Posts Tagged ‘ iphone

Measuring How Search Ads Drive Offline Conversions 04 March 2010 at 12:48 pm by admin

Moderator: Misty Locke, President, Range Online Media & Chief Strategy Officer, iProspect, Range Online Media / iProspect

Speakers:

Nadir Hussain, COO, Media Flint, Inc.
Leigh McMillan, SVP, Marchex Voicestar, Marchex
Wister Walcott, co-founder and VP of Products, Marin Software
Vivian Yang, Senior Manager, Global Direct to Consumer Marketing, Electronic Arts, Inc.

The room is pretty sparse because Ask the Search Engines is happening in the large hall. I know there’s great coverage of that happening so I decided to give readers an alternative with the Analytics & Conversion Track.

Misty explains that Yahoo! did a study in 2007 called ROBO (research online, buy offline) that attempted to quantify “the impact of search marketing and display advertising on consumer shopping behavior and the in-store sales of major retailers.”

slide offline and search 1

Misty: Why aren’t we looking at direct ROI from online efforts toward offline sales?

Wister: It’s complicated and not everyone’s in a position to observe that interaction. Direct response marketers aren’t going to want to spend when they don’t see the direct ROI. And the person that hired that person is trusting them to make the decisions because they don’t know search.

The marketer is on the one hand being held to their results, and on the other hand may know there’s something more there.

Vivian: The biggest question the ROBO study is trying to solve is, search engines are always asking for a big share of a marketer’s budget, but even though 87 percent of people are spending time online, e-commerce only is a single digit of sales. If I only generate a single-digit of sales, then I’ll only get a single digit piece of the budget pie. There’s a question of why people spend so much time online and contribute to a small portion of sales.

We need to understand the consumer’s behavior. From awareness to excitement to eventually closing the deal, it’s a long process and each touch point has a different measurement associated with it.

Misty: Where should I start?

Nadir: Start with search and add in display as well. They point to be able to track. The Internet has spoiled us into thinking every conversion and click is trackable. Because the action isn’t happening online it becomes more difficult to track. But start with search because it’s easy to track.

Leigh: Track your phone calls, including from search. A lot of phone calls for service-based businesses, and these are being driven by search campaigns, whether you know it or not. Attributing these calls to search ROI will let you spend more.

Wister is gong to share his slides, which cover different ways to look at search and offline conversions.

Online to In-Store

  • Q: does on-site activity drive din-store activity?
  • Experiment design:
    • Create equivalent test and control geographies/products
    • Drive increased traffic to test locations/products
    • Compare preliminary conversion events (e.g. product detail page view)
    • Compare in-store product lift

You should see that when you’re spending more ad dollars on your test, the conversion dollars will go up. Then you want to see if there are additional sales for the product inside the store.

Online to Phone

  • Q: accurate value of keywords, creatives?
  • Implementation requirements:
    • Session-level phone number mapping
    • Post-call closure

If you have a lot of keywords you have to map it to the sessions. With post-call closure look at call length (a long call could be a sign of a conversion). Also, you could have the call tech report info after the call, like whether it closed or not.

Within Online: Display to SEM

  • Q: display supports brand?
  • Experiment design
    • Integrate SEM and ad server tracking
    • Drive traffic to test and control ads / geos evenly
    • Compare CTR
      • For visitors that saw test ad
      • For visitors that saw control ad

Nadir is presenting next. What are the different kinds of offline conversions?

  1. Phone calls
  2. Did the phone call result in a sale?
  3. Potential client walking into a physical store (not trackable)
  4. A person redeeming a coupon at a physical store

Why is it so important to track offline conversions? Offline leads are even more likely to result in a sale. Phone call leads are warmer than a form lead. It is a huge mistake to optimize your campaigns based on only partial data, i.e. based only on online conversions.

He tracks which keywords within AdWords campaigns generate phone calls. If you put it together with form analytics data, you can have an aggregated column of cost per lead, driven by keywords.

Leigh jumps in and says that she thinks of call analytics, not just tracking. Think beyond where a person came from and when. With call recording you can pull out a lot of business intelligence, understanding what, down to the keyword, is driving calls. You can improve customer service. It’s not just about tracking where a call comes from.

Audience question: What valuation are you placing on calls compared to conversions and does that vary by cost-point?

Leigh: It varies a lot by industry. In finance, a phone call and a form lead may be valued equally. With her customers, they value phone calls higher than phone leads simply because they convert higher.

Q: What’s the lag time between receiving a form and getting a call from the same customer? Also, what happens when you cancel your vendor and you want to keep your phone numbers?

Nadir: In their experience, they see that if a user submits a form and doesn’t receive a phone call from the sales team, they’ll call within 24 hours. For question two, they quarantine newly acquired phone numbers 30 days to make sure the previous life of the phone number is gone.

Leigh: All toll frees have been used at some point. Quarantine 800s longer than 877s. Plus misdials are easy with toll frees. The goals is just to minimize the noise.

Misty asks Nadir if he wants to finish his slide presentation and he says that he’s happy going with the question driven model that’s surfaced.

Q: My products, video games are driven by in-store purchases. Can you share any info on this topic as it relates to the game industry?

Vivian: Today, more than 3/4 of sales come from in-store sales, and that’s mirrored in their marketing budget. They’ve remained a packaged goods company. But if you look at the video game category, it’s changing. When the economy went soft, video games went stagnant, followed by single digit and then double digit declines. The video game segment is shrinking along with the store shelves. But they’re seeing growth online. They had to figure out what was the optimal marketing budget mix. They found a strong correlation between search interest and offline sales.

slide offline and search 2

There’s a gap in different stages of a product launch, from pre-launch to launch phase to sustain or capture, and then long-tail. There’s a gap between demand and what was captured at every stage. Big missed opportunity.

The quick and easy way was to identify which metric matters. They knew that if there was one piece they were going to influence it was going to be the channel that occupies the majority of the budget – TV. So they thought, could search be tied in to TV? It’s a painful organizational exercise as different departments come together. They talked a lot about what is the marketing being used for. A TV spot is used to brand awareness. When they launched Dante’s Inferno through the Super Bowl commercial, they tracked the lift of traffic to sites and searches? Was there a higher engagement level? That was tracked down to the sales.

Dante’s Inferno has also been building a social app on Facebook. A new feature or character is released at regular intervals, every few weeks. Video game is still very much a word of mouth vertical, so getting that engagement has been a boost.

Misty: We’ve been talking about call tracking for 10 years now, so why hasn’t it taken off?

