- Dec 01 Thu 2011 21:54
追
- Nov 23 Wed 2011 22:31
你的溫度
靠近的溫度,是那麼暖和
抓緊緊,就這樣下去
- Nov 21 Mon 2011 20:20
interview
face
body
sexy
- Nov 21 Mon 2011 17:04
CAN'T NOBODY
- Nov 19 Sat 2011 10:39
A Thousand Years
- Nov 08 Tue 2011 14:38
Sleep Away
bob acri
輕快又不強說愁的jazz
很適合 輕鬆的午安
- Nov 08 Tue 2011 14:25
ice
平靜的小小開心
原來
可以
這麼這麼的
透心涼
- Nov 08 Tue 2011 10:25
Happy people
Happy people are more successful shoppers, study says
A new study found that people who are in more positive moods make faster and more consistent decisions.
不太相信的E翻譯 : 保持心情愉快,控制權就會到你手上
If your answer to feeling blue is to go shopping, you might have a problem — and not just of the hoarder variety. A new study published in the Journal of Consumer Research found that it’s better to shop when you’re in a good mood because you make more consistent, wiser choices. So while retail therapy might be soothing, bummed-out trips to the mall also might explain all those strange outfits in your closet.
Study authors Paul Herr and Derick Davis of Virginia Tech, Christine Page of Skidmore College and Bruce Pfeiffer of the University of New Hampshire conducted the research to focus on one of the most basic interactions in decision making: how one’s mood affects the appearance and assessment of objects. For example, a puppy might be the most adorable thing on Earth when you’re happy, but when you’re annoyed you might see the little guy as nothing more than a yapping poop machine.
“There has been considerable debate about how affect (moods, emotions, feelings) influences the quality of people’s decisions,” they wrote in the paper. “We join this debate by looking at affect’s influence on a very basic element of decision-making: deciding if an object is liked or disliked.”
- Nov 05 Sat 2011 13:49
Kim-Anh,tattoo designer
- Nov 05 Sat 2011 05:37
remember
- Nov 05 Sat 2011 03:22
candy
Who can take it and lick it?only chosed by me
come on and kiss it kiss it
I like that
- Nov 04 Fri 2011 23:32
iSell
全文詳見 iSell
此書中提到的三個銷售上可能的錯誤,值得參考
1) Your marketing talks about WE – and doesn’t engage THEM
Pretty much most of the websites I see are written in a manner that research suggests is not engaging enough for the reader. Lots of time and money gets spent on search engine optimisation and traffic generation.
Yet, if you’re guilty of this mistake, there’s a good chance you’ll be turning these people away, losing leads and sales in the process.
So what’s the mistake? Writing in a style that just talks about ‘We do this…’ ‘We do that’, ‘we’re great at that’, ‘we won awards for this’. It’s called ‘we’ language and too many companies are ‘weing’ all over their sales as a result! So whether it’s your website, landing page, squeeze page, readers just glaze over and move on. Sales you achieve will probably be despite the website not because of it.
Solution? Change it to ‘YOU’ language. So if it currently says ‘we supply the finest work wear…..’ change it to ‘If you’re looking for work wear that…’.
Instead of ‘We offer…..’, it should read ‘You will get…’.
So make sure your copy is written in YOU language, from initial advertising, email campaigns, landing pages, order forms, confirmations, follow ups and the rest. You’ll find the levels of engagement increase with your enquirers – and you’ll convert at a higher level.
- Oct 29 Sat 2011 14:00
Lay It On Me