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rotecting your online privacy is becoming a part of everyday life, one system designed to take the hard work out of protecting your home network and family from advertising, intrusive third-party programs, trackers and malware is Winston. The easy to set up plug-n-play hardware filter reclaims your use of the Internet on all connected devices at home, protecting your online privacy from advertisers, governments, hackers and big tech companies.

protect your online privacy

Earlybird pledges are still available for a limited time via the Indiegogo crowdfunding website where more than 4,000 backers have already helped Winston raise over $1,000,000 in funding. If all goes to plan worldwide shipping of Winston online privacy devices is expected to start during December 2019. Watch the video below to learn more about the features of the Winston hardware specifically designed to protect your online privacy.

“Winston’s founder, Richard Stokes, was in the ad-tech industry for over a decade, most recently as the Global Head of Innovation for the media intelligence division of the world’s largest advertising agency. In that role, he saw the industry move to embrace new technologies that track, mine, and sell private information (imagine every song you like, every relationship, every purchase you make, and every secret you have being stored forever in the cloud). That was the beginning of the omnipresent surveillance state. Rich decided this was not a world that he wanted his children to grow up in. It all came down to one question…if he wasn’t the person to do something about it, then who would?”

protect your online privacy

To make an earlybird pledge from $186 jump over to the official crowdfunding campaign page by following the link below.

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There are times when our students will conduct a good Google search with carefully selected terms but still not find what they’re looking for. They could go back and search again with other terms or they might try using a different search tool. Sometimes using a different search tool and looking in those results can lead students to the new information that they need. Here are three useful search tools that students often overlook.

Google Books

Google Books is a fantastic tool for students to use to locate books and search within those books. As is demonstrated in this video even if a book isn’t available to download in its entirety, students can still search within the book to determine if the book contains enough references to make it worth their time and effort to buy or borrow a copy of the book.

Your School Library

Most school libraries have access to subscription databases that students can’t access without the assistance of your school librarian. Those databases often contain resources that students won’t find through a Google search.

Google Scholar

Google Scholar can be a good search tool for high school students. Google Scholar is a great place to find articles from academic journals. Articles from academic journals aren’t the only things that students can search for on Google Scholar. Google Scholar provides search tools for locating court decisions and tools for locating patent filings. In this video I provide an overview of how to create Google Scholar alerts and in this one I demonstrate tracing the evolution of technology with Google Scholar.

Learn more about teaching search strategies.

I have a popular webinar titled Search Strategies Students Need to Know that you can watch on-demand. The Practical Ed Tech Summer Camp always includes a section on teaching search strategies. Registration is open now.

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Sourced from Practical Ed Tech

E-commerce is one of the fastest growing industries at a global level.

E-commerce is one of the fastest growing industries at a global level. With an increasing number of online companies, reaching customers becomes harder which is why promoting it in a way that stands out from the competition is essential especially when providing to a market where the products of companies are similar.Read

One of the first ways to promote a business to online clients is to create a website. The key is not to create just any website, but one that promotes the best features of your products or services. This is why, for this kind of job, the assistance of specialists is essential.

The creation of the website is just the first step, as there are others to complete in order to reach as many clients as possible. Some of them are listed below.

Mobile website optimization

In a world where the smartphone is equipped to act more and more like a computer, we will soon come to say that desktop computers and even laptops are obsolete as they do not offer the same mobility as phones. This is why having a mobile version of a website will lead to an increased traffic, thus a higher reach to online customers. The creation of a website for mobile devices goes hand in hand with a mobile application, so the two of them should be considered together. Mobile applications also work for those who want to use paid advertising for increasing their online visibility.

Search Engine Optimization or SEO

Having a website, even with a mobile version, is not sufficient to attract online customers. In order to be visible, it needs to appear on the first pages and lines of search engines. For this purpose, they need to be optimized based on the searches of people. The Search Engine Optimization or SEO process can help a company increase its visibility on the Internet.

Social Media Marketing

Social media is the most important channel to reach young audiences. Facebook and Instagram are the two most used social media channels, however, when promoting a business for online clients on these websites, content is what makes the difference. Time, regular posts of high-quality content and attention to the newest trends is what makes a page or account to generate profits and attract clients in the online environment.

The tools available for attracting clients online are quite a few and choosing the right ones is very important. However, through having a website, a business owner can build around to create an identity and later a brand.

