الجمعة، 20 مايو 2016

Top 5 Customer Relationship Management Trends for 2016 & CRM Best Practices

Customer Relationship Management

Customer Relationship Management (or CRM) is back! What a difference a few years makes. Not too long ago, surveys were reporting that 70-75% of all CRM initiatives failed. That was yesterday. This is today. While CRM implementation results leave a lot to be desired, it is amazing what can happen when institutions go from treating CRM as an ad hoc “skunkwork” operation to treating it as a formally constructed corporate initiative. Don’t say we didn’t tell you so.
The fact that you’re at this site likely means that to CRM or not to CRM is not the question. The question is how to do it effectively? How do you create the strategy/vision, manage expectations, how do you organize around the customer, and how do you implement CRM best practices? The answer to these questions lie not only in the imagination but also in the execution of technology. For this reason, you will find plenty of tech talk on these pages. Don’t shy away from these areas as these issues are well within the marketer’s purview and quite frankly, the devil is in the details. Overall, within this site, we tend not to take an IT-dominant view of CRM but more of a business strategy view of CRM and fit the IT-components into the business strategy. And at other times, we bring it down to the very tactical level.
Before we leave this introduction, we want to echo a point of view by Bryan Pearson of Alliance Data Systems on a subject that has been truly troubling us for some time – that is CRM marketers’ seemingly singular focus on data analytics to the detriment of imagination. Mr. Pearson wrote:
    “Instead of developing real relationships with our customers, we often reduced them to mere ones and zeroes… Today, the balance between art and science has teetered inexorably toward science as the true artistry we develop dwindles.”
Science is burying the art of customer relationships. As such we are stalling as marketers as we fail to innovate. Our industry has historically been the most innovative in the marketing realm. In this increasingly competitive environment, let us not forget our innovative heritage. After all, “scientists can explain the world, but only artists can give it meaning.”

