Advertising inflatables has more power than you can imagine

Advertising Inflatables

Advertising inflatables has more power than you can imagine

Advertising inflatables have more power than you can imagine and this is a fact that has been proven time after time.

giant Sun shape cold-air advertising inflatable

25 ft. Sun advertising inflatable

A great way to advertise for sure

In the fast paced and hectic world that we live in, people no longer have the time or the patience or the inclination to see advertisements the way the used to do so in the good old days. As a result of this, advertising in media such as TV, radio, magazines, newspapers, etc., just makes no sense at all. And in fact, advertising in such media is just a waste of money – a tremendous waste in fact, it costs a fortune to advertise in such media.

On the other hand, one of the best ways to advertise is outdoor advertising. This is a great way to advertise without having to pay the high costs of advertising.

It is cheap to advertise by making use of advertising inflatables!

Big conglomerates as well as small business owners are now finding that advertising outdoors by using giant inflatables has a tremendous impact on people. No matter what a person may be doing – walking down the street, driving by, cooking at home, working at the office – the person will always look at the huge inflatable. This is because people are drawn to these giant advertising inflatables – it is something that happens by instinct.


Also, such a form of outdoor advertising is real cheap when compared with other advertising media. Most advertising media are as good as unaffordable to small or even medium size businesses. But these businesses can very easily advertise by making use of giant balloons as these inflatables cost hardly anything.

An unconventional but very popular advertising form

Though there may be quite some truth to it that making use of inflatables is a rather unconventional form of advertising, there is also much truth in the fact that this form of advertising is extremely popular.

There are many reasons why this form of outdoor advertising is very popular. For one, people cannot but help notice these big inflatables and this is just great for any advertiser. After all, the main purpose of any advertising campaign is to get people to notice what is being advertised. The second big reason as to why this form of adverting is extremely popular is because it is cheap and very affordable – more so to small and medium advertisers who have little or no ad budget whatsoever.

Truly, there is a lot of power in advertising inflatables, why not get one for your business today?

Call 1-800-791-1445 for more information on inflatables!

 

Advertising inflatables has more power than you can imagine is a post from: Advertising Balloons

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After Six Years, USPTO Approves Zuckerberg’s First Patent Application

Mark Zuckerberg

Mark Zuckerberg’s first patent application from six years ago has been approved by the US Patent Trademark Office last Tuesday. Called as “Dynamically Generating a Privacy Summary”, the application’s abstract describe the patent as stated:

“A system and method for dynamically generating a privacy summary is provided. The present invention provides a system and method for dynamically generating a privacy summary. A profile for a user is generated. One or more privacy setting selections are received from the user associated with the profile. The profile associated with the user is updated to incorporate the one or more privacy setting selections. A privacy summary is then generated for the profile based on the one or more privacy setting selections.”

The patent basically protects the way a user’s profile information appears on screen. This includes how they view their privacy settings. The patent application was initially rejected by the USPTO for being “obvious”, but it was later revisited and approved.

It is also broad, which probably why USPTO issued their approval after curbing claims 1, 8 and 16. According to public records, the Patent Office rejected Facebook’s first application, but it didn’t stop the social media giant. They redoubled their efforts to get the patent through, a couple of days after they announced that they plan to make Facebook public last February 1.

Ultimate Geek Vanity Trophy

Other than being obvious, the patent application has been attacked by many examiners as it won’t certainly help the social media giant to defend itself from patent spats. Moreover, Facebook’s latest patent approval is described by ReadWriteWeb as the ultimate geek vanity trophy.

In today’s patent wars, a company typically needs an entire portfolio of offensive and defensive patents to make a difference. Good thing, Zuckerberg has already earned half a dozen other patents since 2006.

Zuckerberg’s patent is different from the hefty patent portfolio that Facebook is starting to assemble. As soon as Facebook has its own portfolio, it won’t be that vulnerable the moment it got patent lawsuits.

Although it looks like this patent approval doesn’t mean much, an IPO expert said that Facebook needs all the patents that it could get, especially after it had its recent law suit against Yahoo. Prior to this, the Facebook CEO took his company public, got married and granted an almost $6 million home loan at just over one percent.

 

image: wikipedia

The post After Six Years, USPTO Approves Zuckerberg’s First Patent Application appeared first on About Social Media.


After Six Years, USPTO Approves Zuckerberg’s First Patent Application

Mark Zuckerberg

Mark Zuckerberg’s first patent application from six years ago has been approved by the US Patent Trademark Office last Tuesday. Called as “Dynamically Generating a Privacy Summary”, the application’s abstract describe the patent as stated:

“A system and method for dynamically generating a privacy summary is provided. The present invention provides a system and method for dynamically generating a privacy summary. A profile for a user is generated. One or more privacy setting selections are received from the user associated with the profile. The profile associated with the user is updated to incorporate the one or more privacy setting selections. A privacy summary is then generated for the profile based on the one or more privacy setting selections.”

The patent basically protects the way a user’s profile information appears on screen. This includes how they view their privacy settings. The patent application was initially rejected by the USPTO for being “obvious”, but it was later revisited and approved.

It is also broad, which probably why USPTO issued their approval after curbing claims 1, 8 and 16. According to public records, the Patent Office rejected Facebook’s first application, but it didn’t stop the social media giant. They redoubled their efforts to get the patent through, a couple of days after they announced that they plan to make Facebook public last February 1.

Ultimate Geek Vanity Trophy

Other than being obvious, the patent application has been attacked by many examiners as it won’t certainly help the social media giant to defend itself from patent spats. Moreover, Facebook’s latest patent approval is described by ReadWriteWeb as the ultimate geek vanity trophy.

In today’s patent wars, a company typically needs an entire portfolio of offensive and defensive patents to make a difference. Good thing, Zuckerberg has already earned half a dozen other patents since 2006.

Zuckerberg’s patent is different from the hefty patent portfolio that Facebook is starting to assemble. As soon as Facebook has its own portfolio, it won’t be that vulnerable the moment it got patent lawsuits.

Although it looks like this patent approval doesn’t mean much, an IPO expert said that Facebook needs all the patents that it could get, especially after it had its recent law suit against Yahoo. Prior to this, the Facebook CEO took his company public, got married and granted an almost $6 million home loan at just over one percent.

 

image: wikipedia

The post After Six Years, USPTO Approves Zuckerberg’s First Patent Application appeared first on About Social Media.