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ဒီမိုကရက်တစ်မြန်မာ့အသံ (ဒီဗွီဘီ)ရဲ့ ဇူလိုင် ၁ ရက် ညနေခင်းသတင်းတွေကို တင်ဆက်ပေးပါမယ်။ ဒီကနေ့ နားဆင်ရမယ့် သတင်းတွေကတော့ -ဧရာဝတီမြစ်ရေကြီးနေလို့ ကချင်ပြည်နယ်မှာ ဒေသခံတွေ ဘေးလွတ်ရာ ရွှေ့ပြောင်းခဲ့ ရတဲ့သတင်း - City Mart စီအီးအို အပါအဝင် လုပ်ငန်းရှင်တွေကို စစ်ကောင်စီက ဖမ်းဆီးအရေးယူလိုက်တဲ့သတင်းနဲ့ -ကရင်လူငယ် ၁ ဦး အမေရိကန်ရဲတပ်ဖွဲ့ရဲ့ ပစ်ခတ်မှုကြောင့် သေဆုံးသွားတဲ့သတင်းတွေ နားဆင်ကြရမှာပါ
Q: Hotel အတွက် Page Run ရတာ content အရမ်းရှားတယ် အခြား business တွေနဲ့ယှဉ်ရင် ပိုရှားတယ်လို့ ခံစားရတယ် Promotion ပြောင်းမှသာ content ထပ်ဖန်တီးနိုင်တာ မဟုတ်ရင် ဒီအကြောင်းတွေဘဲထပ်ပြီး ဖန်တရာကြေနေရော၊ ဘယ်လို Content Idea မျိုးတွေ စဉ်းစားသင့်လဲခင်ဗျ။ A: ကျွန်တော့်ကတော့ အကြံပေးချင်တာကတော့ Customer အနေနဲ့ Market မှာ Offlineမှာ တိုက်ရိုက်သွားစကားပြောကြည့်ပါ။ သူတို့ရဲ့ Need တွေ Work တွေ Challenge တွေ ထွက်လာပါလိမ့်မယ်၊ အဲ့ဟာတွေမှာ မူတည်ပြီးတော့မှ ကျွန်တော်တို့က content marketing လုပ်လို့ရတယ်၊ အဲ့ hotel မှာ ဘာကြောင့်လာပြီးနေရတာလဲပေါ့နော် ဥပမာ အဲ့ဒီ hotel က မြို့ထဲနဲ့ နီးလို့၊ အကုန်လုံးနဲ့ accessible ဖြစ်လို့၊ Chill ဖြစ်လို့ ဒါမှမဟုတ်ရင် အပေါ်မှာ Bar ရှိလို့ စတဲ့ဟာတွေ အများကြီးရှိတယ်၊ ဆိုတော့ ဘာကြောင့်လာတာလဲ Why ဆိုတဲ့ဟာကို အရင်ဆုံး Unlock လုပ်ကြည့်ပါ။ Unlock လုပ်မယ်ဆိုရင် အဲ့ဟာနဲ့ ပတ်သက်ပြီးရေးလို့ရတာအများကြီးဘဲ၊ ဘာလို့လာတယ်၊ ဘားအတွက်လာတယ်၊ Chillတယ်ဗျာ ရေကူးကန်ရှိတယ်ဆိုရင် အိုကေ ဘားထဲမှာ ကော့တေးဘယ်လိုဖျော်လဲဆိုတဲ့ ပုံစံမျိုးနဲ့ ဟော်တယ်ကို ကြော်ငြာလို့ရတယ်ဗျာ၊ ရေကူးကန်နဲ့ လာတယ်ဆိုရင် ဘယ်လိုမျိုး Chill ကြမယ်ဆိုတဲ့ ပုံစံမျိုးနဲ့ သွားလို့ရတယ်၊ ဥပမာ- အွန်လိုင်းပေါ်က ရေကူးသင်လို့ရတယ်ဗျာ၊ အဲ့လိုမျိုးဆန်ဆန် ပုံစံမျိုးနဲ့ ကျွန်တော်တို့အနီးနားက ပတ်ဝန်းကျင်အကြောင်းဆိုလို့ရှိရင်လည်း ဒီဟော်တယ်အနီးနားမှာ City Mart မှာ မုန့်သွားဝယ်လို့ရတယ်၊ သူငယ်ချင်းတွေနဲ့ ဟော်တယ်ခန်းထဲမှာ စုစားတယ်၊ ဒါမှမဟုတ်ရင် အနီးနားမှာ ဘယ်လိုတန်ခိုးကြီး ဘုရားတွေရှိတယ်၊ အဲ့လိုဆန်ဆန်မျိုးတွေ လုပ်လို့ရပါတယ်၊ ကျွန်တော်ကတော့ အဲ့ဒီ Unlock the Why ဆိုတဲ့ ပုံစံမျိုးတွေကို အရင်ဆုံးလုပ်စေချင်ပါတယ်၊ ဒါဆိုရင် ပိုအဆင်ပြေမှာပါ။ #marketing #digitalmarketing #market #career #askalex #askalexmm
Q: လောလောဆယ်တော့ SFUx က ကိုAlex သင်နေတဲ့ Digital Marketing အတန်းကိုတက်နေတာပါ။ အခုအချိန်ထိ ဘွဲ့ကလည်းမရ၊ certificate ကလည်းမရှိလမ်းပျောက်နေလို့ပါ။ အကြံပေးပါဦး ကို Alex။ A: ကျွန်တော်ကိုယ်တိုင်မှာလည်း ဘွဲ့လည်းမရှိ၊ certificate လည်း မရှိပါဘူး။ ဒါပေမဲ့ ကျွန်တော် KFC မှာလုပ်ဖူးတယ်။ Samsung မှာ Digital Marketing Manager အနေနဲ့ လုပ်ဖူးတယ်။ City Mart နဲ့ Yoma Bank မှာ Digital Marketing Head အနေနဲ့လုပ်ဖူးတယ်။ ဒီ လေးခုမှာ ဘွဲ့နဲ့ အလုပ်လုပ်တာမဟုတ်ပါဘူး။ Marketing နဲ့ ပတ်သတ်တဲ့ certificate လည်း မရှိပါဘူး။ ကျွန်တော်ဘာတွေလုပ်ခဲ့လဲဆို သင်တန်းလျှောက်တက်ပါတယ်။ ကျွန်တော့် ကိုသင်ပေးခဲ့တဲ့ ဆရာနှစ်ယောက်ရှိပါတယ်။ ကိုအောင်ချစ်ခင်နဲ့ Arilyn ပါ။ နှစ်ယောက်လုံးက ကျွန်တော် အပြင်မှာ တကယ်သင်တန်းတက်ဖူးတဲ့ဆရာနှစ်ယောက်ဖြစ်တဲ့အပြင် အခု Strategy First မှာလည်း သင်နေပါတယ်။ ကျွန်တော် Strategy First မှာဘဲ Marketing ကော Digital Marketing ကောတက်ဖူးပါတယ်။ နောက်ထပ်တစ်ခုကတော့ Google နဲ့ YouTube ပါ။ တစ်ခုခု ဘာပဲဖြစ်ဖြစ် သိချင်တယ်ဆို google နဲ့ youtube မှာ အမြဲရှာပါတယ်။ အဲ့ဒီ့နည်းက ကျွန်တော့ကို အများကြီးသင်ပေးပါတယ်။ ဘွဲ့မရ Certificate မရလို့ဘာမှမဖြစ်ပါဘူး။ အဓိကက အလုပ်လုပ်ချင်ဖို့ဘဲလိုတာပါ။ အရင်တုန်းက လုပ်ခဲ့တဲ့ အလုပ်တွေ အကုန်လုံးဆိုရင် 18 hr challenge ဆိုပြီး တစ်ရက်ကို 18 နာရီအလုပ်လုပ်ပါတယ်။ နားတဲ့ရက်မရှိပါဘူး။ စနေ၊ တနင်္ဂနွေလည်း မနားပါဘူး။ ပြီးတော့ ကျွန်တော် Marketing ကိုချစ်တဲ့စိတ်ရှိတယ် ကိုယ်လုပ်နေတဲ့ အလုပ်ကိုလုပ်ရင်ကိုပျော်နေတာ။ အဲ့တစ်ခုတော့ လိုတယ်။ အဲ့တစ်ခုရှိပြီဆိုရင်က ကျန်တဲ့ဟာတွေ ခေါင်းထဲထည့်နေစရာမလိုဘူး၊ အရမ်း အရေးကြီးတဲ့နေရာမှာ မပါဘူးလို့တော့ ယူဆပါတယ်။ Q: I am currently attending the Digital Marketing class taught by Ko Alex at SFUx. So far, I still haven't achieved my degree and a certificate to get a job. And I lost hope for my career life. Can you please advise me, Ko Alex? Firstly I don't have a bachelor's degree or a certificate. But I have experience working in KFC, digital marketing manager at Samsung, and Digital Marketing Head at City Mart and Yoma Bank. It didn't require a marketing certificate and bachelor for those job titles. What I did was attend marketing classes tutored by Sir Aung Chit Khin and Eileen. They are my mentors and both of them are currently teaching marketing classes at Strategy First. I attended both traditional marketing and digital marketing classes. What's more, are YouTube and Google. Anything I would like to learn, I find it on YouTube and Google. I learned a lot in that way. It doesn't matter if you don't have a certificate or a bachelor's. What's the matter is your passion for work? I used to work 18 hours per day for all my previous jobs as an “ 18 hours challenge .” There is no holiday, no weekend. Most importantly I love marketing. I enjoy working in the marketing field. In my opinion, that's all it takes. The rest doesn't matter that much.
Over the weekend, clinics were held at three locations, City Mart in Lawrence, Richdale in New Bedford, and One Stop Mart in Springfield. WBZ's Matt Shearer reports.
Your own M City Mart will open in Al Karama soon, near ADCB metro station. First time in UAE hypermarket and 1 to 20 discount center together. Tara na at dalhin ang mga pamilya at kaibigan sa opening may libreng regalo pa! For more information call 0523360265 or visit other branches in Deira and Ajman.
In recent years, scholarship on Burma, or Myanmar, has undergone a renaissance. Jayde Lin Roberts’ Mapping Chinese Rangoon: Place and Nation among the Sino-Burmese (University of Washington Press, 2016) is a bellwether of exciting new books to come, and a model for how they might be done. Although Roberts completed much of her research for the book back under military dictatorship in the 2000s, she explores and situates the Sino-Burmese in downtown Rangoon, or Yangon, in a manner that anticipates and responds to the political changes of the 2010s, and with them, the current ethnographic turn towards Burma. In doing so, she delivers on the book’s title, telling the hitherto largely untold story of the in-between place that Rangoon’s Sino-Burmese community has occupied. But she does more than this, along the way drawing the readers attention towards the larger story of nation and state formation in Burma through the lens of a community that has for over a century struggled with how to be both local enough and Chinese enough in an enduringly colonial, yet distinctively postcolonial Southeast Asian city. Jayde Lin Roberts joins New Books in Southeast Asian Studies to talk about temples as nested places, Chinese vernacular schooling, hungry ghosts, how tiger prawns built City Mart, and the tactical occupation of Rangoon’s public spaces through lion dances. Nick Cheesman is a fellow at the College of Asia and the Pacific, Australian National University and in 2016-17 a member of the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton. He can be