Remove 2011 Remove Audience Remove Product Name Remove Search
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Search: Not Provided: What Remains, Keyword Data Options, the Future

Occam's Razor

In late 2011, Google announced an effort to make search behavior more secure. This encrypted their search queries from any prying eyes, and kept from being passed on to websites the users visits after seeing search results. In this post I want to share four angles on secure search: 1. want to protect user privacy.

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The unimportance of product names

37signals.com

Follow us on Twitter for more information on our products. The unimportance of product names. Don’t waste too much time on picking a perfect name for your product. And what about picking a name that’s available as a domain? Search is the way most people wind up finding us anyhow.

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The Ultimate Inventor’s Guide to Inventing Things

Up and Running

In 2011, it accounted for approximately $2.3 If you do have competition, pay special attention to your product name, price range, materials used, what the product claims to do, packaging, and who the manufacturer is. You will still need to do an online search to make sure you’re not infringing on someone else’s idea.

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7 Must Have Features If You Sell Products Online

Entrepreneurs-Journey.com by Yaro Starak

That’s up 15% from 2011. You’re a crazy person if you have a product to sell and you don’t look at the World Wide Web as one of your top priority distribution channels. Many online retailers offer an inbuilt on-site review system , which can attract positive reviews – if your product is good, of course.

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How to name your product, service, or startup

www.volkside.com

Refine words into name candidates: Compare the tentative list of words to your name requirements. Check domain names. Do a Google/Yahoo/Bing search online. This way you can treat the prospective name as a ‘blank canvas’ and build its meaning as you go. Enjoy your naming! Naming resources.

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28 Entrepreneurs Explain How They Came Up With Their Business Names

Hearpreneur

The name of my business is BlueIvy Communications. When I left the corporate world in 2011 to start my Public Relations and Communications firm, it was important that my company/brand represent me and my background. That’s why it was naming my new company BlueIvy Communications made sense. 26- It’s what people search for.

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