As we all know by now … Oklahoma Joe’s officially changed its name to Joe’s Kansas City Bar-B-Que, changing signs at all of its locations.  It’s the restaurant’s first name change in 17 years.
 

Change has KC bidding bye-bye to ‘Oklahoma Joe’s’

The company said in a statement released on Twitter that the restaurant’s owner didn’t own the name Oklahoma Joe’s, but will be able to own the name Joe’s Kansas City. The company also wants to ensure the name invokes reminders of Kansas City’s vibrant barbecue scene.

There are three Joe’s Kansas City restaurants in the area, the original gas station location in Kansas City, Kan., and newer locations in Olathe and Leawood.

Managers said the only thing that will change is the name. Diners should expect the same food, same recipes and the same long lines.
so according to the current customers,, the food hasn’t change.. do you think that the customers will grow or decrease because of the fame name that the business had for long time? that what we are going to see in the few months that coming and see the differences..

for me i think that it will grow more, because people want to see the new changes that the successful restaurant had and they want that fresh start more into that delicious food !!

i am a GoPro fan and i like to see whats up and the news about all of their new product.. .and here is a new earnings and revenue that a website shared to the public of their company

GoPro Inc. is scheduled to report third-quarter earnings after the market close on Thursday. Here’s what investors can expect:

Earnings: The high-definition sports camera maker is expected to report earnings of 8 cents per share, according to analysts surveyed by FactSet. In the second quarter, the company earned 8 cents a share, its first reporting quarter as a public company. It hasn’t disclosed its earnings from the third quarter of 2013.

Revenue: Revenue is expected to come in at $265.6 million, according to analysts surveyed by FactSet. Revenue in the second quarter was $245 million. A year-ago figure isn’t available.

Go Kansas City Royals

Ellen surprised these twins in Missouri with the gift of a lifetime! They sure were excited.

awesome video to share with you 🙂

 don’t forget :
World Series, Game 7 – Series tied 3-3
Today, 7:07 PM on FOX

The Nixie, brainchild of Stanford postdoctoral researcher Christoph Kohstall, is an attempt to make the world’s first flyable and wrist-wearable camera. The Nixie is for those moments in life when you really want a picture or video of something you’re doing, but using a standard camera or phone either isn’t feasible or would interrupt the moment. Imagine being able to capture a picture of yourself climbing a mountain, flying a kite with your children, or going over an epic jump on your bike.

The Nixie drone starts off as a somewhat bulky bracelet, but unfolds into a small, sleek quadcopter after you perform a simple gesture with your wrist. In theory, once the Nixie takes off from your wrist, it’ll know exactly where you’re standing, snap a photo or video, and then come back to you like a boomerang so you don’t lose it.

FacebookMarketingPartnersLogo650

Facebook’s Preferred Marketing Developer program may be getting a new look.

Earlier today, Facebook announced on the Facebook for Business page that the PMD program will be renamed Facebook Marketing Partners.

According to sister site AllFacebook, the PMD program will switch over to Facebook Marketing Partners early 2015. Facebook Marketing Partners will be split into several different categories, which could be a welcome change from the Strategic PMD/regular PMD system.

interviewquestionstoask.jpg - Copyright ThomasBarwick / Iconica / Getty Images

Great class today, especially the subject when we talked about ” The BUSINESS” and what questions when the Interview Questions to Ask the Employer.

  • Why? and How? questions
    • How did you start this business?
    • why are you interested in that ?
    • how did you get to this point?
  • Points about the Business
    • Values? and Goals?
    • Objectives / Goods!
    • Mission/ Vision!
    • Involvement in community?
    • Competitors!
  • How are they Marketing now?
  • What do they want consumers to know?
  • Challenges?
  • How would you describe the responsibilities of the position?
  • Other opportunities in market place?

Every week brings us fresh social surprises. This week, we’ll show you the latest offerings and campaigns from Twitter, Facebook, Pinterest, and Instagram; a gorgeous kickoff video for the launch of BBC music; and a bevy of tools to help you create social media images with ease. Skim to slide happily into the weekend!

God only knows how catchy this is. BBC Music launched with a cover of The Beach Boys’ “God Only Knows,” featuring a group it calls the “Impossible Orchestra“: Everyone from Pharrell Williams to violinist Nicola Benedetti and Elton John are involved, not to mention the BBC’s own concert orchestra. At just over 3 million views, it’s rising fast in the viral video charts—likely because fans of each artist can’t help but watch and share. Still, the pull you feel in your heartstrings is hard to resent: Far from feeling like a cheap celebrity shot, it’s a proper romp into the fantasy world of music.

