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Monday, February 27, 2012

How Inbound Marketing Works (7 Steps) + HQ Search

Inbound marketing is no cakewalk. Marketers who are embracing inbound have a variety of different channels and tactics to master, including content creation, SEO, social media, lead generation, lead management, and analytics. It's no wonder that marketers new to inbound end up feeling overwhelmed and wondering what to tackle first.

Luckily, our friends over at inbound marketing agency IMPACT Branding & Design recently pulled together an infographic that helps inbound marketers understand the entire inbound process from start to finish -- from getting found online, to converting visitors into leads and customers, and then measuring the entire funnel. Well done, IMPACT, you captured the inbound process beautifully!

impactbnd inbound marketing process FINAL resized 600

source: HubSpot | Pamela Vaughan

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As a Global Category Analyst, CHEVRON provided the opportunity to develop & implement outside-the-box thought followed by action. I created process that worked for my category and had the characteristics and results that effected global process improvement across multiple channels.

I applied the same "outside-the-box" thought process to SEO and VISIBILITY PROLIFERATION, and created HIGH QUALITY Online Google Search Domination & Visibility implementation process for ANY business to experience excellent RESULTS!

7. DOMINANT VISIBILITY / 1ST PAGE SEARCH RESULTS:

TEST REAL TIME ONLINE SEARCH RESULTS... CLICK Below:

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Proven Online Google Search Domination Visibility

RESULTS are the only thing that matter! I help get similar results.

  CLICK images... Get RESULTS!

Thank you...

Vincent Medina
Managing Director | Google Search Domination Visibility Expert
http://ArtfulMind.Biz
310 251 9728


I resolve to provide excellent resource for
Online Google Search Domination Visibility Expertise | SEO | Link-building | printing | branding | social media | creative design | business process improvement | marketing | advertising for real estate | business | realtors in Santa Monica | Marina del Rey | Malibu | Pacific Palisades | Hollywood Hills | Downtown Los Angeles | S CA.


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Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Can Your Business Afford to Ignore Social Media? + Search Ingenuity

  Social Icons

If you were running a business five years ago, you will recall how this crazy social media thing played out.

First, a bunch of people calling themselves "social networking consultants" or "new media experts" or some such thing showed up with their palms out. After giving them some cash to do stuff you didn't under-stand, you decided they were mostly flim-flam artists (and we can hardly blame you) and sent them packing. But then, all of a sudden, everybody and their mother was on Twitter and you wondering how the heck it all happened so fast.

The truth is, (few to) nobody knew what to make of social networking sites when they first exploded a few years ago, let alone how to leverage them to help business. But times have changed and the new media just isn't so new anymore—it's matured to the point that anybody with a product to sell, a service to offer, or a brand to promote has to be dedicating resources to their social messaging.

There's a reason Web 2.0 companies like online coupon site Groupon, and business networking service LinkedIn, Google+, Pinterest, and Facebook, the biggest fish of them all, are lining up to (dominate or, boldly) go public.

Social (Media) is big business. And not just for the providers of social media services, but for the companies that use platforms like Facebook and Twitter to increase awareness of what they're selling as well.

A new infographic (below) from visual.ly serves up the goods on just how pervasive social networking has become and what a bonanza it can be for businesses that handle it the right way.

Now, it's true that as with all marketing and advertising (white noise), it can be difficult to determine just what you're getting in return for dollars spent on social media. (But, there are definitely viable metrics that can be applied throughout the social media infrastructure that accurately measure results, and aside from that, if your incoming phone calls have increased, something is working.) That's why you should probably be on the lookout for the next crop of consultants calling themselves "social marketing optimization experts" and such.

But in the meantime, digest these numbers: More than 80 percent of Americans participate in at least one social network and of those people, 53 percent follow a particular brand. That's roughly 130 million customers of some company or companies out there, and as visual.ly puts it, "Shouldn't it be yours?"

Why Your Business Must Go Social

source: Damon Poeter, PCMAG.com

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CLICK images for RESULTS...

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Albert Einstein was one of the smartest beings who ever lived. His contributions to science has left us with many legacy treasures. Even though his theories may have sounded crazy at that time, they have much better clarity now. As many now understand, he was definitely Ahead of the Curve.

