Social media monitoring and marketing: Whether you use Flickr, Gmail or Facebook, how can you make sure that your words and images live on? Find out!
Tagged as:
best practice,
cloud computing,
customer engagement,
customer relationship management,
customer service,
Facebook,
research report,
social media analytics,
social media best practice,
social media buzz,
social media marketing,
social media measurement,
social media metrics,
social media monitoring,
social media ROI,
social networking,
social networks,
twitter,
walled garden,
web analytics,
why your blog is your social media hub
Data and mobile communications giants are growing. This systemic risk – too big to fail, bail me out – may result in another financial crisis – this time in the digital realm.
Tagged as:
best metrics,
best practice,
blog benchmark,
blog footprint,
blog health check,
blog impact,
blog resonance,
brand monitoring,
cloud computing,
competitive benchmarking,
KPI,
market share,
oligopoly,
rights to data,
social media,
social media monitoring,
systemic risk,
trends
Google’s market dominance means that our dependence on the company’s services to work properly and dependably represents a large systemic risk. Imagine Gmail services are unavailable or its server farms go off-line making outsourced data unavailable to your company? Will your business come to a grinding halt?
Tagged as:
better governance,
Chrome OS,
cloud computing,
computing in a cloud,
dependability of networks,
financial crisis,
FT ComMetrics Blog Index,
Google AdWords,
Google Adwords Account,
market share,
online advertising,
out-of-print books,
risk management,
systemic risk
How cloud computing affects your digital data rights… Considering Amazon’s thoughtless decision to delete unauthorized copies of a George Orwell classic from its customers’ Kindles, caution is desperately required.
Tagged as:
BlackBerry,
ceo eric schmidt,
cloud computing,
computing in a cloud,
copyright,
definition of cloud computing,
definition of computing in a cloud,
etisalat,
policy2watch,
property rights,
RIM,
spyware,
standards,
things2read,
threats2watch,
tips2follow,
trends2watch,
United Arab Emirates
The KISS principle (Keep it simple, stupid) is needed to make an operating system or software work properly, including a great user interface and straightforward software code… but do either Microsoft or Google deliver? We tell you why both might fail the test.
Tagged as:
benchmarking software,
Chrome OS,
cloud computing,
Google Apps,
Google Chrome,
Internet Explorer,
market dominance,
marketing buzz,
operating system,
risk management,
software usability,
tools2watch,
Toshiba customer service,
trends2watch,
Windows 7,
Windows Vista