Because who doesn’t miss Hogwarts? Author JK Rowling of the Harry Potter series started tweeting clues to an upcoming spin-off film, based on Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them, a textbook in Harry’s magical world. The first clue was an anagram, often used in the Potter stories, and is shown below. The anagram’s answer can be found here, along with a fuller description of Rowling’s teaser tweets. How can you cultivate social engagement with creative play?

Share that photo for a scare. Halloween’s around the corner, and movie ticket vendor Fandango’s launched the Scare-Off (#FandangoScareContest), a contest inviting movie fans to Instagram re-enactments of scenes from horror flicks. The winner gets a walk-on role in an upcoming film by Blumhouse Productions, the fine people who gave us Paranormal Activity and Insidious. But to attract great content, you need great content: To drive participation, Fandango partnered with MovieClips to create videos like this supercut of cinematic screams (slide your volume knob down):

No PhotoShop skills? No problem. To maximize social engagement, it helps to use strong imagery. But not everyone’s a graphic designer (or has funds to hire one), so Buffer put together [23 tools for creating social-media-ready pictures. Goodies include Canva (see below), a super-simple design program for those who lack PhotoShop savvy; Skitch , which lets you capture and annotate Web screenshots; and CloudApp, which lets you share images internally, take screenshots, and make GIFs.

You don’t need to follow to be interested. Mary C. Long explains Interest lists, a little-known (and little-used) feature on Facebook that lets people group public pages and brand pages into interest groups so they don’t have to scroll through their News Feeds to see those updates. Though it’s too much work for a brand to try convincing fans to add the brand to their Interest lists (assuming fans use them), it’s handy for brands who need to keep an eye on inspiring public pages or publications… and to track competitors, since you don’t have to follow them to add them to an Interest. To create Interest lists, look at the left side of your Timeline and scroll way, way down to “Interests.” From there, create lists as you see fit.

Need some local love? Facebook’s launched its Local Awareness Ads. Slated to launch in the US in the coming weeks, and globally in months to come, the service lets brick-and-mortar businesses target people based on how close they are physically. To make an ad, visit your Ads / Create section, hit “Local Awareness,” and choose the Page of your business. You can then select your radius of ad coverage on a map. You’ll then be asked to enter your ad text and image, as well as a call to action. Use Local Awareness to target people who live near you, or those just strolling through your ‘hood.

Trending on Facebook. Some iOS mobile users may have noticed that when they run a search on Facebook, a Trending module appears below search results. Think of it as Facebook’s version of Twitter’s Trending Topics. The feature’s still in test mode, but its imminent rollout means you’ll more easily keep your finger on that ever-changing pulse—especially if you want to jump on trends like the #IceBucketChallenge while they’re still hot.

When John Doe will have to do. In deference to people seeking anonymity on the world’s most popular social network (consider Ello and Snapchat), Facebook’s quietly developing a standalone app that will let users interact without having to reveal real names. The hope is that the project—due to roll out in coming weeks—will empower people to discuss topics they don’t feel comfortable talking about under public scrutiny. It isn’t yet clear whether the app will interact with Facebook itself.

Say hello to ads on Snapchat! Soon, anyway. CEO Evan Spiegel says they’re on the way, but “they aren’t fancy. They aren’t targeted”—so don’t expect the rich granularity of targeting you enjoy on Facebook. Not to say Snapchat’s audience isn’t worth it: 50% of users are below 25. Ads will likely appear in the app’s recently added “Stories” feature, which lets users (and brands) build “snaps” into a feed that can be viewed multiple times in 24 hours.

Not to be confused with a pinprick. Pinterest launchedPin Picks,” a set of curated collections meant to drive users directly to subjects and current events: Fashion Week, home hacks, and pre-gaming, for example. The collections will be updated weekly; they are created with content partners, whose pins, of course, are featured. This offering presents interesting opportunities for marketers to get their Pins to a wider audience if they’re relevant to a given topic—meaning more motivation to Pin. You can also use them to glean inspiration for how to organize your own Boards for freshness and topicality.

Speaking of Pinterest, WhoIsHostingThis made an infographic to help you double Pinterest followers in just five minutes a day. In addition to handy tips (avoid commenting at random! Pick a specialty), it also provides stats about why Pinterest is of interest (one Pin generates an average of $0.78 in e-commerce sales).

