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salesmotivation · 6 months
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How to create whats 'app Campaign ?
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WhatsApp has become an increasingly popular platform for businesses to connect with their customers and drive engagement. To launch a successful WhatsApp campaign, it is important to understand the process clearly. In this guide, we will walk you through the steps in a crisp and clear manner: Set Up a Business Account:
Before creating your WhatsApp campaign, ensure that you have set up a business account on WhatsApp. – Visit the WhatsApp Business websiteand download the appon your mobile device. – Followthe instructionsprovidedto createa business profilewith relevant informationaboutyour company. Define Your Campaign Goals: Clearly define what you want to achieve through your WhatsApp campaign. -* Determine whether you aimto increase brand awareness,promote new productsor services,drive traffic toyour website or physical store,or provide customer support.* This claritywill helpshapethe contentand strategyof your campaign. Build Your Subscriber List:
Start building a list of subscribers who have opted-in to receive messages from your business. – PromoteyourWhatsAppcampaignthrough variouschannelslike social media,email marketing,andwebsite banners. – Encourageusers to opt-in by offering exclusive deals,content,and valuableinformation. Plan Your Content Strategy:
Develop engaging content that aligns with your campaign goals and resonates with your target audience.
-* Craftcompellingtextmessages,videos,imagesthat areinformative,entertaining,& alignedwithyourbranding.*
Consider using emojis,gifs,& othermediaformatsto makecontentmoreappealing. Use Broadcast Lists & Labels:
Organizeyoursubscriberlistusingbroadcastlists& labelsfor targetedcommunications..
-* Createbroadcast listsbasedon user segments(such as location,demographics),and use labelsto categorizecontacts(e.g., leads,customer support).*
This will helpyou sendrelevant contentto specificaudiencesand streamlineyourcommunicationprocess. Personalize Your Messages:
Personalization adds a personal touch to your WhatsApp campaign, making it more effective. – Use the subscriber’s name or other customized fields in your messages. – Segment your audience based on their preferences, purchasing history, and past interactions for better personalization. Schedule & Automate Messages:
Optimize your campaign by scheduling& automating messages at appropriate times..
-* Use tools like WhatsApp Business API or third-party software to schedule and repetitive messages.*
Ensure that you’re mindful of time zones and avoid sending messages during unsociable hours. Monitor Campaign Performance:
Regularly monitor key metrics to evaluate the success of your WhatsApp campaign and make necessary adjustments.
-* Track metrics like open rates, response rates, message delivery, and conversion rates to assessperformance.*
Utilize analytics tools within the WhatsApp Business app or integrate with third-party solutions for in-depth analysis. Provide Excellent Customer Support:
Leverage WhatsApp as a channel for customer support to enhance customer satisfaction and loyalty. – Respond promptly to customer messages, provide helpful information, and resolve issues effectively. *- Train your customer support squad on using WhatsApp Business features and best practices to ensure consistency.
Creating a successful WhatsApp campaign requires careful planning, engaging content, personalization, and monitoring. By following the steps outlined above, you can build an effective strategy that aligns with your business goals. Remember to keep your messaging relevant and timely while providing excellent customer support through this popular communication channel
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theramenrater · 3 years
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krissidanielle · 6 years
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An Art History Primer
by Kristian Krawford
      I spent many years studying art history in school and dearly loved it. So allow me a few moments to share the fruits of my education with you. Here is your art schooling without the cost of tuition. And you can really impress your friends with all your refinement!
    We begin in Egypt from 3,000 to 330 BC. The style was marked by stiff figures in profile, subject matter was gods and goddesses, kings and queens, jackal-headed deities and the occasional cat. Egyptians were strong believers in the afterlife and decorated tombs with things they felt one needed in eternity.
    Greece from 1200-200 BC. Not much art has survived from this period other than pots, all decorated in geometric patterns—zigzags, chevrons, checkerboards, diamonds. Also Homeric scenes and later some Kouroi statues.
    Rome from 700 BC- AD 500. Virtually everything we know of Greek art comes to us from the Romans. They were the ultimate copycats, conquering the Greek world and plundering their treasures. They did the same to Egypt. They were the first art patrons and art collectors. A tradition that continued for centuries.
    The Dark Ages AD 600-1350. This title is a misnomer as it was a very exciting time in the world. This was the era of beautiful churches, of Charlemagne (my own great-grandfather), the university and of some really beautiful art.
    Charlemagne was King of the Franks and the first Holy Roman Emperor. His empire was called Carolingian and he set out to change the world. He built monasteries and churches, basilicas, murals, sculptures and frescoes—almost none of which have survived. What have survived are beautiful illuminated manuscripts from this time period, which is also called Romanesque because it draws on Roman models.
    One way it was Roman-like was in its bigger and better churches. The architecture at the time, centered in Paris, was called Gothic by Giorgio Vasari, who intended it as an insult. It means “crude and barbaric.” Gothic style was simply the over decoration of a house of God. Elaborate stone tracery, crested finials, painted details—miscellaneous doodads. All crafted by anonymous artisans.
