Get a 25% Discount on One of the Greatest Events of the Season!
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To succeed in modern marketing, you have to make a digital impact. The marketers and businesses who succeed create the most engaging, shareable multichannel experiences. They grow their reach, conversions and customer loyalty faster than their competitors. At Digital Impact 2014 you will learn from brands creating the best digital experiences and managing content marketing to fuel the vital digital channels of search, social media and email marketing. Digital Impact 2014 will inspire digital marketing managers, marketing managers, directors and their advisors responsible for integrating digital marketing to use new approaches to plan, manage and optimise their digital channels to grow the commercial contribution from digital. You will learn from our interactive format featuring case studies of digital transformation from digital managers at leading brands and roundtables and panels to share your pain-points and best practices.
Event Details
Date: Wednesday 17th September Venue: Cavendish Conference Centre, Duchess Mews, London, W1G 9DT Timings: 8.30am - 6pm To register: please click here and use the code simixing25 for a 25% discount on the early bird rate of £195 that finishes at the end of July
Mixing Digital is hosting the Creating the Ultimate Customer Journey Roadshow in Manchester, Dublin and London with our partners Rackspace, Redbox Digital, SLI Systems, Feefo and dotMailer.
At the roadshow we will take a look at how creating the best journey for your customers can take time and be a long process to success, which involves many different internal and external factors. Bringing them together effectively can be tough going, so knowing the route to a successful customer experience can boost your time and your ROI.
Whether it be user hosting, hybrid technology, connecting shoppers to products to accelerate e-commerce revenues, best practice on delivery and returns or an introduction to Facebook and reviews, at these events we touch on all these things to help you create the ultimate customer journey for your brand.
For the full details and to book your place, click below - Manchester, Tuesday 9th September
Dublin, Thursday 11th September
London, Thursday 25th September
Please note: this event is for RETAILERS ONLY
We are looking forward to meeting you there
Take care
Charlie Lines Director and Founder Mixing Digital @mixingdigital
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People in the UK who pirate music and films will soon start receiving emails warning them that their actions are not legal. The warnings are part of a larger scheme that aims to educate people about copyright and legal ways to enjoy digital content. The project, that will start next year, will include up to four warnings annually and will be sent to households suspected of copyright infringement. However if people ignore the warnings, no further action will be taken.
The Twitter accounts of the Kenyan defence forces and its spokesman have been hacked by activists protesting against corruption. Kenyan military spokesman Major Emmanuel Chirchir often uses Twitter to give updates of the war against Somalia's al-Shabab militant group. The hackers criticised the government of President Uhuru Kenyatta, saying it only protected the interests of the elite and was not doing enough to tackle poachers and drugs traffickers. No internal military systems had been infiltrated.
Microsoft is going to stop developing Android-powered smartphones beyond those already available. Nokia X models will now become part of the Lumia range and run the Windows Phone operating system, although existing Android handsets will continue to be supported. The tech firm acquired Nokia's handset division earlier this year. Nokia unveiled its first family of Android phones at the Mobile World Conference in Barcelona in February.
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The NHS is testing a sticking-plaster-sized patient-monitoring patch. It is placed on the chest and it's able to wirelessly transmit data on heart rate, breathing and body-temperature while the patient is free to move around. The system, developed in Britain, could ease pressure on wards and has the potential to monitor patients in their own home. But the Royal College of Nursing says there is no substitute for having enough staff. Routine checks for vital signs - including temperature, blood pressure and heart rate - are a key part of care and safety in hospitals.
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