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  • Here are three new ways for you, and your creative team, to trigger some gigantic ideas.

  • The delicate relationship between management and marketing is a dance roughly akin to that between fox and hen, but with far less goodwill. To management, you're only as good as your last campaign. So let's look at the 12 tenets of Social Media Marketing to see how you can up your success rate.

  • Gartner recently predicted a drop off in Second Life hype, followed by a stablization and eventual trend toward sustainable growth in this burgeoning metaverse. Meanwhile, bloggers and other social media sorts have been debating whether Second Life is so... well, 2006. Greg Verdino admits that he might have contributed to some extent to the "outing" of Second Life. Here, the refreshingly honest Greg offers a balanced view of the opportunities and the risks of doing business in Second Life.

  • There are a number of questions marketers should explore when creating and nurturing an online branded community.

  • The cardinal rule in MySpace is the same one as in the blogosphere: Keep it real. Before you leap in to MySpace as a marketer, you'd best understand it. Because if you don't, the MySpace community can turn on you the moment you make your first misstep. Just like bloggers can (many MySpace users are bloggers, too, since MySpace supports blogging within its platform).

  • Big changes are coming fast and, as marketers, we would be well advised to learn some lessons about metaverse marketing now, lest we be trumped by more nimble competitors. But we need to be smart about our approach, realistic in our expectations and consumer-centric in our executions. Doing it just to do it isn't good enough. On the other hand, neither is waiting to see what happens.

  • Why do you want a blog? Simply put, blogs make it easy to communicate more effectively with the audience you care about. They're the easiest way to update a Web site, provide simple and effective ways of automatically organizing the content you create, and notify your audience when your site has been updated. A blog can also allow you to collect feedback from that audience. And blogs are a great complement to the communications technologies you already use, such as email newsletters, conference calls and mailings. If you're ready to jump in and get started, the following short checklist offers some essential steps you'll want to follow.

  • What do Major League Baseball, Coca Cola, Well Forgo Bank, the W Hotel, and the American Cancer Society have in common? They all use a virtual realm to reach out to potential customers and supporters in novel ways.

  • Although Mark Hyman, M.D, the New York Times best selling author and practicing physician, had a strong, multi-faceted marketing and sales plan in place, the addition of an article-marketing strategy helped in his bid to push his book to the no. 2 spot of the NY Times best seller list. Dr. Hyman's article-marketing campaign was only one piece of the puzzle, but an important piece that helped him establish key relationships with site publishers that will result in increased, targeted traffic and stronger sales for many months and years to come. By including a targeted article marketing program into your marketing and sales plan, you can also achieve book-marketing success.

  • In Part 1 of this two-part article, the author looked at how MySpace (and the social networking industry in general) has evolved. Here in the second part, Cliff examines how he has applied what he has learned and observed to the MyCityRocks testbed, which he launched in Houston in 2005.

  • There's an invasion of little orange buttons on Web sites, and it has nothing to do with a new marketing campaign from Home Depot. Often labeled "XML," "RSS," or more recently "Subscribe," feeds are playing a leading role in the user-controlled distribution and fragmentation of Web content.

  • The growth of MySpace has been front and center in the media over the past 12 months, in part because of the continued incredible growth of the venture but also because of social outrage generated by those who view it as an inappropriate and unsafe environment for teenagers. Here, Cliff looks at what has happened with MySpace, what has changed, and what he's learned about the online social networking business model over the past 12 months.

  • "User-generated content" is much more than today's most tossed-around-the-tongue buzzword. It's the difference between having a flood of site traffic or just a trickle. Empower your users to create information that their peers want to see, and your site becomes a living, breathing place to be. Profiles, photos, and blogs still have currency in this post-and-share world—but video blogging is the hot now thing that's taking off fast.

  • Blog advertising expenditures have exploded in the past year. Companies can make a really big brand splash for relatively little money, meaning that blogs provide advertisers an excellent opportunity to reach a devoted audience niche. But blog numbers, until recently, have been little more than curiosities to big brands.

  • Marketers have a choice: You can continue using the same marketing methods you have always used to reach your customers, or you can try something revolutionary. You can join them. You can stop trying to guess what your customers are talking about, and instead join their communities and talk to them directly. Here are some of the tools -- like blogs, MySpace, and other consumer-generated media -- that your customers are already using to communicate online, and how you can incorporate them into your marketing plan.