Top 5 CRM Trends for 2016

With the economy arguably in a steady growth mode, and new business formation rebounding, marketers are finding the marketplace cluttered. Old school advertising isn’t as effective as it once was. There are over 60 trillion individually indexed web pages out there. According to IBM, 90 percent of the data in the world today was created in the last 2 years. The average e-mail subscriber gets 416 commercial messages a month. Breaking through to your customer is harder than ever before. In this complex environment, we offer 5 new trends for 2016 that will challenge marketers:
1) Content: Corporate web sites tend to be loaded with irrelevant content. They also often fail to meet Google’s Quality Score guidelines which power Google’s Adwords. Consumers, on the other hand, are much more sophisticated today which means that companies need content that is interesting and relevant on all platforms, in order to make that emotional and rational connection that is necessary for engagement. Consumers want in-depth information, and they want it now. Hence marketers are creating shareable content and microsites to highlight products and promotions, but also deliver targeted messages around topics relevant to the buying stages (information at the prospect stage and offers at later stages).
Some brands are finding that content can be four times more effective than a traditional marketing campaign. These same brands are selecting content niches that they feel they can own – often in niches that, arguably, have little direct relation to the products they sell. Companies that are leading in content include:
  • Nike
  • P&G’s BeingGirl
  • Out-Law, a UK law firm
  • OpenView Venture Partners – a VC firm no less
  • Louis Vuitton: Art
  • Burberry: music
  • Red Bull: sport
2) Geo-location: This affects both the digital and offline worlds equally as we now have a physical cookie. By this we mean customers near or in brick-and-mortar stores or digital kiosks can now receive geo-located messages and offers. Retailers can now, via mobile phone signals, track customer movements around and within a store. Retailers can even identify repeat shoppers and keep a record of their in store behavior.
WIth beacon technology, it is now possible to push messages to consumers when retailers think they are relevant to consumers. Not too far off will be the day when a retailer can push offers based upon knowing a consumer’s prior location e.g. consumer just near the beach, on their way back to their hotel could receive a push offer for swim wear that the consumer could purchase as they passed the retailer’s store or digital kiosk, or they could purchase it from the comfort of their hotel room.
This technology, while still in its infancy, is rapidly being adopted by retailers and is going to fundamentally change the way retailers think of their customers. Data analytics just rose to a new level.
3) Service & Customer Experience:  We are rapidly running towards a day when “100 percent of shoppers will be connected 100 percent of the time.”(Deloitte Digital). This will have a profound affect on the customer experience. Google now talks about the customer’s life being divided into micro moments. Businesses need to now preside at all touch points of this new customer journey.  According to McKinsey, seventy percent of a customer’s buying experience is based on how the customer feels they are treated. Today, customers have more choices than ever and are more frugal. This affords them the luxury of demanding more. Key to satisfying this empowered customer is offering a holistic experience across all company touch points and developing the infrastructure that allows for knowledge sharing and smart communication.
Smart organizations will streamline, hide, or eliminate the transactional parts of the customer experience. The Apple Store customer experience is designed so that registers and receipts are effectively nonexistent. That’s because they don’t add to the customer experience, they just get in the way.
Given that customer loyalty is directly correlated to the customer’s brand experience, having authentic personal interactions both before and after a purchase has been made will be the number one priority of all customer-facing companies. Tactics like content creation, loyalty programs and gamification will continue to play an integral role in the customer experience development, but so will initiatives that enable a holistic experience e.g. Uber which allows customers to hail, track and pay for a taxi via its web site and/or mobile app.
Retailers, that in the past have tended to tie their loyalty programs to a private label or general purpose credit card, will begin to experiment with multi-tender loyalty programs (think American Express’ Plenti). As a result of the Great Recession and legal requirements, the cold hard truth is that two-thirds of adults under age 30 currently have no credit cards at all. Retailers wanting to capture the Millennial market will have to become more inventive in order to capture this shopper. Using cash or debit will no longer preclude consumers from participating in a retailer’s loyalty program efforts. Just ask Walmart’s Savings Catcher app or Target’s Cartwheel app (discount loyalty programs).
4) Personalization and customization: In order to be effective in this new year, companies will seek to know more about its customers and use that insight to talk, engage and interact with their customers more often and more meaningfully in new and innovative ways (including mobile, dynamic content, apps, blogs, social). Static web sites are no longer enough, they need to be social, inspirational, and personal.
Given the unique nature of mobile (a single phone number), Marketers can now learn customer habits and offer more proactive services, such as personal assistants to provide curated guidance in store, custom menus in restaurants that exclude foods you clearly don’t like, or have allergies to. WIth Google Now, Marketers now have access to a tool that learns from your phone and tablet activity to make intelligent choices based on ones you have already made.
Companies like Hoxton Analytics are allowing retailers to determine shopper demographics by scanning and identifying customer shoe choices – all in an effort to better understand customers and traffic patterns. Retailers have begun outfitting their fitting rooms with eBay’s “smart” fitting rooms, complete with touch-screen mirrors, motion-sensors, and tracking abilities to monitor what items customers bring into the room but don’t buy. One e-commerce company, Stantt, scanned the bodies of 2,000 men and used the resulting data to come up with 75 different shirt sizes, all slightly different.
Companies are also using their loyalty program and their house lists to send very targeted offers to customers, effectively hiding pricing from their competitors.
Like it or not, 2016 is going to be up close and personal.
5) Omnichannel: Omnichannel is critical today as many brick-and-mortar stores are experiencing negative or anemic year-over-year retail sales growth; but the online component of omnichannel continues to do well as consumers slowly alter the balance of their purchase behavior – shifting more online. Those companies that understand that the brand’s offline dynamism needs to be recreated online – that sense of discovery, inspiration and entertainment – will be the companies that survive and prosper.  Who says that e-commerce sites can’t intermingle presentation, curation and yes, personality? This is the year that the customer’s mobile and digital experiences will evolve and rival the customer’s offline experience – hopefully with some fun and humor mixed in.
The idea of ” first screen” and ” second screen” is no longer relevant to marketers as consumers never had a device by device mind set. Screens have blended together. Consumers want a seamless and consistent experience, digitally and offline. It is now incumbent upon marketing to guide a holistic marketing strategy and customer experience.
Mobile is mainstream now, and will continue to grow and dominate. Marketers now need to put mobile at the center of the omnichannel journey. Driven by Facebook, we’ll see more on-demand services brought to Messenger platforms. Social is mobile. As mobile apps are the primary way people access social media. Start consideration with mobile and evolve the design up to larger screens, implementing strategies that touch the consumer’s browsing and buying journey. This includes arming the floor sales force with mobile technology to check inventory, place orders or make a sale.
Leaders in the omnichannel area include American Eagle, Sears, lululemon, and Selfridges.

