Apart from organisation-designed content, digital learning platforms such as Skills Alpha provide access to numerous external channels of learning and also nurture networked learning and user generated content.
Corporations have been relying on Learning Management Systems (LMS) to faciliate learning and address the challenges of distance, time and cost factors....
http://www.financialexpress.com/industry/technology/digital-learning-needs-help-from-deep-analytics/895892/
Is your e-commerce site experiencing weak organic traffic? Columnist Pratik Dholakiya shares some common issues that impact SEO for online retailers and offers a few suggestions. Not long ago, I talked about 16 very specific on-site SEO mistakes that I see very often, and how to fix those issues. Today, I want to shift the focus toward problems that plague e-commerce sites specifically. I’ll also be addressing on-site problems that have a bit more to do with strategy and a bit less to do with specific technical mistakes. Finally, I wanted to make sure we had some real-world examples to refer to, so I mined case studies from the industry to demonstrate the concrete impact these changes can have on your search traffic. Let’s take a look at these problems and what you can do to resolve them.
https://searchengineland.com/7-site-seo-problems-hold-back-e-commerce-sites-283299/
Ecommerce is a rapidly expanding business niche, with numerous brands marketing an endless range of products and services for all types of target audience. Providing outreach to international audience without requiring a physical store with nominal investment, almost every brand has a web store for capitalizing on the immeasurable potential of ecommerce. Online shopping provides customers the facility to select their desired products and services from the convenience of their location, which has made it a popular choice among customers.
With ecommerce retails in US predicted to reach $460 billion in 2017, it is evident that it will continue to be a profitable venture and optimizing for conversions is mandatory for your ecommerce store to surpass competitors. The following 10 ecommerce tips are derived by analyzing trends in 2017 and are designed to optimize conversions for higher revenue:
http://www.tgdaily.com/enterprise/10-conversion-boosting-strategies-for-e-commerce-stores/
Most entrepreneurs recognize the importance of great customer service and the importance of rewarding employees for great performance. Put these two things together, and it makes sense for companies to tie the size of their employees’ paychecks to the ratings they receive on customer satisfaction surveys.
More than 90 percent of US companies have shifted a greater percentage of their payroll to variable pay to increase engagement and retain talent, according to Aon Hewitt. Pay-for-performance plans are becoming common for customer-facing roles because frontline employees can directly shape the customer experience, and how people perceive the brand. A full 43 percent of companies base some portion of frontline pay on customer feedback ratings, according to a 2017 Accenture-Medallia survey.
https://www.forbes.com/sites/groupthink/2017/08/24/how-to-pay-employees-based-on-customer-feedback/#cea0cd520b3a/
A few years ago I attended an event, organized by our partner BT Global Services. When talking about digital transformation, back then a relatively new term, several CIOs reminded how they always had transformed, illustrating their statements with state-of-the-art projects across a broad range of business functions, processes and technologies of the SMAC stack such as cloud computing (a major area for BT Global Services).
It needs to be said that the average CIO attending the event worked for a large enterprise, the typical customers of BT Global Services. Now that digital (business) transformation has become a broadly adopted and – admittedly – often somewhat misunderstood term, what are CIOs thinking about digital transformation? Isn’t it just a matter of a few CIOs or projects anymore? How does it impact them?
https://www.i-scoop.eu/cio-views-digital-transformation-meet-digital-cio/
One: workers spend far too much time seeking the information they should have immediately available in order to effectively do their job. Two: the time that these workers need to successfully do their job is restricted by all sorts of tasks and activities which hinder them from de facto being successful. Among these tasks and activities: seeking information, which links both classic challenges.
It’s a challenge for knowledge workers and beyond in times where information, collaboration and new skillsets are required to be effective. In this article we focus on salespeople and what stands in their way to be effective, from a perspective of time, information and activities they (have to) spend too much time on, keeping them from their actual task which in the case of salespeople is still selling the last time we checked.
https://www.i-scoop.eu/increasing-selling-bandwidth-selling-time-sales-teams/
Today's marketers are facing a paradox: We have better intelligence and tools for driving growth than ever before. Data-driven digital marketing, programmatic and audience buying are proven to be delivering results. But if return on investment ROI » is going up, why are sales in decline?
There are some simple causes and effects: Media inflation continues to increase across all channels, while reach has declined for most every channel and publisher. Rising costs combined with declining reach drives up Cost-Per-Point CPP » , which means creative needs to be exponentially more effective to deliver the same results (and that's before attenuation of media attention is factored in). In most cases, even the best creative cannot offset the decline in efficiency. It's just math. And as the math suggests, in most cases we'd expect to see a decline in payback. Yet most channel-specific measurements show a positive ROI. Why?
http://adage.com/article/neustar/marketer-s-paradox-roi-sales-decline/310415/
One of the most popular passwords in 2016 was “qwertyuiop”—the string of horizontal letters from the top line of a keyboard. Even though most password meters suggest that it's weak, none offers advice on how to strengthen it. Researchers from Carnegie Mellon University and the University of Chicago have unveiled technology that offers real-time feedback and advice to help people create better passwords. To evaluate its performance, the team conducted an online study in which they asked more than 4,500 people to use it to create a password.
“Instead of just having a meter say, ‘Your password is bad,’ we thought it would be useful for the meter to say, ‘Here’s why it’s bad, and here’s how you could do better,’” said study co-author Nicolas Christin, professor in engineering and public policy at Carnegie Mellon University.
https://news.uchicago.edu/article/2017/05/09/research-utilizes-data-driven-feedback-help-users-strengthen-passwords/
Local SEO competition is heating up. 2018 is the year for you to really raise your local SEO game to enjoy the sweet fruits of high visibility for local searches on Google. Here are 5 strategies you can trust. Read more...
http://www.business2community.com/seo/5-strategies-improve-local-seo-2018-01944760#GT1BkxoUUZEhSsDX.97/
To be subjective, or to be objective, that is the question, and the best product managers already know the correct answer is “both.” As product managers, we constantly face situations where the unknowns outnumber the knowns that we can rely on. It’s our job to drive out that uncertainty and ensure that both people and efforts align toward a common objective. Sometimes these discussions flow smoothly, as the goalposts that we set can be quickly and easily agreed upon – things like providing a quality user experience, solving valuable problems for our customers and our market, and introducing competitively differentiating capabilities are hardly controversial.
What does become controversial, however, is how we go about those things as a team, what exactly we should do, and who we should be building those products for. And when those discussions come up, it’s inevitable that everyone at the table will have different ideas about what those things are – and, unfortunately, the vast majority of those ideas will not be based on hard data. Hence why we, as Product Managers, need to make it our business to ensure that we’re bringing data to the table as we represent and advocate for our customers and our market in those conversations; to do so, we must provide stakeholders with the right mix of qualitative insight and quantitative data that will not only help win them over to our preferred course of action, but also minimize the risk of later changes of course.
https://community.uservoice.com/blog/qualitative-and-quantitative-product-feedback/