As a Global Category Analyst, Chevron provided me the opportunity to develop and implement outside-the-box thought followed by action. I created process that worked for my category and had the characteristics and results that later effected global process improvement.

I applied the same "outside-the-box" thought process to SEO and VISIBILITY PROLIFERATION, and created Google Search Domination and Visibility implementation process for ANY business to experience excellent RESULTS!

DOMINANT 1ST PAGE GOOGLE SEARCH RESULTS:

 

TEST REAL TIME ONLINE SEARCH RESULTS... CLICK BELOW

Image and video hosting by TinyPic

 


 

Get Google Online Search Domination Visibility

RESULTS are the only thing that matter! I help get similar results.

 

RESULTS Matter Most! CLICK images... Get RESULTS!

Thank you...

Vincent Medina
Managing Director  | http://ArtfulMind.Biz
310 251 9728


I resolve to provide excellent resource for printing | branding | social media | creative design | business process improvement | marketing | Online Google Search Domination Visibility Expertise | SEO | Link-building | advertising for real estate | business | realtors in Santa Monica | Marina del Rey | Malibu | Pacific Palisades | Hollywood Hills | Downtown Los Angeles | S CA.


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Friday, February 17, 2012

Be More Successful + Staying Ahead of the Curve

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Leadership tycoon Warren Bennis once said, “We seem to collect information because we have the ability to do so, but we are so busy collecting it that we haven’t devised a means of using it. The true measure of any society is not what it knows but what it does with what it knows.”

There is a wealth of information at our disposal today on the latest discoveries in brain science. While we enjoy reading about these findings and expanding our intellect, how many of us actually apply these concepts?

We can either drown in this information or turn it into a lifesaver by extracting its practical knowledge. This article offers several important tips based on discoveries in brain research that can help us improve our personal and professional lives, as well as help others in our sphere of influence.

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Use VISUALIZATION to learn a new skill

Neuroplasticity is the ability of the brain to continuously create new neural pathways. When we repeat a skill that we are trying to master, we strengthen the neural networks that represent that action. The same happens physically in the brain whether we perform the action, or simply visualize it—Your brain cannot tell the difference between an action you performed and an action you visualized.

In a Harvard University study, two groups of volunteers were presented with a piece of unfamiliar piano music. One group received the music and a keyboard, and was told to practice. The other group was instructed to just read the music and imagine playing it. When their brain activity was examined, both groups showed expansion in their motor cortex, even though the second group had never touched a keyboard.

Albert Einstein, who is credited with saying that “imagination is more important than knowledge,” used VISUALIZATION throughout his entire life. Why not take advantage of what we know about brain plasticity and take the time to add visualization as part of your rehearsals of anything you are trying to master, such as delivering a flawless presentation?

ACHIEVE your goals by keeping your mouth shut

This idea was popularized by Derek Sivers, a professional musician, in his presentation at TED. As he explains, psychology tests have proven that when you tell someone your goal, and they acknowledge it, you are less likely to do the work to realize that goal. This is because your brain mistakes the talking for the doing—that is, the gratification that the social acknowledgment brings tricks your brain into feeling that the goal has already been accomplished. The satisfaction you experience in the telling removes the motivation to do whatever it takes to actually make it happen.

Heed this information and keep your goals to yourself.
It might just spur you to work harder to achieve an important goal.

Smile to IMPROVE your mood

The Facial Feedback Hypothesis indicates that facial expressions representative of an emotion trigger changes in your body that are similar to those that happen when you experience the actual emotion. For example, your brain cannot tell the difference between a posed smile or a genuine smile. A posed smile will elicit, physiologically, the same pleasure or happiness response as a genuine smile. Your facial muscles cue your brain to experience that positive emotion. Taking notice of this, consider how this information can help you to regulate some of your emotional reactions by controlling your facial expressions.

Try this the next time you are in a bad mood: Instead of frowning, which reinforces a negative mood, consider smiling. Research has shown that by doing so, you are likely to experience a more positive mood.

Understand the physiology of emotional pain to DEVELOP empathy

Research at the Department of Psychological Sciences at Purdue University discovered that social or emotional pain is as real and intense as physical pain. The same brain networks are activated when a person experiences a physical injury as when they go through a painful emotional experience. Your brain cannot distinguish between physical and emotional pain.