CRM Best Practices

So what is CRM? Simply put, CRM is putting your customer at the heart of your business. Today it is more important than ever to build better relationships with your customers as, in this day and age of social media, they now talk to 130+ people at a time. They have a megaphone, making it easier for positive and negative messages to spread fast and wide.
With the support of technology, the goal of CRM is to have a 360-degree view of the customer which will enable you to improve the quality and satisfaction of each customer interaction and maximize the profitability of your customer relationships… a win/win for both you and your customers. Depending on how you look at it, CRM can be practiced in companies at different levels. It can be practiced at the organizational level (ideally). It can be practiced at a customer facing level – anything that has to do with interactions with customers, marketing, sales and service. Or It can be practiced at the very functional level, like in a call center within a sales force, etc. While we can look at CRM on many different levels, our definition of CRM is at a strategic level i.e. an organizational level.
CRM is similar to customer loyalty and relationship marketing in that the goal is to move your customer from a transactional interaction to an emotional relationship. The two components most often missing from loyalty and relationship marketing being: a) technology and b) the management of relationships with other members of the business network: affiliates, branches, employees etc. – i.e. recognizing your customer as a customer through any channel.
The term CRM, arguably, was first put into the public domain around 1993, when Tom Siebel came up with it. So it is closely connected to Siebel Systems – an IT company. Hence the problem. Many executives are under the misconception that CRM is principally an IT implementation… which explains many of its failures — and there have been many of them. If technology is applied to a faulty business strategy, all that is going to happen is that the company is going to become more efficient at doing the wrong things. If the core business strategy isn’t put right first, you’ll have failure. As we view CRM more as a strategy than a process… get the business strategy right first. Decide which customers or segments to target. Develop sensible customer acquisition, retention and development plans. Sort out the channel strategy first (direct or indirect) then sort out which products, services, bundles of value to offer the chosen customers. Once that’s in position, then start looking for IT to support it — but not until then.
We spoke earlier about putting your customer at the heart of your business. Part of that process involves developing a “relationship” with your customer. How your customers define that relationship will vary. As the CRM marketer, it is up to you to find out what’s important to that customer. At the end of the day, you want to be able to answer the question: “What’s the “one thing” that is distinctive about my customer relationships?
As we are in a business of one sort or another, our goal as marketers, is to have CRM help us acquire, grow and retain profitable customer relationships to create a sustainable competitive advantage.
Without a doubt, customer loyalty is a key driver of profitability. Creating customer loyalty must be an integral part of your organization’s strategy – particularly in a time of industry consolidation. Understanding customers’ requirements is fundamental to business success.
“It’s incredibly arrogant for a company to believe it can deliver the same sort of product that its rivals do and actually do better for very long. That’s especially true today, when the flow of information and capital is incredibly fast.”
 Michael Porter
The most important basis for strategy development, however, is a comprehensive understanding of what drives customer loyalty and how strong those drivers are. The key to understanding what drives your customers’ loyalty lies in finding answers to the following questions:
  • How does our business define customer loyalty?
  • Are our customers loyal? To what extent or intensity?
  • How do we create, build or earn customer loyalty?
  • How can we use customer loyalty strategically and tactically for positioning?
The first step in answering these questions is to measure both customer satisfaction and customer loyalty. In working toward a thorough understanding of your customer, begin by looking at why your customers leave. Profitable CRM projects start by understanding customer needs.
Read more — Source : http://www.crmtrends.com/crm.html

