The recently updated site has streamlined its ease of use and added one click posting of ads to all states at a small cost.
World Wide Web – November 9, 2011 The helpful classifieds website is providing unlimited ad postings with no account required. Also included are optional videos with ads at no extra cost.
Listdummy.org was designed for people needing a place to buy/sell items quickly and to post just about anything that they want within their local communities. Listdummy.org was started in April 2009 in the foothills of Madison, Virginia as a free classified ads and community site.
The Company has seen unprecedented growth most likely due to offering more to users than they find on other classified websites. Listdummy.org is different in that they actively promote users ads and interesting postings to social networks for added exposure with no additional cost to the user. With the additional option of posting videos, users are latching on and seem to love the more viable source for connection and exposure.
The website features all the standard categories like Autos, Personals, Services, and more while the web hub includes a complete listing of cities and states. Unlike other free classified sites, Listdummy.org does not force ad posters to sign up before posting ads or comments, which means they may remain anonymous. The Company is committed to its one-step process to keep posting simple and quick.
The Company is proud to provide the service to assist so many grateful folks in handling their business in so many ways. Posters may list unlimited ads with very few restrictions. There are only two categories with fees attached, Jobs and Small biz. This is to reduce spam and keep the postings highly professional.
Mobileadvertising continues to grow. If you are a search marketer, you can’t read a blog or check your Twitter feed without seeing another article about the growth of mobile advertising. Google AdWords is helping to continue driving this trend by offering new features that make mobile advertising even easier.
Google is on a roll with new ad extensions in AdWords. Not only can you create Sitelinks, Product Extensions and Social Extensions, now you can extend your ad with info about your mobile apps. Considering that not everyone who searches for your brand or on a keyword related to your app knows you have a mobile app, this is a great way to let those searchers know.
Because this is an ad extension, a link to download your app appears in conjunction with your normal text ad in the search results (on computers, mobile or tablet). Not only does this mean you can position your app in front of searchers, but it can also lead to an overall lift in CTR.
According to Google, they saw a 6 percent lift in CTR when the Mobile App Extension was displayed during beta testing. Here is what the extension looks like in the wild (via Inside AdWords):
AdWords, find the “Ad Extensions” tab and click through. From there, find the drop-down list of available extensions and click on “Mobile App Extension.” At this point you need to do the following:
Select Mobile OS – either Android or iOS (Apple)Enter “Package Name” for Android or “App ID” for iOS. You can also use Google’s handy “Look up app” utility.Write link text. This is important – this your only chance to convince the searcher to click through to download your app.Enter the link URL – the physical location of your app on Google Play or iTunes.
When setting up these Mobile App Extensions, it’s important to properly segment your campaigns by device and software. Create separate campaigns, and therefore separate Mobile App Extensions, for mobile phones vs. tablets and Android vs. iOS. If you don’t, you run the risk of showing an irrelevant ad to searchers and hurting your chances of gaining a customer.
In the same announcement from Google, they also revealed that mobile click-to-download ads will contain far more information. Click-to-download ads have been available since last year, but until now only included the app logo and a brief description linking to your app.
Now, Google has expanded the click-to-download ad to include image previews, pricing and rating information. The data is pulled directly from Google Play or iTunes. All you have to do is provide the landing page URL for your app!
It’s important to remember that click-to-download ads are mobile only – this is a feature based on mobile WAP ads. Don’t know how to set these up? Google has some great instructions for you.
Basically, you create a new WAP ad, insert either the iTunes or Google Play URL as the display URL and the landing page of your app as the destination URL. Google does the rest. Here is an enriched click-to-download ad (via Inside AdWords):
Every smart marketer wants to know how well their campaigns perform. In the past, it was nearly impossible to track app downloads based on PPC spend (unless you set up your own custom tracking). Google has taken a big step in simplifying this process. Now you can create conversion types specific to downloads in Google Play.
