by Arthur Cronos | Dec 28, 2011 | advertising, All, copydragon, mobile marketing, offline marketing, website
The CopyDragon mobile site is now online. When surfing with your mobile phone, just go to CopyDragon.com as usual. Our website will immediately know that you’re using a mobile device, and route you to an optimized website that’s easier to navigate on the...
by Arthur Cronos | Dec 28, 2011 | advertising, All, offline marketing, search engines, website
[Article By Roy H. Williams , September 19, 2005, reprinted with permission from Entrepreneur.com] If you want to attract customers, the answer’s a no-brainer. Websites are perhaps the most overlooked vehicle of advertising for local, owner-operated businesses....
by Arthur Cronos | Dec 9, 2011 | All, copydragon, online marketing
[this post reprinted with permission from “MarketingOnlineClearAndSimple.com”] Resident of Mt. Shasta, California, local marketing heavyweight Nikolas Allen, raves about Arthur Cronos new book “Marketing Online, Clear and Simple,” available now...
by Arthur Cronos | Oct 29, 2011 | advertising, All, copydragon, online marketing, search engines
Do Americans shop online? Is a bear Catholic? Does the Pope visit in the woods? Of course they do! They learn from search results, user reviews, ratings, text ads, image ads, news headlines, forums, videos and even good old-fashioned official brand websites....
by Arthur Cronos | Oct 27, 2011 | advertising, All, copydragon, online marketing, search engines, social networks, video
Jim Lecinski is the managing director for Google’s U.S. Sales and Service. Check out his persuasive video about the “Zero Moment of Truth,” here — Now, quite possibly you may wonder how this might affect your business. Or maybe you’re...
by Arthur Cronos | Oct 26, 2011 | advertising, All, copydragon, search engines, social networks, website
Marketing, and selling things, changes over the years. These days it changes quickly. In many cases, the deal is … your business either adapts … or dies. I’ve had a couple of businesses die, where I failed to find a way to adapt to the changing...