Matteo Caporale

I'm a Digital Marketing Generalist, a Tech Nerd, a Creativity Storm, and your company's secret weapon.

About

About Me

Matteo Caporale

Marketing Generalist

I decided that I would have worked in Marketing in the year 2000, after watching the movie "What Women Want" with Mell Gibson, who already was a hero for me after "Braveheart".

Besides the love story and the sexual jokes, the movie tells the story of the best marketing guy in New York, which even being already on the verve of popularity, uses a redical approach to assume the point of view of the customer he wants to hook (he literally puts their shoes and pantyhose"). He does this because he's trying to land a job with one of the biggest brands -Nike-, because he's competing with a new employee whoo knows the targt better -she's a woman-, but also because he likes his job and wants to stay at the top.

I decided then that I wanted to be like him, and even though I couldn't work with Nike, I always study the needs of my customer and try to have the deepest understanding of their needs, and then put in the shoes of their customers to find the best way, medium, peace to deliver the message, and bring results.

  • Birthday:21.09.1988
  • Email:Email me!
  • Nationality:Italian
  • Study:Univercity of Trieste
  • Location:Udine, ITA / Como, ITA / Lugano, CH
  • Freelance:Available

Programming Skills

WordPress95%
HTML & CSS90%
Python60%

Language Skills

Italian100%
English95%
German / Spanish70%

Knowledge

  • SEO, SEM
  • App, Webapp, No-coding
  • Social Media / Community Management
  • Data Analysis
  • Content Creation, Photo / Video / Drone shots

Interests

  • No-coding and dynamic application
  • Website and User Acquisition optimisation
  • Digital Presence Development
  • Custom Website and AI
  • Entrepreneurship and New Technologies

Experience

  • 2017 - Now

    Marketing & Sales Consultant

    Freelance
  • 2017 - Now

    ICUC

    Content Manager
  • 2016 - 2017

    Domainsbot

    Marketing & Sales Manager
  • 2015 - 2016

    rankingCoach

    Content Manager
  • 2014 - 2015

    TTM Rossi

    Web Marketing Manager
  • 2013 - 2015

    Tonutti Group

    Markting Manager
  • 2012 - 2013

    Nestlé Purina

    Project Manager

Testimonials

Services

What I Do

  • 01

    Web Development

    Turning coffee-fueled code wizardry into shiny websites that make users go 'Wow!' and developers go 'Why?

  • 02

    Social Media

    The multitasking maestro juggling hashtags, schedules, and photos to make your brand sparkle in the digital jungle.

  • 03

    Content Creation

    Playing with pixels, capturing moments, and weaving visual magic to make your brand look picture-perfect and video-awesome! Also from the sky.

  • 04

    SEO & Digital presence

    Unleashing the digital detective within, making search engines fall in love and your brand conquer the online realm.

  • 05

    Community Manager

    The friendly ambassador bridging the gap between your brand and its fans, keeping the online tribe happy and engaged.

  • 06

    AI Implementation

    Transforming science fiction into reality, sprinkling AI fairy dust to supercharge your business with futuristic wizardry.

Partners

Customers

Customers

News

Latest News

  • Just because we can't get out and about like we normally would, doesn’t mean we have to stop taking pictures. There’s still plenty you can do, provided you're prepared to use some imagination. Here are a few ideas to keep you shooting until normal life resumes.

    Most photographers love to shoot the unusual, and you don’t get much more unusual than These Unprecedented Times. Right now everything counts as out of the ordinary. There are a number of remarkable things about these lockdown days that are worth photographing now so we can remember them when it is all over.

    Most photographers find it hard to see interesting pictures in places in which they are most familiar. A trip somewhere new seems always exactly what our photography needed, as shooting away from home consistently inspires us to new artistic heights.

    Streets empty that are usually busy are remarkable and can evoke the sense of historical pictures from before the invention of the motorcar. Other things that are different at the moment will be queues to get into stores and the lines marked out on the floor to show how far apart we should be.

