Home Depot Drops Two High-End Titles
The Home Depot has dropped two high-end catalogs that it had launched just one year ago. But the big-box retailer has no plans to exit the direct-to-consumer home market.
The Home Depot has dropped two high-end catalogs that it had launched just one year ago. But the big-box retailer has no plans to exit the direct-to-consumer home market.
Going into the holiday 2006 season, it’s not the most optimistic of times. Consumers are weary of the Iraq war, leery of another rise in energy costs,
Forrester Research says that holiday shoppers are pessimistic this year. But BDO Seidman says that chief marketing officers at leading retailers are quite optimistic
The third quarter was a strong one for IAC, parent of Ask.com, HSN, and the Cornerstone Brands catalogs.
To recap: We have covered three of the five steps to optimize your data: data aggregation (getting your data together), data augmentation (filling in the gaps in your data), and data processing (making your data useful).
The next step in the process is data analysis, or making your data meaningful
When searching for leads for selling your products or services, you want to find those companies who have a problem for which you have the solution. How do you go about finding those companies and how do you find the level of contacts you need from within the companies? Here are seven strategies:
Merrimack, NH-based gifts and gadgets merchandiser Brookstone says it will save “seven figures” a year by turning to the co-ops in lieu of traditional list brokers and managers.
Many are predicting the 2006 holiday season will be the busiest yet. Whether they set foot in the store, or click the mouse a few times, customers will be buying in droves
London–“Multipositional marketing” and “e-bops” may not be buzzwords yet. But if several of the speakers here at the European Catalogue and Mail Order Days have their way, they soon will be.
London–Online public relations isn’t simply a matter of devoting a section on your Website to press releases and the phone number of your PR contact–though that is a key, and often overlooked, tool.