Leigh: People are doing it more, though I think it was slow to take off because of an over-focus on tracking online conversions right around that same time. There also wasn’t a scalable way to move someone from an online search to a phone call. With Skype and the iPhone, calls and search traffic is converging. Price for call tracking has come down in the last year, even, and the cost may have been prohibitive in the past.

Leigh’s slides are going up now.

slide offline and search 3

Wister: You may want to try “poor man’s call tracking” if that’s you option. Send an e-mail after the call. The e-mail is pretty sparse, but with a URL. When they click through you can capture a cookie and see what keyword they converted on. (I don’t know that I caught all that right since it doesn’t make sense… Chime in if you know what that’s supposed to say! *Nudge, nudge, Wister* )

Q: What are the top sources for staying up on search to offline?

Nadir: Watch what Google is saying. With click to call ads, Google will be tracking that themselves.

Leigh: Matt Booth, an analyst previously at Citysearch, knows a lot about calls.

Measuring How Search Ads Drive Offline Conversions was originally published on BruceClay.com, an SEO tools provider.

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Measuring How Search Ads Drive Offline Conversions

+ Keynote – The State Of The Search Union By admin 04 March 2010 at 10:47 am and have No Comments

Moderator: Chris Sherman, Executive Editor, Search Engine Land

Speakers:

Vanessa Fox, Contributing Editor, Search Engine Land
Avinash Kaushik, Analytics Evangelist, Google Inc.
Misty Locke, President, Range Online Media & Chief Strategy Officer, iProspect, Range Online Media / iProspect
David Roth, Director of Search Engine Marketing, Yahoo! Inc.

Keynote, Day Three SMX

Hi everyone! It’s the final day of the SMX West conference and I’m leaving it all here. Blog ’til you drop, baby! There’s a good-sized crowd for today’s keynote, a roundtable convo between some heavy hitters of search.

Chris welcomes everyone. When they’ve done panels like this in the past, he’s usually saying Google, Google, Google. But in the past year we’ve seen more radical change than he’s observed in the last 15 years since he’s covered the search engines. It’s really exciting, and that’s why they’ve assembled this stellar panel.

Last year this time we were in the early stages of an economic meltdown and everyone was uncertain about how the recovery would take place and what it meant for a new industry like search marketing. So does search still have a bright future?

Dave: As a search marketer, it allowed him to show their stuff and gave them a reason to shift strategies. In his experience they were able to support business goals in a shifting landscape through search marketing. Also, he’s seen a shift back to SEO and not just in paid.

Misty: Some businesses as a whole saw pain points, but e-commerce areas performed well. In some areas, e-commerce business grew when they weren’t expecting it to. Some record-breaking months and quarters were seen thanks to search. Both customer acquisition and customer loyalty were both affected positively.

Chris: The Super Bowl is the big spend event for TV advertiser. We’ve seen several advertisers pull out of it this year. Is that a shift online?

Vanessa: With Pepsi, they decided to shift their money to social media. But what struck her when watching Super Bowl ads was that many large brands were just starting to recognize search was important. It seemed better than last year, but slowly edging up and there’s still a lot of work left for large brands.

Chris: In terms of branding, there seems to be an argument that branding and search don’t mix. Do you believe that?

Avinash: What’s great about search is that relevancy and accountability are there. Branding was a great metaphor for wanting to do something without understanding the outcome. But in search, the case is that you can use it effectively for many desired outcomes. When people say, “I want to run a branding campaign,” his first question is what do you want out of it? A one time thing, a long-term relationship, and so on. Search is an effective way to show relevance for many goals.

Chris: It seems there’s finally a good number two in Microsoft and Yahoo!

Dave: It’s a huge project and a lot of resources are being put in the partnership. The proof will be in the pudding as advertisers start to migrate. When things like this happen, he’s usually the one being the guinea pig.

Chris: There was a lot of animosity early on in the media around the partnership.

Dave: Yahoo! search and engineer resources will move to Microsoft but a lot remains to be seen. Everyone on this project understands that this is a must-work project so he thinks they’ll figure out a way to make this happen.

Chris: What’s the reaction of clients across the spectrum?

Misty: They’re excited, not only clients but also the search managers at her agency. It allows her to shift strategy, so instead of 70/20/10 it’ll be 60/40. The opportunity is big around reach and the additional volume this will bring. One question will be will Microsoft still bring us some of the highest conversion rates once Yahoo! comes in. Bing Cashback has been a big opportunity for her clients.

Avinash: Competition is a good thing. It gets people to innovate and do better and not get stale. The way each engine works and the kind of people that use each engine is very different. You should have a strategy for SEO for each engine, a portfolio strategy because you will find more customers and find your dollars more effectively.

Vanessa: She’s waiting to see how the partnership shakes out. She doesn’t know how Searchmonkey and BOSS will work when Yahoo! doesn’t have its own index. Yahoo! did have a play for innovation and for startups, so she’s reserving judgment until the partnership settles in.

Chris: Google has a culture of being open and yet opaque. With Caffeine we’ve heard it’s on one data center. What impact is the Caffeine update going to have on SEO? And is Google going to continue in it’s sprit of tools and openness?

Vanessa: Once she looked at all the changes by Google in the last year, normally she tells people not to think much about SEO besides the foundation, but now it’s really important because there have been so many changes to Google search. With Caffeine, she doesn’t think it will have an SEO impact, because there’s no rankings change, other than indirectly, for instance being able to crawl a site quickly.

Avinash: If every Googler woke up and decided they would answer questions from webmasters, he doesn’t think we’d ever be able to answer all the questions. One part of the tool strategy is trying to help people at scale and give you the transparency and info you need to make better decisions. Also, the tool strategy is to help you make better decisions with search better. He’s been “orgasmic” about the amount of data Google has made available, like Insights for Search, geo and trends organic search data all there.

Chris: There’s a little confusion of who’s doing what regarding Yahoo! and Microsoft.

Dave: Yahoo!’s committed to search, and one way is on the sales side. They’ll be managing both display and search for their network, and maintain the high-touch with big customers. A lot of smaller and self-service customers will be managed on the Microsoft side. With the platform, he thinks the goal is to make the adCenter platform the platform of choice for both Bing and Yahoo!

The question is what can we do given the data and assets we have to serve ads better for the consumer. Buying behavioral and demographic targets, there are teams focused on creating better ad products and technologies for consumers and advertisers.