Here is the set up process:
This is great for businesses advertising Android apps on Google Play. Not so great for the millions more pushing their iOS apps for iPhones and iPads. At this time, Google AdWords still doesn’t support the tracking of iOS apps. At least this is a step in the right direction.
All in all, if you are advertising mobile apps, it just got a lot easier to position your apps in front of active searchers. Not only did your marketing reach expand, but your ability to track (in part) just got easier, too. Let’s hope this kind of innovation and simplification continues for mobile advertising!
ALTAMONTE SPRINGS, Fla., April 26, 2012 /PRNewswire-iReach/ — A classified advertising battle is under way in Latin America, with regional classified portals expanding and evolving in hopes of fighting off major multinational media classified publishers moving in from outside the region.
Opportunities abound, as demonstrated by companies like EBay and Naspers targeting the traditional family-owned media companies in Latin America. The growth of interactive media and smartphones is changing the way buyers and sellers match their needs for cars, homes, jobs and other items. Free classified marketplaces are surfacing as the new turf in the war for revenue and profits.
Six key Latin American markets are covered in a 64-page report, “Latin America: Battle is growing for classified advertising,” released today by the AIM Group, publishers of the Classified Intelligence Report, the global industry continuous advisory reporting service. The report, available for purchase at http://aimgroup.com/buy, focuses on Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Chile, Mexico and Venezuela. The AIM Group reviews the market forces in each country; the traditional media companies and their efforts to manage the transition to interactive media, and the largest classified publishers in the market, whether print, online, or both.
“Growth in the consumer economies of these major markets is forcing media companies to adapt,” said Peter M. Zollman, founding principal of the AIM Group. “With young audiences and a still-vibrant traditional print newspaper environment, a fundamental transition is under way.
“As Internet use grows in Latin America, especially on smartphones and tablets, users are finding new ways to search for cars, homes, jobs and ‘stuff’ — putting newsprint classifieds at great risk, while creating opportunities for a wide range of media companies, ranging from small feisty independents to some of the biggest media companies in the world,” Zollman said.
About the AIM Group: The AIM Group, formally the Advanced Interactive Media Group
LLC, is the world’s leading consultancy in interactive media and classified advertising. It publishes Classified Intelligence Report, a continuous advisory service often called”the bible of the classified advertising industry.” Founded in 1998 and based near Orlando, Fla., the AIM Group works with leading media companies, broadcasters, dot-coms, yellow-page publishers and technology companies. It provides strategic and tactical consulting; sales training; proprietary and published research about interactive media; and other services.
Zollman and AIM Group Latin America Director, Dave LaFontaine, are available for interviews. Copies of the Latin America classified report are available for journalists for coverage purposes. Call: 407-788-2780 or email: JenniferL@AIMgroup.com for more information or to schedule an interview.
Media Contact: Jennifer Waxman-Loyd The AIM Group, Advanced Interactive Media Group LL, 407.949.4444, jenniferl@aimgroup.com
News distributed by PR Newswire iReach: https://ireach.prnewswire.com
Craigslist may be updating its interface in response to competition from fast-growing marketplaces like Fabrice Grinda’s OLX, because it’s hiring a designer to update its mobile offerings, tweak the site and make the whole experience “faster, friendlier and easier.”
Craigslist, with a billion pageviews per day, is one of the leanest sites on the web—it’s maintained by a staff of 30-something in San Francisco. The Craigslist formula of purple links on a white background, unchanging except for a minor tweak to the fonts and the addition of a light gray hue, has provoked fierce debate for years. Some say the design is perfect. Some say it sorely needs an update. We say, just don’t turn our beloved classifieds page into another hipsterish, drag-and-drop, rounded-corner CSS-fest.
As Collaborative Fund’s Craig Shapiro said of Craigslist and its brother in retro, Drudge Report, “The design in some ways is charming to me. It brings me back to like when I first started consuming web content, like animated GIFs and big fonts and a hodgepodge of somebody who had just learned html. I’d be afraid if we redesigned it, that it would lose some of that charm. I don’t know. It’s so functional that it’s hard to argue with.”
