This Old Marketing - Content Marketing News with Joe Pulizzi and Robert Rose
Un pódcast de Joe Pulizzi & Robert Rose - Viernes
476 Episodo
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PNR 76: The New Media Model Will Include Selling Products
Publicado: 28/4/2015 -
PNR 75: Media Serves Two Content Masters, Brands Serve Just One
Publicado: 21/4/2015 -
PNR 74: LinkedIn Moves for Content Dominance
Publicado: 14/4/2015 -
PNR 73: Like It or Not, Advertising Is Booming
Publicado: 7/4/2015 -
PNR 72: Facebook Moves for Total Internet Domination
Publicado: 31/3/2015 -
PNR 71: The Third Era of the Internet Has Begun
Publicado: 23/3/2015 -
PNR 70: Starbucks Announces Next Move as Media Company
Publicado: 16/3/2015 -
PNR 69: Google+ Finally Dead? Well, Not Really
Publicado: 10/3/2015 -
PNR 68: The Media Industry Is Desperately Confused
Publicado: 3/3/2015 -
PNR 67: When Will LinkedIn's Purchase Run End?
Publicado: 24/2/2015 -
PNR 66: Why the New Golden Age of Marketing Is Now
Publicado: 17/2/2015 -
PNR 65: A Net Neutrality Win | Stop Talking So Much About Yourself
Publicado: 10/2/2015 -
PNR 64: Super Bowl Advertisers Don't Care about Building Audience
Publicado: 2/2/2015 -
PNR 63: Competition for Super Bowl Halftime Attention Is On
Publicado: 27/1/2015 -
PNR 62: Marketing Still Subservient to Sales | The Launch of Facework
Publicado: 19/1/2015 -
PNR 61: The YouTube Killer Is Not Facebook, It's Twitter
Publicado: 12/1/2015 -
PNR 60: The Social Media Phase Is Over
Publicado: 5/1/2015 -
PNR 59: The 2015 Content Marketing Predictions Episode
Publicado: 28/12/2014 -
PNR 58: Here's What Verizon Should Have Done with SugarString
Publicado: 22/12/2014 -
PNR 57: The Only Way to Stop Native Advertising Is to Embrace It
Publicado: 16/12/2014
Joe Pulizzi and Robert Rose, two of the most well-known experts in the content marketing space, talk about the latest content marketing trends and discuss how businesses can use content to attract and retain customers. Each podcast show features a discussion of content marketing headlines, rants from Joe and Robert on what's going on in the industry, and a "This Old Marketing" example from the past (that we can learn from). Always useful, entertaining and never more than 60 minutes.