Listly by Andy R. Newbom
I have decided to take on a challenge. (I love challenges.) I'm going to write 30 blog posts on my blog in the next 30 days.
So read through the list of blog post topic ideas and make comments on them, up-vote or down-vote your favorites and even add your own if you have a crazy good idea you think I should write about. Let's make this challenge a more crowd-sourced collaborative experience.
tricks and tips to kill it
might work with @atomic_reach on this since their tool is good at finding it
or is it all new and all sexy cool?
it baffles my mind that so few food places take advantage of their customers having smartphones
and why
and why
highlight my favorite ones and show the value.
might work with the brilliant Brian Fanzo on this @iSocial_Fanz
To some folks, beer is just a liquid you consume in order to get tipsy. But those of us who are fans of craft brews know they can (and should!) transcend that. Help us craft beer lovers explain to our mass-produced drinking friends why they should fork over an extra couple of dollars for a micro brew.
growth hacking rocks and is a tremendous mindset and approach. But it can so easily devolve to basically spam and the worst part of hacking.
Just because you CAN hack something to spam someone and trick them into taking some action does not mean that you have found the mythical product-market fit
or does it?
Im going to do a 30 posts in 30 days challenge - help me by reminding me and pushing and encouraging me
does the obsession over finding product-market fit lead to better products/services or just better returns on investment?
mobile won the war. but its about behavior not technology
Am I a weirdo or just weird?
Content marketing needs to put the needs of its audience front and center, yet many marketers are really producing content that's thinly veiled product marketing. Can you share the differences and how to tell when a piece has crossed the line?
I have worked in and with quite a few tech companies. In my experience MOST of the time marketing product (blog posts, tweets, decks, PR, articles, landing pages etc) were held to a MUCH higher standard of perfection and critique than engineering product (software code, html/CSS, javascript, UI etc)
Typically when a marketing person has a typo or punctuation mistake in something people lose their mind and freak out and blame that person.
Typically when there is the equivalent mistake in code like a bug, broken links or feature, it is passed over because "code is magic"
So is marketing 100% subjective or partially objective?
What about coding?
if money were BOTH:
No object (roadblock)
AND
Not the objective
what business would I start today?