The future of digital marketing is already here, especially when it comes to presenting highly engaging, personalized, relevant advertising to consumers.
... Let’s think back to the movie Minority Report, which was filmed in 2002 but set in 2054. In a famous scene, Tom Cruise’s character walks into a Gap store. He scans his retinas, and the ad begins speaking to him: “Welcome back to the Gap Mr. Yakamoto, how are those assorted tank tops working for you?”
This movie predicted that, 50 years from now, personalized, 1:1 marketing would be the status quo. Director Steven Spielberg must have had a crystal ball – except that his timing was off. This type of personalized 1:1 marketing is much closer to reality than we’d think, thanks to the advent of tools and technologies like iBeacons (which can trigger messages sent to your phone based on your proximity to a certain location) and richly customized user experiences (easily implemented with real-time personalization tools)....
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Jeff Domansky
Good article, not just on how LI can help students get noticed by College Admissions professionals, but also about the need to behave on the social web, if teens want to go to college.
From the article:
Starting this college admissions season, teens can use the professional networking site LinkedIn in two ways: to research universities and to create profiles highlighting accomplishments that would otherwise be hard to include in a traditional application. LinkedIn made these features possible by lowering the age requirement for users to 14 in the United States and by launching what it calls university pages.
University pages offer basic stats about a college, but also leverage the power of a user's LinkedIn network. When you a view a page you can instantly see how you're connected to the university. Perhaps you know alumni who graduated in a subject in which you're also interested.
"People have said I want to be an astronaut when I grow up and there was never a way to see that footprint or that pathway to get into becoming an astronaut," said John Hill, LinkedIn's higher education evangelist. "We give you that through data and that becomes aspirational."