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The Next 10 Years Of Infocomm Technology

YoungUpstarts

Over the next few decades, this young cohort would comprise a rising proportion of citizens in Asia (31%-40% in Singapore, Korea, Hong Kong and Japan, and more than 51% in Malaysia, Philippines, India and Indonesia). 2000 to 2005: CRM, SFA, ERP, Payroll, Analytics, etc. 1990s to 2000: Infrastructure, Security, Management, etc.

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The Red Queen Problem – Innovation in the DoD and Intelligence Community

Steve Blank

In the 21st century you need a scorecard to keep track of the threats: Russia, China, North Korea, Iran, ISIS in Yemen/Libya/Philippines, Taliban, Al-Qaeda, hackers for hire, etc. The solution is to understand that an innovation pipeline requires different people, processes, procedures, and metrics, then execution.

Community 212
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Digital Marketing & Analytics: Five Deadly Myths De-mythified!

Occam's Razor

It is an investment in numerous report writers or data (puking) automation or hiring a small army in India or Philippines to do that, before investing in any smart Analyst. For how to go about this, use the wonderful Analytics Ladder of Awesomeness. Bonus: Magnificent Mobile Website And App Analytics: Reports, Metrics, How-to! <

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Explained: The actual difference between growth hacking and marketing

The Next Web

Growth hackers utilize analytical thinking, product engineering and creativity to significantly increase their company’s core metric(s). Anyone who figured out how to game Google’s algorithm (aka SEO) was leveraging both creativity and analytics to rapidly grow their company. Thus the term growth hacking.

Marketing 165
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How To Suck At Social Media: An Indispensable Guide For Businesses

Occam's Razor

Success Metrics. In my Oct 2011 post, Best Social Media Metrics , I'd created four metrics to quantify this value. I believe the best way to measure success is to measure the above four metrics (actual interaction/action/outcome). It can be a brand metric, say Likelihood to Recommend. It is not that hard.

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CEO Friday: Why we don’t hire.NET programmers

blog.expensify.com

Hey, David Barrett, instead of considering the percentage of start-ups that don’t use.NET as some kind of meaningful metric, the more important metric is how many of these start-ups burn through their venture funds before producing any viable product to sell. March 27, 2011 at 3:50 pm. Robert Stanton. That is your right.

Java 107