Sourced from The Jerusalem Post

Sourced from pocketnow.

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Blueprints Website Builder is a simple-to-use app with a clean, intuitive visual builder interface. It’s easy to customize to best suit your small business or personal needs. The templates and blocks are based on Bootstrap 4 framework, HTML, and JavaScript, but you don’t need any coding experience to operate. Best of all, Blueprints Website Builder automatically boosts searchability thanks to the built-in SEO.

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Want your products featured in the Pocketnow Shop? Learn more about how to sell your products online!

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“Kill Your Darlings – And Other Lessons From 40 Years Of Storytelling”

AAI Nuts and Bolts of Advertising seminars form part of the AAI Advertisers’ Toolkit, an initiative to help advertisers and marketers keep up-to-date on important advertising topics and useful marketing questions.
Seminar Details

Windmill Lane has been a creative powerhouse in the media landscape for over 40 years.

From its origins in the urban wasteland of Dublin’s docklands during the savage recession of the 1980s to a glittering rise, Windmill Lane grew to work with a list of who’s who in music, television and film, expanding into London and LA, setting up a TV station, and producing some of the most iconic advertising campaigns created in Ireland and internationally.

In the latest #AAIToolkit event, Creative Director John Kennedy will take you on an entertaining journey through the key lessons Windmill Lane has learned in 40 years of navigating creative chaos. But it’s not been all smooth sailing – and Windmill Lane knows a thing or two about working through disruption without a roadmap.

John will share compelling insights into what makes great creative, how you can’t do good work without authenticity and emotion, and how, while the medium may have changed, crafted storytelling will always be at the heart of what we do.

As the media and consumer landscapes continue to change rapidly, John will also argue that the creative process needs to constantly adapt to mirror those changes.

Where: Dentsu Aegis Network, 20-38 Haddington Road, Dublin 4

When: Tuesday 31st March, 8.15-10am

Register to attend:

 

Free to AAI Members – please register your attendance

€40 + booking fee for non-members

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Intermarché, the third-largest supermarket chain in France, distributes close to 970 million printed circulars a year.

Beyond requiring beaucoup papier, “a lot of younger people simply don’t read them anymore,” said Anne-Marie Gaultier, Intermarché’s CMO.

And that’s if they even receive them. It’s difficult for Intermarché to know if its flyers are making it into mailboxes, particularly in urban areas with a lot of apartment buildings.

But retail coupon circulars have been a mainstay of the grocery biz for decades. Rather than tossing them in the bin, Intermarché is taking a more digitally minded and data-driven approach.

In October 2019, Intermarché and sister companies Bricomarché and Bricorama, both DIY retailers, signed a multiyear agreement with ARMIS, a Paris-based startup that allows traditional retailers to transform their physical circulars into localized display ads. Stores upload their product feeds through an SaaS platform and specify catchment areas, and ARMIS buys ads programmatically to reach people who live within proximity of certain store locations.

ARMIS is powered by integrations with the Google Ads API, Facebook API and Xandr API and backed by heavy hitters. AppNexus founder Brian O’Kelley and former AppNexus president Michael Rubenstein both participated in the company’s $1 million euro seed round in 2017. ARMIS has raised a total of 7 million euros since it was founded in 2016.

AdExchanger spoke with Intermarché’s CMO, Gaultier.

ANNE-MARIE GAULTIER: Intermarché is part of an independent group of food retailers. All of our stores are owned by franchisees, and we help facilitate the marketing and the buying. We sell all of the big national and international brands, such as Kraft and Coca-Cola, but we also have our own private label products and brands. We have 62 plants where we produce our own products and the largest fleet of fishing boats in France which we use to get fresh fish.

What role have circulars historically played in your marketing mix?

They are a vital way for our retailers to showcase their promotions, discounts and all of the special deals you can get in the store. We release a new circular nearly every week. Sometimes it’s just about the best deals and sometimes there is a theme, such as homewares or decorations during the Christmas season.

On average, how much money do you spend on print circulars?

I can’t go into detail, but I can say it’s an important budget line for us.

Why did you decide to start digitizing your weekly circulars?

Young people in urban centers don’t read them, it’s hard to stand out and we wanted to reduce our carbon footprint. ARMIS was compelling to us because it allows us to find our consumers on the web and be more personalized. If we have a circular for gardening tools, well, not everyone has a garden, so we’d be distributing a lot of circulars for nothing.

