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Rescooped by Kenneth Carnesi,JD from Social Media Content
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Where Your Customers Come From

Where Your Customers Come From | e-commerce & social media | Scoop.it
Do you know where your customers come from? Many small business owners have a gut answer, but few have actually tracked and know where their customers come from

Via Robert Caruso
Robert Caruso's curator insight, October 5, 2016 9:39 AM
Though tracking and measuring where your customers come from is a crucial first step for any small business, there needs to be more. ROI or return on investment should become the mantra and focus of every small business owner. Being able to make intelligent and educated business and marketing decisions based on facts puts your business well on the path of sales and revenue growth.
Rescooped by Kenneth Carnesi,JD from Content marketing automation
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How I Use Scoop.it To Find Content Marketing's Over / Under - @Scenttrail

How I Use Scoop.it To Find Content Marketing's Over / Under - @Scenttrail | e-commerce & social media | Scoop.it

Visual Marketing Over/Under or How I Use Scoop.it
Friends like +Phil Buckley and +Mark Traphagen are curious about how and why I use Scoop.it. This G+ post shares a detailed analysis of how Scoop.it helps reduce #contentmarketing risks, provides fast feedback to influence social media marketing and creates a safe envrionment to test assumptions, create validated learning and learn fast. 


Via Ally Greer
Ally Greer's curator insight, March 19, 2014 11:41 PM

We're always finding different ways to use Scoop.it, mostly coming from the intelligent community of curators that has manifested itself over the last few years.


Scoop.it Specialist @Martin (Marty) Smith wrote an explanation of how he's using Scoop.it to gauge interest in potential original content. When his posts on Scoop.it do well, he is able to see what his audience likes, and create content along the same vein.


He also explains some of the SEO benefits seen by other Scoopiteers like @Brian Yanish - MarketingHits.com.


Read Marty's post to find new creative ways to measure the potential success of content using Scoop.it and share your thoughts in the comments!

Martin (Marty) Smith's comment, March 20, 2014 12:06 AM
Thanks for the share @Ally Greer. Don't like the RISK FACTORS without @Scoop.it since each post puts modeled and valuable websites at risk. Better to test with the "fastest feedback loop in the west" :). Marty
LKGayton's curator insight, March 20, 2014 10:52 AM

Scoop.it influences social media marketing and more...