“While both types of pain can hurt very much at the time they occur,” says Kip Williams, Ph.D., “social (emotional) pain has the unique ability to come back over and over again, whereas physical pain lingers only as an awareness that it was indeed at one time painful.” Consider for a moment that when we hurt someone emotionally, it may very well be the equivalent of breaking one of their bones. We can create a better world in our sphere of influence just by being mindful of this thought and using it to help develop our empathy towards others.

Lower your stress level by MANAGING your thoughts

There is ample research proving that your brain cannot tell the difference between a real and imagined threat; the physical response is the same.
In Mystic Cool: A Proven Approach to Transcend Stress, Achieve Optimal Brain Function, and Maximize Your Creative Intelligence, Don Joseph Goewey provides a powerful tool—called the Clear Buttonto thwart fearful thoughts and stop the escalating stress. This 10-second strategy works because it creates a distraction from the primitive brain where fear resides.

Care to test it out? Follow these 5 steps:

  1. Imagine that there is a button in the center of your left palm;
    imagine that this button, when pressed, will send a signal to
    your brain to stop the fearful thinking.
  2. Press the button with your right hand as you become aware of your breath.
  3. Take three easy breaths counting them out.
  4. Imagine a different color for each number.
  5. As you exhale, relax in the present moment.

Parker J. Palmer, founder of the Center for Courage and Renewal once said, “Science requires an engagement with the world, a live encounter between the knower and the known.” In other words, knowing is not enough. We do ourselves and others a great disservice when we don’t decide to act on the gift of knowledge. It’s the difference between hording information and developing wisdom.

source: President, Clarion Enterprises Ltd.

________________________________________________________________________________

Albert Einstein was one of the smartest beings who ever lived. His contributions to science has left us with many legacy treasures. Even though his theories may have sounded crazy at that time, they have much better clarity now. As many niw understand, he was definitely Ahead of the Curve.

As a Global Category Analyst, Chevron provided the opportunity to develop and implement outside-the-box thought followed by action. I created process that worked for my category and had the characteristics and results that later, effected global process improvement.

I applied the same "outside-the-box" thought process to SEO and VISIBILITY PROLIFERATION, and created Google Search Domination and Visibility implementation process for ANY business to experience excellent RESULTS!

DOMINANT 1ST PAGE GOOGLE SEARCH RESULTS:

 

TEST REAL TIME ONLINE SEARCH RESULTS... CLICK BELOW

Image and video hosting by TinyPic

 


 

Get Google Online Search Domination Visibility

RESULTS are the only thing that matter! I help get similar results.

 

RESULTS Matter Most! CLICK images... Get RESULTS!

Thank you.

Vincent Medina
Managing Director | http://ArtfulMind.Biz
310 251 9728


I resolve to provide excellent resource for printing | branding | social media | creative design | business process improvement | marketing | Online Google Search Domination Visibility Expert | SEO | Link-building | advertising for business | realtors in Santa Monica | Los Angeles | S CA.


 My Portfolio

 

Tuesday, January 31, 2012

National Geographic Photo of the Day: Best of 2011 + Online Presence

National Geographic is well known for their AMAZING PHOTOGRAPHY... take a look!

Photo: Camel thorn trees silhouetted against sand dunes

Camel Thorn Trees, Namibia

Photograph by Frans Lanting, National Geographic

Tinted orange by the morning sun, a soaring dune is the backdrop for the hulks of camel thorn trees in Namib-Naukluft Park.

See more pictures from the June 2011 feature story "Africa's Super Park."

Photo: Whitetip shark and diver

Oceanic Whitetip Shark, Bahamas

Photograph by Brian Skerry, National Geographic

Oceanic whitetip shark and diver in the Bahamas

(From the National Geographic book Ocean Soul by Brian Skerry)

Photo: Roots of a birch tree wrap around a glacial boulder

Yellow Birch, Adirondacks

Photograph by Michael Melford, National Geographic

On the trail to Goodnow Mountain, a yellow birch appears to be ingesting a boulder left behind by a glacier. With its tenacious trees and rebounding wildlife,Adirondack Park is a miracle of regeneration. Committed advocates and legal protections written into New York’s state constitution offer hope that it will remain forever wild.