Customer relationship management CRM : Implementing

Retail financial services in all markets, including emerging markets, are undergoing major transformation, driven by change, deregulation and customer sophistication. Customer service and specifically relationship management, in particular, are crucial to attaining a sustainable competitive advantage in the marketplace.
The implementation of a one-to-one programme within an emerging economy is the focus of this paper, specifically in the financial services environment. The steps in the implementation of CRM as proposed by Peppers, Rogers and Dorf (1999b) are examined and the effect on customer service in an emerging market is investigated. The findings indicate that there are positive associations with these steps and customer
service.
INTRODUCTION
Changes in customer expectations can be identified throughout the world. Customer relationship management (CRM) strategies have become increasingly important worldwide due to these changes in expectations from customers as well as changes in the nature of markets. Changes have been noted across the world, but opportunities present themselves in South Africa and other developing countries for CRM strategies.
Customer Relationship Management (CRM) is a managerial philosophy that seeks to build long term relationships with customers. CRM can be defined as “the development and maintenance of mutually beneficial long-term relationships with strategically significant customers” (Buttle, 2000). Under certain circumstances it may result in the termination of relationships (du Plessis, Jooste & Strydom, 2001). It can also 1Adele Berndt is currently an Associate Professor in Marketing at the University of Johannesburg. Her areas of specialisation include Services’ Marketing and Customer Relationship Management (CRM) together with strategic leadership areas in these disciplines. She has presented papers various national and international conferences. She is a founder member of the Leadership Forum in South Africa and a member of the South African Institute of Management Scientists (SAIMS).
Frikkie Herbst is currently an Associate Professor in the Department of Marketing Management at the University of Johannesburg. His areas of specialisation include Strategic Marketing, Marketing Research and Research Methodology. He has presented papers at national and international conferences and published articles in various peer reviewed journals.
Lindie Roux is currently working in the Banking industry in South Africa. She studied at the Department of Marketing and Communication Management at the University of Pretoria where she obtained her M Com in Marketing Management in 2001.
be noted that the relationship is developed with strategically significant customers, and hence it is necessary for the organisation to determine the nature of the significance. Traditionally this would be done by determining the value of the customer to the organisation, but other criteria that can be used include whether a customer serves as a benchmark for other customers or whether the customer inspires change in the supplier (Buttle, 2002).
The implementation of CRM is regarded as desirable by organisations due to the benefits that accrue from these strategies among their customers, such as greater loyalty and resulting profits. The focus of a CRM strategy is the acquisition, retention and overall customer profitability of the specific group of customers.
• Acquisition of customers: this refers to the need of organisation to find new customers for their products. This means they are required to develop strategies to attract potential customers to purchase the product. The cost of attracting a new customer is estimated to be five times the cost of keeping a current customer happy (Kotler, 1997).
• Retention of customers: organisations also need to focus on existing customers in order to ensure that they continue purchasing and continue supporting the product. Organisations can increase their profitability by between 20% and 125% if they boost their customer retention rate by 5 percent (Peck, Payne, Christopher & Clark, 2004).
• Profitability: Customer profitability reflects the financial performance of customers with respect to all the costs associated with a transaction (Gordon, 1998). Profitability in the case of CRM is determined in the light of the lifetime value of the customer to the organisation, taking account the income and expenses associated with each customer and their respective transactions over time (Gordon, 1998).
In attempting to understand the implementation of CRM programmes, it must be borne in mind that economies differ in terms of their level of development. Two economic criteria can be used in this economic analysis; population size and per capita income have been incorporated into the calculation of per capita GNP and per capital GDP (Hough, Neuland & Bothma, 2003). This analysis makes it possible to categorise economies as being developed, developing and less-developed (Hough et al., 2003).
Developed economies (such as the USA and Japan) are characterised by political stability, highly-educated and literate populations, high levels of innovation and entrepreneurship as well as high levels of both industrial and information technology. Less-developed economies (such as Bulgaria, Bangladesh and Ethiopia) have political instability (sometimes political anarchy), government inefficiency, low standards of living and low levels of economic wealth. An emerging market (or developing economy) is defined as markets that are in the process of evolving to becoming developed (i.e. higher income) (Hough et al., 2003). It is into this category
that South Africa can be placed.
Developing economies have the following characteristics :
• Improving educational standards, literacy and work skills levels
• Relatively efficient technology systems
• Relative political stability and a movement towards market-based economies
• Rapidly expanding financial services (Hough et al., 2003).
The characteristics of developing economies as listed above form part of the imperatives for the implementation of CRM. CRM includes the use of technology in the building of databases and the use thereof to develop and improve the relationship with the various markets, including the final consumer. In order to exploit this technology, skills among staff are required. Organisations within developing markets have customer information in databases, though many do not have the advanced technology or skills to exploit the information that is stored (Brunjes & Roderick, 2002). This indicates that CRM can be used within developing markets, though organisations will still be required to manage its implementation with care.
The answer to this question has to be no. The reason for this is that not all organisations have customer information, which makes the implementation of CRM impossible. Examples of these products include mass products (Gordon, 1998). Further, businesses where there is a high customer churn (where customers remove their patronage) or where there is a low Customer Lifetime Value (CLV) which impacts on the profitability of the organisation are not suitable to the implementation of CRM (Kotler, 2002). These are true, irrespective of the nature of the economic development within markets. It can thus be said that CRM is appropriate for certain organisations in emerging markets.
Organisations that can implement CRM successfully are those that have a great deal of information concerning the customer and where there are differentiated needs among the customers (Kotler, 2002).
Financial services meet the criteria for the implementation of CRM as indicated by Kotler. Financial institutions have a great deal of information concerning their customers and their needs differ. This means that banks offer different products to different customers. Some customers require a mortgage bond in addition to their current account and credit card, while for other customers, vehicle financing is more important. The financial circumstances of customers differ, resulting in different packages being offered to customers. It is also possible for financial institutions to tailor their packages thereby making them customer specific
http://gbata.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/JGBAT_Vol1-2-p7.pdf

