Berkshire Businesses Realise Importance of Blogging
I’ve just got back from a meeting of the West Berkshire Business Club where I spoke about blogging for small businesses. I was asked several questions about the way to set up blogs, how to
I’ve just got back from a meeting of the West Berkshire Business Club where I spoke about blogging for small businesses. I was asked several questions about the way to set up blogs, how to
“In the Know” is a weekly women’s magazine who called me up a couple of weeks ago to talk about blogging. Their article “Confessions of the housewife bloggers” appears in today’s issue and quotes me
CISCO, the technology company, has just launched a new virtual meeting tool which it hopes will replace typical video conferences links. The product competes directly with Hewlett Packard’s “telepresence” technology which some people say is
Yesterday I was running a workshop on blogging where I pointed out that you should include an email address in all articles you publish. That way, I argued, you can get to know exactly who
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5 thoughts on “Internet Psychology and Marketing”
Some fascinating insights. On a purely technical note – is there a version of this presentation that’s a little more user friendly? I’d like to be able to pause and navigate to a particular section. Is this possible?
Thanks Steve. If you go to the following link you can pause and navigate through the entire presentation.
https://present.me/view/66105-internet-psychology
Many thanks – the timeline makes a big difference. I later realised the presentation above is navigable with some quirks!
The 0.56s judgment thing is particularly pertinent. Is there a reference for that?
I mentioned the 0.56 seconds in this article last year that has a reference to a paper in Nature.
http://www.grahamjones.co.uk/2012/blog/internet-psychology/websites-should-appeal-to-individuals-i-e-you.html
However, there are other studies – I’ll see what I can dig out
Thanks again, I looked at the Nature article – the fact that people are making reasonably reliable decisions (or at least those matched by longer exposures) in just 0.05s is remarkable.
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