Posts Tagged ‘ winter

More Sights and Sounds of Vancouver 2010 18 February 2010 at 7:45 pm by admin


The Vancouver 2010 Winter Olympics is well under way and the city is just buzzing with activities. Even if you don’t take in a single Olympic event, there is just so much to see and do right now. Here’s a few more videos and photos from around downtown Vancouver.

The first video was taken at the Royal Canadian Mint Pavilion. You already saw the pictures of the $1 million coin. Now you can watch the video. The second video shows the Olympic cauldron. I have a great view of the cauldron from my house in West Vancouver. However, the flame looks even better when you’re only 100 feet from it. The BBC was filming at the cauldron when we got there and it seems I got on some BBC news broadcast (I was filming them while they were filming me).

Vancouver 2010

The lantern display on Granville Street. The street was sealed off from cars.

Vancouver 2010

The world’s biggest Canada flag. It draped two sides of a 12 stories building.

Vancouver 2010

The line up to get into the Royal Canadian Mint Pavilion was over two hours long.

Vancouver 2010

Sally Chow dancing inside the Royal Canadian Mint Pavilion.

Vancouver 2010

The Olympic cauldron looks a lot like Superman’s fortress of solitude.

Vancouver 2010

Sally and her Grandparents in front of the cauldron. You can see the BBC doing their news broadcast from behind the fence.

Vancouver

The Olympic cauldron from my home in West Vancouver. I have the best view in the world!

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More Sights and Sounds of Vancouver 2010

+ Dot Com Pho – The Olympic Edition By admin 14 February 2010 at 12:26 am and have No Comments


We’re calling this Dot Com Pho the Olympic Edition because of the Vancouver 2010 Winter Games. However, it could have just as well been the Valentine’s Day Edition or the Chinese New Year Edition since they’re all happening at the same time. With three big happy events happening, we figured it was only right to head to Happy Pho on Main Street and King Edward to celebrate.

Our happy Dot Com crew were joined by the Affiliate Summit Blog Mistress, Heather and her daughter. Chef Aaron Koo made the trip in as well. Among the regulars were Ed Lau, Michael yurechko and Stephen Fung, who showed up last. Anyone is welcome to join us at Dot Com Pho. Follow me on Twitter to find the time and location of the next one.

For this edition of Dot Com Pho, we have a happy Olympic Chinese Valentine’s New Year, how to handle Olympic protesters, chicken hot pot, making a lemon soda, China Vs. Canada opening ceremonies, spelling edition wrong, buzzing Google Buzz and the Apple iPad is the Gadget of the Week. Enjoy!

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Dot Com Pho – The Olympic Edition

+ Friday Recap: SEO Olympics — Love, Flips and Tricks Edition By admin 12 February 2010 at 4:43 pm and have No Comments

To the tune of “Get Down Tonight” by KC and the Sunshine Band: Do a little dance! Make a little noise! It’s Friday night! It’s Friday night!

Sometimes these fits of brilliance just hit me. ;)

I love coming across the hilarious antics of people who know Google Street View is in town. SEO and social media marketer Michael Gray found a great one this week: two dudes chasing Street View in scuba gear! The story told by traveling through that moment in time is priceless. If you go back a frame you see them waiting in their lawn chairs while reading the paper.

We’re trying out a new recurring feature on the BCI Facebook fan page. In our Facebook question of the week, we want to know what you think about topical issues in Internet marketing. This week’s Super Bowl advertisers had me wondering if traditional media ads have more-or-less become a means for driving online traffic. Add your two cents to the convo, please!

Oh, and it’s also important that you weigh in on PajamasJeans. They’re pajamas and they’re jeans. I believe Susan’s comment was: “I can’t tell if these are brilliant or insane.” One vote for brilliant! PajamaJeans are so the next Snuggie!

Here’s another fun find, and this one’s especially useful for folks who like a dash of personality with their analytics data. VisitorVille is an analytics program that represents your site, your visitors, and the sites from which they came as a virtual town. The sites are buildings, the visitors are people and search engines are buses! It’s like Sims for statistics!

Bruce Clay, Inc.’s cohorts down under have been busy! Bruce Clay Australasia made its SEO Factors and Trends Report, previously available only to clients, available to the public. The report includes recommendations for social media marketing, link building and personalized search optimization.

Want some tips on personal branding? (I do!)