A Framework for Customer Relationship Management

A Framework for Customer Relationship Management


The World Wide Web is the opportunity afforded companies to choose how they interact with their customers. The Web allows companies to build better relationships with customers than has been previously possible in the offline world. By combining the abilities to respond directly to customer requests and to provide the customer with a highly interactive, customized experience, companies have a greater ability today to establish, nurture, and sustain long-term customer relationships than ever before. These online capabilities complement personal interactions provided through salespeople, customer service representatives, and call centers. At the same time, companies can choose to exploit the low cost of Web customer service to reduce their service costs and offer lower-quality service by permitting only electronic contaa.
The flexibility of Web-based interactions thus permits firms to choose to whom they wish to offer services and at what quality level.
Indeed, this revolution in customer relationship management (CRM)’ has been referred to as the new “mantra” of marketing.^ Companies such as Siebel, E.piphany, Oracle, Broadvision, Net Perceptions, Kana, and others have developed CRM products that do everything from track customer behavior on the Web to predicting their future moves to sending direa e-mail communications.
This has created a worldwide market for CRM products and services of $34 billion in 1999, a market that is forecasted by IDC to grow to $125 billion by 2004.
The need to better understand customer behavior and the interest of many managers to focus on those customers who can deliver long-term profits has changed how marketers view the world. Traditionally, marketers have been trained to acquire customers, either new ones who have not bought the product before or those who are currently competitors’ customers. This has required heavy doses of mass advertising and price-oriented promotions to customers and channel members. Today, particularly tor the company’s “best” customers, the tone of the conversation has changed from customer acquisition to retention.
This requires a different mindset and a different and new set of tools. A good thought experiment for an executive audience is to ask them how much they spend and/or focus on acquisition versus retention activities. While it is difficult to perfectly distinguish the iwo activities from each other, the answer is usually that acquisition dominates retention.
The impetus for this interest in CRM came from Reichheld, who demonstrated dramatic increase in profits from small increases in customer retention rates.” His studies showed that as little as a 5% increase in retention had impacts as high as 95% on ihe net present value delivered by customers. Other studies done by consultants such as McKinsey have shown that repeat customers generate over twice as much gross income as new customers. The considerable improvements in technology and innovation in CRM-related products have made it much easier to deliver on the promise of greater profitability from reduced customer “chum.”
For example. Exhibit 1 shows the results from a 1999 McKinsey study on the simulated impaa of improvements in a number of customer-based metrics on the market value of Internet companies. The metrics are divided into three categories: customer attraction, customer conversion, and customer retention.
As can be seen, the greatest leverage comes from investments in retention. If revenues from repeat customers, the percentage of customers who repeat purchase, and the customer churn rate each improves by 10%, the company value was found to increase (theoretically) by 5.8%, 9.5%, and 6.7% respectively.
A problem is that CRM means different things to different people. For some, CRM means direct e-mails. For others, it is mass customization or developing products that fit individual customers’ needs. For IT consultants, CRM translates into complicated technical jargon related to terms such as OLAP (online analytical processing) and CICs (customer interaaion centers).
What do managers need to know about their customers and how is that information used to develop a complete CRM perspeaive? Exhibit 2 shows the basic modeL which contains a set of 7 basic components:
• a database of customer aaivity,
• analyses of the database,
• given the analyses, decisions about which customers to target,
• tools for targeting the customers,
• how to buiid relationships with the targeted customers,
• privacy issues, and
• metrics for measuring the success of the CRM program.
EXHIBIT 2. Customer Relationship
Management Model
Create a Database
Analysis
Customer Selection
Customer Targeting
Relationship Marketing
Privacy Issues
Metrics