General Motors Co. plans to stop advertising with Facebook Inc. after deciding that paid ads on the site have little impact on consumers’ car purchases, according to a GM official.
The move by GM, one of the largest advertisers in the U.S., puts a spotlight on an issue that many marketers have been raising: whether ads on Facebook help them sell more products. On Friday, Facebook is expected to sell shares in an initial public offering that could put a market value on the company of as much as $104 billion.
“General Motors plans to stop advertising on Facebook after the company’s marketing executives determined their paid ads had little impact on consumers. Sharon Terlep has details on The News Hub. Photo: Getty Images.”
Executives have spent the last two weeks trying to convince investors that its advertising business makes it worthy of a sky-high valuation.
GM will continue to promote its products on Facebook, but without paying the social-media company, the GM official and other people familiar with the matter said. Many companies maintain free Facebook pages.
GM’s decision raises questions about the ability of Facebook to sustain the 88% revenue growth achieved in 2011. Facebook said last month its first-quarter ad revenue was down 7.5% from the previous three months. Facebook blamed “seasonal trends” for the decline, as well as a greater number of users from outside the U.S., where ad rates are lower.
GM spent only about $10 million last year to advertise on Facebook, according to people familiar with the matter. That is a fraction of GM’s total 2011 U.S. ad spending of $1.8 billion, according to Kantar Media. It is also a tiny share of Facebook’s total 2011 revenue of $3.7 billion, most of which was advertising sales.
GM is the third-biggest advertiser across all media in the U.S. after Procter & Gamble Co. and AT&T, according to Kantar.
The auto maker’s marketing chief, Joel Ewanick, said the company “is definitely reassessing our advertising on Facebook, although the content is effective and important.” Mr. Ewanick has spent the last year restructuring the Detroit company’s marketing operations in an effort to cut billions of dollars in costs.
Content refers to the unpaid Facebook pages GM and other companies use to promote their products. GM spends about $30 million on content created for the site, including on agencies that manage the content and daily maintenance of GM’s pages, people familiar with the figures said.
GM started to re-evaluate its Facebook strategy earlier this year after its marketing team began to question the effectiveness of the ads, the people said.
Mr. Ewanick and other GM marketing executives met with Facebook managers earlier this year to discuss their concerns. But the auto executives left unconvinced that advertising on the website made sense, according to people familiar with GM’s thinking.
At the meeting, Facebook criticized GM’s approach of having multiple firms managing its advertising for the site, according to another person familiar with the matter. GM has been revamping its marketing, hiring a new ad firm to buy its media.
Many ad executives believe Facebook’s global audience of 900 million registered users makes the site too big to ignore.
Earlier this month, a top marketing executive from the U.S. division of Kia Motors Corp. questioned the value of Facebook ads, saying it was unclear how paid ads help sell cars. However, the South Korean auto maker said it still planned on increasing its ad spending on Facebook this year.
“Companies in industries from consumer electronics to financial services tell us they’re no longer sure Facebook is the best place to dedicate their social marketing budget—a shocking fact given the site’s dominance among users,” said Nate Elliott, an analyst at market research firm Forrester, in a company blog post on Monday.
Other auto makers are more confident about Facebook’s value as an ad outlet. “We have committed to Facebook for more than $5 million [in ad spending] this year and if the return on investment is there we will spend more next year,” said Dean Evans, chief marketing officer of Subaru of America. “Half the U.S. population is on Facebook, you have to work it to learn it,” he added. Mr. Evans said he has been happy with the return his ads have had so far.
Keeping auto manufacturers engaged is critical for Facebook. The auto industry is the largest pool of U.S. advertising dollars and often can make or break a marketplace. Automotive companies and car dealers shelled out $13.89 billion on U.S. ads across all media last year, according to Kantar.
