Global Presence The analytical component was a key element for Alibaba, as was Lyris’ already strong international presence, which includes a recent expansion into the UK and experience in Australia and other markets, said Dave Dabbah, director of sales and marketing at Lyris. “They were looking for a company that understood how e-mail works in the U.S. and the English-speaking world, as well as in…
Category Archives: China Marketing Articles
Google China Through Outdoor Advertising To Get New Users, China Online Marketing, Shanghai, China
Google China has confirmed with local media that the company has started to place outdoor advertisements in subway and bus areas in Beijing and Guangzhou. The company previously tried the outdoor advertisements in several cities in southern China. So far, Google’s advertisements have entered Beijing’s subway line 1, Guangzhou’s subway line 1, and more than 150 bus stops in Beijing to promote Google China’s mobile…
Baidu Posts Q2 Results, China Online Marketing, Shanghai, China
Chinese search engine company Baidu Inc. announced its unaudited financial results for the second quarter ended June 30, 2009, and stated total revenues were CNY1.097 billion, a 36.7% increase from the corresponding period in 2008. “Our focus on execution drove another strong quarter for Baidu,” said Robin Li, Baidu.com’s chairman and CEO. “Our ongoing initiatives to improve user and customer experience further solidified Baidu’s leading…
Top 5 Serious Pay-Per-Click Errors China Online Marketing, Shanghai, China (part-1)
Makeing use of Pay-Per-Click is the quickest and easiest method of generating money on the Internet. Naturally, a Pay-Per-Click campaign is made lucrative by maintaining low client acquisition and marketing products with high conversion rates and huge revenue margins. On the client acquisition side, there are errors that minimize and sometimes totally destroy incomes, thus making a campaign unsuccessful. Here are possibly 5 of the…
Google Leaving China
Finally Google has decided to leave China. Soon after the announcement on March 23, 2010, Google stopped censoring the search result of google.cn by redirecting the site to google.com.hk. In Google’s official blog, David Drummond, the corporate’s chief legal officer explains that its decision is due to the Chinese government’s “non-negotiable legal requirement” in self-censorship. However, Google’s R&D work will continue to stay in China….