reached at nick.cheesman@anu.edu.au Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In recent years, scholarship on Burma, or Myanmar, has undergone a renaissance. Jayde Lin Roberts’ Mapping Chinese Rangoon: Place and Nation among the Sino-Burmese (University of Washington Press, 2016) is a bellwether of exciting new books to come, and a model for how they might be done. Although Roberts completed much of her research for the book back under military dictatorship in the 2000s, she explores and situates the Sino-Burmese in downtown Rangoon, or Yangon, in a manner that anticipates and responds to the political changes of the 2010s, and with them, the current ethnographic turn towards Burma. In doing so, she delivers on the book’s title, telling the hitherto largely untold story of the in-between place that Rangoon’s Sino-Burmese community has occupied. But she does more than this, along the way drawing the readers attention towards the larger story of nation and state formation in Burma through the lens of a community that has for over a century struggled with how to be both local enough and Chinese enough in an enduringly colonial, yet distinctively postcolonial Southeast Asian city. Jayde Lin Roberts joins New Books in Southeast Asian Studies to talk about temples as nested places, Chinese vernacular schooling, hungry ghosts, how tiger prawns built City Mart, and the tactical occupation of Rangoon’s public spaces through lion dances. Nick Cheesman is a fellow at the College of Asia and the Pacific, Australian National University and in 2016-17 a member of the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton. He can be reached at nick.cheesman@anu.edu.au Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In recent years, scholarship on Burma, or Myanmar, has undergone a renaissance. Jayde Lin Roberts’ Mapping Chinese Rangoon: Place and Nation among the Sino-Burmese (University of Washington Press, 2016) is a bellwether of exciting new books to come, and a model for how they might be done. Although Roberts completed much of her research for the book back under military dictatorship in the 2000s, she explores and situates the Sino-Burmese in downtown Rangoon, or Yangon, in a manner that anticipates and responds to the political changes of the 2010s, and with them, the current ethnographic turn towards Burma. In doing so, she delivers on the book’s title, telling the hitherto largely untold story of the in-between place that Rangoon’s Sino-Burmese community has occupied. But she does more than this, along the way drawing the readers attention towards the larger story of nation and state formation in Burma through the lens of a community that has for over a century struggled with how to be both local enough and Chinese enough in an enduringly colonial, yet distinctively postcolonial Southeast Asian city. Jayde Lin Roberts joins New Books in Southeast Asian Studies to talk about temples as nested places, Chinese vernacular schooling, hungry ghosts, how tiger prawns built City Mart, and the tactical occupation of Rangoon’s public spaces through lion dances. Nick Cheesman is a fellow at the College of Asia and the Pacific, Australian National University and in 2016-17 a member of the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton. He can be reached at