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  • If your e-mails don’t get read, you have no shot at getting the publicity you so desperately need. Here's how to beat the odds.

  • nly one in three of you are passionate about your jobs and companies. What advice do you have for helping the other two-thirds of employees wake up and get their groove back? Also this week, read your answers to: How do I manage the creation of a presentation when there are multiple people playing the role of reviewer/approver?

  • Agreement on what and how to measure the forces that drive brands is hard to muster. But here is one suggestion: emphasize systems.

  • Color can be used to support goals way beyond just recognition. It can be used to evoke emotion and build that all important connection with those who surround your brand.

  • Giving It Away

    Article

    Here’s the challenge: How do we very simply communicate our UC (unilateral concession) in a credible way (without saying free)?

  • Here are the top five mistakes that product managers can make to ensure their products fail.

  • he key to a successful newsletter is to send useful information on a regular basis and to maintain constant contact without being a pest.

  • In our world, which is the proper written English: that of the Queen or that of her most loutish of offspring, America?

  • Some optimizing recommendations are jarring for PR practitioners who’ve honed the craft of writing releases.

  • Just because a Web surfer’s visit is short and fleeting doesn’t mean that the relationship is without significant value.

  • hat's your definition of segment identification? What's a unique selling proposition? Add your own two cents to this week's discussion of marketing definitions. Also this week: How do you convince management to budget for training?

  • It’s up to us to make sure others inside our organizations fully understand the contribution and the promise of marketing.

  • Marketing executives invest a great deal of time and money building the brand, only to see it diluted at the most critical point—in front of the customer.

  • Publishing third-party articles on a Web site is a marketing strategy that can be right for one site, yet wrong for another.

  • Because of what is known as split-testing or test runs, direct marketers rarely get it wrong. Why then do other “professionals” rarely pay attention to this incredibly powerful strategy?

  • Converting a Webinar registrant to a customer takes more than a powerful presentation on the day of event.

  • Just because a Web surfer’s visit is short and fleeting doesn’t mean that the relationship is without significant value.

  • This week, weigh in with your own suggestions to: How do we create a PowerPoint slide deck everyone will love? Also this week, read your answers to: What's the best way to break into the marketing field?

  • When you use jargon words and phrases in a presentation, you risk losing credibility. Here’s a list of words that can get you into trouble.

  • Marketers can get so convoluted in our embrace of techniques and technology that we forget about the five keys to direct marketing success.