany – From market research, who would in most cases act as a source for this information.
His sources of data, however, assume the resources of a very large organization. In most organizations they would be obtained from a much smaller set of people (and not a few of them would be generated by the marketing manager alone). It is apparent that a marketing audit can be a complex process, but the aim is simple: ‘it is only to identify those existing (external and internal) factors which will have a significant impact on the future plans of the company’.
It is clear that the basic material to be input to the marketing audit should be comprehensive. Accordingly, the best approach is to accumulate this material continuously, as and when it becomes available; since this avoids the otherwise heavy workload involved in collecting it as part of the regular, typically annual, planning process itself – when time is usually at a premium. Even so, the first task of this `annual’ process should be to check that the material held in the current `facts book’ or `facts files’ actually ‘is’ comprehensive and accurate, and can form a sound basis for the marketing audit itself.
The structure of the facts book will be designed to match the specific needs of the organization, but one simple format – suggested by Malcolm McDonald – may be applicable in many cases. This splits the material into three groups:
‘Review of the marketing environment’. A study of the organization’s markets, customers, competitors and the overall economic, political, cultural and technical environment; covering developing trends, as well as the current situation.
‘Review of the detailed marketing activity’. A study of the company’s marketing mix; in terms of the 7 Ps – (see below)
‘Review of the marketing system’. A study of the marketing organization, marketing research systems and the current marketing objectives and strategies.
The last of these is too frequently ignored. The marketing system itself needs to be regularly questioned, because the validity of the whole marketing plan is reliant upon the accuracy of the input from this system, and `garbage in, garbage out’ applies with a vengeance.
‘Portfolio planning’. In addition, the coordinated planning of the individual products and services can contribute towards the balanced portfolio.
’80:20 rule’. To achieve the maximum impact, the marketing plan must be clear, concise and simple. It needs to concentrate on the 20 per cent of products or services, and on the 20 per cent of customers, which will account for 80 per cent of the volume and 80 per cent of the `profit’.
’7 Ps’: Product, Place, Price and Promotion, Physical Environment, People, Process. The 7 Ps can sometimes divert attention from the customer, but the framework they offer can be very useful in building the action plans.
It is only at this stage (of deciding the marketing objectives) that the active part of the marketing planning process begins’.
This next stage in marketing planning is indeed the key to the whole marketing process. The marketing objectives state just where the company intends to be; at some specific time in the future. James Quinn succinctly defined objectives in general as: “Goals (or objectives) state ‘what’ is to be achieved and ‘when’ results are to be accomplished, but they do not state ‘how’ the results are to be achieved”.[1]
They typically relate to what products (or services) will be where in what markets (and must be realistically based on customer behaviour in those markets). They are essentially about the match between those ‘products’ and ‘markets’. Objectives for pricing, distribution, advertising and so on are at a lower level, and should not be confused with marketing objectives. They are part of the marketing strategy needed to achieve marketing objectives.
To be most effective, objectives should be capable of measurement and therefore ‘quantifiable’. This measurement may be in terms of sales volume, money value, market share, percentage penetration of distribution outlets and so on. An example of such a measurable marketing objective might be `to enter the market with product Y and capture 10 per cent of the market by value within one year’. As it is quantified it can, within limits, be unequivocally monitored; and corrective action taken as necessary.
The marketing objectives must usually be based, above all, on the organization’s financial objectives; converting these financial measurements into the related marketing measurements.
He went on to explain his view of the role of `policies’, with which strategy is most often confused: “Policies are rules or guidelines that express the ‘limits’ within which action should occur.
Simplifying somewhat, marketing strategies can be seen as the means, or `game plan’, by which marketing objectives will be achieved and, in the framework that we have chosen to use, are generally concerned with the 7 Ps. Examples are:
Price- The amount of money needed to buy products
Product- The actual product
Promotion (advertising)- Getting the product known
Placement- Where the product is located
People- Represent the business
Physica
Give your answer to this question below!
McDonald's big 'McStake': Marketing lessons from the fast-food chain's mascot …
Each of those result in huge business benefits from marketing campaigns to sold merchandise and more. But sometimes, in the case of McDonald's, … Bob Allen, founder and chief storytelling officer with Orlando-based IDEAS, said maybe the execution …
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Question by Todd J: Explain the “marketing strategy” differences between:?
the finish line vs. footlocker
the body shop vs. bath & body works
dillards vs. macys
american eagle vs. aeropostale
kohls vs. j c penneys
basically, i have to explain how stores that are similar market different ways and explain what kind of people are attacted to those stores. if anyone knows anything that could help me out, i would greatly appreciate it! thanks a lot!
Best answer:
Answer by endorphin_boy415
From a marketing perspective, I doubt there are serious differences between the marketing strategies with the companies you’ve listed.
If you were to define the target customers for these stores, you’d probably find them to be quite similar. The one notable exception, however, would be Dillard’s and Macy’s. (The typical Dillard’s customer is probably much more affluent and a bit older than the typical Macy’s customer.) Therefore the marketing strategies are probably somewhat similar.
I think a better example of similar type stores with more divergent marketing strategies would be Dania Furniture and IKEA. Both sell European style furniture and in many cases, the buyer has to assemble the pieces at home. The shopping experience for each store is quite different though. At Dania, the customer is allowed to go from one nicely appointed showroom to the other. The pace is slow and leisurely. IKEA, on the other hand, features more of a warehouse type of environment. And while IKEA also offers nicely designed displays, the environment at an IKEA store is much more fast paced, with shoppers all moving in one direction through the store. The customer profile is a bit different too. The Dania shopper is probably a bit more affluent, perhaps a bit better educated and skews a little older. The IKEA shopper is more budget conscious, younger, and probably more concerned about the environment (that’s just the vibe I get).
All this said, the marketing strategy for each store is going to be different. Dania is going to emphasize the showroom aspect of their stores and the quality of their furniture. IKEA is going to emphasize the value of its products. The look and feel of the advertising is going to be different too. Dania will be slightly more upscale and sophisticated in its approach. IKEA – speaking to a younger audience, is going to be more fun, trendy, and relaxed.
As far as your assignment goes, in order to get an accurate gauge on who shops at each, you have to take a look at several things:
PRODUCTS: Which store carries the better brand names? Which store carries the better products?
PRICING: Does one store offer lower prices? If so, what is the evidence of that? One’s ability to afford higher prices can be dictated by several factors:
Age – is the buyer “old enough” to afford more expensive products. Income – how much disposable income does the consumer have? Are they still living at home? Do they have families to support?
Occupation. Better jobs pay better money. The ability to have a better job is often dependent upon Education. So, in general, a store that sells higher priced merchandise than it’s competitor is probably trying to reach a more affluent, better educated consumer who is at an age where they have more disposable income (they either have no kids or their kids are grown and out of the house). These are just generalities, but they may give you a place to start.
ENVIRONMENT: Does one store offer a nice shopping environment? It costs money to build nice displays, and that will be reflected in the store’s pricing. What about the music that is played in the store? What does that tell you about who shops there? How about the store’s staff? Is one younger than the other? Why do you suppose that is?
If I were you, I’d focus on just one of the sets of stores you’ve identified. And, if you don’t mind my suggesting so, I might recommend that you try using my Dania vs. IKEA example, as I think the differences between the stores is a bit more apparent.
Good luck.
Add your own answer in the comments!