Posts Tagged ‘Decade’
Posted in Direct Mail Marketing on August 17th, 2010 by Internet Marketing – Be the first to comment
Lycos Inc., an Internet-bubble highflier that sold roughly a decade ago for more than $12 billion, has been acquired for $36 million by Indian digital-marketing-services firm Ybrant Digital from South Koreas Daum Communications.
Posted in Direct Mail Marketing on July 12th, 2010 by Internet Marketing – Be the first to comment
Brad Spirrison: Thanks to the Internet, smartphones and innovative entrepreneurs who can thrive in any economy, small-business owners have access to countless free tools that can help them court customers immediately. A decade into the 21st century, the key to any company's survival is the ability to use those tools effectively.
Posted in Direct Mail Marketing on June 10th, 2010 by Internet Marketing – Be the first to comment
Internet Marketing's newest driving force Lucas and Carri Cantoni announce the acceptance of their personal invitation to attend the most exclusive master marketing event of the decade. This is the third event in less than seven months for this leadership couple.
Posted in Direct Mail Marketing on October 28th, 2009 by Internet Marketing – Be the first to comment
The Internet has changed the face of the Earth more than any other technological innovation after the discovery of the electrical energy. For less then a decade, the Internet has essentially changed the World of business. Many new commercial activities, processes, and business models have been created, and many old ones have been forgotten. This [...]
Posted in Direct Mail Marketing on October 27th, 2009 by Internet Marketing – Be the first to comment
Microsoft is doing almost everything right with Windows 7. Rock-solid engineering, energetic marketing, great outreach to hardware and software partners. Microsoft bloggers actively share information and take feedback. Collectively, the company does everything you would expect from a smart company nearly a full decade into the 21st Century . One group at Microsoft seems to be stuck in 1999. For some inexplicable reason, the technical team responsible for packaging and manufacturing and selling