Chris: People say we’re seeing social media replacing search for interactions online. What can search marketers do, not just to be social, but to anticipate what’s going to happen in the next 12 or 18 months?

Vanessa: Someone was interviewing her and said that search is old news, so why are trying to get people to optimize for search? People aren’t done searching. She doesn’t think there’s an either or thing for search and social.

Misty: She thinks social elevates the opportunity for search marketing, breaking down the boundaries between marketing departments. If she’s looking at a marketing campaign, search is being given the responsibility to drive campaigns. Lift campaigns, branding campaigns, and so on, marketers have that ability at their fingertips through social and real-time info to drive search volume.

Dave: He’s always said, sit tight, the rest of the marketing community is coming your way, search marketers. Search engines are pulling social into search, which is great. All the discipline and accountability that search has grown up with is going to be a huge advantage for companies.

Avinash: The media loves “or” stories even though we’re in an “and” world. There’s no either or, and that brings me back to my point about having a search marketing portfolio and that each channel is used for what it’s good at. You wouldn’t want to use the shouting from TV ads within a social media campaign. If you execute each strategy optimally, the bottom line impact you’ll have is much broader than you’d have imagined.

Chris: If you’re going all of sudden from mass market messaging to individual touch, how do you manage that info overload? And will we see siloing, with search absorbed in a silo of an organization?

Avinash: We put on the wrong lens when we say, “How do we make advertising more relevant?” Instead, what we do today is try to influence people, and one emerging way to influence people is to have these conversations. What is sure is shouting at people is going away. He believes the single greatest reason for Google’s success is relevance. Marketers have to accept that the way we influence people is changing, because marketers don’t decide what works, the customers do. With question two, he doesn’t see search going into a silo, because it’s used for a broad spectrum of goals.

Dave: If you look at social media managed in an organization, you see it’s the first channel that’s delivered on the promise of customer engagement. Q: Who should own social media in an organization? A: Well, who owns the paper in an organization?
That puts it succinctly. Social is breaking down the barriers because it has to be implemented across an organization.

Vanessa: With data, if all the areas of marketing can share the data there’s going to be much more understanding and it benefits them all.

Chris: What happens when unethical marketers get a hold of all that data?

Avinash: If you look at the sides of the Egyptian tombs, there are spam comments in that. Spam will continue to be a problem for a very long time. The best advertising channels can do is do what they can to suppress it and to provide incentives to doing things the right way.

Misty: There will always be spam. The trick for ethical marketers is overdoing our efforts for authenticity Consumers can sniff it out and sometimes be judged too harshly.

Dave: There’s the potential to do unethical things as well as criminal things. There’s not enough awareness and understanding of advertising mediums by the public and by the government. The risk of regulation is that there’s a big lack of understanding and it’s scary to think what regulation can do to marketing. Legislators aren’t up to speed on technologies like these.

Chris: Let’s shift to global. What’s the opportunity for search marketers? And with regulation, how do you work with restrictions and censorship of certain countries? Opportunity or keep watching?

Vanessa: You should always understand your audience. It’s not enough to just localize your content. Understanding the culture and government, you’ll see audiences are very different. I think the government stuff is a whole other issue, but start by understanding the audience.

Avinash: Search marketers outside the U.S. tend to be sophisticated marketers, though there is still a reliance on shout channels. But they’re getting up to speed fast and there’s an opportunity to come up with something very creative in the global market.

Chris: Outside the U.S. we see a big mobile internet population. Is mobile here?

Dave: It’s here but it may not be what we thought it would be. We’ve seen 20 percent smartphone penetration hit, and that could be a sign of big things.

Avinash: On vacation he was looking for something to do with the family and he picked up his Nexus phone and did a voice search. Six seconds later he had driving directions from where he was. In that six seconds the query went to the Google servers, translated the text, found what he was looking for and delivered him an answer. All that is search. It made him think that he has to rethink his search strategy for that kind of a use case, and he doesn’t think people are thinking of that as search. It’s not just a WAP version of a Web page.

Misty: When a client comes to them and says they want to optimize for mobile, she starts by asking lots of questions about the usability of a site. After that, then the client can think of advertising.

Vanessa: The ubiquity of mobile opens up the door for new search opportunities. Users don’t even know if they’re searching when they do things like Urbanspoon or Google Goggles. Most of the world has never had a smartphone before the iPhone, the first time smartphone had a mass audience. Mobile is here.

Keynote – The State Of The Search Union was originally published on BruceClay.com, an SEO services company.

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Keynote – The State Of The Search Union

+ Keynote: Peter Norvig, Google By admin 03 March 2010 at 10:23 am and have No Comments

Last night’s SMX After Dark party was kickin’ — thanks Bing!

Oh, and get this. I left my iPhone at the BCI booth and they locked up the expo hall before I realized it. So last night I was feeling a little concerned. You know how it is when A) you don’t have your phone, and B) you think you know where it is, but you’re not sure, so you realize maybe you’re putting your hope in the wrong thing when really you should be looking elsewhere. Ugh!

Luckily the awesome SMX team worked some of their lovely magic and got the convention center security to let me in to get my phone. Thanks so much, Michelle Robbins, Karen DeWeese, and Santa Clara Convention Center Security! This is one happy, mobile-ready blogger!

Now on to the keynote! Peter Norvig, director of research at Google, is beyond impressive. He’s a search pioneer, an author, a rocket scientist and was an “adult partier” in the Nutcracker. And that isn’t even half of the accomplishments moderator Chris Sherman just rattled off. Google and their geniuses.

Keynote: Peter Norvig

Peter will start by presenting a number of Google’s research projects:

  1. Person Finder: really useful after natural disasters
  2. PowerMeter
  3. Earth Engine: shows deforestation of rain forests
  4. Trike and Snowmobile StreetView: taking StreetView to new frontiers
  5. User Photos in StreetView
  6. Image Swirl: see images related to each other
  7. Web-Scale Image Annotation
  8. Image Rotation Captcha: Instead of swirly, hard to read words, they’re experimenting with having users turn an upside-down picture, right-side up.
  9. Goggles: take a picture and get info on it
  10. Discontinuous Video Scene-Carving
  11. Sharing Cluster Data
  12. App Inventor for Android: introductory program development
  13. Speed Recognition
  14. Punctuation/Capitalization in Transcribed Speech
  15. Translating Phone: translate text, Web pages and documents
  16. Low-Resource MT: Yiddish: Some languages don’t have much written text examples, but they used languages that share attributes with Yiddish and were able to figure out translation
  17. Sound Understanding
  18. Google Squared
  19. Clustering
  20. Attribute Extraction
  21. Browser Size

“You can observe a lot just by watching.” -Yogi Berra

Now Danny Sullivan and Chris Sherman will be throwing out questions.