    Pretend everything is new and that you haven’t seen it before, and then you will be free to notice the leading lines, the places where one edge meets another in delightful geometric harmony, and how the ordinary things in the kitchen are transformed when the light is on or off.

    The trick here is to look slowly, and then look again. Take the time to look in detail and to look at the same thing from different angles, with different light, long lenses and wide lenses. Then move to the left a bit. You may never feel the need to leave the house again.

  • Just because we can't get out and about like we normally would, doesn’t mean we have to stop taking pictures. There’s still plenty you can do, provided you're prepared to use some imagination. Here are a few ideas to keep you shooting until normal life resumes.

    Most photographers love to shoot the unusual, and you don’t get much more unusual than These Unprecedented Times. Right now everything counts as out of the ordinary. There are a number of remarkable things about these lockdown days that are worth photographing now so we can remember them when it is all over.

    Most photographers find it hard to see interesting pictures in places in which they are most familiar. A trip somewhere new seems always exactly what our photography needed, as shooting away from home consistently inspires us to new artistic heights.

    Streets empty that are usually busy are remarkable and can evoke the sense of historical pictures from before the invention of the motorcar. Other things that are different at the moment will be queues to get into stores and the lines marked out on the floor to show how far apart we should be.

    Pretend everything is new and that you haven’t seen it before, and then you will be free to notice the leading lines, the places where one edge meets another in delightful geometric harmony, and how the ordinary things in the kitchen are transformed when the light is on or off.

    The trick here is to look slowly, and then look again. Take the time to look in detail and to look at the same thing from different angles, with different light, long lenses and wide lenses. Then move to the left a bit. You may never feel the need to leave the house again.

  • Just because we can't get out and about like we normally would, doesn’t mean we have to stop taking pictures. There’s still plenty you can do, provided you're prepared to use some imagination. Here are a few ideas to keep you shooting until normal life resumes.

    Most photographers love to shoot the unusual, and you don’t get much more unusual than These Unprecedented Times. Right now everything counts as out of the ordinary. There are a number of remarkable things about these lockdown days that are worth photographing now so we can remember them when it is all over.

    Most photographers find it hard to see interesting pictures in places in which they are most familiar. A trip somewhere new seems always exactly what our photography needed, as shooting away from home consistently inspires us to new artistic heights.

    Streets empty that are usually busy are remarkable and can evoke the sense of historical pictures from before the invention of the motorcar. Other things that are different at the moment will be queues to get into stores and the lines marked out on the floor to show how far apart we should be.

    Pretend everything is new and that you haven’t seen it before, and then you will be free to notice the leading lines, the places where one edge meets another in delightful geometric harmony, and how the ordinary things in the kitchen are transformed when the light is on or off.

    The trick here is to look slowly, and then look again. Take the time to look in detail and to look at the same thing from different angles, with different light, long lenses and wide lenses. Then move to the left a bit. You may never feel the need to leave the house again.

  • Just because we can't get out and about like we normally would, doesn’t mean we have to stop taking pictures. There’s still plenty you can do, provided you're prepared to use some imagination. Here are a few ideas to keep you shooting until normal life resumes.

    Most photographers love to shoot the unusual, and you don’t get much more unusual than These Unprecedented Times. Right now everything counts as out of the ordinary. There are a number of remarkable things about these lockdown days that are worth photographing now so we can remember them when it is all over.

    Most photographers find it hard to see interesting pictures in places in which they are most familiar. A trip somewhere new seems always exactly what our photography needed, as shooting away from home consistently inspires us to new artistic heights.

    Streets empty that are usually busy are remarkable and can evoke the sense of historical pictures from before the invention of the motorcar. Other things that are different at the moment will be queues to get into stores and the lines marked out on the floor to show how far apart we should be.

    Pretend everything is new and that you haven’t seen it before, and then you will be free to notice the leading lines, the places where one edge meets another in delightful geometric harmony, and how the ordinary things in the kitchen are transformed when the light is on or off.

    The trick here is to look slowly, and then look again. Take the time to look in detail and to look at the same thing from different angles, with different light, long lenses and wide lenses. Then move to the left a bit. You may never feel the need to leave the house again.

Contact

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