Archive for ‘ blue

SES New York 2010 Liveblog Coverage 11 March 2010 at 2:13 pm by admin

Look out, Big Apple. Search Engine Strategies is coming to town. As always, Bruce Clay, Inc. will be there with blue shirts and plenty of knowledge to share. We’ve got a bunch of ways to do that this year.

First up, on Monday, start the conference off right with SEO training. It’s an all-day class taught by Bruce and you get to take home a copy of the book I spent a year of my life on, SEO for Dummies All in One. Bring it with you to the rest of the conference and I’ll force my broken crippled hand to scribble something trite in it.

At the conference itself, you can visit our booth (#1217) or you can catch one of Bruce’s three speaking opportunities. I’m thinking the White Hat, Black Hat: Unconferenced session at the bar is going to be unmissable.

As for me? I’m liveblogging this time around and you’ll find my schedule below. Use it wisely to plan treats, bribes and icepacks for my hands.

SES 2010 logo

So, to recap…

Training:

Mon. March 22 Search Engine Optimization Training

Bruce will be speaking at:

Tues. March 23, 4:00 – 4:20 p.m.: Theater Presentation in the Americas Hall 1 exhibit hall – “What to Look For in an SEO Vendor”

Wed. March 24, 5:00 – 6:00 p.m.: SEO Super Tools

Wed. March 24, 6:00 – 7:00 p.m.: White Hat Black Hat: Unconferenced (This is a first-time, unique session, taking place in a bar.)

We’ll be in booth #1217 in the exhibit hall.

And I’ll be here:

Day 1: Tuesday, March 23

Time BCI Liveblog Coverage Session Description
9:00 a.m. Opening Keynote: The New Rules of Marketing and PR – David Meerman Scott Session Description
10:45 a.m. How to Become a Link Magnet Session Description
12:45 p.m. Post Mortem: Banned Site Forensics Session Description
2:00 p.m. Keynote Panel: Search Marketing: Analyze This Session Description
3:30 p.m. From Real-Time Search to Dynamic Discovery Session Description
4:45 p.m. Deep Dive Into Analytics: When Bounce Rate No Longer Floats Your Boat Session Description

Day 2: Wednesday, March 24

Time BCI Liveblog Coverage Session Description
9:00 a.m. Morning Keynote: Be Awesome: Ideas for Approaching Search Analytics Differently Session Description
10:30 a.m. Social and Search: Integrating Social Media and Search to Drive the Brand Session Description
12:45 p.m. Keynote Panel – Video: The Next Digital Marketing Frontier Session Description
2:15 p.m. Stretching Your Marketing Dollars: The Upside of Search Session Description
3:45 p.m. Behavioral Analytics and Search Data-Driven Marketing Session Description
5:00 p.m. Where Search and Social Media Collide: Real-Time Search and Twitter Session Description

Day 3: Thursday, March 25

Time BCI Liveblog Coverage Session Description
9:00 a.m. Morning Keynote – The Evolution of Search: End Users Signal The Way Session Description
10:30 a.m. Eye Tracking Research Update Session Description
12:45 a.m. 21 Secrets of Top Converting Websites Session Description
2:15 p.m. Spotlight on Fashion: Blogging for Style Session Description
4:00 p.m. Conversion Ninja Toolbox Session Description

SES New York 2010 Liveblog Coverage was originally published on BruceClay.com, an SEO tools provider.

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SES New York 2010 Liveblog Coverage

+ Dot Com Pho – Post Olympic Blues Edition By admin 06 March 2010 at 11:06 pm and have No Comments


Now that the Vancouver 2010 Winter Olympic Games are over, we’re all suffering from post Olympic blues. The blues have especially hit hard for Ed Lau, who has been cruising downtown everyday hoping to find a street party that is no longer there. Seeing the sad state everyone was in, it made sense to hold this edition of Dot Com Pho at Happy Pho because if anyone can cheer us up, it would be Happy Brian.

