joi, 17 februarie 2011

Damn Cool Pics

Damn Cool Pics


Backstage At The 135th Annual Westminster Dog Show

Posted: 17 Feb 2011 03:47 PM PST

A collection of the cutest pictures from backstage of this years' Westminster Dog Show. Basically, Best In Show IRL.




























































Source: boston


Animals at the Dentist

Posted: 17 Feb 2011 03:36 PM PST




























Source: telegraph


Funny Graphs And Charts

Posted: 17 Feb 2011 01:19 PM PST

These are humorous graphs and charts. In the hands of the right statistician, a graph or chart will say anything he wants it to. Someone made these graphs and charts funny.






































































Facebook Porsche GT3 R Hybrid

Posted: 17 Feb 2011 01:09 PM PST

Porsche is celebrating one million fans on Facebook . On this occasion, the German sports car maker has created a special model GT3 R Hybrid , which bear the names of all Porsche fans on Facebook. Also announced a special Web site dedicated to this initiative, which can increase the scale of the car to find his name on the cab. See this unique cars can be in the Porsche Museum in Stuttgart in February. In the continuation of the publication - a video about how this car was painted.




















How Netflix Destroyed Blockbuster (Infographic)

Posted: 17 Feb 2011 11:15 AM PST

How is Netflix destroying Blockbuster in the movie rental wars? There is an infographic for that. It's filled with a bunch of interesting facts like, did you know that Netflix has more subscribers than the entire population of Australia? Check out the full infographic after the jump.

More Infographics.

Click to Enlarge.


Source: onlinembaprograms


Remi Gaillard – Mario Kart is Back

Posted: 16 Feb 2011 10:49 PM PST

The crazy guy Remi Gaillard is back with his new Mario Kart clip.


Amateur Wedding Photography

Posted: 16 Feb 2011 10:36 PM PST

The one part of your wedding you should never skimp on is the photography. It's always better to shell out a boatload of cash for a good professional photographer than end up with amateur non professional photo shopped pictures of your big day as the couples in these pictures discovered.


























































































































SEOmoz Daily SEO Blog

SEOmoz Daily SEO Blog


What It Takes To Be an Independent Search Marketer

Posted: 16 Feb 2011 01:34 PM PST

Posted by Lindsay

Greener GrassIf you're a Search Marketer working at an agency, in-house or are out-of-work entirely, you've probably considered going independent at least once. A bad day at the office can inspire daydreams of earning more money and working from home in your pajamas. There are clear advantages to becoming your own boss but the grass isn't always greener, as they say.

Remember the 2010 SEO Industry Survey? More than 10,000 respondents participated and the result was some fascinating analysis by Will Critchlow and the Anatomy of a Search Marketer infographic was born. I was in love. As I began exploring the anatomy of an Independent Search Marketer the raw data from this earlier survey revealed yet another use.

I'll share a few new findings from the survey that I thought would be most interesting to those thinking of going solo. Also, as someone who's experienced in-house, agency, and now independent search marketing roles perhaps I can have a useful perspective. I'll try my hardest, anyway!

Lets check out the data first. After I shatter your dreams of making more money and attending every search marketing event once you go independent, we'll dive in to what the job of an Independent Search Marketer really looks like. If you are still interested, that is.

As with any survey, there are a number of caveats to take into consideration when looking at the data and conclusions. Take a read of those cautions as described when we first released the survey data over here. All of the data below looks only at US based respondents. There were 846 US Based Agency Search Marketers, 2217 US Based In-House Search Marketers, and and 1176 US Based Independent Consultants.

Interesting Find #1

On average, Independent Consultants earn about the same as Agency Search Marketers and In-House Search Marketers. The average yearly earnings for all three groups was within the $60-$75K range. As you can see in the graph below however, the distribution is very different. I'll let you interpret that bit as you will.

earnings comparison

If you're thinking of going independent for the financial advantage, rub the dollar signs from your eyes and think seriously about your business plan and revenue forecast. More money isn't a given, but is of course possible.

