David Meerman Scott spotted the real-time marketing revolution in its infancy and wrote five books about it including “The New Rules of Marketing and PR”, with more than 400,000 copies sold in English and available in 29 languages. He pioneered the concept of “newsjacking”, what he describes as the art and
Tag: Microsoft
Brand list: What are the most valuable Brands in 2020
How do tech companies make money?
How the Tech Giants Make Their Millions? At a glance, it may seem like the world’s biggest technology companies have a lot in common. For starters, all five of the Big Tech companies (Amazon, Apple, Facebook, Microsoft, and Alphabet/Google) have emerged as some of the most valuable publicly-traded companies in the world,
What are the best websites on the Internet?
The top 15 Global Brands
How long it takes to become a billionaire?
Some people say that making the first million is the hardest.Others, like oil tycoon T. Boone Pickens have quipped that the first billion is a “helluva lot harder”. Regardless of which is true, it’s interesting to examine how long it took the world’s wealthiest to reach the million and billion dollar benchmarks, as
History of Largest Internet Companies
What the Big Tech Companies Know About You
Now that companies like Facebook, Amazon, and Alphabet are among the world’s most valued companies, people are starting to hold them more accountable for the impact of their actions on the real world. From the Cambridge Analytica scandal to the transparency of Apple’s supply chain, it’s clear that big tech companies
Top 100 Most Valuable Brands in 2018
According to Forbes, the world’s 100 most valuable brands are worth a staggering $2.15 trillion. While that singular number is impressive, the publication’s 2018 rankings of global brands can be further broken down in other ways that are also quite intriguing. Let’s take a look at brands by individual brand value,
Web search engines: Can anyone match Google?
Yes, Google's products match Google. :/ ccording to Jumpshot, a marketing analytics firm that licenses anonymous ClickStream data from hundreds of millions of users, about 62.6% of all searches online are through Google’s core function. But that’s just the beginning, as that number doesn’t include other Google functions like image search or