Tag: marketing

The Psychology of Color in Marketing and Branding

The psychology of color as it relates to persuasion is one of the most interesting–and most controversial–aspects of marketing. The reason: Most of today’s conversations on colors and persuasion consist of hunches, anecdotal evidence and advertisers blowing smoke about “colors and the mind.” To alleviate this trend and give proper treatment to a truly fascinating element of human behavior, today we’re going to cover a selection of the most reliable research on color theory and persuasion. Misconceptions around the Psychology of Color Why does color psychology invoke so much conversation … but is backed with so little factual data? As research shows, it’s likely because elements such as personal preference, experiences, upbringing, cultural differences, context, etc., often muddy the effect individual colors have on us…

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The Psychology of Color in Marketing and Branding

OneDrive for Business Updates Web User Experience

Mark Kashman (@mkashman) is a senior product manager on the SharePoint marketing team. In March, at SharePoint Conference 2014, we announced a lot of goodness coming soon to OneDrive for Business in Office 365. Now, two months later, we’re beginning to roll out some of the user experience innovations and refinements, including Simple Controls, Site Folders, smarter Search, and more. The new web interface of OneDrive for Business appears when you click OneDrive in the Office 365 top navigation. We believe that the user experience needs to be clean, simple, intuitive, and consistent—while maintaining the best-in-class capabilities to store, sync, and share, and that you should have the best destination to get work done. Period. This is why it’s important to us to keep …

Original Article Can Be Found Here:

OneDrive for Business updates web user experience

Marketing Can No Longer Rely on the Funnel

One of the central concepts of marketing and sales is the funnel through which companies are supposed to systematically move prospects from awareness through consideration to purchase. But consumers are now more informed, connected, and empowered than ever. Does the funnel still work in a digital, social, mobile age? We asked some of the leading marketers in the world – from companies like Google, Intuit, Sephora, SAP, Twitter, and Visa – to assess the relevance of the marketing funnel. What we found says as much about the future of business as it does about the future of marketing. According to these marketers, the primary problem with the funnel is that the buying process is no longer linear. Prospects don’t just enter at the top of …

Original Article Can Be Found Here:

Marketing Can No Longer Rely on the Funnel

Uncover Google Not Provided Data: An Interview with Chris Adams

In a recent interview from Marketo’s Marketing Nation Summit in downtown San Francisco, Murray Newlands talks with gShift Labs’ Chris Adams about how to uncover Google’s not provided data and the benefits that can have for online publishers and advertisers. To find out more, watch the full interview below: These are the key takeaways from the video: In the interview, Chris explains people are looking for more and more ways to uncover not provided data. He says not provided data is becoming an increasingly important topic for marketing executives and agencies who are struggling with the fact that their clients are asking them where their traffic has gone and are unable to give greater detail on the “not provided” segment. Chris says that over …

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Uncover Google Not Provided Data: An Interview with Chris Adams

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