Rex Briggs, CEO of marketing analytics firm Marketing Evolution Inc., said auto makers like GM are used to marketing campaigns that feature splashy TV ads or give big discounts on cars to bring people into stores. Mr. Briggs, who has worked for GM in the past and now works with other auto makers including Honda Motor Co. on determining their return on social media campaigns, said auto makers can’t afford to ignore tools that can help improve people’s feelings toward a brand.
“As long as Facebook is the bedrock of consumer engagement, advertisers can’t ignore it,” said Craig Atkinson, chief digital officer of PHD, a media buying firm owned by Omnicom Group Inc. He noted, however, that Facebook has to prove “they can convert that fan engagement into a business outcome for marketers… It’s about giving the finance people, who are cutting the checks, proof that its ad products work.”
Marketers have been enamored with the size of Facebook’s audience. Many have spent millions of dollars on hiring digital ad firms and creating content for their Facebook pages in order to stimulate buzz, which advertisers liken to word-of-mouth marketing campaigns.
Still, a lot of the activity in the early days didn’t involve paying Facebook for ads. Now, however, many advertisers also pay Facebook, which has introduced several ad products in an effort to generate revenue.
One service, called “sponsored stories,” lets advertisers pay to republish positive Facebook messages that people had posted about their brand.
Facebook has long argued to marketers that unpaid content—like brand pages and building a base of online fans who like a brand—is successful when coupled with paid advertisements like display ads and its “sponsored stories.” Without the additional paid ads, Facebook executives have said, it’s hard for users to learn about the unpaid content.
Facebook said in March, for example, that only 16% of a brand’s fans will see a post about the brand without paying. If the brand pays Facebook a fee per ad, Facebook will use technology to ensure that the ad is seen by 75% of those who click a company’s “like” button on its website.
Rick Summer, an analyst at equity researcher Morningstar Inc., said that GM’s decision only proves that advertising on Facebook is still in its early stages, which should be a lesson to investors hoping to get in on the company’s IPO.
Mr. Summer, who has rated Facebook at a “hold” at $32 a share with a $96 billion valuation, said that it will take Facebook a very long time to build up its advertising business in a way that can justify its lofty valuation. Facebook Monday set a price range for its IPO of $34-$38 per share.
A couple of weeks ago, early participants in the new AdWords for Video program gathered at the YouTube offices. The ostensible justification for the meeting was a fancy photo shoot, but YouTube executives also gave a little pep talk, laying out their vision to make video advertising available to small businesses. They even let themselves get a little dreamy, imagining a day when video might become as lucrative for Google as search.
So what is AdWords for Video? It integrates video campaigns into the AdWords dashboard, where Google’s search and display advertisers are already bidding for and managing their campaign. So small businesses can treat video ads as just another campaign that they’re running with Google, rather than something big and scary. It could be particularly useful for the ones that already have a big presence on YouTube that they’d like to promote. Specifically, AdWords for Video allows you to buy Google’s TrueView ad units, which can appear in YouTube videos, alongside search results, and in the company’s display network.
The program was first announced publicly in September and has been beta testing with select advertisers. Today, however, AdWords for Video is having its official launch, and the program is opening to everyone.
For Group Product Manager Baljeet Singh, the program began two years ago, when he was talking with business-owning friends. Singh suggested that they advertise on YouTube, but they said it had never even occurred to them as a possibility. Naturally, Singh decided that he had to build an ad service that his friends would use, and today is the culmination of those efforts. The product has evolved over those two years, but Singh says there has been “a common thread of trying to make it easy and democratize the flow for our advertisers.” In other words, he says the aim was to continue simplifying the ad-buying process as much as possible.
The program could also become a key way for Google to monetize YouTube. The video site’s finances are the subject of ongoing speculation, with one of the challenges being user-generated content that could scare away advertisers. Singh says that by enlisting advertisers through AdWords, Google should be able to fill more of YouTube’s ad inventory — but that doesn’t mean Google will be sticking ads in front of any random video.
“There’s a set of videos that are monetizable,” Singh says. “Clearly, with more demand, that’s going to imply that more of those videos … are going to be monetized. But it won’t change the set of videos that are monetizable.”
