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Online Marketing: 2009 Predictions

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I sat down with Larry Garfield of the Garfield Group the other day to discuss inbound marketing.  We had an awesome back and forth conversation with ideas flowing both ways. Towards the end of the conversation, he asked me, "Is there anything else you think we should be learning?"

My response was, "Everything I learned about online marketing, I learned by listening and experimentation."

If there's one constant about online marketing, it's that it's always changing.

This got me thinking about what might be coming this year. Here's a long list of predictions based on some logical leaps: 

The Obvious Ones

  1. The Year of the Business Blog. Many say that this was the year of the business blog, or even two years ago was the year. But, from my view in the trenches - talking to small and mid sized business owners - business blogging has NOT arrived yet. There are still way too many CEOs, Marketing VPs and small business owners who are resistant to business blogging: Too much time; Don't understand the value; Risk of revealing too much to competitors; Risk of that unhappy customer vocalizing. I think this is the year that business leaders will get over these crappy excuses. The economy will affect businesses in such a profound way (or CEOs will fear it so much) that they'll be aggressively looking for ways to attract more traffic, capture more leads and make more sales via the web. Blogging is the first step to doing this cost effectively. A business blog will be as essential as a website in 2009.
  2. SEO Consultants Will Deliver an ROI. SEO Hacks Will Go Out of Business. In 2008, If I had a penny for every time a business owner told me they paid their webmaster to do SEO for them or they hired someone to do SEO for them for $500/month, I would be on a beach somewhere right now: officially retired. In 2008, a good SEO consultant cost several thousand dollars a month. To maintain these prices, SEO consultants will need to expand their offerings to include content creation services. The only way to make SEO a consistent lead generation tool is to consistently create content. SEO consultants won't just be fixing SEO mistakes, picking keywords and doing On Page SEO, anymore. They'll be delivering an ROI within 3 months by creating content and link building at the 12th grade level. A good SEO consultant will generate leads. Not just polish the deck chairs.
  3. Social Media Advertising Will Come of Age. The average mid sized company spends a decent amount of money on pay per click advertising each month. The average mid sized company doesn't blog and doesn't actively improve their organic search rankings effectively. It's always easier to spend money than it is to spend time and resources. It's especially easy to spend money when it's very obvious what the return is. With PPC ads, you put money in, pick keywords, put up some landing pages (hopefully). Then, you get leads. It's obvious. With blogging and SEO, there are a bunch more steps and it isn't guaranteed unless each step is executed without mistake. The same goes for social media. Almost all businesses fail at leveraging social media effectively. It's not about just putting money in. However, in 2009, Twitter, Facebook, Linkedin, MySpace, Digg, etc, will make it easy to put money in and get targeted traffic out. Most of these sites are just recently launching their targeted ad capabilities.  They'll figure it out this year. Businesses will jump on this bandwagon. Not because it's right... but because it's easy.
  4. Marketing Software Will Become as Critical as Accounting Software. Companies like HubSpot, Constant Contact, Unica, Omniture, etc will demonstrate that a company without marketing software is a company without a future. The software the marketing department uses will become more important than the creative agency they use. Software will be as critical for marketing as it is for accounting.