See more pictures from the September 2011 feature story "Forever Wild."

Photo: Tops of skyscrapers emerge from fog

Skyscrapers, Dubai

Photograph by Catalin Marin, Your Shot

Every year around the month of October, Dubai experiences heavy fog due to the still-high humidity and the falling temperatures. With all the new high-rise buildings (including the tallest in the world, Burj Khalifa) this provides a great photographic opportunity.

Photo: A cottonmouth snake showing its fangs

Cottonmouth, North Carolina

Photograph by Jared Skye, My Shot

While working as a field researcher for a biodiversity study on pine plantations in North Carolina, I found this Agkistrodon piscivorus in a drainage ditch. It's seen here displaying the classic defensive posture that gives it the common name "cottonmouth."

Photo: People jumping from a platform into Lake Superior

Swimmers, Lake Superior, Minnesota

Photograph by Nick Otto, My Shot

I love all the empty space around the swimming platform. It shows how the lake is both huge and peaceful. The figures of the people become very small, and what makes the shot is the person jumping from the platform and appearing especially tiny surrounded by all that water.—Catherine Karnow

Photo Tip: Don’t be afraid to have a lot of open space in your photos. Wide open space is as much an element as the objects and subjects in your photos.

Photo: A blacktip reef shark swimming among fish

Blacktip Reef Shark, Maldives

Photograph by Paul Wilkinson, Your Shot

Smaller fish keep their distance when a blacktip reef shark swims amongst them in shallow water in the Maldives.

Photo: Kung fu master standing near mountain retreat

Kung Fu Master, China

Photograph by Fritz Hoffmann, National Geographic

Buddhist monk and kung fu master Shi Dejian (above) and his disciples hauled bags of cement and roof tiles up steep mountain paths to build an isolated retreat (in background) away from the tourist crowds at the Shaolin Temple.

See more photographs from the March 2011 feature story "Battle for the Soul of Kung Fu."

Photo: A pathway covered in red autumn leaves in a German forest

Autumn Woods, Germany

Photograph by Jonathan Manshack

This photo was taken during autumn in Hameln, Germany, which is the birthplace of the infamous Rattenfänger—or Pied Piper as we Americans know it. This shot is actually on top of the last few hills that soon sink into the state of Niedersachsen (Lower Saxony). This area is essentially lowland plains—hence the name Lower Saxony!

(This photo and caption were submitted to the 2011 National Geographic Traveler Photo Contest.)

Photo: Decorated elephant

Elephant Festival, India

Photograph by Marjorie Lang, My Shot

The Elephant Festival is one of the most popular festivals in Jaipur and takes place at the famous Chaugan Stadium in March. It begins with a beautiful procession of bedecked elephants, camels, horses, and folk dancers. The mahouts proudly embellish their elephants with vibrant colors, jhools (saddle cloth), and heavy jewelry.

Photo: Snow-covered trees in a field

Alberta, Canada

Photograph by Dwayne Holmwood, My Shot

Beautiful frost at sunset in Alberta

 

source: National Geographic

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Vincent Medina
search term: Who is the Google Online Search Domination / Visibility Expert?
http://ArtfulMind.Biz
310 251 9728

 

Monday, January 23, 2012

Online Presence & Visibility....Defined!

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CLICK image below for results your business can experience too! (no matter what business that is)... Guaranteed.


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Vincent Medina
Google Online Search Domination / Visibility Expert Santa Monica Los Angeles
http://ArtfulMind.Biz
310 251 9728

 


 Expert: Advertising + Business Process Improvement + Design + Direct Mail + Marketing + Printing + Google Search Domination + SEO/Link-Building + Social Media
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Saturday, January 21, 2012

Rethinking Information Diversity in Networks + Google Search Visibility Expertise

"Making the WORLD More Open & Connected." ~Mark Zuckerberg
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How do your friends shape the information you see and read online? Social networking technologies like
Facebook let us connect to hundreds, even thousands of people -- and have fundamentally changed how people get their information.