To help get the word out, Google has appointed nine Ambassadors — businesses who have already had success with AdWords for Video, who have chosen to each mentor a nonprofit on getting started on YouTube, and who will be hosting Google+ Hangouts to share their strategies. The Ambassadors cover a pretty broad range of businesses (albeit usually ones with a strong online presence and lots YouTube videos to promote) including Berkleemusic.com (the online arm of the Berklee College of Music), online clothing retailer ModCloth, and RevZilla, a site that sells motorcycle gear. I talked to representatives from each of those three companies, and they all talked about how the program had opened their eyes to what they can do with video ads at a relatively low cost. They also had suggestions for future improvements — mainly ways to track how each video led not just to views and clicks to a website, but actual purchases.
/PRNewswire/ – Total revenue growth for the online classifieds market in Australia in 2011 was 16%, dipping 6% over the 22% growth achieved in 2010. The general shift from print to online expenditure is continuing with online accounting for an estimated 39% of total classifieds advertising expenditure in 2011, up from 18% in 2007.
“Expenditure growth driven mostly by shift from print to online”
Frost & Sullivan’s latest report, Australian Online Classifieds Market, due for release in April 2012, revealed that in 2011 total expenditure on online classifieds was $714 million. Growth in expenditure was driven more by the continued shift from print to online rather than an increase in total classifieds expenditure, which increased only by 3.5% in 2011. As the online classifieds market reaches a higher level of maturity, Frost & Sullivan forecasts that annual growth rates will continue to fall with the overall market expected to hover around $1,000 million in 2015.
In the auto online classifieds sector, a significant reduction in revenue growth was shown from 24% in 2010 to 14%, as the publishers found it more difficult to factor in prices rises for standard online classifieds ad placements in a softer and maturing market. This was a similar scenario for the real estate market which also suffered a decline in revenue growth from 24% to 15%. The online employment classifieds market continued to perform strongly during 2011, with annual growth of 19%, and total expenditure of $244 million, with growth only slightly below that of the previous year.
“The CAGR of the overall online classifieds market between 2011 and 2015 is predicted to be 8.8%, with the auto sector outperforming the other sectors, though only by a marginal amount, “said Phil Harpur, Senior Research Manager, Australia & New Zealand ICT Practice.
“A strong mobile channel offering is becoming increasingly important for online classifieds publishers, as audiences fragment across multiple platforms and a growing proportion of users are accessing the internet via mobile devices. “However of the three major online classifieds segments, real estate offers particularly good potential for mobility, as it is the segment for which mobility is most important to site users” explains Phil.
We are also seeing changes in the competitive environment in all the major sectors. For example LinkedIn has now established itself as a viable alternative to traditional recruitment websites, especially in specialist/niche white collar industries where it is the best and fastest medium to reach a network of skilled and networked professionals,” Phil elaborated.
In real estate classifieds potential for growth through greater market penetration is limited with 95% of estate agencies are estimated to use the online channels to list properties. “Property advertising expenditure growth will continue to slow with growth driven mainly by increased spending on premium advertising rather than basic listings,” he added.
The report also covers the general segment of the online classifieds market, defined as general merchandise categories outside of the three major segments of real estate, employment and automotive. Here, two business models which are impacting and restricting growth in the general online classifieds market are the online auction market and the free classifieds market. “eBay continues to make significant inroads into this market and Gumtree’s level of Internet traffic has grown significantly over the past 2 years,” Phil finishes.
Frost & Sullivan’s Australian Online Classifieds Market April 2012 report forms part of the Frost & Sullivan Australian Digital Media program. All research services included in this subscription provide detailed market opportunities and industry trends evaluated following extensive interviews with market participants. Interviews with the press are available. If you are interested in more information on this study, please send an e-mail with your contact details to Donna Jeremiah, Corporate Communications, at djeremiah@frost.com.
