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  • The biggest influencers in marketing? Here are the top 25, according to InsideView. Take a look for a dose of inspiration for your own marketing.

  • You've sent your tweet out into the giant black hole that's the Twitter stream. Now what? Is the time you devote to marketing via Twitter paying off? If so, how? Here's how to make sure you get more out of Twitter.

  • Why do some video advertisements get millions of online shares, whereas others barely get any? A report from Unruly examines which television ads from the most recent Super Bowl performed well online, and which did not.

  • You could win a $100 Amazon gift card just for giving us a glimpse into what your day looks like as a marketer.

  • Outdoor sports are in full swing, and even athletes who aren't planning to compete are honing their workouts. Which made me realize that three key metrics categories we apply in sports also apply to marketing.

  • This week, the old makes itself new again. See how LinkedIn plans to out-clout Klout, which of Facebook's new features are Shazam-like, how Sesame Street feels about selfies, and what you can learn about disrupting industry-standard marketing… from a porn website. (Don't worry, it's totally SFW. Which is kinda the point.)

  • Asked what would make them book a vacation more quickly, 42% of travelers surveyed say they would do so for a best-price guarantee and 23% say they would do so for a $100 cash reward.

  • How can you make sure that search engine marketing is driving business to you? The next evolution in SEM—call tracking—will improve your paid search conversion rate and maximize efficiency.

  • Job recruiters spend only six seconds on average reviewing an individual candidate's resume to determine whether the person is a potential fit for an open position, according to a recent study by TheLadders.

  • As marketers have been under more pressure to prove ROI on their efforts, leads have been an easy KPI to measure. Unfortunately, leads don't always lead to revenue, which is of course the most important KPI for any business.

  • Michael Brito discusses why companies need to become publishers, and how they can transform their organizations to embrace this change.

  • Considering the plethora of content marketing software choices, how can marketers find the right tools that fulfill their needs and also meet enterprise, process, and platform requirements?

  • You've asked for a yearend report on your website, and you don't like what you see. Turn things around by giving your creative and digital teams productive goals. Here are six simple fixes to wake up your site.

  • Mobile devices are now the most popular platform for interacting with marketing emails, but it's becoming increasingly difficult to turn those opens into clicks, according to a recent report from Campaign Monitor.

  • Gmail has been making lots of waves lately: priority inboxes, promotions tabs... Every new release seems intended to make life harder for email marketers. But if we'd stop complaining for a minute, we'd see a host of hidden opportunities.

  • The best ways to re-engage inactive email subscribers are to take the time to show them you care or offer them a fixed discount, according to a recent analysis by Return Path.

  • LeBron James is one of the greatest basketball players ever. Even when his natural ability reaches its limit, he continues to improve by using simple principles that can be directly applied to your marketing efforts.

  • Learn what branded vids won mothers' hearts, which topics engage most on Twitter and Facebook (and how to take advantage of them), what's new with social platforms, and how one brand used a compulsive (and sometimes annoying) Instagram trend to boost its own renown.

  • One in five marketing and ad executives say it has become more common for their company to issue counteroffers to employees who have received outside job offers, according to a recent report from The Creative Group.

  • Creative marketers worry that organization, structure, and process take away from time that could be spent creating. But without structure and processes in place, you lose more time than you gain.