Mirror mirror on the wall, who’s the best socnet of all? For teens, it’s Instagram: 76% use it now, up from 69% in the springtime, per a Piper Jaffray study that also found only 45% of teens say they use Facebook, a huge drop from 72% in the spring. Behind Instagram, Twitter is used by 59% of teens—a drop from 63% just a few months ago, but still a higher rate of use than Facebook. Pinterest and Tumblr trail behind at 22% and 21%, respectively.

Want the youths? Be positive. Facebook published a Crowd DNA study to teach us how to reach younger users (age 13-24). Among the findings: 58% of young people are optimistic, with 13-15-year-olds expressing the most positivity (64%). They rank happiness as more important than other ambitions, including financial independence, loving families, or the discovery of their own interests and skills… which we always thought influenced happiness, but that’s just our age talking. Despite that, 73% say their lives revolve around friends and family, especially on social networks.

Couple that knowledge with a Havas study, Hashtag Nation, which finds that young people are more receptive to brand adoption. “If you can create a friendship with these consumers, you really take it to the next level. They will go to great lengths to support you,” the study reads. The brands teens choose make a statement about their lives—but they also have an “innate understanding” of marketing and their value as consumers, so don’t underestimate them. The article wraps with tips on how to attract the “dream demo.”

How well does Twitter engage? ExactTarget found out. Engagement rates on Twitter vary by Tweets and industry, but media and entertainment brands get the lion’s share of average replies (7.7) and retweets (23.8) for the whopping 199,000 tweets the industry published out the 3 million tweets in the study sample. Compare that with travel and hospitality, which accounted for 287,000 tweets but scored low in average replies (1.8) and average retweets (5.6). The infographic also provides engagement rates for photo versus text tweets.

We’ll wrap with some musical nostalgia. This week, to the dismay of Millennials and Gen-Xers everywhere, Buzzfeed reported that last weekend marked the death of Saturday Morning Cartoons—the first time in over 50 years that none were broadcast. The reasons for their demise are many, but a swift final blow to cartoons can be traced to technology such as cable, streaming, and DVDs. Today your kids’ most memorable early entertainment experiences will likely be on-demand or iPad-based. (Also worth noting: Brand budgets are also following this trend from TV to online.)

To honor an era past, below is a video of the Carnegie Hall orchestra playing theme songs from 43 cartoons. Can you guess which ones they are?

Lisa Allen lecture

Posted: October 6, 2014 in Uncategorized

it was very fun and good class that we had with Lisa Allen , she is a very good freelance writer, and obviously she likes her job too. i also checked out her blog and i used several information that might help me in the future with developing your eMarketing strategy.

if you haven’t visited her website yet, here it is: http://backtoallen.com/

llaimage

Social network and websites can be very effective in the social communication for business and companies. Any business these days should have at least an official website that represent their brand and present their work to the customers.

Official websites for any local business not only can be helpful to make the communication between the customers and the company itself, but it will give a very good aspect and look to any company and makes it official trust company for the customer. For example, a Hotel Company’s website is very effective business between the hotels customers; it allows them to reserve rooms and look up for prices and any special offers thru the official websites of any hotel they want. Also they will have a very close up look for specific rooms in details in all around the world from only a click search button from the website.

Also it will provides them with pictures and details from inside the rooms to make it easier for the customers to see what they will be expect and they will grab their attention, specially from the amazing views from the ocean views from their balcony rooms that grabs the viewer attention and encourage their desire to rent rooms for vacations or any business trips. It also allows the hotel companies to make advertisement for their special and discounts rates especially in their slow days to grab more customers and business.

Not only the official website is helpful for the business, social network can play very helpful too because not a lot of people check the brand website, the companies can offer their business and offers thru their official page on the social network to make it easier to reach the public audience.back to the Hotels’ example website , a good and helpful website, it offers basic information about which they are availability of rooms across the country and diversity of rewards programs available for their customers. .

iPhone 6

Posted: September 30, 2014 in Uncategorized

although i am not an Apple type of guy, but i really liked how Apple is marketing their new feature iPhone 6 on their website .. they used a 2D type of view that makes the viewers more interesting of what are they seeing. it gives them more impression of the iPhone 6 and magic power to it. although they used all these technology to market it, iPhone has lost lots of money after they released the iPhone 6. with all the roomers and all the issues that the phone had especially easy to break was one of the biggest problem to the customers

https://www.apple.com/iphone-6/