Stars Are Aligned, But Probably Won't Happen Until Late 2009

  1. B2B Lead Generation Will Arrive. You'd be amazed at how many traditional B2B marketers respond with, "We don't sell anything online", when I ask them if online marketing is an important tool for the growth of their business. Marketers will finally wake up to the fact that the internet and b2b marketing are a match made in heaven. B2B buyers are looking for information to educate themselves. The internet was made to deliver the information people need 24x7x365 in millisecond response times. Buyers are willing to share their contact information to get that information. B2B Marketers will finally put 2+2+2 together.
  2. Most One-Trick-Pony Agencies will Die The website design business - as a standalone business - will die. So will the traditional PR agency and the traditional ad agency. There are far too many 10-30 person agencies who do just one thing. In the past few years, mid sized businesses have moved more and more of their budget to agencies that can do interactive marketing work: demand and lead generation. This year, those agencies will start adding some traditional agency services to their offerings. Then, they'll just take away all of the business. They won't just take it from traditional agencies either. Web site development companies have just as much to worry about. This is the year for marketing and web development agencies to adapt or die. They MUST develop services that generate demand for their clients. They must turn themselves into inbound marketing agencies. It's more about delivering an ROI. Not just billable hours.
  3. Web Celebrities will Develop Best of Breed Agencies.  Chris Brogan, Lee Odden, David Meerman Scott, Darren Rowse, Paul Gillin. Most of these guys were relatively unknown a few years ago. Their blogs and books have made them famous (at least among internet marketing circles). Most of them make money from books and speaking engagements. This year, if they haven't already, they will realize that they can make much more money consulting to corporate clients. They'll gradually build teams around them. Lee Odden is the farthest along with his SEO agency. Chris Brogan is off to a real strong start with his New Marketing Labs social media agency. I'm not saying that all of these guys will make the jump. But, the path of using your blog to start your best of breed marketing consulting agency will be proven. In fact, any agency that wants to survive will need to have a well known blogger like Steve Rubel or Todd Defren at the thought leadership helm.
  4. Sales and Marketing Departments Will Function as One. Sales and marketing groups never seem to get along. They never share power. An organization is either "sales driven" or "marketing led". HubSpot is an anomaly. Our sales team is bigger employee wise, but that's because our marketing team reliably generates demand with less people. We also work together to define what an ideal lead looks like. Sales tells marketing what kind of sales objections we receive and why people do or don't buy... and all this affects what content that marketing creates next. In 2008, we never missed a monthly sales quota. Marketing never missed their lead generation monthly quota. We use data and software to make unbiased decisions. We adapt weekly and monthly. As more companies adopt marketing software that integrates with sales software to do closed loop marketing, more more marketing and sales teams will function as one.

Probably More Accurate Predictions for 2010

  1. Non Media Businesses will Launch Their Own Online Media Companies. HubSpot is a software company. But, most of our prospective clients are attracted to us because of the media we create: marketing webinars, this blog, HubSpot tv, marketing white papers, etc. The media we create is the engine behind our amazing growth in 2009. We now have 1,000+ clients. We're teaching them exactly how we've turned content creation into a demand generation machine. I predict that there'll be a bunch of product and services companies that will launch full blown media companies. These media companies won't sell advertising. They'll create demand for their owners. Johnson and Johnson's BabyCenter is the perfect example. We'll see much more of this. Hosted social networks like the ones from Awareness and Jive will enable this movement.
  2. Effective CPL Ad Networks Will Arrive for B2B. LinkedIn or some other social media sharing site will take on Cost-Per-Lead advertising and win it. They'll be able to provide leads on a cost per lead basis even to niche B2B companies. They'll force Google to get serious about CPL. They'll forever change the way b2b companies generate demand by creating a centralized lead capture system similar to the Adwords publisher network. This network will make online lead generation turn-key. Since it's performance based, there'll be no barrier to trial. Any company not using it will be foolish. This is not necessarily a good thing for companies who haven't started turning their own website into a lead generation machine; Relying on a 3rd party network where your competitors can simply outbid you removes all competitive advantage you may have. This network is also not a good thing for those who haven't started creating their own media. In order to effectively advertise on this network, advertisers will need to supply their own webinars, white papers, ebooks, etc. 
  3. Search Will Become Social. Social Media Will Take a Large Chunk of Search. Facebook's market share will grow and it will deliver real value for businesses. People were talking about Facebook at every holiday party I attended this year. It's adding users at an unprecedented rate. Everyone uses it. Facebook's web search market share will grow past Yahoo's search marketshare. They'll also figure out how to rank results based on your profile and your friends' profile and online activities. Or maybe it'll be Twitter. Who knows? But, I think social media and social networking will become an important variable in algorithmic search this year. As a result, social media sites will begin to even out the playing field of search and search advertising. Good SEO consultants and social media marketers will realize this long before it happens. They'll be combining their SEO and social media services into one offering.
  4. New Ecosystem Businesses Will Grow Very Quickly and Demonstrate the Power of the Web to Change an Industry. There are very few "EcoSystem" businesses on the web today. Google is the best example. They created software that organized the web. Then, they leveraged the attention this generated to create an audience of billions of searchers. They turned these searchers into consumers by launching an ad platform. This attracted advertisers. They had more advertisers than they could serve. They then built an army of publishers. They had more advertisers than they could service themselves, so they built an ecosystem of advertising professionals. They combined software + publishers + advertisers + ad agencies + consumers together into an ecosystem. Yet, they only directly employ the software developers. Everyone else participates because they receive greater benefit than they put in. More businesses will create an ecosystem around themselves like this. The ones that do will win really really big. Like Google has changed the online advertising game, these businesses will transform their industries too.
What do you think of these predictions? What do you predict? (Photo by griraffes.)

