Last month’s contents were newsworthy and informative. Leading the pack was Maurice Smith’s post on the ultimate marketing challenge followed by Leo Valiquette’s piece on phone etiquette. As always, we had some great contributions from our guest bloggers on presentation skills, measuring Facebook contest ROI, the neurobiology of marketing, and filing patent applications, among others.
In case you missed any of it, here is a handy recap of our posts, as ranked by the enthusiasm of our readers:
October 9: The ultimate marketing challenge: Final Fling helps plan your own death, by Maurice Smith
October 29: Don’t let your phone skills atrophy, by Leo Valiquette
October 23: When a good presentation isn’t good enough, by Anil Dilawri
October 31: Waterloo’s Velocity accelerator is 5, and growing fast, by Francis Moran
October 30: How to measure Facebook contest ROI, by Nick Steeves
October 21: Canada’s focus needs to be on tech products, not research, by Denzil Doyle
October 8: Do not try to convince me that bread is the new broccoli, by Leo Valiquette
October 2: Brain fame: Will technology redefine how our brains are wired?, by Bob Bailey
October 3: The only thing worse than not investing in marketing, by Francis Moran
October 24: TiE holds first-ever Canadian conference, in Ottawa, by Francis Moran
October 10: Bringing the spies in from the cold: PR lessons for spooks, by Francis Moran
October 17: Are surveys the last great Potemkin village of media relations?, by Francis Moran
October 28: How long, really, do you have to file a patent application?, by David French
October 7: Is your app ready for social media marketing?, by Peter Hanschke
October 22: Kobo has proven big brands can seldom afford to beg forgiveness, by Leo Valiquette
October 16: Unshackle your local marcom efforts from head-office control, by Leo Valiquette