Joining us for this Pho get together were the regulars like Aaron Koo, Michael “FATal1ty” Yurechko, Wolfgang, Christl, Bonnie and Marilyn. Ed finally realized there wasn’t going to be a block party at Robson Square and showed up last. We were also joined by the George Moen, the President of Blenz Coffee. I want to thank George for giving everyone who showed up at Dot Com Pho, Blenz coffee for life. I plan to make maximum use of that!

Discover the SECRETS I’ve Learned to go from zero a month to over $40,000 a month from blogging. Download Make Money Online with John Chow dot Com for FREE!



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Dot Com Pho – Post Olympic Blues Edition

+ Supercharging Your Descriptions With Sitelinks By admin 02 March 2010 at 5:52 pm and have No Comments

Sitelinks in Google search are handy, shiny and new. But what can they do for you? For the answer, you’ve come to the right place.

Speakers:

Jerry Dischler, Senior Product Manager, Google Inc.
Vanessa Fox, Contributing Editor, Search Engine Land
Ariel Sumeruk, Head Business Intelligence, Clicks2Customers

Sitelinks session: Ariel Sumeruk, Jerry Dischler, Vanessa Fox

Jerry from Google is going to talk about the ad side and organic side of Sitelinks. Organic will be covered first.

What are Sitelinks?

Sitelinks help users navigate your site. Our system analyzes link structure of your site to find shortcuts that will help save users time. One line Sitelinks and two-column Sitelinks are both delivered.

Two-column Sitelinks are showed when they believe the result is the most authoritative for a particular query. One line Sitelinks show when they believe the result is highly relevant but not necessarily authoritative for a particular query.

Tips to get better Sitelinks

  • First and foremost, create a site that is well-structured and easy for users to navigate.
  • Use meaningful page titles
  • Pay attention to anchor text throughout your site
  • Avoid boilerplate and repeated text
  • Also consider headers and other content on each page

If there’s consistency across titles, anchor text, navigation, etc., that’s a good signal for Sitelinks.

Turning Off Sitelinks

You can block Sitelinks for up to 90 days via Webmaster Tools. If less than 3 unblocked Sitelinks, no Sitelinks will appear for your site.

Breadcrumbs

This was rolled out more recently and is related to Sitelinks.

  • In place of the normal URL is a site hierarchy that shows where the result fits.
  • Each level of the hierarchy is a clickable link
  • Must have a clear site hierarchy and visible, linked breadcrumbs on your site for breadcrumbs to show.

Now for the paid side.

What are Ad Sitelinks?

Ad Sitelinks is a new feature of AdWords that allows you to attract more users and move them further down the purchase funnel by providing additional links to content deeper within your sites. They’ll accept 10 links from you but will only show 4, based on the query. They show these ads Sitelinks for navigational results.

Choosing Ad Sitelinks

  • User segmentation: Ad Sitelinks can help you segment your user before they ever reach your site.
  • Brand segmentation: Your core brand may have several sub-brands. You can highlight those segments and leverage your core brand.
  • Most Valuable Pages (MVPs): Ad Sitelinks can let you direct traffic to the most popular pages

Writing Link Text

  • Clear calls to action: If you are directing users to pages with actionable content, make those actions clear in the ad text.
  • Briefer is better: Users are more likely to click on short, clear links than longer, more descriptive links.
  • Use landing page language: Prominently display the language from your link on the associated landing page so users are more likely to stay on the page and explore their options.

Ariel takes the podium next. Ad Sitelinks are managed as a campaign-level setting. He’d like to see Google consider moving it into a group-level setting.

  • Google doesn’t provide you with a separate report on Sitelink performance.
  • There is no info on how many times Sitelinks get triggered.
  • Click costs get assigned to keywords generating impressions in the usual manner.

How to get specific performance metrics?

