
nastya
10 signs of a speaker-sloth: how to understand that someone was not preparing for a speech
Anna Zagumennaya, event director of the PR Partner agency, shares 10 signs of a public speaker’s poor preparedness for speaking – from reading material on a piece of paper to poor audience knowledge – and explains how such errors can be avoided so as not to lose the trust and location of the audience
How often do you attend business events, but after listening to reports you can’t remember what the speaker was talking about? Or, during the speaker’s speech, catch yourself thinking that you’ve sat half of the time on the phone?
Many blame themselves for not being able to concentrate and missing important information. But is it really so? Of course not! Continue reading
Robots or living people? How customer service will change in the next decade
Elena Stolyarskaya, business coach, customer service expert, talks about the main trends in customer service development in the near future and lists 7 key changes that will affect the online and offline sales
Our life, the world around us, is changing at an incredible speed. Over the past 10 years, humanity has made a quantum leap in the development of technology. What seemed like utopia not so long ago is reality today. Smartphones, social networks, Wi-Fi. For a couple of clicks on the phone, we call a taxi, choose a place to live in another city, order food at home, communicate with friends from anywhere in the world. Everything moves in a spiral of continuous development. Technologies, geopolitics, economic conditions, business formats are changing. Continue reading
How to use a promotion mix if your business is related to distribution
Yuri Pavlyuk, speaker and consultant for integrated Internet marketing, shares his experience in promoting a distribution company on social networks and using targeted advertising; explains the benefits of a promotion mix strategy
One of the main areas of my marketing activity is related to a distribution company. The peculiarity (read: complexity) of this business is not only that there is a lot of competition (especially for top vendors). Often, all distributors have almost the same prices, they are closely monitored (both “from above” and one after another) and harshly suppress dumping attempts. In addition, many advertising channels are stopped: sometimes you can’t use the vendor’s logo in the banner, and in the context, commercial keys for the product. Finally, we cannot directly influence the product itself. Continue reading