First, don’t let NBC do to you what it did to Leno. Some brand analysts believe Jay Leno’s brand may be tarnished beyond repair.

Next, look on the bright side of life. According to analysis by social media marketer Dan Zarella, negative remarks expressed on Twitter may result in fewer followers.

Finally, see what lessons you can take away from the big guys. Mashable breaks down the keys to success when building a brand hub through media. Not surprisingly, social media participation plays an important role.

If you’re looking for some pointers for performing site audits, SEO Alan Bleiweiss has published the first part of a series that offers just that. From putting a price tag on failure to the generation of an action plan, this is hands-on SEO at its finest.

Internet marketing firm Outspoken Media celebrated a one-year anniversary this week. Co-founder Rae Hoffman shared her insider’s view on launching a startup. From the post I got an idea of initial setup costs, considerations in developing company structure, and areas of significant growth.


CC BY-SA 2.0

Here’s some more interesting insight into the inner workings of a company. A Silicon Alley Insider Chart of the Day charted Microsoft’s operating profit by division. Online services and entertainment and devices have been reliably in the red, while Microsoft Office is the company’s winner by a mile.

I’ve become personally invested in a soon-to-be iPhone app from my buddy Dan, @dgiul. This year I’ve had a minor obsession with food holidays and have been happily announcing them on Twitter. Dan had the brilliant idea to turn the food holiday calendar into a handy app, and he’s open to ideas for names. It’d also be great if you could vote on your favorites! Thanks for helping make this dream a reality!

Susan continues to rub in the fact that she’s got a darling baby niece and we don’t. Hey Susan! Just so you know, that dewy-eyed angel you were snuggling is actually a lying, murderous bigot! I’m on to you now, babies! (J/K. Susan already knows about those naughty monkeys. She sent me the post!)

Digiday is surveying mobile marketers for their Mobile State of the Industry Q1/10 report. Participants will receive the survey results, two weeks free access to their digital knowledge base and the chance to win a pass to a DM2Event or a gift certificate.

Just in time for the Winter Olympics, Google has introduced a snow mobile to its Street View fleet. Yahoo! Sports is decked out for the Olympics, and Bing Maps is putting its tech preview of Streetside Photos to good use with pics of Vancouver.

I ran across a series of travel quizzes on National Geographic, which could be hours of fun for those snowed in this weekend! There are quizzes on countries, cities and national parks. I got a pathetic 5/8 for my home town of L.A. Think you can do better?

If you’re not snowed in this weekend, you’ll probably be celebrating Valentine’s Day with your sweetie. No sweetie? No worries. Romance isn’t always what it’s cracked up to be, right, xkcd?

Friday Recap: SEO Olympics — Love, Flips and Tricks Edition was originally published on BruceClay.com, an SEO services company.

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Friday Recap: SEO Olympics — Love, Flips and Tricks Edition

+ Welcome To Vancouver – Home of the 2010 Winter Olympic By admin 30 January 2010 at 9:47 am and have No Comments


In less than two weeks, my home city of Vancouver will host the 2010 Winter Olympic. The city is ready for its biggest event since Expo 86. There is an excitement in the air that I haven’t felt in a long time. Vancouver has consistently won best city in the world to the live in titles from many organizations and the world is about to find out why.

For those coming to the games, Vancouver and I welcome you. Let me show you a little preview on what you can expect when you land in our fair city. The video below is an artistic collaboration between Innerlife Project and TimeLapseHD. It was filmed along the same time as when I filmed living above the clouds. Welcome to Vancouver!

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+ 5 Lessons Learned from a List to Santa (All of Them Can Make You Money) By admin 23 December 2009 at 7:05 am and have No Comments

image of Santa looking at Christmas list

In the eight Christmases since life changed my name to Dad, Santa’s list has never been more important.

In our house, the tradition is that each child requests a single gift from the big guy. The problem is, this year both kids asked for something a little beyond Santa’s typical reach.

Fortunately, my wife and I have learned enough about persuasion and selling to turn our trip to the store into an opportunity to keep the magic alive a little longer.

It’s important to me that Santa deliver what they ask for. My kids are five and seven, and still believe. I’d like to preserve that bit of childhood magic as long as I am able.

What do you want? No, what do you really want?

My daughter originally wanted to ask Santa for “Biscuit,” a battery-operated dog that does tricks on command and is roughly the size of a Shetland pony. I’m not positive, but I think Biscuit may require a car battery to start barking.