  • We provide unique IDs to all the Sitelinks
  • This enables us to monitor which and how many clicks each Sitelink got
  • We then link the information back to the originating group through the adcopyid
  • We analyze the stats for groups between the first and last Sitelink occurrence

Clicks on Sitelinks are a small percentage of total traffic to triggering groups (2 percent to 10 percent in their experience). About 6 percent of clicks on related ad copy were on Sitelink. This doesn’t mean that 6 percent of clicks happen on a Sitelink when it actually shows. It is likely to be more as Sitelinks do not always show. This means the observed increase in CTR could be due to higher visibility of the ad as a whole.

Do Sitelinks affect shopping behavior?

We compared the percentage of sales happening in Department A before and after the introduction of Sitelinks on brand terms.

There are 2 comparisons:

  1. Year on year of the same period
  2. A comparison to the 6 weeks prior to the introduction of a site

Brand terms: contribution to total revenue by departments for which Sitelinks were added (YoY comparison over same period)

Before Sitelinks: 55.96 percent

After Sitelinks: 64.41 percent

Conclusion

Useful for running tests on brand terms: these are more likely to be eligible for Sitelinks

Could be used to push competitors further down the page: increase above the fold dominance

Also pushes own natural search results down, which is problematic if you rank poorly

Check out their blog at www.clicks2customers.com/c2cblog for more info as they share it.

Supercharging Your Descriptions With Sitelinks was originally published on BruceClay.com, an SEO services company.

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Supercharging Your Descriptions With Sitelinks

+ Final Lessons Learned from One of the World’s Highest-Paid Copywriters By admin 02 March 2010 at 7:28 am and have No Comments

image of cash coming out of a laptop

This is the final installment of a three-part series on how to translate advice from marketing guru Dan Kennedy to a new online environment.

One of the smartest things any online marketer can do is to study the “old school” guys who wrote direct mail, magazine ads, and other artifacts of advertising history.

Why? Because it took a tremendous understanding of the psychology of persuasion to make those tactics work.

When you pair shiny new communication technology with tried-and-true methods to persuade and sell, you hugely increase your odds of success.

So let’s continue exploring what old-school guru Dan Kennedy can teach us about 21st-century marketing. This week we’ll cover lessons 11 through 14 from Kennedy’s book The Ultimate Marketing Plan.

I can’t promise these tips will make cash start spewing out of your laptop. But they do represent a lot of sound business thinking.

(Incidentally, the links to the book are Amazon affiliate links, which means if you buy it, I’ll be able to buy a pack of gum! Put any of this advice into action and you should get quite a lot more out of the deal.)

11. Create a short-term sales surge

One of the factors that plagues most small businesses, especially when they’re starting out, is a shortage of cash.

Creating quick “sales surges” is one of Kennedy’s specialties, and he has a lot of suggestions for how to do that. (For more ideas, I can strongly recommend picking up his book.)

Essentially, though, all the variations come down to one basic strategy:

  1. Make a great offer.
  2. Limit it in time, number of copies you’ll sell, or both.
  3. Make sure you come up with a good story or reason for the promotion.

Kennedy, as you can imagine, gives some rather old-school ideas like red tag sales or “My accountant thinks I’m crazy!”

He also likes to pluck interesting themes out of current events. For example, at a recent conference he invited loyal customers to bring old copies of his products in a “Cash for Clunkers” promotion.

Kennedy’s creativity is mostly involved in coming up with a reason for his promotions. But if selling information is part of what you do, you can also create a brand-new product for your “cash surge.” It doesn’t have to be extensive (it’s annoying how often we’re short on both cash and time). In fact, you can offer something that you develop over the weekend.

These “surges” can help any business, small or large, get through the lean times and amplify earnings during the best. And not only do short-term surges bring in cash, they also build your list of customers, strengthening your business for the long haul.

12. Take Advantage of New Marketing Technologies

As you might imagine, readers of Copyblogger are well ahead of the curve here. If any of these are missing from your current communication mix, you can very profitably add them to make your business stronger.

Audio, Video and Webinars: Record a meeting, training or presentation and post it to the web where you can repeatedly benefit.