Interesting Find #2

Independent Consultants work with a smaller book of clients at one time than Agency Search Marketers.

how many clients do you work with at one time?

If you're looking for variety and to work with a larger number of clients at once, an Agency job might be your best bet. If you prefer to dive deep with a handful of clients, an Independent Consultant career path could be the way to go. Personally, I'd call this finding a big plus for the Independent Consultant side.

Interesting Find #3:

Independent Consultants are less likely to attend industry events and conferences than both Agency Search Marketers and In-House Search Marketers.

attended-event

Uh oh. Come on Independents! If I were to guess, I'd say that Independent Consultants are less likely to attend industry events because the cost comes directly out of their own pockets. I'm interested in your thought on this, too.

What does it take to become an Independent Search Marketer?

Still thinking of taking the leap from employed to self-employed? Lets explore how your duties as an In-House or Agency Search Marketer might change in your new role as Entrepreneur and Lone Ranger.

Expert Skills

Regardless of what search segment you choose to focus on, as an Independent Consultant your clients will expect you to be an expert. They'll be hiring you to make solid recommendations usually beyond the skill set that they have in-house. It is okay to ask for help from your peers (read your consultant/client NDA first!) and seek the opinions of others, but YOU need to make the call on the final recommendation based on your experience, expertise, and the information at hand.

Stay S-M-R-T Skills

In The Simpsons' "Homer Goes to College" episode, Homer gleefully sets his high school diploma aflame, while singing, "I am so smart, I am so smart, S-M-R-T, I mean S-M-A-R-T!" Behind him his living room is going up in flames (quote). Just because you've made it into the realm of independent consulting doesn't mean you can stop going to conferences (see Interesting Find #3). Keep engaging, keep reading, and keep learning if you wish to continue growing your career.

Self-Promotion Skills

Don't like to toot your own horn? That'll cost ya. You need to be able to speak intelligently and convincingly about your subject matter. You need to speak confidently about your experience and skills without taking it too far.

Nun-chuck Skills

nun-chuck skillsJust kidding. You don't need nun-chuck skills to be an Independent Consultant, unless your also trying to get girls. Right Napoleon?

 Closing-the-Deal Skills

Do you have a hard time asking for things? Once you've covered the Expert and Self-Promotion pieces, you might find yourself in a position to sell something. So, what do you do?

As an in-house or agency consultant, you likely haven't had to sell your services... for money. Sure, you sell ideas, projects, and the like. You may even be great at asking for a raise or negotiating for more holiday time. What it comes down to is this. Are you willing to look a prospect in the eye (or at least speak over the phone) and sell a project along with the price tag?

General Business Skills

You might be an SEO prodigy, but that doesn't mean you are a business person. It is possible that the most brilliant SEO on the planet would be most successful and earn the most money if he is allowed to focus on his core strength. Running an independent SEO consulting business requires a lot of tasks that will take you away from the thing you love. Here is a quick list of the non-SEO stuff you’ll need to be prepared to tackle.

  • Marketing – I know, you can show up in the SERPs for the terms you are targeting but SEO isn’t the only marketing channel at your disposal to drum up clients. What else do you have in your tool belt? Email, graphic design, advertising, social media, affiliate...? Take stock and make sure you have enough tricks bill collectingup your sleeve.
  • Basic Accounting – Even if you hire an outside accountant to handle your taxes, you’re going to have to keep records and have a clue about balancing a budget, filling out a W-9, invoicing, accounts payable, etc.
  • Bill Collecting - If a client doesn't pay, it is on you to follow-up and make it happen. Outsourcing this function can be pretty expensive, so be prepared to do it yourself at least in the beginning.
  • Strategic Planning – Sorry, this one sounds borrowed from a business 101 text book. The content there wasn't all drivel! Strategic planning is important because you need to be able to plan and think about your business as well as do the work. 
  • Old-Fashioned Paper Pushing – You’ll need to register your business and keep it registered, notice and do something about legal matters as they arise, open your mail, deal with banks, order business cards, etc. This is my least favorite part about being independent. Each of these items can seem like a small task, but add them up and you can lose a lot of valuable billable time.