Creating a Customer Database

A necessary first step to a complete CRM solution is the construction of a customer database or information file.’ This is the foundation for any customer relationship management aaivity. For Web-based businesses, constructing a database should be a relatively straightforward task, as the customer transaction and contact information is accumulated as a natural part of the interaction with customers. For existing companies that have not previously collected much customer information, the task will involve seeking historical customer contact data from internal sources such as accounting and customer service.
What should be collected for the database? Ideally, the database should contain information about the following:
• Transactions—This should include a complete purchase history with accompanying deLails (price paid, SKU, delivery date).
• Customer Contacts—Today, there is an increasing number of customer contact points from multiple channels and contexts. This should not only include sales calls and service requests, but any customer- or company-initialed contact.
• Descriptive Information—This is for segmentation and other data analysis purposes.
• Response to Marketing Stimuli—This part of the information file should conlain whether or not the customer responded to a direct markeiing initiative, a sales contact, or any other direa contact.
The daia should also be represented over time.
Companies have traditionally used a variety of methods to construct their databases. Durable goods manufacturers utilize information from warranty cards for basic descriptive information. Unfortunately, response rates to warranty cards are in the 20-30% range leaving big gaps in the databases. Service businesses are normally in better shape since the nature ol ihe product involves the kind of customer-company interaaion that naturally leads to better data collection. For example, banks have been in the forefront of CRM aaivities for a number of years. Telecom-related industries (long distance, wireless, cable services) similarly have a large amount of customer information.”
The following are illustrations of some corporate database-building efforts:
• The networking company 3Com created a worldwide customer database from 50 “legacy” databases scattered throughout their global operations.
They built customer records from e-mails, direct mail, telemarketing, and other customer contacts, with descriptive information by department, division, and location.
• Thomson Holidays, the British tour company developed a Preferred Agents Scheme to enlist the assistance of travel agents in building the database. They collect customer descriptive information and data on trips taken. This enables them to calculate the profit on a per customer trip basis.
• Taylor Made, the golf equipment manufacturer, has a database of over 1.5 million golfers with their names, addresses, e-mail addresses, birthdays, lypes of courses played, and vacations taken.
Companies such as Procter & Gamble and Unilever ihal sell frequently purchased consumer products have greater problems constructing databases due to a lack of systematic information about their millions of customers and the fact that they use intermediaries (i.e., supermarkets, drug stores) that prohibit direct contact. The challenge is to create opportunities for customer inieraction and, therefore, data collection. This can be from running contests to encouraging customer visits to Web sites. Waldenbooks offers a 10% discount on purchases if customers provide information to the company and become Preferred Readers.
Exhibit 3 gives a general framework for considering the problems in database construction.’ Firms in the upper left-hand quadrant have many direct customer interactions (banks, retail) and therefore have a relatively easy job construaing a database. Firms in the lower right-hand quadrant have the most difficult job because the interact less frequently with customers and those interactions are indirect (through channels) in nature. Auto and furniture manufacturers are examples here. The other two boxes represent intermediate situations.
The point of this framework is that unless you are in the high-direct box, you have to work harder to build a database. The Thomson Holidays example above provides a good illustration of company that uses channel incentives lo take a low frequency product and still obtain customer information. Kellogg has developed a creative solution to the problem through its “Eat and Eam” program where children find a 15-digit code inside cereal boxes and then go to the company’s Web site, enter some personal information, and become eligible for free toys. The task for companies is then to move towards the upper left-hand quadrant through increased customer contaa and “event” marketing.
EXHIBIT 3. Getting More Customer Interaction
High
Interaction
Frequency
Low
Customer
Direct
Banks
Telecom
Retail
Personal
Computers
Internet
Infrastructure
Interaction
Indirect
Airlines
Packaged GocxJs
Drugs
Furniture
Autos
to a lack of
by Russell S. Winer

الخميس، 19 مايو 2016

ADFOC Paga Por Publicidad

Te dejo un vídeo que te lo explica muy bien.

Como Ganar Dinero Con ADFOC Mientras Duermes



En este artículo me gustaría hablar de otra forma de ganar dinero con el mínimo esfuerzo y en piloto automático, se trata de una página similar a Adf.ly que nos ofrece algunas opciones muy interesantes de ganar dinero constante. Aclarar antes de continuar comentar que el secreto o bien uno de los tantos secretos para ganar dinero en Internet consiste en diversificar y principalmente en no descartar nada por pequeño que sea, en este negocio se debería de dar valor hasta a un centavo.

Se trata de ADFOC, es una empresa que se dedica a hacer publicidad con un enlace en tu pagina web. ADFOC lleva mas de 4 años repartiendo dinero, paga rigurosamente, paga del 7 al 11 de cada mes y a partir de 10$. Paga por PAYPAL y por BITCOIN.

Lo primero que tenemos que hace es registrarnos haciendo clic en SING UP , tenemos que poner un correo electrónico, debe de ser correcto para poderlo poner también en la opción de cobro por paypal, los datos tienen que ser verdaderos para que el dinero no se pierda por el camino.

Una vez registrados y dentro deberemos ir a la pestaña de inicio de información de la cuenta y poner todos nuestros datos.