Autoresponders: With a great autoresponder series, you can write copy which is delivered in a sequence, regardless of when a prospect signs up. This will enable you to automate your marketing and free up time to refine other aspects of your business. And they’re great for creating rapport and trust with your customers.

The next hot communication technology. Kennedy is a notorious technophobe; he doesn’t personally use email or the web at all.

But like many smart businesspeople, he’s willing to make money with new technology even though he personally dislikes it. In fact, Sonia seemed to have experienced a warm reception when she recently spoke at one of his conferences.

As long as a marketing tactic is ethical, be willing to consider it even if you aren’t personally a fan. If you hate Facebook but that’s where your customers are, you may want to suck it up.

13. Avoid employee sabotage

For those who use VAs or other employees (whether they’re on a contract or a regular payroll), there are some special areas to watch out for.

Employees are a reflection of both you and your business. Whether they are ringing up sales or answering email, they are ambassadors for your policies, and for how you feel about your customers.

In my first business, there were times when I would leave my shop on an errand only to come back to a rather unpleasant surprise.

“You said WHAT?”

“To who?!?!”

Delegating is a great thing (and usually necessary if you want your business to grow). But you must be the captain of your own marketing ship, as well as the navigator and the crew.

Even the most valuable employees are still just that — employees. And no one will ever care as much about your business as you do.

This is one reason the Partnering Profits model makes so much sense in the online world. Small businesses are easier and easier to create. It makes perfect sense to partner with people to run them with you, sharing the workload and the profit.

14. Hiring and firing experts

Learn from the best, but take everything with a grain of salt.

I’ve bought and absorbed numerous info products over the last year. Some were good, some were great, and a few were barely better than lousy.

Nevertheless, even the worst has taught me something.

You won’t learn it all in a day or a download, nor should you expect to. Someone asked an awesome question in Sonia’s Remarkable Marketing Blueprint forum the other day. They wondered, “What’s the point in having memberships in different sites, like Lateral Action, Third Tribe Marketing, and the Blueprint?”

I’m a member of all three, so I’m happy to share my thoughts on that.

There isn’t a single download that holds all the answers. Like life, we pick up a bit here and a bit there, all of it blending to make us who we are. We experience things differently at different times. True success is a slow and steady climb, rung by rung.

When you involve yourself with quality people who are putting out quality information, you get a better ladder. You still have to do the climbing yourself..

There is no guru or authority who can give you all the answers.

Not Dan Kennedy, not Brian Clark, not Sean Platt.

That said, you want to make sure you’re taking advice from someone who’s walked the walk.

In Cameron Crowe’s much-quoted movie “Say Anything“, there’s a scene where the hero, Lloyd Dobler, is standing at the gas station listening to a handful of lonely men handing out relationship advice. To which Lloyd says:

If you guys know so much about women, how come you’re here at, like, the Gas ‘n’ Sip on a Saturday night, completely alone drinking beers with no women anywhere?

Good question.

I would strongly recommend Dan Kennedy’s Ultimate Marketing Plan as a powerful resource that should be in any copywriter’s toolbox. He’s “walked the walk” and advised thousands of traditional businesses. And with a little creativity, his advice works just as well in the new online environment.

Obviously, the book contains more information than I could squeeze into a few thousand words. But I hope the “Cliff’s Notes” version has been useful!

Read the other posts in this series

About the Author: Sean Platt writes direct response copy, as well as helping authors write, publish and promote their book. Follow him on Twitter.


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Final Lessons Learned from One of the World’s Highest-Paid Copywriters

+ Final Lessons Learned from One of the World’s Highest-Paid Copywriters By admin 02 March 2010 at 7:28 am and have No Comments

image of cash coming out of a laptop

This is the final installment of a three-part series on how to translate advice from marketing guru Dan Kennedy to a new online environment.

One of the smartest things any online marketer can do is to study the “old school” guys who wrote direct mail, magazine ads, and other artifacts of advertising history.