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Posted by Pete Caputa on Sat, Jan 03, 2009 @ 05:08 AM

COMMENTS

Pete:  
 
Good list here, and I really like your thinking around the potential for non-media companies, including big brands who have been known more for their products and/or services, to establish themselves as media channels of their own by publishing compelling content on a regular basis. 
 
Community platforms like the ones built by Jive, Awareness, and our company, LiveWorld, help support the technology side, but the even greater responsibility comes with content creation and community building. I think that means community managers and content developers will be in demand in 2009. 
 
Might mean, too, that there are golden job opportunities for some of those journalists -- professionals who are skilled in delivering well-researched and well-written content -- who are losing their jobs left and right as newspapers and other mainstream media outlets learn (struggle?) to adopt new business models. 
 
Bryan | @BryanPerson 
LiveWorld

posted on Saturday, January 03, 2009 at 7:45 AM by Bryan Person


Great post! As someone helping a traditional ad agency excel online, I hope your predictions are true. 
I also agree on your B2B lead gen prediction. It's starting to happen... 
-Josh

posted on Saturday, January 03, 2009 at 8:07 AM by Josh Fialkoff


As a sales person, it would be great if sales and marketing departments function as one! There have been countless times over the years where my colleagues and I are left scratching our heads wondering what the marketing department was thinking when launching campaigns that had no relevance to what we were trying to achieve. Coming from the sales end, I have always thought that sales should be able to share ideas and experiences with marketing because reps are the people who are closest to the customer. How can you develop strategies and campaigns when you aren't listening to your customers? I believe it should always be a two way conversation between these two departments. Each can learn from one another and take the company to the next level. Not sure why it has taken until 2009 to figure this out when it seems to be common sense!

posted on Saturday, January 03, 2009 at 8:33 AM by Bianca Buco


Very good wrap-up of the year! I agree that the average size business is going to have to shed the excuses 
and start blogging - whether they really get it or not.  

posted on Saturday, January 03, 2009 at 8:52 AM by Paul


Pete,  
 
Love this post! Great insight into SEO, social media, blogging and agencies.  
 
Looking forward to working together in 2009. 
 
Paul

posted on Saturday, January 03, 2009 at 9:08 AM by Paul Roetzer


@BryanPerson - Agreed. I think journalists should be repositioning themselves as community and content managers. On one hand, it's pretty sad that unbiased journalism stands to lose as newspapers business model struggles. On the other hand, the blogosphere tends to keep company backed bloggers pretty honest. As partnership manager at HubSpot, I'd like to learn more about your product.  
 
 
 
@Josh. Let me know if I can help. Sometimes it's difficult to be the lone champion for change in an organization.  
 
 
 
@Bianca. I agree that marketing and sales should have figured out how to collaborate a long time ago. And there are certainly companies where the relationship is equal. But, it seems to be the outlier. Not the norm. You should come work for us.  
 
 
 
@Paul. Blogging. Just do it! (Sound good?) Seriously, I was on a sales call with someone the other day and I asked my usual question, "Are you going to start a blog?". They hesitated and started making excuse type words. I kinda interrupted him and said, "You have to blog. If you want to generate new business from the web, it's not an option." Then, I asked "Who in your organization is going to contribute by writing articles?".  
 
 
 
@Paul Roetzer. Look forward to working with you in 2009 too. It's going to be a good year.  
 

posted on Saturday, January 03, 2009 at 10:27 AM by peter caputa


Very insightful Mr. Peter Inbound Marketing Nostradamus Caputo!  
 
While some folks are all gloom and doom about what's going on in the economy, I see it as very exciting. 
 
If Hollywood were to make a movie about it, my vote for a title would be "Darwin Does Marketing." 
 
Traditional, dinosaur marketing methods are in the throes of a natural evolutionary process, clearing the way for the next generation. 
 
Thus creating an economic optical illusion that the sky is falling, when, in fact, the ground is swelling with opportunity. 
 