 

While much of our time is spent communicating with close friends about events in our personal lives [1], we also use online networks to share breaking news, discuss political issues and learn about new trends.  In 2010, my colleagues Itamar Rosenn, Cameron Marlow, Lada Adamic and I conducted a study on Facebook to understand the nature of information spread in social networks.

 

Some claim that social networks act like echo chambers in which people only consume and share information from likeminded close friends, stifling the spread of diverse information. Our study paints a different picture of the world.

 

Instead, we found that even though people are more likely to consume and share information that comes from close contacts that they interact with frequently (like discussing a photo from last night’s party), the vast majority of information comes from contacts that they interact with infrequently.  These distant contacts are also more likely to share novel information, demonstrating that social networks can act as a powerful medium for sharing new ideas, highlighting new products and discussing current events.

 

The research suggests that Facebook isn’t the echo chamber that some might expect – online social networks actually increase the spread of novel information and diverse viewpoints.

 

 

Social Networks as Information Pathways

 Economic sociologist Mark Granovetter was one of the first to popularize the use of social networks in understanding the spread of information.  In his seminal 1973 paper, The Strength of Weak Ties [2], Granovetter found that surprisingly, people are more likely to acquire jobs that they learned about through individuals they interact with infrequently rather than their close personal contacts. 

 

To explain this phenomenon Granovetter used social graphs to illustrate how networks relate to information access (Figure 1). When a person interacts with two individuals frequently, those individuals are also likely to interact with one another.  It follows that people tend to form dense clusters of strong ties who are all connected.

 


Figure 1: We are connected to core groups of strong ties that we interact with frequently and weak ties that we interact with infrequently. Granovetter's hypothesis about the "strength of weak ties" states that weak ties facilitate information flow from disparate clusters of people.

 

 

What do these structures have to do with information access? Since people in these clusters all know each other, any information that is available to one individual spreads quickly to others within the cluster. These tight-knit social circles tend to be small relative to people's entire social network, and when it comes to information about future job opportunities, it can be hard to find new leads.

 

Granovetter used the relationship between interaction frequency and social structure to explain why information about jobs is instead found through weak ties that we interact with infrequently.  Weak ties help spread novel information by bridging the gap between clusters of strong tie contacts.  The strength of weak ties informs much of the popular understanding of information spread in social networks.

 

 

Birds of a Feather Surf Together

 But what about information that is more widely available, like news on the Internet? To understand the flow of more general types of information in society, it’s important not only to take into account how people are connected, but also the commonalities that promote the spread of information.  One of the most robust findings in social networks is that of homophily [3], the tendency of individuals with similar characteristics to associate with one another.  Individuals are connected to each other through workplaces, professions, schools, clubs, hobbies, political beliefs and other affiliations.  The homophily principle holds true for any kind of social network you can think of: close friends, professional contacts, classmates and even the people you ride the bus with. 

 

Today, these commonalities not only shape how often people interact and what they talk about, but also what kinds of information they as individuals seek on the Web.  Homophily suggests that people who interact frequently are similar and may consume more of the same information.  Individuals that interact less often tend to be dissimilar and may consume more diverse information.  This view of the world is illustrated in Figure 2 below.

 


Figure 2: Information spread in online social networks. Our study suggests that strong ties are similar and more likely to be tuned into the same web sites. Weak ties, being more dissimilar, tend to visit different websites.

 

 

Interest & Novelty

 To understand how online social networks affect the spread of information, we used random variation in the News Feed to determine how likely a person is to share Web content if she did or did not see the content shared by her friends.  We found that people are more likely to share the information they were exposed to by their strong ties than by their weak ties on Facebook (Figure 3).   

 



Figure 3:
People are more likely to share information (links to Web pages) that they were exposed to by strong ties in their News Feed [4]. Tie strength between two individuals is measured by the number of comments a person received from their friend on Facebook. Other measurements of tie strength, like the number of messages, co-appearances in photos, and discussion on posts are discussed in our paper [5].

 

There are many possible explanations for the increased flow of information across strong ties. One reason is that close contacts are more likely to be similar to one another, and therefore find content shared by their close friends more interesting.  An alternative explanation is that strong ties are more "influential", so that people are more likely to be persuaded to share information from their close contacts. 

