Lead Generation on the Web: Sample Sections
I’ve created a Squidoo page with sample content from my O’Reilly Shortcut. Check it out.
scratch that niche!
I’ve created a Squidoo page with sample content from my O’Reilly Shortcut. Check it out.
I’ve just created a Squidoo Lens that features the copywriting platform I use to help develop white papers, case studies, and other materials for our clients. Feel free to check it out.
I was just six years old when the original Star Wars blasted into my consciousness. Basically, the perfect age to have someone take over your entire creative drive before you even had a chance. From then on, my peers and I were “letting the Wookie win,” pretending to fly in formation on our X-wing bikes, and avoiding Stormtrooper patrols. (As for who I modeled myself after, it was Solo of course….couldn’t stand the Jedis in either the original or prequel series. Yes….I cheered at the Jedi downfall. Too many meetings!)
When you look back at them, though, the movies are a series of unfortunate dialog choices held together with special effects. Thank God for Harrison Ford and Alec Guinness for keeping the original series somewhat entertaining. The prequels were actually physically painful to endure, from the Gungans (”me so stupid!”) to the names of characters (really, how am I supposed to be scared of a guy named Count Dooku?) to more than I can possibly mention here.
(I guess you could say that the above paragraph is also a lesson in marketing. It is possible to be too commercial, too salesy, too out there. It’s pretty bad when the generation that grows up loving what you created just sighs and rolls their eyes when you come out with quite possibly the most anticipated continuation of that initial product.)
However, there are a few gems to be snatched from George Lucas’ opus. So let us snatch, and relate to the world of marketing.
Check out this excellent video, which recreates a presentation on using social media and other Web 2.0 technologies/techniques to enhance an existing marketing program. There is a slight pitch at the front for Proclaim, but bear with it, it’s worth it.
Over the past few decades there have been some forces at work that have rocked marketing down to its core. These forces aren’t going away; if anything, they are accelerating, causing increased effects.
Here they are, in no particular order (list is not all-inclusive!):
There are more forces at work, of course. Anyone care to comment?