Why? Because it took a tremendous understanding of the psychology of persuasion to make those tactics work.

When you pair shiny new communication technology with tried-and-true methods to persuade and sell, you hugely increase your odds of success.

So let’s continue exploring what old-school guru Dan Kennedy can teach us about 21st-century marketing. This week we’ll cover lessons 11 through 14 from Kennedy’s book The Ultimate Marketing Plan.

I can’t promise these tips will make cash start spewing out of your laptop. But they do represent a lot of sound business thinking.

(Incidentally, the links to the book are Amazon affiliate links, which means if you buy it, I’ll be able to buy a pack of gum! Put any of this advice into action and you should get quite a lot more out of the deal.)

11. Create a short-term sales surge

One of the factors that plagues most small businesses, especially when they’re starting out, is a shortage of cash.

Creating quick “sales surges” is one of Kennedy’s specialties, and he has a lot of suggestions for how to do that. (For more ideas, I can strongly recommend picking up his book.)

Essentially, though, all the variations come down to one basic strategy:

  1. Make a great offer.
  2. Limit it in time, number of copies you’ll sell, or both.
  3. Make sure you come up with a good story or reason for the promotion.

Kennedy, as you can imagine, gives some rather old-school ideas like red tag sales or “My accountant thinks I’m crazy!”

He also likes to pluck interesting themes out of current events. For example, at a recent conference he invited loyal customers to bring old copies of his products in a “Cash for Clunkers” promotion.

Kennedy’s creativity is mostly involved in coming up with a reason for his promotions. But if selling information is part of what you do, you can also create a brand-new product for your “cash surge.” It doesn’t have to be extensive (it’s annoying how often we’re short on both cash and time). In fact, you can offer something that you develop over the weekend.

These “surges” can help any business, small or large, get through the lean times and amplify earnings during the best. And not only do short-term surges bring in cash, they also build your list of customers, strengthening your business for the long haul.

12. Take Advantage of New Marketing Technologies

As you might imagine, readers of Copyblogger are well ahead of the curve here. If any of these are missing from your current communication mix, you can very profitably add them to make your business stronger.

Audio, Video and Webinars: Record a meeting, training or presentation and post it to the web where you can repeatedly benefit.

Autoresponders: With a great autoresponder series, you can write copy which is delivered in a sequence, regardless of when a prospect signs up. This will enable you to automate your marketing and free up time to refine other aspects of your business. And they’re great for creating rapport and trust with your customers.

The next hot communication technology. Kennedy is a notorious technophobe; he doesn’t personally use email or the web at all.

But like many smart businesspeople, he’s willing to make money with new technology even though he personally dislikes it. In fact, Sonia seemed to have experienced a warm reception when she recently spoke at one of his conferences.

As long as a marketing tactic is ethical, be willing to consider it even if you aren’t personally a fan. If you hate Facebook but that’s where your customers are, you may want to suck it up.

13. Avoid employee sabotage

For those who use VAs or other employees (whether they’re on a contract or a regular payroll), there are some special areas to watch out for.

Employees are a reflection of both you and your business. Whether they are ringing up sales or answering email, they are ambassadors for your policies, and for how you feel about your customers.

In my first business, there were times when I would leave my shop on an errand only to come back to a rather unpleasant surprise.

“You said WHAT?”

“To who?!?!”

Delegating is a great thing (and usually necessary if you want your business to grow). But you must be the captain of your own marketing ship, as well as the navigator and the crew.

Even the most valuable employees are still just that — employees. And no one will ever care as much about your business as you do.

This is one reason the Partnering Profits model makes so much sense in the online world. Small businesses are easier and easier to create. It makes perfect sense to partner with people to run them with you, sharing the workload and the profit.

14. Hiring and firing experts

Learn from the best, but take everything with a grain of salt.

I’ve bought and absorbed numerous info products over the last year. Some were good, some were great, and a few were barely better than lousy.

