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Beautiful live chat software pricing for sales and support

Beautiful live chat software pricing for sales and support
In-browser Chat Our in-browser Olark chat makes connecting with your customer as easy as launching a browser! You can also connect using your favorite IM client. Targeted Chat Targeted chat lets you set rules to interact only with visitors who go to a specific page or behave in certain ways, so you can talk to the most important customers. CRM & Helpdesk Integrations Give your salespeople powerful information about customers and keep track of them over time with Olark live chat and your CRM. Customize Your Design Olark can match your design perfectly with customization features. Sophisticated Insights Along with an integration with Google Analytics, you can learn about customer and operator behavior and how to improve your business overall. Offline Messages Never miss a customer. Developer API In addition to the awesome features we continue to develop, we offer a useful API that allows you to trick out Olark even further. Cobrowsing

Pricing Simple Installation No Commitment. Cancel any time. Customizable Graphics Complete Transparency Works on stores of any size Top notch customer service We're proud of our product and always willing to help. Will Granify work on my store? Yes! How does pricing work after the trial? Granify is pay on performance — there's no charge unless we increase your revenue! Can I cancel my account at any time? Yes.

The seven tricks everyone can learn from game designers Gamification, the practice of adding game-like mechanics to non-game applications to improve engagement, is going through a hype cycle. And one of its leading experts, Amy Jo Kim, added to the push by outlining seven core gamification tricks today at the Web 2.0 Expo in San Francisco. Kim, a veteran game designer and founder of the game studio Shufflebrain, said she wasn’t a fan of the word “gamification.” Kim said that some people describe gamification as a loyalty program on steroids; or using game techniques to turbo-charge products, services and apps; or taking a real world activity and turning it into a game. Here are the seven ideas explained: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Kim has worked on games such as The Sims and Ultima Online for Electronic Arts and she has helped design game-like experiences for eBay, Netflix, and Rock Band. Don't let cyber attacks kill your game!

Getting Your Startup Website Ready, Pre-Launch Even if you’re not quite ready to show the public your product, you can still create a good website and a solid online presence for your startup. I want to sidestep the argument about whether or not it’s good to be “stealth” or not, and work with the assumption that if you’ve purchased the domain name, you’re going to put up some sort of website. So here are a few of the things you should consider when building your startup’s site: 1. You don’t have to commit to the whole graphical “look and feel” of your brand on day one, but you do want to to make moves in that direction. 2. Be sure to capture the email addresses of those who visit. Add these people to a newsletter. 3. Make sure you have all the various sharing buttons on your site so that people can follow you on Twitter, follow your RSS feeds, like your site, and easily share information with their friends about your sites. 4. Never underestimate the importance of having a blog. 5. 6. Enough about you.

Your Product Needs to be 10x Better than the Competition to Win. Here’s Why: Last night I had the great privilege to interview Bill Gross, one of the Internet’s true pioneers. To say he has had an impact on the web would be an understatement. His impact has even helped a small country gain admission to the United Nations. Overture (Goto.com) He invented the category of sponsored search. He created GoTo.com (later renamed Overture) out of a frustration with search. The idea actually came to him from the Yellow Pages business. He was skeptical of spending the money but astounded at what a transformational impact it had on his business. Bill’s rationale was the more serious your business was, the more you could afford to pay for placement and therefore the more likely it was for consumers. So he launched a company with exclusively paid search. Heresy. Google was clear that they WOULD NOT go into this business. GoTo.com went on to ink huge distribution deals with Microsoft, AOL & Yahoo! IdeaLab In 1995 Netscape IPO’d and browsers started to become more prevalent.

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