Q: What’s the biggest thing that came out of the 20 percent project?

One story is that both Gmail and Adsense were built by a Googler because he was frustrated he couldn’t search his e-mail. Machine translation is similar. And speech recognition has come so far since its original iteration.

Q: How hands-on are Google’s founders in 20 percent projects?

They’re still involved, but we don’t see them around as much. I don’t think they have their own 20 percent project because their jobs are pretty much 100 percent.

Q: Are your research facilities around the world separated by project or is it you just can’t fit everyone in Mountain View?

It’s both. Some projects you need to have people that are living in the language and culture. Also, sometimes we need more engineers and we can’t hire everyone from the same pool.

Q: What’s the most hyped technology development?

I think the emphasis is on the right place right now. Mobile emphasis is appropriate. Are we going to have hand-curated tags or be able to machine read the content? That’s going to be messy but I don’t think it’s overhyped any more.

PageRank is one thing that’s overhyped. Yes, the PageRank computation is important, but it’s just one of many things. It’s got the catchy name and the name recognition, but we’ve always looked at all the available data. The infrastructure that we built

Q: Is there a difference between core search vs. ads vs. other projects?

Yeah, in some sense there’s a separation of the house, just like at a newspaper they don’t let the ad department effect the editorial department.

Q: If you want to grow up to be a search engineer, how does someone do that? There’s no school for search engineering.

In other industries you can get trained at school and then step into the field quickly. When people are doing information retrieval in college and then come to Google, after a few months they’ll say, wow this is a whole different world than what I did in school. The books coming out now are getting better now, expanding from library science to search.

Q: What’s the training to become a Googler?

There’s a course they start with, then they get put on a starter project. They get experience and lots of help as they get their feet wet.

Q: Do people move around a lot at Google?

We encourage moving around. We try to keep projects short, three or six months. And you find that people will come up with a new idea as they’re working on a project that they want to develop once it’s over. The infrastructure of departments is parallel, which makes it easy to move around.

Q: Anything you’d like to know from our attendees?

How are we doing?

[The audience applauds!]

…I didn’t do this session justice. So much good stuff and my fingers aren’t awake yet or something. Thankfully there’s a whole slew of bloggers covering this session:

Keynote: Peter Norvig, Google was originally published on BruceClay.com, an SEO services company.

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Keynote: Peter Norvig, Google

+ Friday Recap: The Week in a Jiff Edition By admin 19 February 2010 at 5:24 pm and have No Comments

It’s been a crazy week. I moved desks and now I have a great view out the window. We had a BBQ feast for lunch today. And Christopher and Shannon have been in town, hanging out at SEOToolSet training. Don’t you just love family reunions?

We’ve made it to Friday and it’s time to let off a little steam. So you know the drill on Fridays: news of the (search) world and news of the weird. Away we go!

hermit crab on computer keyboard

I tweeted about this on Monday (hat tip to Susan) and a few peeps liked it so I’m compelled to use it as my opener. I present to you CRABZILLA! I’m told on good authority that Mega Shark is Crabzilla’s only plausible nemesis. I wouldn’t want to take part in that battle. Well, until it’s over, at which point I’ll be there with my fork, butter and maybe a slice of lemon for garnish self-defense.

Are you ready for Google Caffeine? It’s up for debate whether or not the infrastructure update that the search engine said would begin rolling out in the new year has been fully implemented. Still, it’s good to have some guidelines in mind when optimizing a Caffeine-ready site.

A few weeks back the makers of the quintessential doll Barbie asked fans what Barbie’s next job should be. The result is a sign of the techie times we live in. Barbie is a computer engineer! A little in-depth analysis by the BBC suggests some flaws with the way IT Barbie came together, but I’m a fan of the technically minded and feminine woman Barbie’s representing. [Me too. It's IT Barbie-style. —Susan]

Location updates have always posed a danger, and one site highlighting this fact was circulating the Web this week. Please Rob Me aggregates Foursquare updates with a dose of humor, keying in on the fact that people find it trendy to update the world about their empty homes.

Yes, there’s much to be cautious of on the social Web, which is why the demand for online reputation management has rocketed upwards. If you’re looking for innovative ways to defeat unflattering content on the Web, Bury Negative Publicity With New Pages on the Same Domain is a must-read, including tips for sites like Digg, Wikipedia, blogs, and even police blotters.

Photoshop celebrates its 20th anniversary today! What would we ever do without that fabulous photo editing suite? Gotta love the interactive timeline Adobe’s put together. Li’l guy’s come a long way!

A massive botnet, called the Kneber botnet, was uncovered by security analysts. The infected network included more than 74,000 personal, corporate and government computers, yet the botnet was recognized by less than 10 percent of antivirus software. It’s being attributed to two criminal gangs that have been cooperating with each other.

virtual kaleidoscope

What’s a girl to do when even a wholesome place like the Internet is corrupted by criminal gangs? Play with a virtual kaleidoscope, of course! That toy right there is hours of fun, and it’s shared with love, care of Mrs. Esparza! [Hi, Mom! —Susan]

Of course, the Internet has facilitated sharing across the world, and social media is a big part of that. But which social network is really driving shared content? According to data from widgets company Gigya, Facebook is responsible for 44 percent of content shared via social networks. Twitter’s next with 29 percent, followed by Yahoo! at 18 percent. As a whole, social media sites account for 75 percent of all content shared online.

Susan got giddy when she shared this story in the Skype chat this week. It looks like in a couple years, one terabyte solid state hard drives the size of a postage stamp will be a reality. I believe her comment was along the lines of: “Imagine having a terabyte flash drive. You could carry your whole life around. Perhaps on a fashionable necklace.” Now that’s a girl who’s thinking of the possibilities! [It's no more geeky than the hashtag necklace I got this week. —Susan]

On a related note, it was interesting to learn that we’re facing a worldwide shortage of flash memory chips thanks to the iPhone and other Apple devices. Apparently the iPhone consumes 30 percent of the world’s supply of NAND flash chips.