The rich fossil juice of those old and decaying methods is really the fuel of transformation. Embrace it and prosper!

posted on Saturday, January 03, 2009 at 10:34 AM by Lisa Almeida


Pete, 
Nice job on these predictions. I've been "preaching" on the evolution of SEO for most of 2008 as shown in this blog post: 
http://www.findandconvert.com/blog/2008/should-seo-become-so/ 
 
Looking forward to working with you in 2009. 

posted on Saturday, January 03, 2009 at 11:13 AM by Bernie Borges


@lisa. I don't have a middle name. But "Inbound Marketing Nostradamus" is pretty catchy. :-) 
 
@BernieBay. I knew that you had said or written something to that affect. I made your link clickable.

posted on Saturday, January 03, 2009 at 11:25 AM by Pete Caputa


Very good post and I will come again to it after 12 months to see if the predictions became a reality. :-) 
 
Have a great 2009!

posted on Saturday, January 03, 2009 at 12:26 PM by Todor Christov


Very good post and I will come again to it after 12 months to see if the predictions became a reality. :-) 
 
Have a great 2009!

posted on Saturday, January 03, 2009 at 12:26 PM by Todor Christov


Peter, 
 
 
 
Great perspective of reading the tea leaves on the industry. I've been thinking about one of your predictions quite a bit lately - "Most one-trick Pony Agencies will die". Its really pretty amazing how fragmented services firms are today. Given the complexity of the options available to most mid-sized firms, comprehensive strategies are going to be required that look across market, channels and technique. We're finding our clients are really responding to metrics dashboard tailored to their specific needs. 
 
 
 
I wonder how many old-style marketing, PR, Ad Agency and Web design firms will be more likely to fade away - vs. re-invent themselves, join forces with others or add more strategic front-ends to their work?  
 
 
 
Thanks for the great post! 
 
 
 
Skip

posted on Saturday, January 03, 2009 at 12:44 PM by Skip Shuda


Good Predictions, Pete, Thank you for sharing your predictions for 2009 with all of us! :) 
 
We took particular note of and agree with you on #2 "Most One-Trick-Pony Agencies will Die under your "Stars ..." Section! 
 
Don't you all think that this means that small companies offering only one product/service should either "band together" and/or join a larger firm to be able to offer a broader range of products/services and/or more complete solutions to all of their clients? 
 
Thank you again, Pete, for sharing and posting your Insightful Predictions for 2009! :) and Everyone Have a Great Day! :)

posted on Saturday, January 03, 2009 at 1:50 PM by The Virtual Consulting Firm


Great post - Thanks for giving me some ideas...

posted on Saturday, January 03, 2009 at 3:41 PM by Julia Stewart


And here I thought this is what we were meant to be doing as SEO companies all along.... pah. 
 
This is why.... we will own Australia because other SEO companies still do not get that they cant just ride the "fad" of SEO and charge extortionate fee's for delivering nothing.

posted on Saturday, January 03, 2009 at 5:10 PM by Marc


Great Post! 
I think we are in for a huge year for inbound marketing and online advertising, as the old is weeded out and the new growth is encouraged.  
 

posted on Saturday, January 03, 2009 at 5:13 PM by Damon Cirulli


I am glad to see a predictions post that does not already think online and social media is mainstream - stepping outside of self, you realize how many people/companies have not embraced yet. Exciting times ahead!!! 
 
 
 
The one point I would add (unless I missed it) is business model. Those online for "years" and lots of time building numbers with no real opportunity will start to realize they need business this year...or at least hire someone to create a business ROI on time. You know, make some $ while building community and service.

posted on Saturday, January 03, 2009 at 6:13 PM by David Sandusky


@Pete. I would love to work for a company where the relationship is equal! (As I'm sure any sales person would!) From what I know about HubSpot, you use all of the same techniques that you suggest for your customers. More simply stated - you practice what you preach! This helps both HubSpot and its customers be successful. 2008 was a rough year for many companies, yet HubSpot exceeded sales goals by taking their own advice! I bet there aren't many companies out there that can say they are successful simply by using their own product! Your sales reps must come to work with smiles on their faces :-)

posted on Saturday, January 03, 2009 at 6:23 PM by Bianca Buco


Some of these predictions are good, others reveal a little naivete regarding the way medium and large companies do business.  
 
The death of creative or one-trick agencies? Don't count on it until relationships stop dictating deals (which won't ever happen). 
 
