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Delicious/immediatefuture
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bookmarks posted by immediatefuture
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Lessons marketers can learn from the Toyota crisis - Marketing News | UTalkMarketing
?The key thing the public worries about is whether they are safe to drive. If they can't find a quick answer, their anxiety amplifies,? said Group Account Director at immediate future, Niall O?Malley.
"The YouTube videos (as below) were a good move. They combined the traditional elements of positioning messages, such as empathy and factual explanation with clear links to the well-SEOed recall landing page so that anyone searching for ?Toyota recall? gets Toyota?s half of the story.?
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immediate future Bolsters Consultancy Team With Seven New Hires
PR & Social media agency, immediate future, has made seven new appointments across all levels.
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5 Social Media Tips for Better Corporate Social Responsibility
5 Social Media Tips for Better Corporate Social Responsibility
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Crowdsourcing Examples / Acknowledgements and Sources
Crowdsourcing Examples
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The Community Roundtable's Community Maturity Model
The Community Maturity Model
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Consumers embrace social shopping, new Deloitte survey reports | InternetRetailer.com - Daily News
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Performics Search Engine Marketing Blog: Consumers Open to Marketing Messages on Social Media Sites
Performics study examining 3,000 consumers? use, response to social media being unveiled at ad:tech New York
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TweetedBrands
TweetedBrands - The most mentioned brands on Twitter
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UKOM - Home
The UK Online Measurement Company is the authoritative voice for UK online audience measurement, run in response to the needs of advertisers, media agencies and online media owners. With the IAB and AOP at the helm, UKOM was established to drive progress in audience measurement and create, administer and fund an industry agreed system for planning online advertising campaigns in Britain
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Making your messages strike home | Trends | Marketing Week
UK mums spend an average of 32 hours per week with media, compared with the 36 hours for the average UK consumer. They surf the internet as much as their counterparts, but that is the exception: television, newspapers and radio all rank lower on their radar than they do for an average UK consumer.
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