My son planned to ask Santa for the Lego Star Wars Imperial Cruiser. This thing has roughly the same number of pieces as a glass garbage truck driven from a rooftop, and a sticker price equivalent to my winter electricity bill.

Our mission: steer our daughter toward a Fur-Real Panda Bear which is just a fraction of Biscuit‘s price tag, and get our son drooling for Darth Vader’s TIE Fighter, which is smaller and more within our budget.

Entering the toy department armed with our strategy, here are five basic selling principles which we used to get our children to not only alter their wish lists, but want their new gifts even more than they did the old ones:

1. Scarcity

This one was awesome because I didn’t even have to try. There it sat, all the way at the top of a shelf so high not even my 6 ‘ 3’’ frame could tickle the Fur-Real Panda Bear. The rest of the selection lay littered along the bottom shelves.

“Uh-oh,” I said. “We’re going to have to ask someone to help us get the panda bear down.”

My daughter asked why the panda was up so high away from all the others. I told her it must be because everybody wanted him and there were only a few left.

“Oh,” she whispered. My daughter rarely whispers. Other people’s desires amplified her own. My daughter’s not greedy, but she is human, and humans tend to want something all the more the second it seems out of reach.

2. Storytelling

My son and I struck out on our own, leaving my wife and daughter to think about the panda.

I slipped into a story about Darth Vader and his planet-blasting Death Star. My voice rose in pitch, my hands in the air. I quieted to a whisper. I was an actor reciting Shakespeare and my son’s mouth was an open O.

“Hey, have you ever thought about asking Santa for Darth Vader’s TIE fighter?” I asked. “I bet he would get it for you.”

I pulled the box from the shelf and placed it in my son’s hands. His eyes lit up and he turned it this way and that through the air, the sounds of laser blasts spraying from his lips.

Information is important, but people connect to stories. If you want someone to both relate to your information and remember it later, deliver it in a “once upon a time.”

3. Address objections

My son was fondling the box. I figured he was about a third of the way to wondering why in the Hoth he had ever wanted a starship when he could’ve been asking for Darth Vader’s TIE fighter all along.

But we weren’t quite there yet.

“The TIE fighter’s a lot smaller,” I explained, pointing to Darth Vader’s home away from home. “The starship is like five times bigger.”

He asked how many pieces are in the starship. I smiled. It was like he was doing half the work for me. “It’s five times the size because it has five times as many pieces.”

Now even though my son LOVES pieces, this was an easy objection to get past.

“Hmmm.” At this point, I was actually stroking my chin like some cartoon character. “If you ask Santa for Darth Vader’s TIE Fighter, then we’ll be able to put it together and take it apart a lot more times.” I smiled wide and dropped to my knees so my eyes met my son’s. “We’ll get to play with it more because it will be put together more often.”

My son’s smile is always bright, but this one was even brighter than usual. You can’t ignore objections, but you can identify and address what the other person really wants. And in this case, it was to spend more time with his daddy playing.

Once you know what your buyers are really looking for, you can rob objections of their power.

4. Clearly state the benefits

When we rejoined the girls, my daughter asked how I would decide between the two toys. She’s a practical girl and, like her father, loves to linger on several sides of an argument.

“Well, at first I thought it was close,” I said, nose wrinkled, “but then I started thinking about it. Now I’d have to say the panda is the clear winner.”

She wanted to know why.

“Well, his size for starters,” I said. “Biscuit is so big, you’d never want to take him up and down the stairs.”

We live in a hundred-year-old Victorian, and there are times when going upstairs feels like it should come with the help of a Sherpa.

I also explained that because of its size, the panda could keep her company and sit next to her while she’s doing her homework or is at the computer.

I let that sink in, then added, “The panda could even sleep with you, I bet. Biscuit would probably just sit in one place most of the time.”

When you’re writing to persuade, don’t forget to articulate what’s great about the experience. Give them the wind in their hair and let them clearly feel the smile on their face.

5. Know your audience

I’m lucky enough to be around my children for most of the minutes they aren’t in school. Getting them to change Santa’s list was made simple by first knowing them inside out and then communicating as effectively as possible.

Working out a communication plan with my partner ahead of time, using the same principles that make a sales letter work, made it a paint-by-numbers process.