We share our loyalty and CRM data with them, which allows us to further personalize. For example, if we have a special circular for women who just had a baby, we can identify the moms and only push that information to that target audience. Circulars can’t make that distinction, it’s just massive distribution.

What sort of effort does this require on your end?

ARMIS ingests the information from our circulars and plugs it into their system, which is easy. But we still need a team to make sure we’re reaching the right target, to track results and to follow the KPIs.

Are you able to collect new data from the digitized circular ads?

We can identify which products appear to be of interest to target groups close to specific stores and which get the most clicks. But it’s still early. We’re at the stage where it’s mainly about trying to get a sense of reach and only beginning to phase out paper circulars in big cities. The second step will be to create more specialized circulars to target specific groups.

Can you attribute foot traffic or sales to the local online ads you’re running?

We’re broadly measuring the effect on stores in exposed areas versus unexposed areas, but soon we’ll be able to use our loyalty program to trace whether this is creating incremental sales.

Do you still print circulars, and why/why not?

We do still print circulars, and I believe there will always be a place for them. We have some customers who aren’t very digital, who rely on circulars, people who live outside of cities. There needs to be a balance in everything we do.

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Sourced from adexchanger

Sourced from  Power Retail

Social media can make or break a brand’s image. Small things like maintaining transparent language can be the crux to building a strong and loyal customer.

On average, Australians spend more than 800 minutes scrolling through social media per week. From Instagram to TikTok, we’re living in a world of omnipresence. Shopping is the same, and this omnipresence will only become more ubiquitous.

Every year social commerce adapts and transforms with ever-sophisticated technology and consumers. Digitally native and rapidly self-educating, Australian consumers are spending more tie on their phones than ever before. Capturing every facet of this tech is a vital tool for bolstering growth.

In 2020, it’s not acceptable to simply have an Instagram account. In 2019, the number of internet users globally was 4.4 billion. Furthermore, 3.5 billion of those internet users also utilised social media.

On social media, even the smallest moments can be worthy of a share. Get your team to create a video of someone using a product, share customer images and reviews, and keep the content honest. In this day and age, 59 percent of social media users want to see content that is authentic and engaging. Thirty-three percent wish to see informative content and 28 percent want to see something visually appealing.

2020 Trends to Watch and Apply

  1. Transparency … To the Next Level

    As one of the key buzzwords of the last two years, a retailer that maintains transparency is one that establishes greater trust with its consumer. Whether it’s a simple post on Instagram and Facebook that an item is out of stock, or even posting a requested item on social with a hyperlink to the site. Last week, Sportsgirl shared a post on Instagram with the caption: ‘WE GET IT – YOU ALL CAN’T STOP TALKING ABOUT THIS DRESS. So, here it is…’ This language is laidback, relatable to its audience and has a compelling CTA which will resonate with its consumer.

    In 2018, Showpo shared a video on YouTube addressing the backlog of orders during the busy Easter period. The video, titled ‘So… We F*cked Up’, included Showpo’s CEO, Jane Lu, who addressed the business’ mistakes and promised to do better in the future. In the act of frankness, it opened up a dialogue about the ways the company could improve. Social media allows companies to have somewhat face-to-face communication with their consumers.

  2. Multiple Platforms – Within Reason

    It’s no longer acceptable to be across two or three channels. Cross-promotion is a fantastic way to keep your consumer abreast of the latest promotions, products and updates for your brand. It’s also a useful tool for capturing a new audience. With TikTok growing exponentially (500 million global active monthly users and 1.5 billion iOs and Android downloads), creating an authentic and well-conceived action plan for these platforms is essential. There is a catch, though. Just because a platform is trending, it doesn’t mean your brand is aligned with that platform.

    A success story of a retailer utilising the likes of TikTok includes Superdry, who brought out three TokTok influencers during the launch of its store in August 2019. “The way Australian’s (and the world for that matter) shop and interact is evolving. We have seen the rise of many businesses and technologies that have entered the traditional brick and mortar marketing stratagem (AfterPay, WeChatPay, Facebook, Instagram and even AI technology) and TikTok is just one of the newer developments,” said Matthew Iozzi, PR and Marketing Manager at Superdry Australia. “We are seeing an active shift in the kind of content brands are expected to create for Gen Z. Moving away from static, posed, model-esque Instagram shots, to engaging video and interactive AI.”