Web celebrities creating superior agencies? Doubt it - weblebrity does not correlate with successful entrepreneurship. Most small and medium business owners don't have time to run 18 social networks and publish a blog at the weblebrity level.

posted on Saturday, January 03, 2009 at 6:51 PM by Nicholas Kinports


Pete - Great Post! Especially like "A good SEO consultant will generate leads.". Pretty obvious but unfortunately most SEO firms don't get this. Fixes such as titles, headers, etc are short term fixes. They of course will make a difference in ranking but the difference is going to be marginal. To see dramatic differences, SEO firms need to work with clients and guide them towards content generation including more targeted body copy, blog content, and off-site content. 
 
-Jeetu

posted on Sunday, January 04, 2009 at 9:15 AM by Jeetu Mahtani


Great post, Pete. I really enjoyed it. I think you are right on about how the one-trick-pony shops are in trouble. I think a few will survive as very upscale boutiques, but that $500/month one-trick company is in deep trouble. It'll be fun to revisit this in 12 months, scorecard in hand.

posted on Sunday, January 04, 2009 at 10:33 AM by Dan Dunn


@Todor. Should be interesting to see whether anything comes true this year. Most of it will be hard to judge on the surface.  
 
@Skip and @The Virtual Consulting Firm. I see a lot of companies partnering or "banding together". But, I don't think it's the best strategy. Ultimately, I think the agencies that win  
will have project managers who can manage all of a client's activities with an eye on ROI.  
 
@The Virtual Consulting Firm. Use your name next time. Using your keyword in our comments field doesn't affect your search ranking at all, as we do not pass SEO credit.  
 
@Marc. I'm hoping SEO consultants realize they need to measure their results based on leads and sales. Kudos to you if you're already doing that.  
 
@Damon. I left the term "inbound marketing" out of the predictions. But, we're obviously bullish on the trend. :-) 
 
@David. I have Paul Roetzer to thank for that. As I was brewing this post in my head, I asked a few people what they thought was to come this year. Paul said that  
the things we early adopters all talk about will actually start to be adopted by mainstream.  
 
@Bianca. I'll put in a good word.  
 
@Nicholas. Naive, huh? I understand that relationships are important - no matter what size the company. But, results are even more important. Plus, I think data and software will start to make the "Creative" part of the marketing equation a lot more interchange-able.  
 
@Jeetu. Spot on. Can't do SEO w/out creating content. I like the term "Off site content". Most people refer to that as link building, but the term "Off site content" points out how important content is to building links (ie press releases, guest posts, article marketing) 
 
@Dan. You can run the scorecard. My mind doesn't reflect very well. I'm always thinking about what's next. I'll be writing 2010 and 2011 predictions. :-)

posted on Sunday, January 04, 2009 at 6:32 PM by peter caputa


Great post Pete! We even blogged about it: http://www.findandconvert.com/blog/2009/web-marketing-predictions-for-2009/ 
 
I sure hope you are right about sales and marketing departments functioning as one. I've seen so much wasted times and many issues arisen with clients when sales and marketing do not communicate and work as a team. 
 
Looking forward to working with you in 2009! 
 

posted on Monday, January 05, 2009 at 7:52 AM by Michelle Berdeal


I think we already know intuitively that this is going to happen.  
 
It is a very interesting analysis that provides insights and a wide perspective.

posted on Tuesday, January 06, 2009 at 7:03 PM by Victor Velasquez


nice article, as marketing online we have many possibility to get more rich here, as blogger,writer or advertising. good luck and visit my blog http://www.on-marketing.net

posted on Monday, January 12, 2009 at 8:53 PM by ahas


As founder of TraceWorks I especially like the one: 
 
"Marketing Software Will Become as Critical as Accounting Software" 
 
Good post.

posted on Tuesday, January 27, 2009 at 2:39 AM by Morten E. Wulff


I like your thoughts on #2 regarding SEO for $500 a month. I think that there will still be companies that only invest in a part time SEO effort, and will get part time results. It will take some convincing for these companies to see the return on investing money in content. Without a steady flow of content on a site, it's rather pointless to adjust title tags, add key words, sitemaps and expect any kind of real lift in SEO results.

posted on Tuesday, January 27, 2009 at 11:55 AM by Sean


Hi there! I happen to bump in this blog because your subject "PREDICTIONS" is truly triggering... I myself want to see what lies ahead in the future especially in Internet Marketing. 
 