Nevertheless, even the worst has taught me something.

You won’t learn it all in a day or a download, nor should you expect to. Someone asked an awesome question in Sonia’s Remarkable Marketing Blueprint forum the other day. They wondered, “What’s the point in having memberships in different sites, like Lateral Action, Third Tribe Marketing, and the Blueprint?”

I’m a member of all three, so I’m happy to share my thoughts on that.

There isn’t a single download that holds all the answers. Like life, we pick up a bit here and a bit there, all of it blending to make us who we are. We experience things differently at different times. True success is a slow and steady climb, rung by rung.

When you involve yourself with quality people who are putting out quality information, you get a better ladder. You still have to do the climbing yourself..

There is no guru or authority who can give you all the answers.

Not Dan Kennedy, not Brian Clark, not Sean Platt.

That said, you want to make sure you’re taking advice from someone who’s walked the walk.

In Cameron Crowe’s much-quoted movie “Say Anything“, there’s a scene where the hero, Lloyd Dobler, is standing at the gas station listening to a handful of lonely men handing out relationship advice. To which Lloyd says:

If you guys know so much about women, how come you’re here at, like, the Gas ‘n’ Sip on a Saturday night, completely alone drinking beers with no women anywhere?

Good question.

I would strongly recommend Dan Kennedy’s Ultimate Marketing Plan as a powerful resource that should be in any copywriter’s toolbox. He’s “walked the walk” and advised thousands of traditional businesses. And with a little creativity, his advice works just as well in the new online environment.

Obviously, the book contains more information than I could squeeze into a few thousand words. But I hope the “Cliff’s Notes” version has been useful!

Read the other posts in this series

About the Author: Sean Platt writes direct response copy, as well as helping authors write, publish and promote their book. Follow him on Twitter.


Scribe for SEO Copywriting


Thesis Theme for WordPress

See the rest here: 
Final Lessons Learned from One of the World’s Highest-Paid Copywriters

+ Friday Recap: Dance Like You Mean It Edition By admin 26 February 2010 at 5:46 pm and have No Comments

So I’m getting pretty anxious. I don’t know if it’s the caffeine IV drip from this morning or the tornado brain I get before leaving town for a monster search relay like SMX West, but things are getting all Fri-dazed up in here.

I mean, is it true that I might really hear Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer address a house packed with search marketers? As Marty Weintraub of aimClear wonders, could the occasion of Ballmer keynoting a search conference usher in a new SEO era? How refreshing to think that Microhoo may support the SEO industry!

Here’s a story that seems to defy understanding. Facebook has been awarded the U.S. patent for the (implicit) social network feed. According to All Facebook, the implicit feed refers to the list of actions taken by friends and not the updates voluntarily posted by friends. As my industry friend @Pamela_Lund so aptly put:

tweet by @Pamela_Lund

I’ve been thinking for a while how awesome it would be to have a complete guide to microformats, listing all the different kinds of microformats and how to implement them. As soon as I scrawl “guide to microformats” on my wish list, voil

+ Google and Ask to Battle for Q&A Supremacy By admin 11 February 2010 at 5:37 pm and have No Comments

aardvark asking a question

This week Google has made bold moves to extend its reach of Internet services. They’ve announced their intentions in the territories of ISPs, social networking, SEO consulting, and Google is now going after community-based question and answer.

Google is a threatening competitor in any market, bringing with it deep pockets and an impressive brain trust. So when news broke that Google has acquired Aardvark, a question and answer–based social network, it was clear that the big dog was going after Ask.com’s neighborhood.

So what do you do when Google’s coming after you? Doug Leeds, President of Ask.com-U.S., was able to give me a few minutes of his time to answer that very question.

Here’s some of our exchange:

Me: Does Google’s entrance into the Q&A space affect Ask’s strategy at all?

Doug Leeds: Bring it on. I don’t think it’s going to change anything really in the short-term. And Aardvark is very nascent; they have a very small user base. I don’t believe that they can scale quickly. Ask gets a million questions a day, and there’s no way Aardvark could handle that kind of volume without seriously changing their technology.

