Building a website in less than 3h and less than $100! Agence Tesla
This document provides step-by-step instructions for building a basic website in 3 hours or less for under $100 using WordPress or Strikingly. It outlines the process of picking a theme, domain, and plan; creating pages and sections; adding a menu, customizing the homepage; adding a blog; and basic SEO and analytics. It also discusses Singapore grants available for website development costs.
Making a first good impression is a must. From friendship to love – not to mention professional relationships – that first projection of the self can be critical. These make or break moments can of course be engineered, thank goodness. From the age old use of fashion and beauty to the plethora of social media platforms and apps that make us look our best today, the options are becoming endless, both physically and digitally.
With the advent of virtual reality, it’s become so much easier to project something that may not really be there, whether it's a killer whale splashing through a gymnasium, a holographic human rights march, or even exploring your new IKEA kitchen from a child’s perspective. Technology isn’t just enabling virtual realities; in some cases it's making us question it entirely.
Senior Strategist Dominique Bonnafoux presented Trompe l'Oeil and The Art of The Lasting Impression at Eurobest 2016 in Rome.
FITCH Fuel - The Future of Malls in SingaporeFITCH
The document discusses the future of malls in Singapore. It notes that retail only makes up 2.1% of Singapore's total spending and questions the role of malls. Singapore has a very high population density but most people live in high-rise public housing. The document suggests that malls need to become places people want to spend time at by getting to know their target customers, creating flagship stores for devoted fans, and encouraging exploration within the malls. It argues for prioritizing return on time invested over purely financial returns.
This document outlines key milestones in the evolution of music consumption, from local village squares where people would buy bread, to the introduction of the first iPod in 2001 and streaming services like Spotify launching in 2014, culminating with Amazon's 'one touch' Prime music app.
What are the key forces driving change in the retail sector?
Where does the opportunity with the consumer lie?
In our Retail Showcase, we share with you our vision of what it takes to win in retail today.
The document summarizes Kashish Sehgal's project on visiting a mall. It includes sections on the objectives of the project visit, details collected at the mall like the number of floors and shops, types of shops and goods sold, facilities available, and thanks to those who helped with the project.
A quick look at six top trends transforming the retail industry in 2016, including highlights on high street real estate and an overview of priorities for the year ahead.
Building a website in less than 3h and less than $100! Agence Tesla
This document provides step-by-step instructions for building a basic website in 3 hours or less for under $100 using WordPress or Strikingly. It outlines the process of picking a theme, domain, and plan; creating pages and sections; adding a menu, customizing the homepage; adding a blog; and basic SEO and analytics. It also discusses Singapore grants available for website development costs.
Making a first good impression is a must. From friendship to love – not to mention professional relationships – that first projection of the self can be critical. These make or break moments can of course be engineered, thank goodness. From the age old use of fashion and beauty to the plethora of social media platforms and apps that make us look our best today, the options are becoming endless, both physically and digitally.
With the advent of virtual reality, it’s become so much easier to project something that may not really be there, whether it's a killer whale splashing through a gymnasium, a holographic human rights march, or even exploring your new IKEA kitchen from a child’s perspective. Technology isn’t just enabling virtual realities; in some cases it's making us question it entirely.
Senior Strategist Dominique Bonnafoux presented Trompe l'Oeil and The Art of The Lasting Impression at Eurobest 2016 in Rome.
FITCH Fuel - The Future of Malls in SingaporeFITCH
The document discusses the future of malls in Singapore. It notes that retail only makes up 2.1% of Singapore's total spending and questions the role of malls. Singapore has a very high population density but most people live in high-rise public housing. The document suggests that malls need to become places people want to spend time at by getting to know their target customers, creating flagship stores for devoted fans, and encouraging exploration within the malls. It argues for prioritizing return on time invested over purely financial returns.
This document outlines key milestones in the evolution of music consumption, from local village squares where people would buy bread, to the introduction of the first iPod in 2001 and streaming services like Spotify launching in 2014, culminating with Amazon's 'one touch' Prime music app.
What are the key forces driving change in the retail sector?
Where does the opportunity with the consumer lie?
In our Retail Showcase, we share with you our vision of what it takes to win in retail today.
The document summarizes Kashish Sehgal's project on visiting a mall. It includes sections on the objectives of the project visit, details collected at the mall like the number of floors and shops, types of shops and goods sold, facilities available, and thanks to those who helped with the project.
A quick look at six top trends transforming the retail industry in 2016, including highlights on high street real estate and an overview of priorities for the year ahead.