El siguiente paso es introducir nuestra URL para que nos cree un enlace pulsando en Shrink , el cual deberemos introducirlo en nuestras redes sociales, FACEBOOK,TWITTER,YOU TUBE,etc……. Cuanta mas URL tengamos para acortar, mas posibilidades de ganar dinero tenemos, también podemos acortar todos los enlacen de entradas que tengamos y a si aumentar los ingresos

Dependiendo de las visitas recibidas puede variar mucho el nivel de ingresos, no nos haremos ricos con esta pagina de acortado de enlaces, pero podemos sacar unos buenos eurillos.

Para poderos registrar HAZ CLIC AQUÍ

También te voy ha dejar un truquillo para que aumentes esos ingresos, pero sin ser avariciosos porque te bannearan, tienes que registrarte AQUÍ que es una pagina de intercambio de trafico web, OTOHITS

Sirve para darle trafico a una pagina web, es gratuito y aquí puedes insertar tu enlace acortado y darle trafico, pero abuses porque seras banneado.

Te dejo un vídeo que te lo explica muy bien.
Como Ganar Dinero Con ADFOC Mientras Duermes

Como Empezar A Ganar En Forex



Como Empezar A Ganar En Forex
Admin | 19 abril, 2016 | FOREX | No hay comentarios
Como Empezar A Ganar En Forex



Como Empezar A Ganar En Forex es un mercado de divisas donde existen muchas posibilidades de ganar dinero… pero también de perderlo. Hay muchas personas que se han hecho famosas pero tienes que saber que esto no ha ocurrido de la noche a la mañana: todas ellas han estudiado el mercado y han ido desarrollado diferentes métodos que les han ayudado a llegar hasta a la cima.

forex cre

No dejes que nadie te convenza de lo fácil que es ganar dinero en FOREX porque no lo es: no esperes hacerte rico de un momento a otro y trabaja duro para elaborar una estrategia.
Para ayudarte a dar tus primeros pasos en FOREX puedes seguir estos consejos.
Cuenta gratuita en Forex

También conocida como servicio de prueba. Básicamente la idea es contactar con un bróker que nos ofrezca este tipo de servicio. No vamos a “jugar” con dinero real por lo que no vamos a tener ni pérdidas ni ganancias.
Es interesante que nos quedemos en este mundo aparte hasta que empecemos a dominar algunas técnicas. Tienes que tener en cuenta que salir directamente a este mercado con dinero propio puede ser una ruina ya que podemos perderlo todo en muy poco tiempo.
Análisis de las divisas más rentables

FOREX se basa en el estudio de las divisas de los países y en sus fluctuaciones. Si, por ejemplo, hemos cambiado nuestros dólares por euros y nos damos cuenta de que estos han subido, habremos ganado dinero y lo habremos perdido en el caso contrario.
Una primera idea consiste en estudiar las divisas de aquellos países que se consideran más estables y en donde la inflación es más baja (esto quiere decir que los inversores confían más en ellos y, por ende, podemos tener más posibilidades de hacer una muy buena inversión).
Depósito inicial: ¿Cuánto necesitas para acceder al mercado de FOREX?

Aquí nos encontramos con cifras muy dispares: mientras algunas personas aseguran que la mínima cantidad oscila entre 10.000-20.000$, lo cierto es que podemos entrar en él utilizando el capital de un bróker.
Esta cuantía también es muy variable: hay algunos que no te permitirán una inversión mínima de 1000$ mientras que otros te lo permitirán por unos 200$.
Tienes que tener en cuenta una cosa: los cambios de monedas pueden traer unos beneficios (o unas pérdidas) muy poco significativas. Es por ello por lo que necesitamos tanta cantidad inicial, si no no notaremos ninguna diferencia cuando ganemos.
Cuidado con FOREX

Existe mucho material a lo largo de Internet donde podemos encontrar tipo de información para saber cómo operar. Es muy importante leerlo todo para no cometer graves errores que nos hagan perder antes de tiempo.
No apuestes demasiado dinero y sigue estrategias que te permitan conservar la máxima cantidad posible en caso de que haya algún tipo de pérdida.
Y, sobre todo, mucha paciencia: es un mercado muy complicado donde solo podremos aprender si vamos poco a poco y no nos impacientamos demasiado.

