GGR: GeoGlobal Resources Inc [was GEOG was BOWG] (2000 + )


  1. pigman
  2. JackSwanson
  3. JenL_2
  4. Kirk
  5. Kirk
  6. pigman
  7. pigman
  8. pigman
  9. pigman
  10. pigman

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Top 120.   Oct 10, 2000 2:44 PM

» pigman - CLOSE AT IT'S ALL TIME LOW!

If I was short, I would be the happist guy in the world. This thing goes down and only down. When it was $6 I told everyone on this board that I don't short anything under $25. No room for making money. Boy, was that a mistake with this one. At $6, it was easy money. The problem here is the fact that it still is easy money at it's century low of 53 cents. It is going to ZERO, and that is a fact. Get your 50cents while you can.

-- posted by pigman



Top 121.   Oct 10, 2000 9:40 PM

» JackSwanson - I know its painful for some on this thread...

But lets call BOWG what it is, its a turd folks.

-- posted by JackSwanson



Top 122.   Oct 10, 2000 11:42 PM

» JenL_2 - Jack....

...Keep the Faith Baby!....Suite101.com is not going to close it's doors, and BOWG is not going to go to 0. Better BOWGdays are yet to come! Patience!!......Jen

-- posted by JenL_2



Top 123.   Oct 11, 2000 6:56 AM

» Kirk - Marketing by permission

Marketing by permission
http://cnnfn.cnn.com/2000/10/11/cashflow...

Many good supporting links back at the original plus some graphics that summarize Permission Marketing. Go read it!

Entrepreneur Seth Godin preaches new tactics for a new economy

By Staff Writer Hope Hamashige
October 11, 2000: 8:53 a.m. ET

NEW YORK (CNNfn) - Most people are bombarded by advertising every day. They are hit by it when they open the newspaper, turn on the television, open the mailbox, check their e-mail and sometimes when they answer the telephone.

Seth Godin, entrepreneur and author, is one who thinks traditional marketing won't work for most companies, particularly new companies, because the advertising is, for the most part, unwanted.

"Finding new ways, more clever ways to interrupt people doesn't work," Godin said at a gathering of e-business executives in New York on Tuesday. Traditional forms of marketing amount to "spamming" people, and spamming has not proved an effective method of getting word out about your company.

A completely passive approach, on the other hand, such as putting up a Web site and hoping someone will notice while out surfing is not a marketing strategy that is likely to draw a ton of customers either.


Try making friends first


The keys to successful marketing, according to Godin, are getting people's permission to sell to them and to perfect the art of creating a "viral" marketing campaign. Neither approach is as easy as tacking up a billboard somewhere along Highway 101, but, if they work, they will be much more successful than any traditional method.

The difference between traditional marketing and permission marketing is in the relationship the business has to its customers. Traditional advertising tries to court strangers. Permission marketing means you have to first turn strangers into friends before selling them a product.

"Selling to people who actually want to hear from you is more effective than interrupting strangers who don't," Godin said.

Godin points to Amazon.com as a company that has made friends from strangers before trying to sell to them. Presented as a courtesy to customers, the online bookseller let the 4 million customers who had bought Stephen King novels know that he had a new book out. The next day, Amazon.com sold 1 million copies.

It's not just e-commerce companies, he pointed out, that can successfully gain permission to sell to people and profit from it. Hallmark asked shoppers in its stores if they would like to be notified when Christmas ornaments go on sale. The company sent postcards to those who did and sold $100 million worth of ornaments in a day.

Godin actually practiced what he now preaches when he was running his own company, Yoyodyne. Yoyodyne, a direct marketing company, marketed only to people who agreed to receive and respond to online product pitches. Yahoo! bought Godin's company about two years ago.


Engineer a viral campaign


In his latest venture, book publishing, Godin is again applying the lessons he talks about at seminars such as these. The marketing of his latest self- published title, "Unleashing the IdeaVirus" is in itself a test in viral marketing.

Godin refused to work with conventional publishers after they rejected some ideas he had for marketing the book. Instead, he put the book on the Internet where anyone can download it free of charge. In 30 days, he said, more than 400,000 copies had been downloaded. On the Web site, he makes it easy for anyone to download a copy and also to send one to a friend.

Later, when the $40 bound book version made its way to bookstores, it quickly rose to No. 5 on Amazon.com's bestseller list, even though it was still available for free on the Internet.

That is, in effect, one of the primary lessons of viral marketing and probably the single most difficult one for most business owners to grasp, Godin said. It's counterintuitive, but if you give your ideas away for free, you and your company will increase in value.

"Give up control and give it away," Godin said. "The more you give your idea away, the more your company is going to be worth."


'Put the money in the product'


It's not just about giving things away for free, however. Engineering viral marketing depends on, first and foremost, a good product. Without a product that people want to know about, no amount of evangelizing is going to make it work. "Put the money in the product and forget about the Super Bowl ad," Godin said.

Viral marketing works in some ways like word of mouth, but rather than fading over time, it gets bigger. Engineering a viral campaign depends also on courting evangelists, or "sneezers" -- people like technology journalists who have the ability to spread the word about your company far and wide.

You also have to be able to identify your hive, in other words, the people who will get the most use out of your products. You also need to know whether your hive has a network through which they can communicate with one another about your product. Napster, said Godin, is one company that blasted to 10 million users in a short period because it identified a hive (college students) that has the ability to communicate because most have computers and access to e-mail.

Finally, make it easy for people to pass on the word of mouth by making sure people know the name. If they can ask for it by name, or can very easily describe it, it is going to be easier to pass on.

Vindigo, said Godin, is one company that has been successful in creating a viral marketing campaign. People are talking about it, creating a buzz, but they created a product that can also be easily handed from one person to the next via Palm Pilot.

-- posted by Kirk



Top 124.   Oct 11, 2000 12:50 PM

» Kirk - BOWG Chart

One nasty Week!
<img src=http://chart.neural.com/servlet/GIFChart...>

Then again, if Yahoo! is having troubles, then nobody wants to buy these stocks and so they go down.

-- posted by Kirk



Top 125.   Oct 11, 2000 2:43 PM

» pigman - Re: Kirk

Yahoo makes money, BOWG makes none and doesn't have plan to make any.

-- posted by pigman



Top 126.   Oct 11, 2000 2:45 PM

» pigman - Re: Kirk

Don't compare BOWG to YAHOO. Please, even you know better than that. Not even close. BOWG is stuff stuck between the thread of yahoo's shoe. CRAP!

-- posted by pigman



Top 127.   Oct 11, 2000 2:49 PM

» pigman - By the way!

I told you to get out at 62 cents. On it's way to ZERO!

-- posted by pigman



Top 128.   Oct 11, 2000 2:57 PM

» pigman - I smell reverse split!

Reverse split to get more room to move lower.
Example: 10:1 reverse split puts the share price at 4 bucks or maybe less. Problem is you have 10 fold less shares. You get less from BOWG, seems to be the game plan.

-- posted by pigman



Top 129.   Oct 12, 2000 2:47 PM

» pigman - Now 37 cents and still on sale.

If you want to sell you to can enjoy 37 cents. These idiots on this board have you thinking this is cheap and then it gets cheaper. The kids in school are using their lunch money to trade this thing. I have been trading since the early 80's and seen this kind of stock disappear off the map. Grab your 37 cents while you can!
The PIG is right on and will continue to remind you. Remember, I told yOu all to sell in the 9's.
The PIG says get out!

-- posted by pigman



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