While it’s highly unlikely you’ll get prospects that you can know as well as your children, you can get to know them. Pay attention to the details, ask the right questions, and uncover not just what they want, but why they want it. Do that, and you’ll be able to meet their needs.

There is a laser-thin line between many of the principles of friendly, honest selling and highly effective parenting.

With both, you must allow the learner or buyer to stumble onto your solution as though it was their idea all along. Sure, you use the authority you’ve built, but you also let your audience come to their own conclusions.

Trust is the key

Of course none of these tactics would have worked if our children didn’t believe in us.

And trust is an integral part of these strategies. I’ve never lied to my kids (you and I both know Santa doesn’t count) and have never let them down. I have never done anything to damage our bond and so they trust me entirely.

I would never have sold them on the panda or the TIE Fighter if I didn’t believe they would love their choices. If your actions are based on integrity and you do what is right for your audience or clients, they will do what is right for you in return.

About the Author: Sean Platt is a direct response copywriter and independent publisher. Follow him on Twitter.


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5 Lessons Learned from a List to Santa (All of Them Can Make You Money)

+ Friday Recap: Gravy-Flavored Edition By admin 25 November 2009 at 2:31 pm and have No Comments

Happy Thanksgiving! The whole office just came together for a serious cornucopia of a potluck lunch. If by the end of this post my eyes aren’t rolling to the back of my head as I succumb to a food coma, I’ll consider this an incredibly successful day. (Though my tummy already knows it is!)

turkey

So it’s recap time! With a short week comes a recap in a smaller serving size than usual. You should be saving room for that feast tomorrow, anyway, right?

Some people can’t seem to participate in social media very long before doing something that bites them in the behind — something that raises red flags with a boss or rocks the boat of a romantic relationship. But here’s a first. A member of one quasi-celeb’s entourage was arrested after not using Twitter.

When a crowd of teenage fans got too rowdy at the mall while waiting for singer Justin Bieber, police asked Bieber to calm them down with a tweet. Apparently he didn’t tweet soon enough, and police arrested the VP of Bieber’s record label. Don’t ask me — I’m just the messenger.

Marketers using Twitter may be interested to know that corporate accounts are set for release by the end of the year, according to co-founder Biz Stone. Paid accounts would come with extra layers of feedback and analytics. I hear they make for good insulation in the winter months.

Here’s another head scratcher. AOL is rebranding itself as Aol. That period there wasn’t just to end the sentence — it’s part of the name. PaidContent reports that what “the lowercase lettering suggests is a complete break with the notion of AOL as acronym and the period at the end is just that.” Deep. [In the rest of the world, we call those full stops. As in AOL needs serious therapy. Full Stop. --Susan]

TechCrunch outed a major media network for soliciting reciprocal links, making sure to pass the link request to Matt Cutts along the way. I’m all for sharing the link love, but be safe, kids.

You know Google Analytics, that little service that tracks the behavior of visitors coming to and navigating through your site? Well, it looks like Germany may ban Google Analytics because it violates national data protection laws. What? No one uses it anyway, right?

One speedy marketer caught a screen shot of user interface testing by Google featuring tabs with related search terms. Google’s always testing new results, but it’s somewhat rare to see them out in the wild. And after the initial find, the interface was never to be seen again!

Google Image Search has been a target of critics after flip-flopping over an offensive image of the First Lady. A few weeks ago someone reported that the first result of an image search for “Michelle Obama” was a photoshopped monkey. Then Google removed the image, citing webmaster guideline violations by the site. Now Google has returned the image to the results but has included a sponsored listing pointing to more information on their response to offensive search results. Don’t mind me — just feeling a bit dizzy over here.

But that’s nothing compared to the level of dizzy caused by Black Friday. When the zoo of humanity takes over the shopping malls like a swarm of locusts, you know I’m not around. Instead, I’ll be sitting at home finding all the deals online. Search Engine Journal has rounded up Black Friday ad sites worth your while. And Search Engine Land has tips on how sites can put on their Black Friday finest.

P.S. Earlier this week I shared some ideas for last minute, quick and easy Black Friday marketing pushes. It’s never too late for next year!

Things I learned from Boing Boing this week:

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Friday Recap: Gravy-Flavored Edition

+ Friday Recap - Little Genius Edition By admin 20 November 2009 at 12:21 pm and have No Comments

Welcome back to Friday, friends. There was no major news this week. Oh, wait. There was that one minor blip on the radar — a.k.a. the release of Twitter’s new, official retweet feature.