About Frost & Sullivan
Frost & Sullivan, the Growth Partnership Company, enables clients to accelerate growth and achieve best-in-class positions in growth, innovation and leadership. The company’s Growth Partnership Service provides the CEO and the CEO’s Growth Team with disciplined research and best-practice models to drive the generation, evaluation, and implementation of powerful growth strategies. Frost & Sullivan leverages more than 50 years of experience in partnering with Global 1000 companies, emerging businesses and the investment community from more than 40 offices on six continents. To join our Growth Partnership, please visit http://www.frost.com.
Classified ads are a very popular way to communicate with consumers. While classified ads have been around for over thirty years, the ease and popularity has only grown over time. The advertising is both inexpensive and in may cases free. The growth of online marketing has also grown and now you have advertising online with classified ads as well.
Classified ads can be used to drive traffic to your website, or make an announcement, really they can be used for almost any purpose and can be used for any industry. Using a classified ad means you only need a few lines of text, and your information is conveyed. Search engines today utilize classified ad sites constantly, because they are always updated with fresh information. If you submit your ad with your URL, then Google can get to your website quicker and consumers can find your site quicker inside their index.
Classified ads can be placed for job openings, automobiles both new and used, beauty products, business ventures, products and services, real estate, and so much more. You also can reach worldwide when advertising online. You are not only able to influence your consumer buying, you are promoting your services or products with every click.
For consumers, the great thing about classified ads and advertising online is that they can easily shop and compare, saving them time and effort in their buying. Your targeted audience is able to view your advertising for a longer period of time and can bring multiple consumers to you.
Some of the key reasons for using classified ads and advertising online other than the fact that many of them are free classified ads:
Classified ads are very effective in marketing
Distribution to a larger target audience, worldwide
Affordable advertising method, free or very inexpensive
Keyword usage can be used as a website link and improve your ranking
Advertising online with classified ads can help you to grow specific categories of your business
Classified ads can help to really drives traffic to your website and help in marketing strategy
You can target your audience with specific products and reach largest audience
Using classified ads for your advertising online is smart and affordable and really can improve your sales, your ranking and your online presence. Utilize the free classified ads as much as you can, but remember the total cost is inexpensive and the results are huge.
6th copy of Gulf Competitiveness Forum in Riyadh will include speakers from various business and social sectors Hundreds of business and NGO leaders, intellectuals and media folks will come together in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, from Jan twenty-one to 24 to take part in the 6th Worldwide Competitiveness Forum. The event is anticipated to supply discernment on the continual financial and economic Problems impacting on the world as well as positive ideas to address the most pressing worldwide challenges. Each year, the event addresses the idea of competitiveness from various viewpoints presented by the keynote speakers and panel sessions attended by leaders and experts in diverse fields.
Canada’s previous PM Jean Chretien, South Korea’s previous PM, Chung un-chan will also address the Forum. Different panel sessions will explore the primary theme from different angles. One session titled “Generation C-Click, connect, communicate, cooperate” will discuss the way forward for digital connectivity and reliance on the virtual world in doing business. A second session titled “The anatomy of a businessman” explores the development of entrepreneurship and how entrepreneurs continue to change their business practices over the years. One of the sessions titled “Artrepreneurship” examines Art as an industry that creates business opportunities, generates profit and creates jobs. The SAGIA event is happening at a time when there is robust global interest in investing in Saudi Arabia, which has been promoted as the most stable of regional economies that offers tremendous growth possibilities. The Saudi Arabian economy has been unaffected by the political turmoil that has swept across the Middle East.
According to latest Business Monitor World (BMI) report, new investments in 2012 are expected to finish in 10 % yearly expansion. Mr. Abdulla Uzaib, the Director of GCF, asserts : “The GCF is a platform where opinions and ideas from all over the world converge.