  3. Visual-Rich Content

    It’s no longer viable to share simple images across social media. Content can conjure up a better online retail experience and can create a lifestyle from a single product without too much imagination from the consumer.  YouTube is the best option for tech demonstrations – Instagram is ideal for fashion and makeup. “Using tactics like blogging, you can create warm traffic to remarket to later, with a much lower CAC than cold traffic,” said Cassandra Campbell, Content Marketing Lead at Shopify.

    It’s not just about creating a beautiful image for Instagram 0- you have to compel your customers to continue to visit your site. Use reviews, essential features of the product, real-life pictures of people using your product and anything else that you think it’s useful for the customer. This is one of the most essential parts of creating rich content – make sure it’s relevant to your customer, not just your brand image. BCF does this in spades with its content. The company often shares imagery of consumers using fishing tackle and camping gear from the retailer, while staying rich in its aesthetics and staying ‘on-brand’.

  4. Don’t Discredit Influencers

    In 2019, there was a peak of influencer content. The social media world was flooded with #ad hashtags, and content was soon becoming far too saturated to have any cut-through. Then when Instagram cut off the visuals cues of likes in 2019, it seemed that the inevitable bubble for influencers had burst. However, this isn’t the case. While the number of influencers may have dipped in size, it means that the quality of this content may have actually increased. According to Power Retail, 53 percent of Australian consumers want influencers to promote bargains, and 43 percent prefer content that is filled with advice or tips.

    When it comes to finding the right influencers for your content, it’s not about finding someone with a considerable following. In reality, that will get you nowhere. It’ doesn’t make sense to pay someone thousands if they don’t represent the retailer’s brand image, messaging or overall ethos. Micro-influencers, or those with under 100,000 followers, often have a core community of loyal followers who produce a high engagement rate. While hiring a celebrity may look great for your image, it may not have the cut-though you’re expecting. Influencers of this calibre get hundreds of offers thrown at their feet every day, and if they shill every product under the sun, their audience may feel desensitised to the content.

Really, not much has changed for social commerce, but the retailers must remember the power of social media. It pays to do your research, find imagery and messaging that resonates with your brand, and don’t be afraid to reach out into new platforms that may bolster further growth with a new audience.  It can make or break a brand; and can build or demolish reputation.

Sourced from Power Retail

 

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Are you looking for ways to improve your email marketing strategy? Want to delve deeper into human psychology to understand how to compose your email campaigns?

The team from Emma Inc. share their tips for success in this infographic.

They break things down as follows:

  • How the amygdala affects our gut reactions
  • How our brain processes content
  • How our brain reacts to human faces
  • How our brain reacts to color

Check out the infographic below for more detail.

Infographic looks at the psychological principles of email marketing

A version of this post was first published on the Red Website Design blog.

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Follow Mark Walker-Ford on Twitter

Sourced from Social Media Today

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Using these marketing tricks, there’s light at the end of the funnel.

Whether you’re a novice e-commerce entrepreneur or a veteran in the space, it’s a good idea to continuously set new, higher sales goals. Greater sales translate to greater benefits for your company.

But the rules for how to increase sales aren’t necessarily one-size-fits-all. There are numerous variables to consider, such as product offering, existing customer base and customer demographics. It’s natural, too, for businesses to go through ups and downs, which requires entrepreneurs to keep an eye on e-commerce and purchasing trends and adjust ccordingly. After all, tried-and-true methods may have worked in the past, but eventually, the same old strategies can lose their touch.

Consumer habits tend to change quickly, especially as far as e-commerce. Here are four marketing tricks that could help you bring in a new wave of sales and revenue.

Prove your site is trustworthy

Concerns over cybersecurity have risen exponentially in recent years, which makes it more important than ever for e-commerce entrepreneurs to make their websites secure and even display badges reflecting their relationships with security providers (such as Norton Secured, Google Trusted Store, Verisign, McAfee Secure or BBB Accredited Business).

Think mobile-first and utilize video

Customers are not limiting themselves to shopping from their computers; instead, they’re increasingly using their mobile phones and tablets to make purchases online. This is especially the case for millennials. And it’s also why video demonstrations are great e-commerce tools: Not only do they often encourage consumers to stay on the site longer, but they can also increase engagement no matter which kind of device they’re shopping from. With video, you can showcase how a product works, and this is especially useful for new or unique products.