If you had to describe the average player of Farmville or Mafia Wars or another game on a social networking site, what would you say? Are you picturing a 43-year-old woman, by any chance? If so, you’d be right! According to a survey in the U.S. and U.K., most social gamers are females between 30 and 59 who work full time. [This research is supported by anecdote. I have seven aunts and they all play Farmville like it's their job. —Susan]

And finally, as soon as I read a tweet from instantly popular @sh*tmydadsays account on Twitter, I was a follower. So it is with great joy and anticipation that I spread the rumor that William Shatner will play dad on the TV series pilot based on the Twitter account. This could just be the best show of the 21st century. No pressure.

Friday Recap: The Week in a Jiff Edition was originally published on BruceClay.com, an SEO services company.

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Friday Recap: The Week in a Jiff Edition

+ Your First Week of Blogging – Plan Your Future Blog Posts By admin 18 February 2010 at 6:17 am and have No Comments

Lets look at another idea of what to do in your first week of blogging. Related to our previous post in this series which focused upon writing compelling content – is a task that I think can be a very useful habit to get into – developing an Editorial Calendar, or at the very least doing some planning on the future content that you’ll be producing for your blog.

Today I want to show you three techniques that I use in my process of future planning for posts.

1. Capturing Ideas

One of the most useful folders that I have on my computers desktop is one that I simply call ‘Ideas’.

Screen shot 2010-02-18 at 10.24.40 AM.png

Inside that folder are four other folders – one for each of my blogs and another for miscellaneous ideas.

Screen shot 2010-02-18 at 10.26.01 AM.png

Inside each of those folders are many many text files. Each text file is a different idea for a blog post.

  • Some are completely empty and the name of the file is simply a short phrase which is an idea I could write about.
  • Other text files are simply a list of 3-4 points that I could write about.
  • Others are more developed ideas – they might contain an introduction or even a full draft of a post (although generally once they are at this stage I move them over to saving them as a draft in WordPress).

These text files generally begin their lives at random times during the day when I’m thinking about something else and an idea pops into my mind. The key is to capture them quickly, record them in a way that they can be found again and to develop them as much as I’m able to as the idea is fresh.

Sometimes, if I have the time and energy for it, I’ll work on the ideas for a while straight away but many times I simply get as much of the idea down into the file as I can and then save it for another time.

This means that at any point of time I have quite a few post ideas at different stages that I can tap into.

2. MindMapping

mind-map.pngI won’t write an extended post on this as I’ve covered it previously but one of the most powerful techniques that I’ve ever used for coming up with blog ideas to write about is mind mapping.

You might choose a different method of brainstorming – but the key is to set aside specific times (I try to do it monthly) to simply come up with ideas to write about.

You can read more about how I do this in at Discover Hundreds of Post Ideas for Your Blog with Mind Mapping. Note: I used to use whiteboards for this process but now use a Mac tool called MindNode.

Generally once I’ve done the mind mapping exercise I’ll then convert the best of the ideas that I’ve generated into text files to save in the ideas folders mentioned above.

Note: Incidentally – I also use mind mapping when planning a new blog. It’s similar to the technique outlined above on coming up with post topics but I find it also helpful in planning out categories for a new blog.

3. Editorial Calendars

I’ve used a variety of approaches to creating editorial calendars over the years. I’ve adapted my approach over time to suit the different stages of my blogs. These days as I’m actively editing two decent sized blogs with up to 30 posts a week I find that I need to map out what posts I’ll be doing ahead of time.

In doing this you’re able to develop content that builds momentum (posts that build upon each other), take your readers on a more thoughtfully planned journey and give them a more balanced run of content.

I found previously that if I wasn’t planning ahead in this way that I’d end up with too much of one kind of content all in a row which didn’t really benefit readers as much.

The other good thing about this approach is that you know what writing you need to have done by certain times of the week – deadlines work well for me in motivating me to work.

My Editorial Calendar approach these days is pretty much based around spreadsheets. I’m on a mac and use its ‘Numbers’ program for this and simply have a spreadsheet which looks like a weekly calendar. Here’s last weeks:

editorial-Calendar.png

You can see here that DPS has a 2 post per day schedule and that ProBlogger is on a 1 post per day schedule – but I like to throw in a few extras each week. This is obviously a completed week – I generally am playing around with it during the week and am finalising timings as the week progresses as I (and my writers) finish posts.

I also have editorial calendars on the go for future weeks at any given time – they’re less developed but I do add to them as I get closer to the beginning of each week.

At this point spreadsheets work best for me but previously I’ve taken different approaches including using a paper diary, using iCal and Google Calendar, using tools like Basecamp etc. It’s about finding a system that works for you and setting it up so that you do it naturally as part of your workflow.

Also check out Day 12 in the 31 Days to Build a Better Blog – it is all about Editorial Calendars.

Tasks for Your First Week

Perhaps an editorial calendar like the above one is a little advanced if you’re in the first week of your blog – however the concepts behind it can be good to explore. If I were starting a blog today I’d be taking the above three exercises and doing something like this:

  1. Set up an Idea Collection Process – whether it be using folders and text files as I’ve mentioned above, getting a notebook and pen or using a tool like Evernote on your iPhone – set up a system where you can collect ideas as you have them for future use.
  2. Set aside time to brainstorm topics – schedule time into your monthly (or weekly) workflow where you’re simply setting aside time to brainstorm possible topics to write about on your blog.
  3. Develop some kind of system to help you look ahead at the future posts on your blog – You might use a calendar of some kind or simply have a section of your notebook where you plan your next week or month of content.

Share Your Approach to Planning Future Content on Your Blog

I’ve shared 3 of the techniques I use to help me keep fresh content coming on my blogs – I’d love to hear from you on how you do it in comments below!

Post from: Blog Tips at ProBlogger.

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Your First Week of Blogging – Plan Your Future Blog Posts

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+ How To Go From Domain Name To Live WordPress Blog In 15 Minutes By admin 07 February 2010 at 10:42 pm and have No Comments


Last night, I was at a Chinese New Years party at West Van Baptist Church. During the party a few people asked me how hard it was to set up a blog and how long it would take. As luck with have it, I just happened to have my Macbook with me and decided to give a little demo on how to register a domain name, set up a new WordPress blog and have it all live on the Internet in 15 minutes.

Twelve year old Ifan Yang is the son of one of the church members. I decided to use him for the demo. The goal was to show everyone how easy it was to get a blog up and running. Here’s the step by step process.

Step 1 – Register The Domain Name

Deciding on a domain name can be the most time consuming of the entire blog creation process. Most people get stuck at this step and never move forward. Fortunately in this case, the domain name was Ifan’s name and it was available. The domain name was registered at GoDaddy .