The long and short of it is that no one likes it. Lisa Barone dissects the many shortfalls of the function in Why Twitter’s New Retweet Feature Sucks. (Tell the Wall Street Journal I said hello, Lisa!)

cloud computing

Google also had some news to share this week. The source code for Google Chrome Operating System has been opened up to developers. That news and other updates were shared by Google during a press conference this week. You can find coverage of the event across the Web, but readers got a special treat as Matt Cutts joined the liveblogger corps.

Microsoft announced that their anticipated cloud computing system, Windows Azure, will be fully live early next year. The company is inviting software developers to create programs for the platform, hoping to catch up to the cloud computing pack leaders Amazon and Google.

And Yahoo!’s playing catch up in the social search arena as the search engine introduces Twitter results, as well as photos and videos, to their news search results. However, unlike the direct access secured by Google and Bing, Yahoo! will be using Twitter’s public API to incorporate tweets.

Twitter added a new API to the family this week, the Twitter Geotagging API. Now tweets can be geotagged to display location information about where the tweet was posted from. The feature is opt-in only, and is not available on Twitter itself, but through third-party applications.

tweet for a cause

As the wave of holiday season giving rolls up, search aggregator LeapFish is using Twitter as a tool to donate a Make-A-Wish gift to a young boy and his family. A simple tweet and LeapFish will donate $.05 toward sending a four-year-old to Disneyland. They’re still far from the $10,000 goal. Won’t you take a moment and tweet?

With Thanksgiving less than a week away, we’ve officially entered the winter holiday season. PPC Hero offers us search and shopping statistics, popular gift categories, peak shopping days, and Yahoo!’s holiday campaign best practices and tips.

As I get myself in shape for the eating marathon that is Thanksgiving, it’s hard not to send out a wish of support to all the poor, deprived waffle lovers in the country. Breakfast lovers are renewing the cry “leggo my Eggo!” ever since the waffle maker announced that a shortage would exist until the middle of next year. Here’s hoping none of your loved ones have waffles on the wish list this year.

SEO industry thought-leader Danny Sullivan wrote a search marketing industry retrospective on the 10-year anniversary of the first search marketing conference. What were marketers talking about 10 years ago? Human powered engines, cloaking and that little engine Google.

baby in glasses
CC BY 2.0

Hard to believe that big monster Google was ever a baby, but it’s true. How are these for some fascinating facts about babies? New research shows that newborn babes cry in their native tongue. Picking up language patterns from the womb, babies come out crying in the familiar inflections of the local language.

One doctor of linguistics has performed his own language experiment with his newborn, speaking to his kid only in Klingon for the first three years of his life. The result? One adorably nerdy three-year-old.

We may never fully understand the mechanics behind language acquisition, but for some, it sure is fun to try. One mystery I wouldn’t touch with a ten-foot pole is the Riemann Hypothesis, an unsolved math problem that turned 150 years old this week. If you’re more adventurous than I am, give it a shot. Solving the problem comes with bragging rights and a cool $1 million. [Also a lifetime supply of pocket protectors, nerd. --Susan]

In coming-down-the-pipes news, Twitter’s co-founder has confirmed that corporate, for-pay Twitter accounts that offer additional feedback and analytics will be launched in a matter of time. Meanwhile, rumors about a Google-branded Android phone have been all but confirmed.

Slightly more certain is the fact that 2010 is just weeks away. How did the first decade of the new millennium pan out for everyone? It’s been quite a ride, hasn’t it? The Webby Awards has published its list of the ten most influential Internet moments of the decade. It boggles the mind that these formative events only occurred in the last few years when it’s hard to imagine life any other way. I mean, like whoa.

Things I learned from Boing Boing this week:

  • One can have a spiritual experience at an aquarium. Or just by watching an online video of an aquarium.
  • Though we once thought warm bloodedness was a trait of every mammal, a recently discovered extinct goat was cold-blooded!
  • Money has always been in fashion, but origami takes it to the next level.
  • Kitties are cute. Okay, it may not have been a learning moment, but in a must-see vid shot from a police car dash cam, one kitty worked his magic, thus proving that kitties are cute! [And that that policeman was dedicated. He was going to get that ticket written, affectionate snugglekitty or no. --Susan]
  • While I thought it was just a fiction dreamt up by The Pirates of the Caribbean writers, the rising and setting sun can actually flash green!

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