Como Detectar Las Encuestas Fraudulentas

Como Detectar Las Encuestas Fraudulentas

 

Es bastante común que cuando te encuentras navegando por la red te topes con temas sobre cómo ganar dinero a través de internet y más específicamente por medio de encuestas remuneradas.

encuesta
Cada día se suman más personas al grupo de los que buscan ganar dinero extra a través de internet y en la comodidad de su hogar, y es por ello que muchas empresas se aprovechan de esta situación y crean campañas publicitarias prometiendo grandes cantidades de dinero a cambio de responder simples encuestas que solamente te llevara unos pocos minutos contestar.
Realmente cada quien tendría que analizar y tener juicio crítico, es decir, algo que parece tan bueno por lo general no es verdadero, por ejemplo, existen muchas páginas que dicen que tienes que registrarte y colocar tus datos para que luego de ello te comiencen a mandar encuestas que tienen poco valor económico, esto con la promesa que luego de haber contestado un cierto número de encuestas, te comenzaran a llegar otras en donde tu ganaras más dinero.
Pero, ¿alguien se ha preguntado para quien responden las encuestas?

Hay que aclarar que no todos los sitios de encuestas online son un fraude, por el contrario si existen algunas en donde te pagan por este servicio, aunque cuesta un poco llegar al saldo mínimo para solicitar un pago, pero si pagan, pero también hay otras páginas que únicamente se dedican a estafar a las personas, la dinámica de ellos es crear publicidad dentro de dichas encuestas y con esto ellos generan ingresos pero tu no.
Las verdaderas paginas en donde si te pagan, trabajan con las grandes compañías y es un método de estudio de Marketing, con esto ellos verifican si sus productos gustan al público y también identifican que deben mejorar en sus envases o en algunas ofertas y de esta manera llegar a ganar millones de Dólares, mientras que a ti únicamente te pagaran unos cuantos centavos, no sé ustedes pero aunque me paguen por responder ofertas, esto también me suena a estafa.
Como sé si me están estafando en las encuestas remuneradas

La verdad que no hay una guía como tal para saber si la página es SCAM, pero como mencionaba anteriormente cada quien debe tener un buen juicio y no dejarse llevar por la emoción de que puede ganar grandes cantidades de dinero fácilmente, ya que si eso fuera cierto, todos los internautas seriamos millonarios.
Analiza y ve las señales:
1. La página de encuestas te está pidiendo dinero a cambio de enseñarte un mejor método, (FRAUDE)
2. Constantemente realizas encuestas con poca remuneración y el límite de cobro es muy alto, (ESTAFA)
3. Has buscado información en la web sobre esa página de encuestas online y no encuentras buenos comentarios, (como dice el dicho, si el rio suena es porque piedras lleva, FRAUDE)
Con estas tres sencillas preguntas que te hagas antes de empezar a perder tu tiempo contestando encuestas, lograras saber si estas a punto de ser estafado.
Aunque debes diferenciar entre “fraude y estafa” en las encuestas, el fraude es cuando una web te paga miserias cuando ellos ganan millones, y una estafa es cuando te fajas todo el día y la noche contestando encuestas y nunca recibes un solo centavo por ello, lo que sucede es que luego de que cientos de personas hayan acumulado ganancias sin cobrar, las paginas mágicamente desaparecen y no volvemos a saber de ellos y se llevan todo nuestro dinero.

 

الأربعاء، 18 مايو 2016

DDOS Explained Fully



 DDoS is short for Distributed Denial of Service.
DDoS is a type of DOS attack where multiple compromised systems, which are often infected with a Trojan, are used to target a single system causing a Denial of Service (DoS) attack. Victims of a DDoS attack consist of both the end targeted system and all systems maliciously used and controlled by the hacker in the distributed attack.
How DDoS Attacks Work
According to this report on eSecurityPlanet, in a DDoS attack, the incoming traffic flooding the victim originates from many different sources – potentially hundreds of thousands or more. This effectively makes it impossible to stop the attack simply by blocking a single IP address; plus, it is very difficult to distinguish legitimate user traffic from attack traffic when spread across so many points of origin.
The Difference Between DoS and DDos Attacks
A Denial of Service (DoS) attack is different from a DDoS attack. The DoS attack typically uses one computer and one Internet connection to flood a targeted system or resource. The DDoS attack uses multiple computers and Internet connections to flood the targeted resource. DDoS attacks are often global attacks, distributed via botnets.
Types of DDoS Attacks
There are many types of DDoS attacks. Common attacks include the following:

    Traffic attacks: Traffic flooding attacks send a huge volume of TCP, UDP and ICPM packets to the target. Legitimate requests get lost and these attacks may be accompanied by malware exploitation.
    Bandwidth attacks: This DDos attack overloads the target with massive amounts of junk data. This results in a loss of network bandwidth and equipment resources and can lead to a complete denial of service.
    Application attacks: Application-layer data messages can deplete resources in the application layer, leaving the

  • Application attacks: Application-layer data messages can deplete resources in the application layer, leaving the target's system services unavailable.