Ever since Felicity Smoak was first revealed to be wheel-chair bound via leaked set photos, the Arrow fandom has been equally split on whether that's the route they want the show to take with their beloved girl-Friday. Given her tech background and sudden paralysis, comic book fans were quick to point out Felicity's similarities with another DC Comics wheelchair bound heroine, Barbara Gordon. When the former Batgirl became paralyzed below the waist, she adopted a new codename of Oracle and used her expert hacking skills to assist Batman and the rest of the Bat-family from the Batcave. Despite these similarites, Arrow showrunners have been very vocal about dissuading fans from thinking Felicity was becoming the show's version of Oracle. However, if Felicity's character arc this season isn't taking inspiration from Oracle perhaps it's taking inspiration from Oracle's replacement, Proxy aka Wendy White. The Arrow executive team previously confirmed that Felicity has ties to The Calculator,...
- 1/27/2016
- ComicBookMovie.com
Adapted from his book Engage, Brian Solis presents his list of suggestions to help businesses learn how to engage customers on Twitter through the examples of those companies, from Dell to Zappos, already successfully building online communities.
Number 1. Special Offers
We live in a society that is as distracted as it is informed. People are making decisions on what to read, view, purchase, visit, and sample based on the information that filters through their attention dashboards. At best, even the most qualified information sourced from the most trusted contacts will receive only a cursory overview. The trick is to concisely introduce the value up front. If the offer is compelling and affiliated with their interests, the consumer will make the connection to personal value and benefits and click-through to redeem the special or coupon when ready or so inclined.
For example, @delloutlet uses Twitter and Facebook to send coupons to customers.
Number 1. Special Offers
We live in a society that is as distracted as it is informed. People are making decisions on what to read, view, purchase, visit, and sample based on the information that filters through their attention dashboards. At best, even the most qualified information sourced from the most trusted contacts will receive only a cursory overview. The trick is to concisely introduce the value up front. If the offer is compelling and affiliated with their interests, the consumer will make the connection to personal value and benefits and click-through to redeem the special or coupon when ready or so inclined.
For example, @delloutlet uses Twitter and Facebook to send coupons to customers.
- 4/23/2010
- by Brian Solis
- Fast Company
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