We think that people want this now. They don’t want to wait for a year, two years, to get their questions answered. Whether that means questions answered from Web pages that are already published and have the answers on them, or the answers that haven’t been published anywhere and therefore you have to index knowledge that people have in their head as opposed to what they published, and extract that knowledge out through routing questions to a real-time person — which is what Aardvark is doing and is exactly what we’re going to be launching in the spring — we’ve been working hard on it here.

This is what users see today and we believe we’re perfectly positioned. We’ve got the brand, we’ve got the legacy, we’ve got the percentage of traffic many, many times higher than the number of questions that Google does or anyone else in search. So this doesn’t change our strategy at all. It just makes us redouble our effort and focus more and it kind of tells us and anybody else that says, “Is this the right strategy?” that absolutely it’s the right strategy. At least to the extent that Google believes it is, too.

Speaking to the need for social Q&A is today’s announcement on the Norwegian Inside AdWords blog that site clinics will be offered. In this case one can use a translation tool to find out what’s being said in the post. But that’s not always the case, and there’s nothing as reliable as a person who knows their stuff.

So when the BCI writers wondered what was really written in the post, Susan sent out a quick tweet: “Anyone know Norwegian?” Her friend knew a friend who was happy to volunteer her time to translate the post. And know what? The human-translated version is more readable than the auto-translated version, and I’m guessing, more in keeping with the Google blogs usually familiar tone.

Yes, humans are still good for something. That Ask and now Google are using technology to tap into the human resource is a development full of exciting potential. Ask has the impassioned head start, Google has the muscle, and users are the winners in the world of Q&A.

This week Google has made bold moves to extend its reach of Internet services. They’ve announced their intentions in the territories of ISPs, social networking, SEO consulting, and is now going after community-based question and answer.

Google is a threatening competitor in any market, bringing with it deep pockets and an impressive brain trust. So when news broke that Google has acquired Aardvark, a question and answer–based social network, it was clear that the big dog was going after Ask.com’s neighborhood.

So what do you do when Google’s coming after you? Doug Leeds, President of Ask.com-U.S., was able to give me a few minutes of his time to answer that very question.

Google and Ask to Battle for Q&A Supremacy was originally published on BruceClay.com, an SEO services company.

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Google and Ask to Battle for Q&A Supremacy

+ Be a Playful Blogger By admin 10 February 2010 at 5:44 am and have No Comments

playful.pngOne of the things that first attracted me to blogging was the creative genius that I saw at work in many of the blogs going around at that time.

There was an ‘anything goes’ type attitude among bloggers who were pushing the boundaries of what could be done on a blog. Of course I look back now and much of this past creativity has become quite normal now (for example I clearly remember seeing a blogger include a short video in a post a number of years back and thinking it was cutting edge).

Another thing I loved about blogging was the humor, irreverence and fun I saw happening on blogs. Bloggers were not constrained by the editorial process, policy and standards that journalists worked with and as a result some of the content that they produced was like writing I’d not seen before (note: I’m not saying that editorial processes, policy and standards of journalism are a bad thing – but that what I saw bloggers doing was markedly different to what I saw happening in mainstream media at that time).

Blogging was an exciting genre – we were cutting new ground as a community of bloggers.

Of course this tradition of pushing boundaries and expressing ourselves creatively lives on – in fact it’s a real feature of many successful blogs.

Be a Playful Blogger

In a presentation last year on principles of successful blogging – one of the points I made that tried to get at this pushing of the boundaries and new way of writing was titled – Be Playful.

Not every successful blog is ‘playful’ but many are. Whether it be in the experimentation with new mediums, tools and ideas, or whether it be in the type of content that they produce – almost anything goes when it comes to blogging.