    A French historian (Jules Michelet) coined the term Renaissance, meaning “rebirth,” in the 1800’s. And because the subject is so broad and involves so many artists, I could go on for pages. So for the sake of brevity, some things will receive only a passing mention.
    The Renaissance can be divided into High and Low or Early and Late. The major artists of the Early Period were Giotto (first to paint three-dimensional people); Masaccio (mastered groups of figures); Lorenzo Ghiberti (spent 21 years working on the bronze doors of the Florence Baptistery aka. Gates of Paradise); Donatello (invented relief sculpture); and Filippo Brunelleschi (architect of the Duomo and first to apply the rules of perspective to art).
    The major artists of the Late Period were: Sandro Botticelli (known for sensuous human forms, i.e. Birth of Venus); Leonardo da Vinci (arguably the most famous artist ever of the most famous painting ever, i.e. Mona Lisa); Michelangelo (started out in Florence, moved to Rome to paint the Sistine ceiling); Raphael (another darling of the papacy and one of my personal faves. I love School of Athens); Tintoretto (he closes out the High Renaissance with a Mannerist style); and Titian (greatest Venetian painter, he painted a lot of mythological subjects).
    Some interest tidbits about Leonardo before closing out the Renaissance entirely. Leonardo wasn’t just an artist. He was a scientist, architect, engineer, draftsman, inventor and jack of all trades. He studied the human body by dissecting cadavers and imagined flight hundreds of years before the Wright brothers. He was interested in everything, yet finished almost nothing. He was a master of unfinished work. In fact, the Mona Lisa is one of only a handful of pieces he ever completed. And it was his personal favorite that he carried with him until his death. For centuries, Mona Lisa has remained an enigma. Not just her identity but her unusual expression. Is she or isn’t she smiling? According to Vasari, Leonardo painted a very melancholy sitter. He employed magicians, jesters and theatre performers to entertain her while he painted. It was while painting this portrait that he developed his sfumato technique (Italian for “like smoke”) in which colors and form subtly merge. It would become his trademark.
    The Northern Renaissance is also divided into Low and High. These are the best known Low artists: Jan van Eyck (founder of Flemish painting, he painted the Ghent Altarpiece); Rogier van der Weyden (known for attention to detail and portraits of nobles); and Hieronymous Bosch (known for fantastical landscapes of a dark, medieval world).
    The High Artists of the Northern Renaissance are: Albrecht Durer (not to my liking but this German artist is known for his engravings and woodcuts); and Pieter Breughel the Elder (Flemish painter known for allegories and parables of peasant life).
    Baroque came after the Renaissance. It was a time of courtly festivals and royal ceremony. The term meant to be an insult—“degenerate.”  Caravaggio was the most famous Baroque artist. A rogue character (even tried for murder), he was a naturalistic painter known for dramatic light. He placed ordinary people in his paintings of religious subjects. Scandalous! Peter Paul Rubens painted nobles while El Greco was known for his elongated figures. Rembrandt, considered the greatest Dutch painter ever, was known for his unusual lighting in which he made the most ordinary of people look mysterious. Jan Vermeer, also known for interesting light effects, enjoyed painting the Dutch bourgeoisie. Lastly, Velazquez was a great Spanish painter most interested in royalty.
   From the 1700’s to the 19th century, there were four major art movements: Rococo, Neoclassicism, Romanticism, and Realism.
    Rococo (c. 1730-1800) was art of the boudoir. It was a flirty, fanciful way of decorating the canvas. The main artists (all French) were Francois Boucher, Jacques-Louis David (I can’t stand that guy), Jean-Auguste Dominique Ingres, Eugène Delacroix and Gustave Courbet.
    Neoclassicism (c. 1750-1820) was a genre in which artists copies the simple designs and restrained ornament of the ancient Greeks and Romans. The main artists Jacques-Louis David (I still can’t stand him), Antonio Canova, Jean-Antoine Houdon (known for his amazing bust sculptures of Ben Franklin and George Washington) and Jean-Dominique Ingres.
    Romanticism (c. 1780-1850) was melodramatic portrayals of imaginary subjects. The best known artists were Eugène Delacroix, Francisco de Goya and William Blake—a wonderful writer who illustrated his poems.
    Realism (c. 1848-1875) was basically a reaction to the excesses of Romanticism and some Neoclassicism. In this movement, it was the Americans who led the way. Many were painting beautiful landscapes of their young nation on large canvases. The landscapists were Thomas Cole, Frederic Edwin Church, Albert Bierstadt and Thomas Moran. Realist artists were Winslow Homer and Thomas Eakins.
    Ah, Impressionism! Who doesn’t love it? It all began in 1874 when a group of Paris-based artists who’d been rejected by the Salon were mockingly called “Impressionists” by the April 25th issue of Le Charivari magazine. The name stuck. The style itself was marked by a close observation of nature whereby marks of pure color are placed side by side to create the effects of light on the canvas. They also differed in subject matter, tossing out literary subjects, mythology, and even history. They focused instead on scenes of everyday life. They also abandoned contour, modeling and precise details.
