Harnessing the power of mobile in 2014
As we close out the year, 2013 sees Australia taking home the crown for being the largest smartphone market per capita. But are businesses taking advantage of this opportunity?
As we close out the year, 2013 sees Australia taking home the crown for being the largest smartphone market per capita. But are businesses taking advantage of this opportunity?
If Chargebar’s Jonathon Tanner has his way, you’ll never be caught out with a flat phone battery again.
As businesses come to grips with the rise and rise of the digital world, more are finding new ways to make the most of technology.
Boost Mobile have recently partnered up with Telstra to provide consumers with affordable, exclusive pre-paid mobile services Australia-wide.
Customers are increasingly using their mobile phones to pay bills instead of reaching for their credit card. Mark Reiken’s booming start-up Text2Pay hopes to make the transaction safe, quick and easy for both customer and merchant.
Almost three in five Australian small business owners (55 percent) will work during the Christmas/New Year holiday break and more than one in three (36 percent) will not take any time off.
While the landscape of marketing is changing with new emerging technologies, small businesses have been quick to pick up on marketing tools that allow them to level the playing field with bigger companies.
WatchGuard Technologies’ security analysts have announced their 2012 security predictions. Here are their top 10 predictions for the year ahead…
The outlook for 2011 holiday sales appears to be tepid amid consumer concern over the state of the economy, so savvy retailers are taking matters into their own hands by attracting new customers, generating repeat business, and improving campaign analytics with easy-to-execute mobile marketing programs.
Earlier this month, international research firm Gartner released its IT predictions for 2012. Its 11 predictions make for compelling reading. From its perspective it sees 2012 and beyond as moving towards a loss of centralised IT control and an upward trend towards consumerisation of the cloud.