 
 
Your obvious predictions I should say is clearly obvious. I mean it does not have to be predicted at all because it’s a natural pattern. It's like a common general end. 
 
 
 
However I like the proceeding predictions you’ve mentioned: 
 
 
 
"Marketers will finally wake up to the fact that the internet and b2b marketing are a match made in heaven." ----> I visited a lens who partially talked about <a href="www.squidoo.com/are_you_1_of_us”>"> which I believe is better than b2b...find out why... 
 
 
 
"The website design business - as a standalone business - will die"--->well, with the development of new strategies that does not have to pay big bucks for website... This can be possible. 
 
 
 
"Web Celebrities will Develop Best of Breed Agencies"---> Then that can be a huge impact in internet marketing 
 
 
 
"Sales and marketing groups never seem to get along. They never share power. An organization is either "sales driven" or "marketing led"."--->I have always viewed the two concepts congruent.  
 
 
 
"Non Media Businesses will Launch Their Own Online Media Companies"---> with the growing popularity of Online media... they will surely convince non media businesses to catch up to the advancements of their competitors... Hope they can begin now... ore else... the gap will escalate

posted on Thursday, February 12, 2009 at 8:02 AM by tammygirl25


Hi there! I happen to bump in this blog because your subject "PREDICTIONS" is truly triggering... I myself want to see what lies ahead in the future especially in Internet Marketing.  
 
 
 
Your obvious predictions I should say is clearly obvious. I mean it does not have to be predicted at all because it’s a natural pattern. It's like a common general end.  
 
 
 
However I like the proceeding predictions you’ve mentioned:  
 
 
 
"Marketers will finally wake up to the fact that the internet and b2b marketing are a match made in heaven." ----> I visited a lens who partially talked about <a href="www.squidoo.com/are_you_1_of_us”>"> which I believe is better than b2b...find out why...  
 
 
 
"The website design business - as a standalone business - will die"--->well, with the development of new strategies that does not have to pay big bucks for website... This can be possible.  
 
 
 
"Web Celebrities will Develop Best of Breed Agencies"---> Then that can be a huge impact in internet marketing  
 
 
 
"Sales and marketing groups never seem to get along. They never share power. An organization is either "sales driven" or "marketing led"."--->I have always viewed the two concepts congruent.  
 
 
 
"Non Media Businesses will Launch Their Own Online Media Companies"---> with the growing popularity of Online media... they will surely convince non media businesses to catch up to the advancements of their competitors... Hope they can begin now... ore else... the gap will escalate

posted on Thursday, February 12, 2009 at 12:04 PM by tammygirl25


Very insightful! I just wanted to add one thing; more and more companies will be searching for ways to become more productive such as using applications such as e-invoices, fax invoices, email invoices and much more. Thanks for the article, every business owner should read and adhere to your post. –orangepoint.net

posted on Saturday, February 28, 2009 at 10:58 PM by OrangePoint Communications


Big Ticket To Wealth - The Internet Marketing System Creating Millionaires! 
 
http://www.BigTicketWealth.org 
 

posted on Sunday, May 03, 2009 at 1:39 PM by margret


I think video will continue to grow and all the people kicked off of youtube will search for different avenues. I did. I got a FREE account, link exchanges and keyword targeting which is helping my search engine rankings. The site I chose to use waswww.adwido.com

posted on Monday, June 22, 2009 at 11:15 PM by seh


Great post! Online marketing are really very essential on business field. For now, social media advertising are really great way of promoting business online. I've read an article which adheres that the online marketing has changed with the advent of social media. Find out the article here: http://www.articlerack.com/index.php?page=article&article_id=65523 

posted on Tuesday, June 30, 2009 at 4:09 PM by Shane


Excellent write-up!!! Has helped me with my site on <a href=http://www.markamoment.com>Daily Photo thought for the day

posted on Tuesday, July 07, 2009 at 12:33 AM by markamoment


You views on social media advertising is true. This attracts average medium size companies for effective marketing. There are tools like commentino whose writers will advertise your business via comments in targetted forums. Advertisors pay per comment, if comments meets their requirements. They also provide real-time analytics to measure ROI. 
http://snipr.com/mchxz

posted on Wednesday, July 08, 2009 at 4:56 AM by woody


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