In fact as I look back on the most memorable posts that I’ve published on my blogs it is often the ‘playful’ ones that stick out. A few examples:

A few quick starting points for being playful

There are many ways to ‘be playful’ on a blog but a few starting points include:

  • Experiment with your voice – it is often not ‘what’ you say but ‘how’ you say it that grabs people’s attention.
  • Humor – careful use of humor can really make an impact upon readers.
  • Surprise – much of what I’m trying to get at with this post is to allow yourself to do things a little different with your blog – things that surprise your readers will make them stop in their tracks a little and take a second look at what you’re doing.
  • Fun Projects – pretty much any project that allows your readers to do something fun and interactive would fit into this category. On DPS this would include our Weekend Photography Challenges where we ask readers to submit an image on a theme each weekend or here on ProBlogger it’d include our group writing projects over the years. These projects are largely about fun, interacting with others and a little self promotion for readers.

How have you been playful on your blog?

Being playful is not something you can make a definitive list of how to do. Playful blogging comes in all shapes and sizes so I’d love to hear how you’ve done it on your blog (or how you’ve seen others do it). Please feel free to share a link below to your examples!

Post from: Blog Tips at ProBlogger.

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+ Porsche Unveils 911 Turbo S with 530 HP of Happiness By admin 08 February 2010 at 10:58 am and have No Comments

Porsche 911 Turbo S


The engineers at Porsche have developed a range-topping sports car designed to deliver the finest in terms of power, performance and driving dynamics: the 911 Turbo S. The heart of this exclusive high-performance athlete is the six-cylinder boxer engine boosted by two exhaust gas turbochargers with variable turbine geometry. The flat-six engine has an increase in power over the 911 Turbo by 30 to 530 hp and maximum torque is a most impressive 516 lb-ft.

Despite its significant increase in power and dynamic performance, the new 911 Turbo S does not consume any more fuel than the Porsche 911 Turbo, making it by far the most efficient sports car in its class. The 911 Turbo S Coupe is EPA rated at 17 mpg city, 24 highway.

The 911 Turbo S comes exclusively with the seven-speed Porsche-Doppelkupplungsgetriebe (just say PDK), Porsche’s Double-Clutch Gearbox, delivering power to the Porsche Traction Management (PTM) all-wheel drive system. The increase in driving enjoyment is ensured by the now standard Dynamic Engine Mounts and Porsche Torque Vectoring (PTV), including the standard mechanical differential lock on the rear axle. In conjunction with Launch Control, part of the standard Sport Chrono Package Turbo, the 911 Turbo S accelerates from a standstill to 60 mph in 3.1 seconds.

Porsche 911 Turbo S

Top speed is 195 mph. Extra-light and fade resistant Porsche Ceramic Composite Brakes provides outstanding performance in terms of stopping power and controlled application of the brakes. Other standard equipment on the 911 Turbo S includes Dynamic Corning Lights, 19-inch RS Spyder wheels with central locking, a three-spoke sports steering wheel with gearshift paddles, adaptive sports seats, cruise control, and a CD/DVD changer. The special twin-tone leather upholstery in Black/Cream or Black/Titanium Blue, along with the new Ice Blue Metallic exterior color underlines the exclusivity of the first Turbo S in five years.

The new Porsche 911 Turbo S will be at dealerships as both a Coupe and Cabriolet in May 2010. The 2011 Turbo S Coupe and Turbo S Cabriolet prices are $159,100 and $170,200, respectively. Start saving those pennies!

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Porsche Unveils 911 Turbo S with 530 HP of Happiness

+ What I Want in a Windows 7 Tablet By admin 02 February 2010 at 2:08 pm and have No Comments

When I think of the uses for a Tablet I keep coming back to the same thing over and over again..
Email – Communication – Browsing
Email that’s a no brainer, I need access to my Webmail and Office mail so something like the push email features that make Blackberry very strong.
Communication another no brainer, Bluetooth and [...]

What I Want in a Windows 7 Tablet is a post from: Dave Naylor’s SEO Blog.

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What I Want in a Windows 7 Tablet