Thursday, June 13, 2013
Tuesday, May 28, 2013
Build Stories
The Building of Stories from Big Fish Presentations
This presentation is a wonderful guide to the elements and suspense of storytelling and how a good story can inspire us to act and move forward.
It is worth a read. Well done to my friends at Big Fish Presentations.
Click the full screen button for best reading.
This presentation is a wonderful guide to the elements and suspense of storytelling and how a good story can inspire us to act and move forward.
It is worth a read. Well done to my friends at Big Fish Presentations.
Click the full screen button for best reading.
Friday, May 24, 2013
Tuesday, May 21, 2013
Future Factors 2013: A Forecast From Singapore
We Are Social - Future Factors 2013 from We Are Social Singapore
This a very clear presentation by a Singaporean agency on the future trends in social and mobile media. Well done to We are Social Singapore.
This a very clear presentation by a Singaporean agency on the future trends in social and mobile media. Well done to We are Social Singapore.
Monday, May 20, 2013
One of World's Toughest Regulators Ticks Social Media
In April 2013 the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) ruled companies trading on the US Stock Exchange can post investor information on social media.
That's a major tick for social media channels as "perfectly
suitable methods for communicating with investors."
Noting the rate at which information flows through Facebook, Twitter and other platforms, the SEC cautioned companies to give investors adequate notice of when and how they plan to use social media when releasing information.
In a survey of 120 financial types the online publication, Bulldog Reporter, found 60% to 70% of all investors say they use traditional sources of
investment information (press releases, newspapers, analyst
reports.)
People under 40 are the most likely group to check company information on social media.
People under 40 are the most likely group to check company information on social media.
The US stock market operates in a highly litigious environment and the SEC oversees highly regulated, multi-billion dollar
transactions every trading day.
The ruling should encourage Australian governments wrestling with what information is suitable for their own online accounts.
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