People Skills

You may know your search marketing inside and out. You may have a solution identified to triple a web property's search traffic. Unfortunately none of that will matter if you can't communicate and influence your prospects and clients. Some people are excellent at this from birth. Others have to work at it.

Money or Mommy
 
If you aren’t lucky enough to have contracts set-to-go the day you transition from employee to independent, you’ll last a lot longer if you have a cushion while you get on your feet. You can be creative here, for sure, because a safety net can take on many forms. Here are a few ideas.
  • Save money first ( You're so smart!)
  • Move back in with Mom. Food, shelter, bedtime stories, what more do you need? (Think I'm kidding? See: Census Bureau data, Slide 18)  
  • Take a loan. This seems like a bad idea, but your finances are your own business. :)
  • Lean on your partner. Are you currently living large with two household incomes? I bet you could manage on one for a little while.
  • Get your boss to hire you. Some of my best independent consulting clients today are my employers of yesterday. Why not continue to work a bit for your current boss, as an outside consultant? It could make the transition smoother and help everybody meet their goals.

What is the fun in that?

Certainly there are a lot of heavy things to think about before making a go of it on your own. Lets round this post out with the top 5 reasons that being an Independent Consultant is awesome.

  1. You can choose your own clients. Not into paper products? Don't pitch the project!
  2. You don't have to get dressed in the morning. You should. The point is you don't have to.
  3. You'll have a nice short commute from your bedroom to your office.
  4. If you have a young family, you can oversee your children's care with in-home childcare.
  5. If you do your best work at midnight, have at it. Aside from client calls and general daytime availability you can usually set your own hours.

That does it for tonight. Happy Daydreaming!

P.S. Congratulations Watson! "I, for one, welcome our new computer overlords." - Ken Jennings

Images from Shutterstock


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Why It’s OK to Offend People in Social Media Graywolf's SEO Blog

Why It’s OK to Offend People in Social Media Graywolf's SEO Blog


Why It’s OK to Offend People in Social Media

Posted: 16 Feb 2011 08:01 AM PST

Post image for Why It’s OK to Offend People in Social Media

Recently, Kenneth Cole took a bit of criticism in the social media space for making what many considered an insensitive tweet. I’m going to disagree with the social media guru’s here and say it’s ok to offend people. In fact, it’s probably something you should do on a regular basis. In case you missed it, here’s the tweet in question

Kenneth Cole Tweet

First off, it’s pretty obvious the tweet was a joke. Done in poor taste … maybe … but it was still a joke. If you didn’t get that it was joke, then there are bigger issues you need to confront. But back to the point of this post, is it OK to offend people who might turn into potential customers … I say yes.

IMHO if you try to be the company or person that everyone likes and never offends anyone, chances are you will make a lot of compromises and end up with a mediocre product that is undistinctive and unremarkable. In short, you will have no point of differentiation. There’s nothing that makes you unique or  memorable in anyway. The second point is that not everyone is your customer. The more you tailor your product to specific customers, the more those customers will love you.

Scikotics Asylum 2009

Customized Scion

Take for example the Scion above. It’s boxy and lacks the streamlining of most modern cars and sports cars. It’s low to the ground so doesn’t appeal to the SUV soccer MOM demographic. This car isn’t made for everyone. It is made for a specific customer, a customer who likes this style and look. They like it so much, in fact, they create communities and groups where they can show off their custom modified versions, like the one pictured above. I think it’s ugly … and I realize I’m not the customer, but I am glad they are making them. Let’s be honest: presenting a Camry to the Toyota board of directors is a safe move; presenting a Scion takes some nerve.

