Salesforce Canada
Martha Galley, Vice President, Customers for Life, at Salesforce will speak with other esteemed female leaders at the Forward Together conference in Toronto, an annual event that aims to elevate women in the workplace so they can progress forward together.
It’s easy to look at the entrepreneurs who changed an entire industry and discuss their achievements after the fact. The real skill is in identifying those startups long before they make their mark. With The Disruptors, Business News Network (BNN) is taking that challenge one step further and
Whether we notice them or not, emotions and cognitive biases influence every purchase decision. Find out how to build off of these biases and psychological factors in your sales marketing strategy.
He’s been a reporter with the Globe and Mail and the National Post. He’s blogged for Forbes and too many other sites to mention. If anyone could teach startups about how to tell effectively tell their stories, who better than Mark Evans?
Early in my career, I spent 10+ years working in the technology industry in marketing, product development and business development roles. Since then, I’ve had the privilege of coaching dozens of women executives from across the industry and I’ve been an invited speaker at about two dozen
Canadian small and medium-sized businesses might not always pay much attention to the latest mobile innovations, and sometimes with good reason. It could take months for new smartphones, tablets and other products to hit the Canadian market, and SMBs need to focus on the tools that they can use
To call Canada a nation of social media fanatics is something of an understatement. According to a poll from Forum research earlier this year, Facebook is used by close to six in 10 Canadian adults, who visit it, on average, about nine times a week.
One of the most exciting moments in the life of a startup is certainly when they acquire that very first paying customer. And then comes the second, the tenth, and, if they are lucky, many more exciting milestones. Unfortunately, that’s also when the troubles can start. Large organizations can
The average small or medium-sized Canadian business will likely have an owner or president, one or more sales people, someone in charge of marketing, but not always a full-time IT person. That may soon change. According to a report published in March by the Information and Communications