Pinterest: Engage in meaningful ways. Drive Sales.
As retailers, we’re always looking for opportunities to engage our customers in a more meaningful way. Pinterest is a social networking site that promotes engagement and also holds the potential to drive sales. In fact, this newest social platform is projected to account for 40% of all social-driven revenue in the near future.
Don’t take my word for it though. Trust the stats:
· 1 in 5 users have pinned an item that they later purchased
· 21% of Pinterest users purchase items they pin either in-store or onlineNaturally we’re all scrambling to get a piece of the Pinterest pie. But if you want in on these amazing results, you need to know a thing or two about what works and doesn’t. For starters, content is the single most important key to having a successful presence on this platform. Beware though - pinners don’t want sales, discounts, and promotional materials thrown in their faces.
So what is great content for Pinterest?
Source: redpepperland
How Instagram Went From Idea to $1 Billion in Less Than Two Years
The entrepreneurial dream of selling a startup for megabucks came true for the founders of photo-sharing app Facebook agreed to buy the company for $1 billion in cash and stock. It’s a remarkable outcome for a young company that still isn’t generating revenue.
Facebook is betting it can leverage not only Instagram’s photo filtering and sharing services but also its skyrocketing user base. Since its launch in 2010, Instagram now has more than 30 million registered users with hundreds of millions of photos shared.
Here’s a quick history of how Instagram grew from a simple idea to a $1 billion acquisition:
March 2010:
Stanford University grad Kevin Systrom closes a $500,000 seed round from Baseline Ventures and Andreessen Horowitz while working on a location-based app called Burbn.
July 2010:
Systrom and Mike Krieger, who also studied at Stanford, begin designing an app for sharing photos.
October 2010:
Systrom and Krieger launch the Instagram photo-sharing iPhone app with 80 initial users.
Systrom uploads the first picture to Instagram.
December 2010:
Instagram announces full photo support and sharing on Foursquare.
The app reaches 1 million registered users.
February 2011:
Users grow to 1.75 million, sharing more than 290,000 photos daily.
The company raises a $7 million financing round led by Benchmark Capital and a group of angel investors including Jack Dorsey.
Instagram releases a real-time API that allows universal sharing on any service.
July 2011:
Instagram’s registered users top 6 million. More than 100 million photos have been shared.
August 2011: Facebook says it’s getting ready to unveil a series of its own photo filters, reportedly after a failed attempt to purchase Instagram.
October 2011:
One year after launch, Instagram’s number of users continues to explode, with nearly 50,000 people signing up for the service each day, Systrom says.
November 2011:
News reports hint that the company is seeking a $20 million valuation as it puts together another round of funding.
At TechCrunch Disrupt in Beijing, Systrom says the startup’s most difficult day was its first, when the site crashed multiple times. “But it turns out people are very forgiving for something they love a lot,” he says.
January 2012:
From 1 million registered users at the beginning of 2011, Instagram grows to more than 15 million users. On average, 60 photos are uploaded every second, the company says.
April 2012: Sequoia Capital is said to be leading a $50 million funding round for the company, valuing Instagram at $500 million.
The company unveils its Instagram for Android app and says it now has more than 30 million users.
Facebook announces that it has agreed to purchase Instagram for $1 billion in cash and stock.
Originally published by Entrepreneur
LinkedIn Rolls Out 'Follow Company' Button for Brands

LinkedIn has announced a new program that lets brands embed a “follow company” button from the social network on their homepages. The option, announced on LinkedIn’s blog on Monday, is similar to Liking a brand on Facebook or following them on Twitter. Followers will receive automatic updates …
Source: Mashable
Numberclips
Cute, colourful paperclips carefully bent in to numbers to brighten up any boring paperwork!
Available to buy at the MoMA Store.
Cool evolution of an old idea.
Source: nowplease
History and prediction by Stock Logos
A brief review of the history of famous logos and predictions of how they will look like in the future made by Stock Logos.
Source: whudat.de
The 2012 Colour Run is currently touring through 20 U.S. cities. The only requirement is wearing a white shirt. Throughout the run, participants are doused in bright pigments (cornstarch that is 100% natural and safe). Each kilometer is focused on a specific color – 1k is yellow, 2k is blue, 3k is green, 4k is pink, and the 5k finish is a “Colour Extravaganza” where a rainbow of hues are thrown.
Source: thecolorrun.com
We #love your brand! Today we can give it some well deserved TLC with our unique FREE #brand love-check #valentine day only offer (value £179). Signup at hello@sowecreate.com #in #fb
We #love your brand! Did you know that people are more likely to tilt their heads to the right when kissing instead of the left? Give your brand some love on 14th February with our unique FREE brand love-check #valentine day only offer. Signup at hello@sowecreate.com #in #fb
7 Marketing Lessons From RIM's Failures

Alex Goldfayn is CEO of the Evangelist Marketing Institute. His new book is called Evangelist Marketing: What Apple, Amazon and Netflix Understand About Their Customers (That Your Company Probably Doesn’t). You remember, don’t you? The emails magically appeared while you weren’t lookin…
Source: Mashable



