Author: Franz Malten Buemann

  • Reklam Sektörü ve Yapay Zeka – Ted Innovation

    submitted by /u/tedinnovation [link] [comments]

  • Population and big innovations

    It’s tempting to embrace the meme that the best way for humans to solve the big problems in front of us is to increase the population, perhaps dramatically. The thinking goes that people are the ones who can solve problems, and more people give us more problem-solvers.

    This doesn’t hold up to a reductio ad absurdum analysis: clearly, a population of 10 people isn’t as good at solving problems as one with a billion, but at the same time, if there were a trillion people on Earth, that wouldn’t last long. There must be a number that’s optimal, but it’s probably not the biggest number we can possibly create.

    And reviewing the data on Nobel prizes per capita, or patents per capita, we see that there isn’t a correlation between population density and productive breakthrough innovation. It looks like innovations are more likely the result of a civil society, sufficient resources, enough productivity to enable spending on R&D and a culture of research and engineering.

    We also see geographic hotbeds of innovation over time (physics in Germany a hundred years ago, or network innovations in Silicon Valley a decade ago) that are the result of information exchange and cultural expectations, not population density.

    We don’t get these results by stretching the carrying capacity of our one and only planet. We can’t shrink our way to possibility, but we probably can’t get there via exponential expansion either.

  • Just launched a new marketing automation software. Need help testing to see what we can improve for marketing and sales teams (link below)

    It’s been in the works for the last couple of months. We wanted to work on an affordable marketing automation software for small and midsized companies. I would be glad if you could give me some reviews simply by responding to this thread. Access the automation software via https://monkeypesa.com/automation submitted by /u/ntendek1 [link] [comments]

  • 5 Steps to Deliver an Awesome Salesforce Demo

    Have you ever seen somebody give a demonstration and walk away amazed? We’ve all been there, and we can all judge whether the demo was a success or not, but it’s harder to pin down exactly what the factors were that gave the demo that… Read More

  • Salesforce Low-Code Security Risks in 2023

    When the Clouds emerged as a new way to avoid upfront hardware costs and rapidly adjust resources to meet fluctuating demands, the assumption was that security would be the same as traditional software and networking. We quickly realized that cloud security wasn’t going to be… Read More

  • Learning resources for not technical people

    Hi All, I’m a consultant in marketing automation and I’m certified with Adobe Campaign and I know how to use Marketo, Salesforce Marketing cloud etc… I have a marketing background and for this reason I learned everything on the job but I feel I miss some javascript knowledge (even though at the moment I had never had the need). I tried different courses but I feel they are too broad and at the moment I don’t find an actual application. What do you suggest to do? Maybe I just should need only few functions that do 90% of the job? There is any course that is related to marketing automation? submitted by /u/vaimelone [link] [comments]

  • SEO life time licenses

    I’m quitting seo and selling some licenses I have. Seo content machine lifetime with updates. GSA ser, GSA captcha breaker and scrapebox. All are lifetime licenses. ​ https://preview.redd.it/ff0lu81srzea1.png?width=936&format=png&auto=webp&s=9d497404522e24af94d696b875303fd53ed30c21 submitted by /u/D3M1ThA [link] [comments]

  • The coming ubiquity

    The fuss about AI might be mis-focused.

    It’s easy to point to a computer-created essay, song or illustration and find the defects or errors. Given hard work by 1,000 trained people, it’s likely that a human could make something more useful or inspired than a computer could.

    But the real impact of AI isn’t going to be that it regularly and consistently does far better than the best human effort.

    The impact will be that it is widespread, cheap and always there.

    Search for anything and the Wikipedia page will ‘write itself’ just for you.

    Brainstorm 12 variations of a solution to any problem you’re thinking about. Have a Rogerian therapist and idea coach on call at all times.

    Press a button on your fridge and see a dozen recipes that use what’s in the produce drawer, and just that.

    Everywhere, all the time.

    Ubiquity is the quiet change we rarely see coming.

  • How can marketing automation be used by tech companies.

    submitted by /u/ntendek1 [link] [comments]