GoDaddy

If your domain name is available, then go ahead and register it. We just register the domain name. We didn’t use any other GoDaddy services. The main reason I like using GoDaddy is they have a really nice DNS manager that makes domain admin very easy. Total time to register the domain name was two minutes and cost $10.69.

Step 2 – Set Up The WordPress Blog

FirefoxScreenSnapz005

For this demo, I set the blog up at WordPress.com. This is WordPress’s free blog hosting service. I don’t recommend using this for a money making blog because WordPress.com does not allow you to place any type of advertisings on their service. However, if you’re looking to test the blogging waters, WordPress.com is a great service to get your feet wet in.

The main advantage of WordPress.com is it’s free and extremely easy to use. Registering an account and setting up the new blog took about ten minutes. The most time was spent deciding which theme to use.

Step 3 – Map The Domain Name

Blogs on WordPress.com use a sub domain structure. If you set up a blog on the service, the URL would generally be http://yourname.wordpress.com. This is fine for many bloggers but from a branding standpoint, it’s far less desirable. However WordPress.com offers a domain mapping service that will allow you to use your own domain name. Mapping a domain on WordPress.com cost $9.97.

WordPress does offer domain registration and mapping service for $14.97. However, I prefer to keep my domain provider and host provider separate. Should I wish to move any of my blogs to a new web host in the future, GoDaddy will allow me to do that easily. Trying to move a domain registered at WordPress.com would be a lot more difficult and may not even be possible.

To map a domain, log into your GoDaddy account and fire up the Domain Manager. Check the domain you want to admin and then choose Nameservers. This will pop up a box for you to enter the DNS information for WordPress.com

GoDaddy

After entering the above DNS info, log back into your WordPress.com blog and go to Settings -> Domains in your blog’s dashboard, enter the domain into the form at the top of the page, and click the Add domain to blog button. If the name servers are verified, you will be prompted to purchase the required credits via PayPal and complete the mapping process.

WordPress Domain Mapping

After you have made your purchase, go back to the Settings -> Domains page, select the radio button next to the domain you just mapped to your blog and click the Update Primary Domain button.

WordPress Domain Mapping

As soon as I set the primary domain to use, I was able to view the blog on the Internet by typing IfanYang.com in a web browser. Total time to set up the domain map was three minutes. Here’s the finished blog.

IfanYang.com

Total cost of the demonstration was $20.66. I think I could have created the new blog in less than 15 minute but I was limited by the 3G speed of my iPhone connection. Now that the blog is up and running, the real work of keeping it updated begins. Good luck Ifan!

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+ Dot Com Pho – Learning To Read Edition By admin 06 February 2010 at 9:42 pm and have No Comments


We got tired of eating Pho every week so this week, we decided to head to Nando’s Chicken in Kerrisdale for some flame grilled Portuguese chicken. Nando’s is one of my favorite places for chicken. The franchise has hundreds of locations around the world and Vancouver has been a very good market for them. Nando’s is also the first restaurant that allowed me to try out my new chip enable Visa card.

We had a nice turn out of ten people coming out for Nando’s famous Peri Peri chicken. The location is idea for a Dot Com meet up. It’s relatively quiet with a seating layout that promotes networking. This is the second Dot Com Pho we held at Nando’s and I can see us going there for more meet ups in the future.

For the Learning To Read Edition of Dot Com Pho, we have Stephen’s chicken lunch, Tris Hussey’s new blogging book, eBook reader smack down between the Amazon Kindle and the Apple iPhone, iPadInCanada.ca, the iPhone app of the week and other stuff. Anyone is welcome to join us for Dot Com Pho. Follow me on Twitter to find the time and location of the next one.

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 – Learning To Read Edition

+ 10 Steps to Build a $50 iPhone App for Your Blog By admin 05 January 2010 at 9:30 pm and have No Comments


If you’re reading this site, you’re probably a blogger or someone interested in making tons of money from blogging at home. With the world going mobile and online even more than ever before, you’re going to have to make your presence known on the go, so you don’t get left in the proverbial dust.

Since I do a lot of the iPhone development for my current company, I have learned so much about the industry and how important it is for people to really put your presence in mobile devices and with my relatively young site Lakers Nation, I wanted to create an iPhone application to compliment our ever-expanding Twitter (@LakersNation) and Facebook Fan Page (Facebook.com/LakersNation) presence,  that could really give Laker Fans all over the world a way to read our content in the best possible mobile format. I’ve reached out to dozens of vendors from all around the world and the starting price for some of these apps would start off at like $5,000 because of the relatively low supply of developers in this highly demanded market.

Then I read a Mashable Article that had me jumping out of my seat – Build an iPhone App for $50? – I thought there was no way possible that could be, but I checked out the video and low and behold, it’s true. I created one for Lakers Nation in less than 10 minutes then gave John a quick IM and told him I’d make him one, too – so tempted to charge him more, but bad karma stopped me.

So, let’s get started on how you can build an iPhone App for $50.

1) Go to AppMakr.com and register for an account – no affiliate link or anything. I’m not making a dime off this and neither is John (yes, he resisted, but it’s for the betterment of the blogosphere!)

2) Once you’ve created an account and logged in, you’ll be directed to your App Manager Page. To get started, you’ll want to press the “Create an App” Tab on the upper left as seen below:

3) Choose which iPhone App template you’d like to use – Since they are new, you only have one option, so press “Choose This”

4) Submit your RSS Feed of your Blog as I show you below. If you’re using wordpress, you’ll find that adding “/feed” to the end of your category URLs is going to come in very handy.

5) Now, we’re getting into the main graphics of the app. If you have any custom logos, you should get them ready. Here’s what you’re going to need:

  • 512 x 512 pixel Logo – This will be the “button” on the iPhone Menu.
  • 320 x 480 pixel Splash Screen – This is the loading screen which is the first graphic your app will load.