We will hear revelations from corporate leaders, NGOs and thinkers not simply about our key theme of entrepreneurship, but also about the major economic and social challenges the world is facing now.” The Forum is also a major networking event for players from across the world and Saudi and regional firms. There is considerable emphasis on startups and medium companies, as they're the most promising sectors in the fast-growing Saudi economy, especially in terms of making new jobs. Many of the businessmen and businesswomen in the country are of young age, they are the driver behind the Tiny and Medium Business sector. SAGIA has one or two ongoing initiatives that encourage competitiveness and growth, with substantial focus on the youth. These include the Saudi Fast expansion 100 (SFG100), Most competitive Youth, and Saudi Responsible Competitiveness Index. SAGIA supervises the attraction of foreign investment into the country, and manages Saudi Arabia’s competitiveness agenda in an effort to enhance the states business environment. On account of the efforts of SAGIA’s Countrywide Competitiveness Council, and the Saudi Administration in total, Saudi Arabia is now considered the 8th largest receiver of FDI with inflows of 35 Bill GREENBACKS in 2009, eleventh Most straightforward Place to Conduct Business according to the World Bank-IFC’s Conducting Business Report, and the 21st most competitive country in the world according to the World Economic Forum’s Worldwide Competitiveness Index.
For more information, please contact : SAGIA : May Bin Dayel our net site Alef World : Ibtihal AlSamaraie alsamariealefinternational.
Houston, Texas based online marketing, info management, SEO and PAY PER CLICK firm thanks clients for a banner year, is looking forward to a successful New Year. Houston, Texas based online marketing and info managing corporation, Renegade Advertising, Inc pr newswire stated that it exceeded all expectancies in 2011 and is looking forward to more pre-eminence in the New Year. Speaking to the employees at the end-of-year meeting in the company offices, Chief Executive Officer, Travis Starnes related the company met or surpassed all goals thanks to the effort of its employees and the smashing clients it bought across the year.
“We had a great year. Not only did we meet, we beat all goals and we are happy about that. We're looking forward to the New Year and we are expecting to do even better,” Starnes said. In a statement released earlier today, the company declared, “2011 has been a banner year for us thanks to you our pals, partners and clients. “We were successful typically because of the patronage and confidence of our trustworthy clients. We are thankful for the trust our wonderful clients have in Renegade Advertising and look forward to another year of continued success,” the company SEO declared. About Renegade Advertising, Inc Renegade Advertising, Incorporated is a composite web based marketing company that specializes on tiny and middle sized enterprises (SMBs) throughout NorthAmerica.
The company helps firms in web-based marketing, advertising, SEO (SEO), pay-per-click (Pay-per-click) campaign management, information management, web development, trademark designs and social media optimization. Contact us at 281-712-2194 or thru renegade-advertising
With great excitement and pleasure, Waters for Life, Incorporated. Launched the first of 3 new websites this week and the 1st AdyaClarity newsletter,MyAdya. WatersforLife was rolled out December 29, 2011. AdyaClarity is being refurbished for release end 2011. Very soon, these is scheduled to be announced in the newsletter and PR releases.
To subscribe to My Adya (monthly newsletter) and In the Know (the more technical health and water-related online publication), go to any of the watersforlife web pages and sign the GuestBook or supply an e-mail in one of the forms on each page . A confirming e-mail will be despatched back, along with links to other rewarding video shorts and other information. Many who've been following the advent of the product Adya Clarity in the U.S. The previous seven years wrote with positive comments and testimonials supporting the health-related advantages of these mineral additives to clean freshwater. The managerial team is grateful for the customer fidelity and belief in what Waters for Life is doing, so much so that they wanted to share more info about the corporate mission. These webs will function to educate folk about what founder Matthew Bakos calls the “Unshakable Truths” around the simple act of existing with, drinking, and using Earth’s WATER. Similarly, the webs will gather online those that understand and accept the simplicity of Adya Clarity’s use of black mica extracted minerals to clean the body of pollutants and poisons found today in all freshwater supplied by municipalities for drinking and bathing.
And in a disaster eventuality, this knowledge could be the contingency plan that is the difference between life and death. Stay tuned!