Remove differences
Remove Business Blogging Remove Differentiation Remove Inbound Marketing Remove Youtube
article thumbnail

102 Compelling Social Media and Online Marketing Stats and Facts for 2012 (and 2013)

Webbiquity

This post, along with 79 Remarkable Social Media Marketing Facts and Statistics for 2012 and 87 More Vital Social Media Marketing Facts and Stats for 2012 previously published here, provide a solid foundation for that understanding. What do buyers really want from social media marketers? 25 Social Media Facts and Statistics.

article thumbnail

7 Strategies for Using Content to Market Industrial Products

Industrial Marketing Today

Home Marketing Matters About Contact B2B Marketing Store Company Website 7 Strategies for Using Content to Market Industrial Products by Achinta Mitra on May 14, 2010 in Content Marketing , Industrial Marketing & Web 2.0 , Industrial Marketing Blog I am a big fan of Content Marketing or as some people like to refer to it as Inbound Marketing.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Thought Leadership: Marketing Engineering Services with Technical Articles

Industrial Marketing Today

Then you know very well that it is fundamentally different from marketing industrial and/or manufactured products. There is very little to differentiate one from another. He was talking about his long journey in convincing upper management about the value of starting a business blog.

article thumbnail

How to Conduct Competitive Analysis to Step Up Your Content Strategy

Hubspot

When you ask marketers who their competitors are, they can rattle off a list quite quickly, and perhaps a few anecdotes about notable differentiators like product features, sales techniques, and site structure. Maybe they'd like to know more information about them (say, their marketing techniques?) Image credit: pasukaru76.

article thumbnail

10 Genius Ideas That Changed Marketing Forever

Hubspot

“In many ways, marketing used to be a lot like software development,” wrote marketing technologist Scott Brinker. Yearly plans of a few major initiatives would lumber forward with rigid hand-offs between the different stakeholders -- researchers, strategists, creatives, media buyers, etc. 2) Blogging.