6) Creating Buttons that represent different feeds to different parts of your site. Remember when I told you that “/feed” comes in handy, well, this is where they come in. These are the feeds that I will be submitting for John’s site by pressing the “+ Add RSS/Atom Feed URL”:

  • Blogging – http://www.johnchow.com/category/blogging/feed
  • Fine Dining – http://www.johnchow.com/category/fine-dining/feed
  • Technology – http://www.johnchow.com/category/technology/feed
  • Cars – http://www.johnchow.com/category/cars/feed
  • Investing – http://www.johnchow.com/category/investing/feed
  • The Net – http://www.johnchow.com/category/the-net/feed
  • Dot Come Lifestyle – http://www.johnchow.com/category/dot-com-lifestyle/feed
  • Make Money Online – http://www.johnchow.com/category/make-money-from-a-blog/feed
  • Trade Show – http://www.johnchow.com/category/trade-show/feed
  • Featured – http://www.johnchow.com/category/featured/feed
  • Ramblings – http://www.johnchow.com/category/uncategorized/feed
  • Videos – http://www.johnchow.com/category/videos/feed
  • Featured Video – http://www.johnchow.com/category/featured-video/feed
  • Reviews – http://www.johnchow.com/category/reviews/feed
  • Wordpress – http://www.johnchow.com/category/wordpress/feed

After submitting each feed, make sure to press the “Validate” link to make sure your feeds work.

This is what it looks like:

Now you may think these are a crapload of categories aka buttons to put into the app, but there is a more button users can press on their iPhones and if they would like to rearrange the buttons on the bottom, it’s as simple as drag and dropping.

7) This is the final customization part of the look and feel of the app, so this is what you’re going to need here:

  • 320 x 46 pixel Header Image – This is located at the top of the app at all times.
  • Color Codes for Fonts – Linked and Regular – I would suggest similar color scheme to your current blog.

Controls

And this

Controls

8) Monetizing your iPhone App. To get started, you’ll need to select one of these Mobile Ad Platforms. For Google’s Sake, we’re picking AdMob – Sign up with them and get your publisher ID to put here:

John has decided to make his first iPhone app Ad free, so you won’t be seeing this implemented.

9) Publish your App – This is the part where you’re going to see $199 and freak out, but guess what, I’ve got a coupon from Mashable to save you $150 bucks that expires 1/6/10, so HURRY! Ready? Type “MASHABLE” into the Coupon Field like I did below then press Publish.

10) Once you have paid the $50 for the iPhone App, you’ll be asked to submit details for your App, so that it is listed properly in the iTunes store. Submission and approval takes about 2-4 weeks even though AppMakr is claiming 1-2 week turnaround. I guess YMMV here.

That really did just take 10 steps and I hope you really enjoyed this tutorial.

If you’re a Lakers Fan, feel free to follow my Play-by-Play twittercasts of Laker Games @LakersNation and if you’re an old school blogger, you might remember me at MrGaryLee.com

Now, let’s see those apps. Leave a comment when you’re finished with yours!

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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+ All You Need to Know About Google’s New Feature Updates By admin 10 December 2009 at 5:53 pm and have No Comments

Let me just let you in on a little story I like to call my life in search this week.

For real.

On top editing and posting the fire hose of liveblog posts and photos coming out of SES Chicago (so much info it’ll make your head explode!), I’ve been flailing to stay above water just to keep up with the changes Google has announced this week.

Since entering the search marketing industry, I’ve often felt like Lucy at the chocolate factory. Wrapping those drops of cocoa heaven in their tidy little packaging, I thought I was getting a handle on the search industry news cycle and was covering announcements as they rolled down the conveyer belt. Thing is, they just dialed up the speed.

So naturally, my logical initial reaction to this information overload is to freak the flip out.

Like myself, businesses are asking a series of important questions:

How is search changing? What does that mean for my Web site? What do I need to do now? And how does Google expect regular businesses to keep up with this madness?!

So what’d Lucy do when faced with the daunting conveyer belt that wouldn’t quit? She stuffed the chocolates in her mouth — where they went on to undergo serious digesting. I’ve had a chance to process and analyze Google’s new features with the help of a few of my favorite BCI SEOs. Now I’ll try to distill the info of highest import and make the business implications of these changes clear.

Google Expands Personalization to All Searchers

Just the Facts

A week ago Google began personalizing search results for all users. Previously, signed-in users were offered personalized search results based on Web history. Now signed-out users will also get custom search results based on the last 180 days of search activity. Google will receive this Web history through a cookie in the user’s browser.

Customized results will be indicated by the “View customizations” link that appears on the top right corner of the results page. Through this link the user is able to turn off customization and view their compiled Web history.

Analyzing Business Implications

Personalization customizes results based on the preferences a user has previously shown. That means that a user is influencing their future results in part based on the sites they’ve visited through search. In this way, there’s a chance that personalized search results can create a system that rewards incumbents, which are likely big name brands.

However, in reality, the negative effects of this should be small. First of all, Google has a limit of two results from a single domain. Secondly, Google will be looking out for this sort of problem and will seek to minimize it. And last, and perhaps most significantly, unique, long-tail queries make up the bulk of queries every month, and a scant few results for those queries are even in the ballpark.

Previous testing on the effects of Google’s Web history personalization suggests that only minor changes occur. Personalized results usually were seen in a re-ranking of the top ten results rather than a totally different set of top ten results. Also, the top three to four results rarely saw shake-ups. The majority of shifts occurred within positions five through ten. And while ranking shifts were definitely identified when personalization occurred, it occurred almost as often when personalization was turned off.

Rather than worrying about how to avoid the effects of personalization, a sound SEO strategy is to adhere to SEO best practices, publish high quality content, and to promote that content around the Web.

Google Releases New Mobile Search Features

Just the Facts

On Monday, Google held an event in Mountain View to showcase some of its upcoming search technology. The two major announcements were the launch of real-time search results (covered in the section below) and the experimental release of new features for mobile search.

Search by voice, search by location and search by sight are the three features Google’s VP of engineering expanded upon at the event and in a follow-up blog post.

Search by voice lets users speak queries to Google and immediately receive search results using the Google Mobile App for the iPhone, Blackberry, and Android devices. This feature originally launched a year ago, but this week Google announced additional language support and its vision of a real-time translator.

Search by location is new feature on Google Maps for Android devices that helps users answer the question “What’s nearby?” After the user selects a location on the map, Google will return a list of places of interest, including restaurants and stores. In the future Google expects to begin delivering “What’s Nearby” results with local product inventory as well.

Search by sight is accessible through the Google Goggles application for Android devices. It lets users submit photos to Google and receive information about the subject in the image, whether it’s a landmark, a book, a place, a logo, or a work of art.

Analyzing Business Implications

What it comes down to is this. People are searching on the go more and more, and Google is providing some incredible tools for them to do so with greater speed and ease. For businesses that means you’ll want to continue to optimize your presence online so these search-savvy users will find you when they’re looking in your neighborhood.

When search by location for products is released, it may be well worth the effort to include your full product inventory on your site. And optimizing your listing for Google Maps and local search is now, as always, an absolute must.

