No matter what, the very first piece of social media real estate I’d start with is a blog.
Chris Brogan
Founder, New Marketing Labs
.
You must embrace the true value of your organization and develop a referral system that allows you to bring the best of your authentic self to every opportunity.
John Jantsch
Author, Duct Tape Marketing
.
Focus on the core problem your business solves and put out lots of content and enthusiasm, and ideas about how to solve that problem.
Laura Fitton
Inbound Marketing Evangelist, HubSpot
.
People shop and learn in a whole new way compared to just a few years ago, so marketers need to adapt or risk extinction.
Brian Halligan
CEO & Co-founder, HubSpot
.
People don’t trust businesses the way they used to … For the first time we found that the most trusted sources were ‘a person such as yourself or a peer’.
Steve Rubel
Chief Content Strategist, Edelman
.
My theory is that in the age of the internet, it’s what you write , not where you write it, that matters.
Dan Lyons
Marketing Fellow, HubSpot
.
In today’s information age of Marketing and Web 2.0, a company’s website is the key to their entire business.
Marcus Sheridan
Author, The Sales Lion Blog
.
Confidence is the willingness to be as ridiculous, luminous, intelligent, and as kind as you really are, without embarrassment.
Susan Piver
Best-Selling Author
.
The way you can understand all of the social media is as the creation of a new kind of public space.
Danah Boyd
Social Media Researcher, Microsoft
.
A blog is a great way to connect more deeply with your existing or would-be customers, build a community around your business, give a human personality and “voice” to an organization, evolve your business and relationships in sometimes unexpected or surprising ways, and yes, drive sales.
Ann Handley
Chief Content Officer, MarketingProfs
.
Quit counting fans, followers, and blog subscribers like bottle caps. Think, instead, about what you’re hoping to achieve, with and through the community that actually cares about what you’re doing.
Amber Naslund
Best-Selling Author
.

Creating an interesting presentation requires a more thoughtful process than throwing together the blather that we’ve come to call a presentation today.
Spending energy to understand the audience and carefully crafting a message that resonates with them means making a commitment of time and discipline to the process.
Nancy Duarte
President & CEO, Duarte Design
Like this:
Like Loading...
You must be logged in to post a comment.