Mega Mall is a large shopping center located in a major city. It has over 100 stores and restaurants spread out over 3 floors. The mall attracts thousands of visitors each day and is one of the top revenue generators in the retail industry, but management is concerned about declining customer traffic and sales.
Mall architecture involves the creative design of malls and related structures. The goals are to make optimal use of space, create a good store environment for customers, increase foot traffic, and improve the mall's image. Key elements include store planning to efficiently allocate space and direct crowd flow. Common mall designs are the free flow layout, grid layout, and loop layout. Green architecture uses transparent materials to provide natural light. Upcoming trends include more convenient kiosks. Factors like the facade design, atriums, lighting, sound, and odors also affect the overall mall architecture.
The document provides details about the Phoenix Market City shopping mall in Chennai, India. It was developed by Mills Limited on 17 acres of land and opened in January 2013. It has over 260 stores across 5 floors, as well as a basement and multi-level car parking. Key features include a food court, fun city entertainment zone, 14 restaurants, and an 11-screen multiplex cinema.
In this ppt we have shown that when the students are supposed to visit a mall,,, wht to do there and we have explained the topic retailing in some details.here we've visited westend mal,ludhiana...!!!!
The document discusses the nature of services and the differences between services and goods. It states that services are intangible, inconsistent, have simultaneous production and consumption (inseparability), cannot be inventoried, and involve customer participation. It then discusses different types of services (business, social, personal) and provides examples of key business services like banking and insurance. For banking it outlines different types (commercial, cooperative, specialized, central) and functions. For insurance it discusses principles, functions, and types (life insurance).
This document provides case studies and zoning plans for the Wave Mall in Noida, India. It includes:
1) Details on the site location and dimensions, building height and area, parking provision, and zoning plans for each floor outlining circulation, retail spaces, food courts, and other amenities.
2) Analysis of the zoning plans noting the hierarchy of circulation, optimal distribution of space for tenants, and positioning of anchor stores.
3) Additional information on the multiplex sizes, capacities, and location across floors as well as analysis of toilet provision and traffic flow for the multiplexes.
Content Marketing Ideas! How to Find the Best Stories to Tell Your CustomersTopRank Marketing Agency
The document discusses content marketing strategies and frameworks. It emphasizes the importance of customer empathy and using customer insights to inform content creation. Specifically, it recommends mapping content topics to customer buying cycles and personas, focusing content on answering common customer questions. It also provides tips for generating content ideas from customer journeys, topic clusters targeting specific stages of the buying cycle, and leveraging different data sources. The overall message is that content should be highly relevant to customers by understanding their goals, pain points and situations.
The document discusses standards and guidelines for architectural design of shopping malls. It provides details on column spacing, store depths, clear heights, parking requirements, shop sizes and layouts, circulation areas, exits and staircases. Standards for showcases, shelving, aisle widths, and mechanical systems are also outlined. Shopping malls should allow 5-6 parking spaces per 1000 square feet and exits should be within a travel distance of 30 meters. Staircases and corridors require minimum widths and heights to facilitate safe evacuation.
Is it in our nature to be generous? FITCH has been studying brands and generosity for the last 6 years and uncovered ways in which creatives and brands need to use different parts of the brain to unlock empathy in an increasingly disjointed and disrupted world.
FITCH Chairman and Chief Creative Officer Tim Greenhalgh will examine the spectrum of generosity, from mean and cynical behavior, to give and take, to those brands that give freely. He’ll outline the dynamics of a great and generous experience and answer the $1,000,000 question: does being generous and offering great experiences for customers make brands money? The good news is, yes.
How to identify customer pain points and create agile solutions that will ensure long term health for your brand? Alasdair Lennox walk us through innovation in retail at the 2016 Online & Offline Retail forum in Moscow.
How do we deal with the new retail paradigm? Dominique Bonnafoux, senior strategist, walk us through the latest trends in personalisation, experience and convenience. This was presented at Pulse London on May 16th.
Today's shoppers exist in a world that moves at an unparalleled and relentless pace. It's time to accept that the store can no longer stand still and, in fact, is never truly “finished.” Brands perceive they can’t afford to experiment when the truth is, they can’t afford not to. Retailers have to be responsive and experimental--that’s agile retail. They have to think like startups and embrace the Silicon Valley approach to 'fail first, fail fast, learn and iterate.’ The good news is technology is emerging to enable agile retail. What’s missing are the tools and processes to disrupt and revolutionize the store design process. In this session, FITCH will debut new methodology that brings agile concepts to the market, present real life examples of current retailers successfully working this model, and show how stores of the future will embrace this change.