nick.cheesman@anu.edu.au Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In recent years, scholarship on Burma, or Myanmar, has undergone a renaissance. Jayde Lin Roberts’ Mapping Chinese Rangoon: Place and Nation among the Sino-Burmese (University of Washington Press, 2016) is a bellwether of exciting new books to come, and a model for how they might be done. Although Roberts completed much of her research for the book back under military dictatorship in the 2000s, she explores and situates the Sino-Burmese in downtown Rangoon, or Yangon, in a manner that anticipates and responds to the political changes of the 2010s, and with them, the current ethnographic turn towards Burma. In doing so, she delivers on the book’s title, telling the hitherto largely untold story of the in-between place that Rangoon’s Sino-Burmese community has occupied. But she does more than this, along the way drawing the readers attention towards the larger story of nation and state formation in Burma through the lens of a community that has for over a century struggled with how to be both local enough and Chinese enough in an enduringly colonial, yet distinctively postcolonial Southeast Asian city. Jayde Lin Roberts joins New Books in Southeast Asian Studies to talk about temples as nested places, Chinese vernacular schooling, hungry ghosts, how tiger prawns built City Mart, and the tactical occupation of Rangoon’s public spaces through lion dances. Nick Cheesman is a fellow at the College of Asia and the Pacific, Australian National University and in 2016-17 a member of the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton. He can be reached at nick.cheesman@anu.edu.au Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In recent years, scholarship on Burma, or Myanmar, has undergone a renaissance. Jayde Lin Roberts’ Mapping Chinese Rangoon: Place and Nation among the Sino-Burmese (University of Washington Press, 2016) is a bellwether of exciting new books to come, and a model for how they might be done. Although Roberts completed much of her research for the book back under military dictatorship in the 2000s, she explores and situates the Sino-Burmese in downtown Rangoon, or Yangon, in a manner that anticipates and responds to the political changes of the 2010s, and with them, the current ethnographic turn towards Burma. In doing so, she delivers on the book’s title, telling the hitherto largely untold story of the in-between place that Rangoon’s Sino-Burmese community has occupied. But she does more than this, along the way drawing the readers attention towards the larger story of nation and state formation in Burma through the lens of a community that has for over a century struggled with how to be both local enough and Chinese enough in an enduringly colonial, yet distinctively postcolonial Southeast Asian city. Jayde Lin Roberts joins New Books in Southeast Asian Studies to talk about temples as nested places, Chinese vernacular schooling, hungry ghosts, how tiger prawns built City Mart, and the tactical occupation of Rangoon’s public spaces through lion dances. Nick Cheesman is a fellow at the College of Asia and the Pacific, Australian National University and in 2016-17 a member of the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton. He can be reached at nick.cheesman@anu.edu.au Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices