Posts Tagged ‘research’

The swansong of the CD

sevCnet has posted that Microsoft is considering a USB drive option for the release of Windows 7 so that those of you with netbooks can easily load the new OS. A slick idea in my opinion if only for the uniqueness in the market place but this poses a question of media change.

Is the market ready for the disappearance of the disc? CD’s are gradually being replaced in the music world by the MP3 and its player of choice, the iPod. In the data world you’re seeing a gradual move to the DVD due to higher storage capacity but still a disc, nonetheless.

Microsoft moving what was once on 25 floppy discs, turned 3 CD’s, turned 1 DVD to a USB drive might, in fact, shift the market… or it could blow up in their faces ala Betamax. Early adopters will be all over this without a doubt but the salty old creatures of habit? I’ll let Microsoft and their marketers make this call.

In effort not to be the nay-sayer, I offer an alternative. Make this an upgrade available online. Automate the update process and let it run from there in a one-click user interface. Enter your credit card info, click upgrade, and let her cook. Finding a way to make that work well would save millions in product cost.

Thoughts?

Switching to fiber… maybe

attTruckSo the money saving quest is back on in full force. The latest luxury to feel the warm light of interrogation is Cox. High speed internet and digital cable is delivered monthly with an accompanying $130+ bill. The funny thing is that I bought this package because it was less than $100 at the time. I don’t even remember what happened there. Guess I should have paid more attention.

For the longest time there haven’t been any justifiable alternatives to this set up. DSL was sketchy at best and didn’t deliver the same up speeds as cable, even after they matched the down speeds and Dish Network screwed up the Superbowl so they would never do.

Enter AT&T’s latest attempt at taking my paycheck, U-Verse. In researching I’ve noticed a lot of good in switching but also an obvious point of little or no savings versus a comparable package from Cox. They point out that for that matching price I get receivers for each of the three bedrooms but you must remember that you NEED the receiver to get any channels, unlike with Cox, where you get basic in the rooms in which you don’t have a receiver so I guess it’s a wash if you don’t go with all three receivers.

On a marketing note there was a good and bad in my research. Let’s lead with the good. They’ve got a website called UversUsers.com that has a full on forum and they direct most of their questions from the AT&T forums to that one to be answered by the masses. Very progressive for the big old phone company. Let the satisfied customers sell the product.

The bad news, you might ask? The site had to be moved to another server because of slow response due to heavy traffic. Do you really want the company that can’t keep their stuff working right handling your data? I would think that in selling technology and data such as they do, they might make sure to dot all t’s and cross their i’s before launch, but then, that’s why I’m a marketer now and no longer an IT guy.

Either way, I’m not convinced one way or the other and I’m out for your opinion. I’ve twittered the question as well and now I’m giving you a couple more options. You can leave a comment or vote in the poll below. Help me decide! U-Verse or Cox?

[polldaddy poll=1733542]

Paperback Writer… well, not exactly

upyoursocialI admit, I just titled it that way because I like the song. Beatles… they’re like a warm hug from a long lost family member.  Moving on…

For those who’ve been wondering about my lack of posts, fear not, I have been writing, just for other people.  The first of these guest appearances will be at UpYourSocial.com on or around Thursday, June 18th.  Kyle Judkins of Lost In Technology was kind enough to allow me a submission on his new social media blog.  Want to know more? You’ll just have to go visit.  I would suggest visiting now and acclimating to the site and subject matter.  It’s good stuff.

Another place you’ll find me regularly is on the Organizational Champions Forum.  They’ve recently updated their site to include several interactive features and I highly recommend taking a look, setting up a profile, and getting involved in the movement.  There are a lot of smart people hanging around that forum and they will make you think.  Tell them Jay sent you.

With nothing more for the moment, I leave you with a joke…

A young executive was leaving the office late one evening, when he finds the CEO standing in front of a shredder with a piece of paper in his hand. “Listen,” said the CEO, “this is a very sensitive and important document here, and my secretary has gone for the night. Can you make this thing work for me?” “Certainly,” the young executive says. He turns the machine on, inserts the paper, and presses the start button. “Excellent, excellent!” says the CEO as his paper disappeared inside the machine. “I just need one copy.

Have a great day and don’t take life too seriously.

Swim, Rats!

So the GM execs seem to be throwing in the towel and this is irking me a bit. Primarily because these guys are making a profit today, albeit a small one, and for what? For ultimately dooming the company they ran into the ground? This behavior must have been taught in one of those econ classes I skipped in undergrad.

Analysts called the behavior of the stock a bit of a “levitating magic trick” in it’s hovering around the $1.50 mark but I don’t see it as magic. The American people were not about to lose faith in the great American motorcar company while the executives were still fighting. There was some belief that there would be a marginal rebound, even if it came through restructuring. This belief was fueled by the fact that those in power were still vested in their company.

Today’s act of cowardice for the grand profit of $315,000 (collectively… for 200,000 shares) is proof that the company is and has been run by dismissive incompetence. My Google Finance gadget says the stock is at $1.11 right now. Who knows, by the end of the day they might just hit that magic $0.02 and they can all go home. Arghhh…

Here’s the whole story…
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20090512/bs_nm/us_gm_shares

20 Factors to Better Google Rankings

For those of you in the dark on making your site more searchable, Franklin Bishop sums it up nicely.  It’s a detailed read but worth it.

by Franklin Bishop

Any discussion about SEO Fundamentals needs to start with Google. With over 75% of the world’s web searches now being conducted via Google, it’s safe to say that your potential customers will be starting their journey there as well.

Google is the gold standard of Search Engines in both overall search volume and search quality. I’ll save the rationale behind Google’s dominance for another day, but undoubtedly a large portion of their rise to the top of Search Engine excellence can be attributed to their proprietary algorithm, which is the set of calculations performed against the web’s content that decides which web sites they think their viewers will find most relevant for the entered keywords.

Google is the most difficult search engine to optimize against because it does the best job of filtering out all of the short-cuts marketers try to use to cheat the system. Google makes a company work to return high organically. At the most basic of Google’s (and hence, SEO’s) driving factors to page rank are:

How much relevant content does your site have, and
How highly the web community values your content (measured in number of links from other sites to your content).
This means that the early days of tweaking a few meta tag descriptions to fix your web site’s SEO are long, long gone. In today’s game, SEO cannot be thought of as a one-time expense. It requires a commitment. Based on your competition, your industry and your objectives, it may also require a good deal of time and money before you see results. There is no short-cut around satisfying these two criteria. If an SEO Consultant tells you there is, it’s likely either a scam or an activity that could get your site blacklisted.

So, how exactly does a company show Google great, relevant content that’s as popular and externally-validated as a southern Homecoming Queen? There’s no magic answer, and the rules are always changing, but….

Without further ado, and in no particular order,

Google’s 20 most important factors to better Google rankings

  1.  Keyword Use in Title Tag – Placing the targeted search term or phrase in the title tag of the web page’s HTML header.
  2. Keyword Use in Body Text – Using the targeted search term in the visible, HTML text of the page.
  3. Relationship of Body Text Content to Keywords – Topical relevance of text on the page compared to targeted keywords.
  4. Keyword Use in a web page’s Headline (H1 Tag) – Creating an H1 tag with the targeted search term/phrase.
  5. Keyword Use in Domain Name & Page URL
  6. Link Popularity within the Site’s Internal Link Structure – Refers to the number and importance of internal links pointing to the target page.
  7. Quality/Relevance of Links to External Sites/Pages – Do links on the page point to high quality, topically-related pages?
  8. Age of Document – Older pages may be perceived as more authoritative while newer pages may be more temporarily relevant.
  9. Amount of Indexable Text Content – Refers to the literal quantity of visible HTML text on a page.
  10. Quality of the Document Content (as measured algorithmically) – Assuming search engines can use text, visual or other analysis methods to determine the validity and value of content, this metric would provide some level of rating.
  11. Global Link Popularity of Site – The overall link weight/authority as measured by links from any and all sites across the web (both link quality and quantity).
  12. Age of Site – Not the date of original registration of the domain, but rather the launch of indexable content seen by the search engines (note that this can change if a domain switches ownership).
  13. Topical Relevance of Inbound Links to Site – The subject-specific relationship between the sites/pages linking to the target page and the target keyword.
  14. Link Popularity of Site in Topical Community – The link weight/authority of the target website amongst its topical peers in the online world.
  15. Rate of New Inbound Links to Site – The frequency and timing of external sites linking in to the given domain.
  16. Anchor Text of Inbound Link.
  17. Global Link Popularity of Linking Site.
  18. Topical Relationship of Linking Page.
  19. Link Popularity of Site in Topical Community – The link weight/authority of the target website amongst its topical peers in the online world.
  20. Age of Link.

What’s on your task bar?

Today I’ll go over the hell I put my little work laptop through on a day-to-day basis. Bare in mind I’m using a Lenovo Z61t.  Oh well, at least they gave me 2gigs of RAM right?

Here’s what’s on my taskbar today:

Internet Explorer – don’t knock it, its company standard.  At least I got on the ie7 pilot group.

  • Google Account – a guy’s got to keep up with his infrastructure right?  Keeping this window open saves time and the effort of constantly typing the same URL’s
  • Google Analytics – I know, I know… AdWords does that too but when you’re monitoring multiple accounts, it’s nice to have them on different tabs.
  • Google Adwords – even though I don’t have too, I babysit this one quite a bit.  I’m working currently to increase CTR so it’s good to know what keywords are performing before they start to sour. 
  •  iGoogle – my lifeline to the world.  Detailing this page has its own post coming.
  • splitweet.com – this is one of the better sites I’ve found for monitoring multiple twitter accounts from a browser.  If you have anything better, please share.
  • dreamstime.com – ah, stock images… the life-blood of a creative.  I have accounts and credits with several royalty free sites but this is my go-to.  Honorable mentions go to 123rf.com and fotolia.com

Lotus Notes – work email.  It’s not Outlook but it will do.  Again, corporate standard…

FireFox – a far better browser and used for quality control.  Unfortunately company standards do not allow for clear outside usage but I’ve got it to make sure the changes I implement to our site will translate well to the fairer browsers.  Here’s what’s on it. 

  •  jbhunt.com – company website – up today for some changes that went into affect today.
  • hulu – something to listen to while I’m working.

Photoshop – always open, CS3 version.  I’ve currently got five windows open with bits and pieces of 3 different projects.

Illustrator – again, always open – CS3 version.  I’ve currently got 2 windows open, bouncing ad design ideas for a magazine cover.

Explorer – who has time to go through your recent documents?  Keep explorer open and you can bounce from drive to drive like an Olympic gymnast.

Notepad – I’ve got a green cube… no unnecessary paper on this desk.  This is my note-taking medium as well as a handy way to cut out all that word formatting when copy/pasting into other programs.

Word – primarily a spell-checker, I’ve typically got this one open as a scratch pad as well.  Side note, I tend to write better on Word.  Odd…

ActiveSync – keeps my phone charged and in communication with the little Lenovo.

So, that’s all I’ve got eating up my processing power for now. It’s really fun when I add Flash to the mix.  About that time everything starts running amok.

5 Marketing Resources

Here are a few resources I like when I’m stuck.  These people/places get my mind spinning again when I start to slow down.  take a look.

ProBlogger – if I’m a Luke Skywalker, this guy is Yoda
http://www.problogger.com
In fact, the close observer might notice the not-so-subtle cues from his 31 Days series.  I’m learning all about the neat little additions one might add to increase shareability and peak interests as well as general instruction on becoming a better blogger.  Ultimately though, you will decide what I take from the series and the blog as a whole.

NWASocial – my local people resource
http://socialmediaclubnwa.ning.com/
A spin off of the national Social Media Club, I’m just starting with the local chapter and believe me, this is proving to be quite a resource.  I spent my first meeting getting to know the group and listening to their experiences, good and bad, in bringing social media to their industries and brands.

Organizational champions – inspiration to be inspiring
http://www.organizationalchampions.com/
Mike Thompson has written a book Titled Organizational Champions and this is the blog leading to that release.  I’m really looking forward to reading the book but until then, at least I’ve got the webcasts and blog entries to tide me over.  Mike, one of the founding fathers of Thompson Murray turned Saatchi & Saatchi X has a pretty good dial on the business world and really gets me fired up to get out and affect change.

Twitter – a link to links
http://www.twitter.com
I’ve made at least a marginal effort to follow those tweeple that share common interests and in many cases are in my industry.  Many of my follows post interesting marketing and advertising links as well as links to the constant wave of twitter analysis throughout the web.  I sift through links and find little nuggets of insight and marketing gold.

Experimentation – if it hasn’t ever broken you’re not trying hard enough
I believe that experimentation is at the heart of learning.  I’ve always been the type that learns something by trying, and masters something by making mistakes.  So that’s where we are today… experimentation.

This is my “toolbelt” in as much as these are the resources that I keep close while working.  I’m always looking for new additions.  What research materials to you use in the day to day?