The document discusses several retail trends for 2017 including the continued growth of e-commerce, the evolution of the in-store experience to be more focused on fulfillment, inspiration and frictionless transactions, the rise of conversational commerce through voice assistants, the impact of automation and robotics on jobs, and the need for agility at large retailers to keep up with innovation. It also touches on trends like the sharing economy, crowdsourcing, mobile payments, IoT, VR and blockchain. Additionally, it discusses changes in the role of the physical store, optimizing real estate footprints, increasing productivity and prioritizing leisure experiences downtown.
Retail 2020: Retail Will Change more in the Next 5 Years than the Last 50FITCH
Against a backdrop of seismic shifts in our retail landscape, Christian Davies, Executive Creative Director, Americas at FITCH took the audience on a global tour of the major trends that will be the norm by the time we’re ringing in the New Year of 2020. Emerging trends are mapped against new shopper behaviors and the rise of Gen Z – set to be the largest group of shoppers globally by 2020 – and by new realities of retail operations, language and purpose. This presentation was given at Globalshop in Las Vegas on March 26th, 2015.
Digital Trends in 2017: Making Business Impact in a Changing WorldEdelman
Digital paid media is evolving to provide both the efficiency and accountability promised by programmatic advertising, as well as the transparency and impact of traditional media. This evolution will occur in a few key ways:
1) Traditional media companies will accelerate their digital transformation by expanding programmatic TV buying and forming partnerships between digital and linear players.
2) Brands will shift more investment to digital channels that provide targeting capabilities but can be easily verified, such as digital out of home, podcasting, and interactive event sponsorships.
3) Technology and standards will improve to address issues like viewability, fraud, and attribution in order to restore trust and optimize spending. Brands will demand more transparency from their partners.
Consumer Driven Contracts and Your Microservice ArchitectureMarcin Grzejszczak
My talk from SpringOnePlatform about Spring Cloud Contract
Links:
* http://martinfowler.com/articles/consumerDrivenContracts.html - article about Consumer Driven Contracts by Ian Robinson
* https://github.com/marcingrzejszczak/springone-cdc-client - code for the client side of the presented example
* https://github.com/marcingrzejszczak/springone-cdc-server - code for the server side of the presented example
* https://cloud.spring.io/spring-cloud-contract/spring-cloud-contract.html - documentation of the Spring Cloud Contract project
Mega Mall is a large shopping center located in a major city. It has over 100 stores and restaurants spread out over 3 floors. The mall attracts thousands of visitors each day and is one of the top revenue generators in the retail industry, but management is concerned about declining customer traffic and sales.
Mall architecture involves the creative design of malls and related structures. The goals are to make optimal use of space, create a good store environment for customers, increase foot traffic, and improve the mall's image. Key elements include store planning to efficiently allocate space and direct crowd flow. Common mall designs are the free flow layout, grid layout, and loop layout. Green architecture uses transparent materials to provide natural light. Upcoming trends include more convenient kiosks. Factors like the facade design, atriums, lighting, sound, and odors also affect the overall mall architecture.
The document provides details about the Phoenix Market City shopping mall in Chennai, India. It was developed by Mills Limited on 17 acres of land and opened in January 2013. It has over 260 stores across 5 floors, as well as a basement and multi-level car parking. Key features include a food court, fun city entertainment zone, 14 restaurants, and an 11-screen multiplex cinema.
In this ppt we have shown that when the students are supposed to visit a mall,,, wht to do there and we have explained the topic retailing in some details.here we've visited westend mal,ludhiana...!!!!
The document discusses the nature of services and the differences between services and goods. It states that services are intangible, inconsistent, have simultaneous production and consumption (inseparability), cannot be inventoried, and involve customer participation. It then discusses different types of services (business, social, personal) and provides examples of key business services like banking and insurance. For banking it outlines different types (commercial, cooperative, specialized, central) and functions. For insurance it discusses principles, functions, and types (life insurance).
This document provides case studies and zoning plans for the Wave Mall in Noida, India. It includes:
1) Details on the site location and dimensions, building height and area, parking provision, and zoning plans for each floor outlining circulation, retail spaces, food courts, and other amenities.
2) Analysis of the zoning plans noting the hierarchy of circulation, optimal distribution of space for tenants, and positioning of anchor stores.
3) Additional information on the multiplex sizes, capacities, and location across floors as well as analysis of toilet provision and traffic flow for the multiplexes.
Content Marketing Ideas! How to Find the Best Stories to Tell Your CustomersTopRank Marketing Agency
The document discusses content marketing strategies and frameworks. It emphasizes the importance of customer empathy and using customer insights to inform content creation. Specifically, it recommends mapping content topics to customer buying cycles and personas, focusing content on answering common customer questions. It also provides tips for generating content ideas from customer journeys, topic clusters targeting specific stages of the buying cycle, and leveraging different data sources. The overall message is that content should be highly relevant to customers by understanding their goals, pain points and situations.