 

We also investigate how Facebook amplifies information distribution. That is, if a friend shares something on Facebook, how many times more likely are you to share that information as a result of seeing it in the News Feed? The figure below shows how this multiplicative effect depends on the strength of your tie with that friend.

 



Figure 4:
Weak ties spread novel information that people are unlikely to otherwise see. The figure above shows how many times more likely people are to share a page because of exposure via the News Feed from strong and weak ties.

 

We found that information shared by a person's weak ties is unlikely to be shared at a later point in time independently of those friends. Therefore, seeing content from a weak tie leads to a nearly tenfold increase in the likelihood that a person will share a link. In contrast, seeing information shared by a strong tie in News Feed makes people just six times as likely to share. In short, weak ties have the greatest potential to expose their friends to information that they would not have otherwise discovered.

 

 

The Collective Influence of Weak Ties

 Ultimately, we are interested in how these network effects shape information spread as a whole.  Even though a person is more likely to share a single piece of information from one of their close contacts, it turns out that weak ties are collectively responsible for the majority of information spread. 

 

Let's consider a hypothetical example (illustrated in Figure 5). Let's say a person has 100 contacts that are weak tie friends, and 10 that are strong tie friends.  Suppose the chance that you'll share something is very high for strong tie friends, say 50%, but the weak tie friends tend to share less interesting stuff, so the likelihood of sharing is only 15%. Therefore the amount of information spread due to weak and strong ties would be 100*0.15 = 15, and 10*0.50 = 5 respectively, so in total, people would end up sharing more from their weak tie friends.

 


Figure 5: People are more likely to share information from their strong ties, but because of their abundance, weak ties are primarily responsible for the majority of information spread on Facebook. The figure above illustrates how a majority of influence (orange) can be generated by weak ties, even if strong ties are individually more influential.

 

It turns out that the mathematics of information spread on Facebook is quite similar to our hypothetical example: the majority of people’s contacts are weak tie friends, and if we carry out this same computation using the empirical distribution of tie strengths and their corresponding probabilities, we find that weak ties generate the majority of information spread.

 

 

Conclusion

 The information we consume and share on Facebook is actually much more diverse in nature than conventional wisdom might suggest.  We are exposed to and spread more information from our distant contacts than our close friends.  Since these distant contacts tend to be different from us, the bulk of information we consume and share comes from people with different perspectives. This may provide some comfort to those who worry that social networks are simply an echo chamber where people are only exposed to those who share the same opinions.  Our work is among the first to rigorously quantify influence at a mass scale, and shows that online social networks can serve as an important medium for sharing new perspectives, products and world events. 

 

 

Footnotes

 [1] Common experience would suggest that we spend most of our time communicating with only a few individuals on Facebook.  To a large extent, this is true, and documented in Backstrom, et al. Center of Attention: How Facebook Users allocate Attention. ICWSM, 2011.

[2] M. Granovetter. The Strength of Weak Ties. American Journal of Sociology, 1973.

[3] An extensive and accessible introduction to homophily can be found in McPherson et al.  Birds of a Feather Flock Together. Annual Review of Sociology, 2001.

[4] It is important to note that very often, information does not "cascade" very far along the network.  This phenomenon has been observed in earlier research on Twitter in Everyone's an Influencer: Quantifying Influence on Twitter by Bakshy et al. and has been studied across other networks more extensively in upcoming work by Sharad Goel and Duncan Watts at Yahoo! Research, NY.

[5] The Role of Social Networks in Information Diffusion. Bakshy et al. 2012

 

 

source: Eytan Bakshy via Mark Zuckerberg

 

 

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CLICK here for PROVEN & GUARANTEED GOOGLE RESULTS.   

 

Where we ALL want to be with our business — through Social Media efforts.
The importance of 
innovative SOCIAL MEDIA (SM) and worthwhile content, is in it's opportunity for creating VAST PRESENCE throughout the WEB.
This leading to undisputed DOMINANT VISIBILITY RESULTS.

Thank you,

Vincent Medina
Managing Director, Google Online Search Domination Visibilty Expert
ArtfulMind.Biz | 310 251 9728


Expert: Google Online Search Domination / Visibility Expert + Creative Advertising + Business Process Improvement + Design + Direct Mail + Marketing + Printing + SEO/Link-Building + Social Media
  

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