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FG SQUARED is a full service Interactive Marketing Solutions firm. We blend our expertise in marketing and interactive technologies to help our clients increase their bottom lines. Our core competencies span the spectrum from strategic foundation development to tactical implementation. |
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FG SQUARED interactive marketing
621 E 6th Street Suite 200 Austin TX 78701-3766 Phone: 1 512 481 8831 Fax: 1 512 481 8832 Email: info@fg2.com |
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You're already a marketing ace and you're conversant in the technologies that are fueling the Web 2.0 revolution. You're a rockstar developer who knows the difference between InnoDB and MyISAM database tables. You're a project manager who knows that customer service doesn't always mean making your 5:30 kickboxing class. You're a hot shot designer with the entire catalog of Adobe keyboard shortcuts tattooed on your arms.
Where would you like to take your career?
At FG SQUARED we take very seriously our responsibility to identify and invest in great people. Through every phase of work and across all of our services, the people of FG SQUARED form the basis for the long-term relationships that we maintain and grow with our clients, partners, and employees.
If you want to be a part of building something real (Austin Business Journal ranks us among Austin's 50 fastest-growing companies), and you love to learn, work, and play hard, we want to hear from you right now. Current Openings
FG SQUARED does not discriminate against any employee or applicant for employment on the basis of race, religion, creed, color, national origin, citizenship, marital status, sex, age, sexual orientation, veteran status, political ideology, ancestry, the presence of any physical, sensory, or mental disabilities, or other legally protected status. |
FG SQUARED Announces Creation of Social Web Advisory Panel (SWAP)... Read More Austin Business Journal Honors FG SQUARED Among "Fast 50"... Read More Posted: Mon, 05 Jan 2009 13:24:46 GMT Blogger: clearspace@fg2.com Happy New Year. In spite of the recession this year promises to be a happy one, especially if your business planning has you involved with the online world of advertising and social media.
On the day before Christmas, Business Week's online magazine published a viewpoint by Jeffrey Rayport, founder and chairman of Marketspace, in which he compares the plight of shrinking expenditures on every other form of advertising excepting for the online variety. The article is titled "Why Online Ads are Weathering the Recession." Rayport's premise is, "In most media, 2009 will bring unkind cuts, and Madison Avenue will never be the same. But Internet advertising seems to be holding up." While the title of the article implies a focus on advertising, his arguments also support effective use of social media marketing.
Rayport, a former faculty member at the Harvard Business School, lists a handful of arguments supporting his observation. First, online media has come of age since the mid-2000s. It has become institutionalized.
Digital media provides for accountability that is more illusive in other forms of media. Metrics are possible in ways that are more illusive in other forms of media.
Word of mouth and social media are rapidly becoming recognized as increasingly effective at influencing buyers' decision making. While no one is exactly sure how this phenomenon is going to play out in the future, it's evident that the most prominent social networks - Facebook, LinkedIn, etc. - are already working to capitalize. Marketers from across the spectrum will follow.
Online media is opportune for creating "earned" rather than "paid" ad placements of a sort. Content created by bloggers and other social media enthusiasts can be much more credible with consumers than any form of paid advertising. When companies engage with consumers in open and authentic ways on the social web, new channels are created that naturally increase credibility.
Online media efforts allow for very exact targeting of the people and markets desired to be reached. By targeting potential customers where they congregate online, based on interest and activities, expenditures of advertising and other online communications efforts are more efficient.
The article concludes by stating what many of us who've been involved in social media have been saying for years; traditional forms of advertising and media won't disappear, they will just forever be changed. The recession appears to be further proving the inevitability of the previously noticed trends. Social Capital What is social capital? The power of relationship: in the new world of connectivity, it's not what you know, or even who you know—it's what your online social network knows. In this ultimate word-of-mouth environment, every person in your extended network holds the potential to change your business model. Read More The Art of Consideration Consumers are connected. They spend time evaluating potential purchases in person-to-person, but not necessarily "in-person" conversations. They validate thoughts together. When they buy things they talk about what happened. They have robust networks through which they share experiences, forming the basis for the next round of purchases. They engage with the brands they like along with the messages that convey their essence. Read More |
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