Google Launches Real-Time Search

Just the Facts

The other big announcement at Google’s event this week was the launch of real-time search results. Within the regular search results, users will now see a scrolling box of real-time results for relevant queries. Blog posts, breaking news and Twitter results are among the most frequent results delivered in real-time, along with results from Facebook, MySpace, FriendFeed, Jaiku, and Identi.ca.

Analyzing Business Implications

The real-time search update in Google is a double-edged sword of sorts. On the one hand it could lead to an online reputation nightmare as your brand could be blasted in the search results with relative ease. Non-real-time results go through an algorithm that requires that social proof in the form of links prove the value of results. Real-time results aren’t held to such a strict standard. The possibility to spam search results and publish high-visibility brand bashing both seem to come with the territory.

To protect against this, a business must engage in active brand monitoring so they’re alerted to any negative content as it shows up online. A fast response time to an unfolding reputation crisis can help diminish the effect when compared to a snow-balling reputation disaster.

On the flip side of the coin, real-time search has its business advantages, too. Just as enemies can use real-time search as a tool for evil, a business can use the tool for good. Instead of waiting for a bot to come by, crawl the content and index it, real-time results can show up for searchers instantly. Take advantage of real-time search by fostering a stream of positive press in real time.

Google Caffeine Coming in January

Just the Facts

This is probably a good time to mention the Caffeine update. Caffeine is Google’s next-generation architecture, which Google says will increase the size of the search engine’s index and improve the engine’s indexing speed, accuracy and comprehensiveness.

Today the Caffeine technology is working on a single Google data center. Google will be rolling Caffeine out in full come January 2010. According to Google, the “new infrastructure sits ‘under the hood’ of Google’s search engine, which means that most users won’t notice a difference in search results.”

Analyzing Business Implications

In anticipation of the upcoming Caffeine update, SEOs are hypothesizing what kinds of changes will be coming to SERPs next month. Google had briefly made a testing sandbox available to developers and SEOs. According to one company’s tests, users saw far fewer results returned, faster load times and some shifts in rankings from the third page of results and beyond.

One explanation for the decreased number of results is an elimination of spam — which is a good thing for businesses publishing quality content on their site as it eliminates competitors using unfair tactics to rank. And the fact that major ranking changes were only seen on the third page and on suggests that businesses have little to be concerned about when it comes to their best converting queries.

The wisest course of action at this point is to continue implementing SEO best practices and a strong content strategy that highlights the expertness and value of your business. You may also want to take a baseline of your metrics today, including rankings, traffic, and conversion data. By taking a baseline before the Caffeine update is live, you’ll be able to notice any major fluctuations following the update. If you do see changes of concern, you can then try to identify patterns and focus your SEO efforts going forward.

Now that we know all about Google’s updates this week, what are the chances they let up on that conveyer belt? All this chocolate’s given me a stomach ache.

All You Need to Know About Google’s New Feature Updates was originally published on BruceClay.com, an SEO services company.

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+ Back Up Your Data Online with IDrive By admin 09 December 2009 at 8:26 am and have No Comments

Back Up Your Data Online with IDrive


Your data is important to you. Those family photos are absolutely invaluable and irreplaceable, so why would you leave it up to chance? Maybe you have an external hard drive for backup purposes, but that is in the same physical location as your computer. They could both be harmed at the same time.

This is why online storage is getting increasingly popular. Thankfully, it is also getting increasingly affordable. The idea behind IDrive may sound like a familiar one, but you’ll find over the course of this review that it’s some good features that you may not find elsewhere.

Back Up Your Valuable Data

In a nutshell, IDRIVE provides full-featured online backup. There is a desktop application that you install on your computer and then you are able to backup your photos, music, documents, and so forth to your IDRIVE account. It’s free to sign up for an account.

Back Up Your Data Online with IDrive

The application, which is available for both Mac and Windows, is more than just an online drive where you can drag and drop your data. This is a full backup solution, just like the software that comes with some external hard drives.

Looking at the features page, you can see such highlights as Continuous Data Protection (CDP), which “automatically recognizes the modified parts of file(s)/folder(s) and backs them up every 10 minutes.”

The Desktop Application

Back Up Your Data Online with IDrive

After you sign up for an account and download the application (about 9MB), you can get started with the IDrive Classic program to set up your backup preferences and schedule. You can see the “Backup” and “Restore” tabs for their respective functions, allowing you to navigate through your folders and mark off the files that you would like to backup to IDrive.

You’ll notice the aforementioned continuous backup option in the lower-right corner, but you can also use the button next to it to set up your preferred backup schedule. This appears to be much more robust than the idea behind a competing “box” where you can “drop” files, since you get a full-featured backup solution with IDrive.

Back Up Your Data Online with IDrive

Further to the backup functionality, the IDrive online backup also saves up to 30 individual versions of your backed up data, so you can revert back to older copies of your files if you’d like. The drag-and-drop interface can still be accessed with the optional IDrive Explorer plug-in, so you don’t lose that functionality.

Another sticking point of some other similar online backup solution is the lack of speed. When I started the backup process with IDrive, I was able to get a transfer rate of up to 500kbps. Naturally, your performance will vary based on the type of files, current server load, and your Internet connection.

The Online and Mobile Components

What if you want to access your files from a computer that does not have IDrive installed? That’s where the online browser kicks in. All you have to do is log into your account on the IDrive website and you’ll see all of your files.

Back Up Your Data Online with IDrive

This obviously isn’t as robust as the desktop application, but it means that you can store files in your IDrive account to be accessed later from a remote location. This is fantastic for travel, for instance, since you may not have your main computer with you on the road.

As an additional service, you can also opt for IDrive Lite. This is an application for the iPhone and BlackBerry platforms that allows you to back up, manage, and restore your contact list.

Start with 2GB, Upgrade for More

If you’re looking for some very basic backup and you don’t need a lot of storage, you may be satisfied with the IDrive Basic account. If you need more, you may be more inclined to consider an IDrive Pro account. The personal account gives you 150GB of storage for $4.95 a month (or $49.50 a year). There are also options for families and businesses.

Less than $50 for 150GB of online backup? That sounds like a pretty decent deal. One feature that I would like to see implemented, however, is the ability to share a public link if you want to send a specific backed up file to a friend or colleague. With that in place, IDrive looks like it could be a solid option.

CLICK HERE TO GET STARTED WITH IDRIVE ONLINE BACKUP

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