Create a sense of urgency

Amazon.com mastered many tricks, and the ability to create a sense of urgency in their listings is one of them. Merchants on Amazon know that if you enter an inventory of less than 20 items, the product page will show potential customers the number of items remaining, which can trigger someone to quickly make the purchase before they miss out. Inventories are often kept artificially low to take advantage of this trick.

Another trick that creates a sense of urgency is to offer deadlines with a countdown timer to hook potential buyers who might be on the fence. When it comes to timing, it’s also useful to let people know that if they finalize an order by a certain time, they will receive it before the weekend.

Send abandoned cart reminders

Depending on your customer base, you want to proceed with caution with this one, but it can be extremely beneficial to send emails to customers who abandoned their carts before finalizing a purchase. They’ll be reminded of the product they were considering (make sure to include a photo), and you can even include discount codes or other incentives to buy it that day.

Feature Image Credit: svetikd | Getty Images 

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Vice President, Innovation at Massive Alliance.

Sourced from Entrepreneur Europe

By Peter Cohan.

Technology can sap your productivity, but these four tiny habits can get much of it back.

If you are like most leaders, you waste plenty of your own and others’ time. There is some good news about how to do more with the time you have left: BJ Fogg, the Stanford scientist who founded Stanford University’s Behavior Design Lab, has discovered that people want more than anything to get more productive.

What’s more, after three decades of study, he’s come away with a simple and powerful insight: People can get more productive by making tiny improvements to their daily routines that will stick if they reward themselves after making the changes.

As CNBC reports, Fogg encourages people to insert the tiny habits into their normal routines–for instance, after they brush their teeth in the morning. If someone can’t stick with the new habit, she will feel little disappointment because her expectations were already low. Once she has added the new habit, she should give herself “a fist-bump,” Fogg told CNBC.

I’ve reviewed 12 of Fogg’s little habits and selected four that I believe are most useful for leaders like you. Each habit is connected with an anchor or prompt to help you remember to complete it. Read on for an explanation of why I picked each, why it’s important to entrepreneurs, and why the habit will boost productivity.

1. Sit down at your desk, then put your phone on do-not-disturb mode.

Successful entrepreneurs have great demands on their time from their team, customers, and investors. If you give in to their urgent desire to talk, you lose control of your time–which could make it more difficult for your company to reach its goals.

To keep these people motivated, make a plan each day and stick to it. Ironically, that means you must keep these people from pulling you away from your plan. That’s why you must not to answer every call that comes into your phone by putting it on do-not-disturb mode.

This habit will keep you focused on your key tasks and give you back the time you would have spent talking with the person, thinking about the call afterwards, and doing something to solve the caller’s problem.

2. Don’t browse social media for distraction. But if you do, log out.

Someone in your company–possibly in marketing or customer service–should be keeping an eye on social media.

I think founders should not spend time on social media during work hours. Yet some leaders cannot resist looking at Twitter or LinkedIn during work–possibly justifying it with the thought that they might receive an important business insight.

If you make that mistake, cut your losses by logging out. This will keep you from wasting more time. And if you feel the need for getting away from the grind, take a brisk walk around the building.

3. After you sit down in a meeting, write the title, the date, and the attendees at the top of your notes.

Leaders spend lots of time in meetings–say with potential customers or investors. If you’re like me, you take notes in those meetings so you can remember key details–such as who said what.

The notes help you follow up more effectively with the right people when you have time to think about the topics discussed in the meeting. This is why it’s particularly important for you to write down the date and the name and title of each attendee.

By doing this, you will save yourself the time and embarrassment of going back to the attendees and asking them for this information. That time will be better spent using what happened in that meeting to win new customers or raise needed capital.

4. After reading a time-sensitive email, reply with something like: “Got it. I will review it in detail and get back in touch soon.”

Leaders receive lots of email from their executive team, employees, customers, and others. Many of the emails are time sensitive to the sender but less so to the entrepreneur–who ignores the message.

This failure to respond reduces the sender’s productivity by putting the related task on hold, which aggravates the sender. The simple remedy for this productivity-sapping inaction is to get in the habit of sending a quick note that you received the email and will respond by a particular time.

Adopt these four tiny habits and you’ll get more done.

Feature Image Credit: Getty Images

By Peter Cohan.

Founder, Peter S. Cohan & Associates @petercohan

Sourced from Inc.