The document discusses standards and guidelines for architectural design of shopping malls. It provides details on column spacing, store depths, clear heights, parking requirements, shop sizes and layouts, circulation areas, exits and staircases. Standards for showcases, shelving, aisle widths, and mechanical systems are also outlined. Shopping malls should allow 5-6 parking spaces per 1000 square feet and exits should be within a travel distance of 30 meters. Staircases and corridors require minimum widths and heights to facilitate safe evacuation.
Is it in our nature to be generous? FITCH has been studying brands and generosity for the last 6 years and uncovered ways in which creatives and brands need to use different parts of the brain to unlock empathy in an increasingly disjointed and disrupted world.
FITCH Chairman and Chief Creative Officer Tim Greenhalgh will examine the spectrum of generosity, from mean and cynical behavior, to give and take, to those brands that give freely. He’ll outline the dynamics of a great and generous experience and answer the $1,000,000 question: does being generous and offering great experiences for customers make brands money? The good news is, yes.
How to identify customer pain points and create agile solutions that will ensure long term health for your brand? Alasdair Lennox walk us through innovation in retail at the 2016 Online & Offline Retail forum in Moscow.
How do we deal with the new retail paradigm? Dominique Bonnafoux, senior strategist, walk us through the latest trends in personalisation, experience and convenience. This was presented at Pulse London on May 16th.
Today's shoppers exist in a world that moves at an unparalleled and relentless pace. It's time to accept that the store can no longer stand still and, in fact, is never truly “finished.” Brands perceive they can’t afford to experiment when the truth is, they can’t afford not to. Retailers have to be responsive and experimental--that’s agile retail. They have to think like startups and embrace the Silicon Valley approach to 'fail first, fail fast, learn and iterate.’ The good news is technology is emerging to enable agile retail. What’s missing are the tools and processes to disrupt and revolutionize the store design process. In this session, FITCH will debut new methodology that brings agile concepts to the market, present real life examples of current retailers successfully working this model, and show how stores of the future will embrace this change.
The document discusses several retail trends for 2017 including the continued growth of e-commerce, the evolution of the in-store experience to be more focused on fulfillment, inspiration and frictionless transactions, the rise of conversational commerce through voice assistants, the impact of automation and robotics on jobs, and the need for agility at large retailers to keep up with innovation. It also touches on trends like the sharing economy, crowdsourcing, mobile payments, IoT, VR and blockchain. Additionally, it discusses changes in the role of the physical store, optimizing real estate footprints, increasing productivity and prioritizing leisure experiences downtown.
Retail 2020: Retail Will Change more in the Next 5 Years than the Last 50FITCH
Against a backdrop of seismic shifts in our retail landscape, Christian Davies, Executive Creative Director, Americas at FITCH took the audience on a global tour of the major trends that will be the norm by the time we’re ringing in the New Year of 2020. Emerging trends are mapped against new shopper behaviors and the rise of Gen Z – set to be the largest group of shoppers globally by 2020 – and by new realities of retail operations, language and purpose. This presentation was given at Globalshop in Las Vegas on March 26th, 2015.
Digital Trends in 2017: Making Business Impact in a Changing WorldEdelman
Digital paid media is evolving to provide both the efficiency and accountability promised by programmatic advertising, as well as the transparency and impact of traditional media. This evolution will occur in a few key ways:
1) Traditional media companies will accelerate their digital transformation by expanding programmatic TV buying and forming partnerships between digital and linear players.
2) Brands will shift more investment to digital channels that provide targeting capabilities but can be easily verified, such as digital out of home, podcasting, and interactive event sponsorships.
3) Technology and standards will improve to address issues like viewability, fraud, and attribution in order to restore trust and optimize spending. Brands will demand more transparency from their partners.
Consumer Driven Contracts and Your Microservice ArchitectureMarcin Grzejszczak
My talk from SpringOnePlatform about Spring Cloud Contract
Links:
* http://martinfowler.com/articles/consumerDrivenContracts.html - article about Consumer Driven Contracts by Ian Robinson
* https://github.com/marcingrzejszczak/springone-cdc-client - code for the client side of the presented example
* https://github.com/marcingrzejszczak/springone-cdc-server - code for the server side of the presented example
* https://cloud.spring.io/spring-cloud-contract/spring-cloud-contract.html - documentation of the Spring Cloud Contract project