When you build websites or other online community, you should look for ways to be more discriminating and distinctive. When you create places filled with information that people like or are passionate about, you become a destination they seek out, instead of a destination dependent on drive by search engine traffic. If people like you enough to go out of their way to visit you, you don’t have to worry about things like the death of RSS. If you don’t think being unique inspires feelings of loyalty and love then I suggest reading a recent post by OK Cupid on what makes people beautiful. It’s a fascinating piece.
Creative Commons License photo credit: Ben Chau

tla starter kit

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Why It’s OK to Offend People in Social Media

Advise the Advisor: Austan Goolsbee and Small Business

The White House Your Daily Snapshot for
Thursday, Feb. 17,  2011
 

Advise the Advisor: Austan Goolsbee and Small Business

In the second edition of the Advise the Advisor series, Austan Goolsbee, Chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers, is asking for your feedback on small businesses and entrepreneurship.

Watch the video and submit your feedback.

In Case You Missed It

Here are some of the top stories from the White House blog.

Spending Time with Our Military & Their Families
Dr. Jill Biden writes about recent visits with our troops and military families.

What I’m Hearing from You Through Advise the Advisor
David Plouffe, Senior Advisor to the President, responds to some of your Advise the Advisor feedback.

Deadline for the Race to the Top Commencement Challenge is February 25
The Race to the Top Commencement Challenge is back and we’re asking public high school students from across the country to tell us about ways their school is preparing them for college and a career. The deadline for applications is February 25, 2011.

Today's Schedule

All times are Eastern Standard Time (EST).

9:30 PM: The President and the Vice President receive the Presidential Daily Briefing

9:55 PM: The President holds a meeting on the Elementary and Secondary Education Act

12:15 PM: The President and the Vice President meet with House Democratic Leadership for lunch

12:30 PM: Briefing by Press Secretary Jay Carney WhiteHouse.gov/live

1:45 PM: The President signs the John M. Roll United States Courthouse Bill

3:00 PM: The President departs the White House en route Andrews Air Force Base

3:00 PM: The Vice President holds a Recovery Act Cabinet Meeting WhiteHouse.gov/live

3:15 PM: The President departs Andrews Air Force Base en route San Francisco, California

8:45 PM: The President arrives in San Francisco, California

9:45 PM: The President meets with business leaders in technology and innovation

WhiteHouse.gov/live  Indicates events that will be live streamed on White House.com/Live.

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Seth's Blog : On pricing power

[You're getting this note because you subscribed to Seth Godin's blog.]

On pricing power

If you're not getting paid what you're worth, there are only two possible reasons:
1. People don't know what you're worth, or
2. You're not (currently) worth as much as you believe

The first situation can't happen unless you permit it to. If you're undervalued, then you have a communication problem, one that you can solve by telling accurate stories that resonate.

Far more likely, though, is the second problem. If there are reasonable substitutes for your work, and those substitutes are seen as cheaper, then you're not going to get the work. 'Worth' in this case means, "what does it cost to get something like that if something like that is what I want?"

A cheaper substitute might mean buying nothing. Personal coaches, for example, usually sell against this alternative. It's not a matter of finding a cheaper coach, it's more about having no coach at all. Same with live music. People don't go to cheaper concerts, they just don't value the concert enough to go at all.

And so we often find ourselve stuck, matching the other guy's price, or worse, racing to the bottom to be cheaper. Cheaper is the last refuge of the marketer unable to invent a better product and tell a better story.

The goal, no matter what you sell, is to be seen as irreplaceable, essential and priceless. If you are all three, then you have pricing power. When the price charged is up to you, when you have the power to set the price, there is a line out the door and you can use pricing as a signaling mechanism, not merely a way to make a living.

Of course, the realization of what it takes to create value might break your heart, because it means you have to specialize, take risks, create art, leave a positive impact and adopt generosity in all you do. It means you have to develop extraordinary expertise and that you are almost always hanging way out of the boat, about to fall out.

The pricing power position in the market is coveted and valuable... The ability to have the power to set a price is at the heart of what it means to do business profitably, so of course there is a never-ending competition for pricing power.

The curse of the internet is that it provides competitive information, which makes pricing power ever more difficult to exercise. On the other hand, the benefit of the internet is that once you have it, the list of people who want to pay for your irreplaceable, essential and priceless contribution will get even longer.

 
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