Charlene Li

Charlene Li
marketing ends listeners
We're all learning here; the best listeners will end up the smartest.
loyalty long marketing
Companies need connections to their markets to create long-term loyalty.
technology marketing conversation
Twitter is not a technology. It's a conversation and it's happening with or without you.
aim attract build businesses consumers developers host investment looking market platform reach service small software
Ad-supported software for consumers and very small businesses is only the beginning. Microsoft's real aim is to build and host a service platform that will attract the investment of developers looking for a way to reach these market sectors.
aim build deliver developers host platform robust service services
Microsoft's real aim is to build and host a service platform that will be robust enough that other developers will want to use it to deliver their services through it.
boxes microsoft moving selling true
Microsoft is moving out of selling boxes into selling real, true services.
blog blow develop dive google niche
I think Google is going to blow them out of the water. So they need to dive into some niche and develop something other than just blog search.
entered gorilla sauce secret
The 800-pound gorilla just entered the blogosphere, ... the secret sauce to Google's blog-search success.
engine search targeted technology terribly users
Search engine users aren't terribly loyal, so a better or more targeted technology could make headway.
blog sauce search secret
This relevancy ranking is what I think will be the secret sauce to Googles blog search success.
number people small
It's only a small number of people who know what to do with it.
change content dearth hurdle overcome people search starting video
The big hurdle for video search to overcome has been the dearth of content that people really want to find online. That's starting to change rapidly.
search time video
It's going to take a long time for video search to develop.
average easy fact matter user web
The fact of the matter is--the average user shouldn't have to get used to RSS. It should be something that's just as easy as browsing the Web or doing anything else on the Internet.