Published on
June 12, 2008 in
from HTI, social marketing and social media.
Tags: applications, battle, branding, digg, digg.com, directories, facebook, flickr, Friendster, how to, internet marketing, myspace, Networking, new and improved, online pr, ppc, results, search engine, SEM, SEO, social media, social media marketing, video, videos, yahoo, youtube, Youtube.com.

This is Part 2 of our Primer on Social Media Marketing – How to Get Started.
With the first step in our primer, we have established what Social Media is, and all the forms it may take on the Internet. Now, we’ll take you through some pointers on how social media marketing is implemented. As applications multiply by the day, we can’t list all methods, but here are some essentials. Continue reading ‘Primer on Social Media Marketing (Part 2)’
Published on
June 9, 2008 in
from HTI and social marketing.
Tags: applications, apps, Blogs, branding, campaign, data, facebook, flickr, google, graph, myspace, Networking, online marketing, online marketing campaign, SEM, social media, social media marketing, social network advertising, social networking, social networking sites, twitter, USA, video, videos, word-of-mouth, yahoo, youtube.

Part 1 of our Two-Part Primer on Social Media Marketing
Facebook. Flickr. YouTube. Wikipedia. MySpace. Last.fm. Yahoo! Groups. Second Life. Twitter. Message boards. Wikis. Forums. Blogs!
So much Internet usage nowadays revolves around these various applications, technologies, and formats. What do they have in common? They’re all a part of the Social Media phenomenon, which grows at a monstrous rate. And it would only be expanding so vigorously if someone was making money off of it. Continue reading ‘Primer on Social Media Marketing (Part 1)’
Published on
June 2, 2008 in
email and from HTI.
Tags: Blogs, copywriting, did you know, e-commerce, ecommerce, email vs. e-mail, google, hyphen, lost, USA, visible shops.

You might be feeling correct whenever you write “email” by its traditional spelling “e-mail.” But did you know that many consider the hyphen to be superfluous and anachronistic? In fact, some resent the hyphen so much that they have a petition against it. Today, the more appropriate spelling of web-based terms tends to avoid hyphens and combine two words together (see “online,” “website,” and “blog”).
Dictionaries like Webster’s still use the hyphen in “email,” but that may change soon. Continue reading ‘Copywriting Tip: Drop the Hyphen… Words, Unite!’
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