Though Èdouard Manet is the founding father of Impressionism, it is Claude Monet who is most often associated with it. Other stars are: Edgar Degas (he favored ballet dancers); Auguste Renoir (young women and rosy-cheeked girls); Alfred Sisley (the only Brit in the mix); and Mary Cassatt (the only American and most famous woman).
    From 1874 to 1886, the Impressionists exhibited together a total of 8 times, but long before they broke up, the members were moving on to other things.
    Post-Impressionism is a catch-all term to describe all the art that came after Impressionism. It also relied on the use of bright colors and splashy brushwork, but differed in what artists were feeling and saying. The stars of this movement were: Georges Seurat (inventor of Pointillism and a personal fave); Paul Gaugin (the native-loving man of bright colors); Vincent Van Gogh (most mad and magnetizing); and Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec (decorative posters of cabaret life).
    Expressionism was marked by sometimes violent colors, abstract forms and emotional subjects. The big Expressionists were: Edvard Munch; Henri Matisse (inventor of Fauvism); Wassily Kandinsky (inventor of Abstraction); and Amadeo Modigliani (lover of long, lean bodies and necks); and the Viennese love-chronicler, Gustav Klimt.
    Cubism is my least favorite genre so will receive scant mention here. It was the first totally abstract art movement—not at all representational—relying on geometric forms. Created by Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque, they were influenced by Cézanne, modern science and African masks.
    Dada was a brief European anti-art movement that sprang up after WW1. It spawned the likes of Marcel Duchamp, Max Ernst and Man Ray. I take back what I said about Cubism being my least favorite. Dada is.
    Surrealism came after Dada and although it was primarily a literary movement, it translated well into art. Basically about the relationship between dreams and the unconscious, this movement gave us Marc Chagall, Joan Miró and Salvador Dalí.
    Constructivism was another brief art genre, this one centered in Russia. It spawned no internationally known starts, only regional artists on a mission.
    Abstract Expressionism was about bigness—big canvases, big brushes, big cans of house paint, big male egos. It was also almost totally American. The main men were: Jackson Pollock (big drips and splatters); Willem de Kooning (brushy abstractions); and Mark Rothko (large blocks of color).
    Pop Art is populist art. It’s representational and easily comprehensible. It’s spawned some very famous artists—Jasper Johns, Robert Rauschenberg, Andy Warhol and Roy Lichtenstein, to name a few. These artists rejected nature and instead focused on the manmade.
    Minimalism came after Pop Art and spawned Frank Stella and a few minor artists.
    So what genre is the art of today and where is it headed? Well, all the art since is generally lumped into the category of post-modernism and involves artists deriving their work from both natural and manmade sources. Today artists even use a third source—the wonderfully human imagination. Artists also create their work from many different mediums. Today, we have oil painters, acrylic artists, watercolorists, charcoal and pencil artists, collage artists and even mixed-media artists who use a combination of all of the above to create their unique works. And let’s not forget digital artists who create their imaginary worlds entirely on computer. Though future historians will have a difficult time categorizing the art of today, one thing is for certain: they won’t lack for interesting and beautiful paradigms to study.
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kayblvck · 3 years
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Shoutout to @valuable.information for allowing me to use the platform to showcase my talent and promote my album. Great interview. With good ppl. Full video on the way. Writing My Wrongs Deluxe Edition out now. Link in my bio #podcast #interview #album #highlyuniqueradio #valuableinformation https://www.instagram.com/p/CTXIinCA3Sj/?utm_medium=tumblr
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techihead · 4 years
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Adobe PDF is one of the widely used elements to read, interpret, and to share the valuable information across the internet. The incorporation of the Liquid Mode will make it much easier to navigate efficiently through larger PDF documents on Adobe mobile application.
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askcliveapp-blog · 5 years
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Some of the happy people from the great 2019 @surfingmed conference, held @racvtorquayresort prior to @ripcurlprobellsbeach Such a wonderful vibe and talent. An honour to be one of the speakers. @farley_performance_training @surfingvictoria @dutchsurfdoc @micksowry @richiebennett80 @wsl @rebeccadowse @miguelagmoreira #bellsbeachpro #racvtorquayresort @jagcoffee #surfingmed #lecture #speaker #conference #training #surfing #eliteathlete #surftraining #cliverodell #cliverodellexercisetechniquespecialist #smilingface #valuableinformation @stephdimop @austinware #beginnertoelitetraining #elitesurfertraining (at RACV Torquay Resort) https://www.instagram.com/p/BxFDJIOH5QJ/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=1eka8hdp38gyl
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traveler-food · 3 years
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competencets · 3 years
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We had the opportunity to speak with a very experienced, knowledgeable and brutally honest construction managing director today! He left us with a lot to think about and aim for! His biggest advice was let no-one or nothing stop you on your journey! #valuableinformation #appreciative #workgoals #aimbigger #getstronger #pettypeople #wisewords https://www.instagram.com/p/CQL239-h_LA/?utm_medium=tumblr
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deepayurvedas · 4 years
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lifeofconquest-blog · 7 years
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a-bobby-buck-promo · 3 years
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babyfacedheel · 8 years
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Sometimes...
I feel as if I'm like 5 years ahead of most of my friends and other times I feel like a 5 year old. Pretty much.
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