vineri, 5 august 2011

Damn Cool Pics

Damn Cool Pics


Real-life Robocop Policeman

Posted: 04 Aug 2011 08:08 PM PDT



Policeman Dan Pascoe attempted to use his squad car to prevent a BMW thief from escaping onto the highway outside of London. The BMW hit the squad car as Pascoe was getting out, hurtling him into the air. Pascoe immediately jumps up, chases down the BMW on foot and eventually catches the thief. Pascoe suffered no injuries.


The Most Married Celebrities

Posted: 04 Aug 2011 07:04 PM PDT

Celebrity weddings are known for not lasting a long time. Take a look at the revolving-door love lives of a few celebrities married at least four times starting with the actress most famous for her string of exes, eight-times-wed Elizabeth Taylor.

Liz Taylor - 8 Husbands








Brigitte Bardot - 4 Husbands








Barbara Walters - 4 Husbands








Liza Minnelli - 4 Husbands








William Shatner - 4 Wives








Billy Bob Thornton - 5 Wives








Geena Davis - 5 Husbands








Larry King- 7 Wives








Zsa Zsa Gabor - 9 Husbands








Jennifer O'Neill - 9 Husbands







SEOmoz Daily SEO Blog

SEOmoz Daily SEO Blog


Guide to Setting up Advanced Segments in Google Analytics for Complex Brand Names

Posted: 05 Aug 2011 07:31 AM PDT

Posted by Stephen

This is a step by step guide to setting up Brand and Non Brand keyword segments for a complex brand – when you have multiple brand keywords and where your brand keywords mirror your non brand keywords.

I have used the example of a client with a number of sub brands to demonstrate. Pay attention to the difference between AND and OR statements in the examples. As a non-developer, I find them to be tricky little weasels. There are four parts to the process:

  1. Choose the right brand keywords
  2. Set up a custom segment for brand keywords
  3. Set up a custom segment for non-brand keywords
  4. Check that your segment numbers add up

1. Choose the right brand keywords

The process of setting up brand keywords is straightforward when you have a single obvious brand name, but there is more subtlety required in choosing keywords in more complex situations. For a client such as alh.hr with a range of hotels in Dubrovnik, Croatia, where hotels have names such as "Hotel Dubrovnik Palace" which mirror the non-brand search term "hotel Dubrovnik", we have to extract just the unique part of the brand name and use it as the brand keyword. So from their Global Brand and list of Hotel names

  • Adriatic Luxury Hotels (ALH)
  • Hotel Excelsior Dubrovnik
  • Hotel Dubrovnik Palace
  • Hotel Bellevue Dubrovnik
  • Hotel Kompas Dubrovnik
  • Grand Hotel Bonavia Rijeka
  • Villa Agave

I extract the terms Excelsior, Palace, Bellevue, Kompas, Bonavia and Agave. I add to this list their global brand name ALH and its full written name Adriatic Luxury Hotels. Sometimes you need to make trade-offs based on searcher intent. You will note that Adriatic Luxury Hotels can be both a brand and non-brand keyword and we need to make a decision on how to classify this. I believe that keeping it as a brand keyword is the alternative most reflective of searcher intent and we will have to live with the few who use it as a non-brand keyword. We now have eight brand keywords to set up in our segments.

2. Setting up a custom segment for Brand keywords

  1. In Google Analytics, click on the "All visits" drop down to access advanced segments
  2. Click "create a new advanced segment"

  1. Search for "keyword" in the box
  2. Drag and drop the green keyword field from the left into the right hand side box

2 brand advanced

  1. Set condition to contains
  2. Add the brand keyword as a value
  3. Add all brand keywords similarly with OR statements
  4. Add an AND statement
  5. Search for "medium" in the box
  6. Drag and drop the green medium field from the left into the right hand side box
  7. Set condition to matches exactly
  8. Add organic as the value
  9. Add and OR statement
  10. Search for "medium" in the box
  11. Drag and drop the green medium field from the left into the right hand side box
  12. Set condition to matches exactly
  13. Add cpc as the value
  14. Name your segment – Brand Keywords
  15. Test your segment by clicking the test segment button

It should look like something like this:

 

3. Setting up a custom segment for Non Brand keywords:

  1. In Google Analytics, click on the "All visits" drop down to access advanced segments
  2. Click "create a new advanced segment"

  1. Search for "keyword" in the box
  2. Drag and drop the green keyword field from the left into the right hand side box

5 non brand advanced 

  1. Set condition to does not contain
  2. Add the brand keyword as a value
  3. Add all brand keywords similarly with AND statements
  4. Add an AND statement
  5. Search for "medium" in the box
  6. Drag and drop the green medium field from the left into the right hand side box
  7. Set condition to matches exactly
  8. Add organic as the value
  9. Add and OR statement
  10. Search for "medium" in the box
  11. Drag and drop the green medium field from the left into the right hand side box
  12. Set condition to matches exactly
  13. Add cpc as the value

It should look something like this

4. Check, double check and sense check your segments.

Experience has taught me to make sure my segments are correct before using them.

If you have created your segment as above, you should see this in you Custom Segments box

Do a sense check.

Number of brand keywords + number of non-brand keywords should = all keywords.

For ALH I found that keyword numbers didn't add up because people were searching in Croatian for the website and I hadn't included Croatian versions of the brand terms! I had to go back and put in Croatian language brand terms.

Check that values on a graph add up

Put both segments on and go to Traffic sources > Search engines. Scan a number of data points and make sure they add up. Simple.

 

Check that your actual keywords fall in the correct bucket.

Put both segments on and go to Traffic sources > Keywords. Scan a number of data points and make sure each keywords falls in the expected bucket.

9 checking table  

These three very simple checks will save you a lot of headaches when working with advanced segments.

---------------------------------

This is my process when working with Brand segments, if you have other solutions please share them in the comments. I find this tricky to get my head around and would love some more tips

Note: You can only have a max of 20 AND or OR statements per segments and you can only have a max of 100 advanced segments per profile. You have the option in keywords "matches regular expressions" which can help you work around these limits.


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Tactics for Early Adopter Marketers on Google Plus - Whiteboard Friday

Posted: 04 Aug 2011 02:19 PM PDT

Posted by Aaron Wheeler

 Roger Mozbot invited you to join him on Google+! Well, he would, if he had an account. Unlike the rest of us, he's waiting until it comes out of beta, a wise decision considering some of the problems the social network has faced in the past weeks. On the other hand, there's a lot to like about Google Plus; if anyone's taking a shine to it early on, it's online marketers of all stripes. As with Twitter, it can take some work to get valuable invites from the right people.

Not getting added to as many circles as you'd like to be? Will Critchlow from Distilled talks with Rand about some strategies you can employ to get those invite emails flowin' faster than spice flows out of Arrakis.

 

Video Transcription

Rand: Howdy, SEOmoz fans. Welcome to another special edition of Whiteboard Friday. I am joined once again by Will Critchlow, founder and Director at Distilled.

Will: Hi, Rand.

Rand: Will, thanks for being here again. It's great of you to fly all the way back over.

Will: Again, every week.

Rand: Yeah, my God. Amazing.

Will: You're killing me.

Rand: I think we're wearing the same shirts as last time.

Will: Well, this is my traveling clothes.

Rand: Oh, I can tell.

Will: Yeah. Thanks.

Rand: Yeah. Can you zoom in on that, Casey?

Will: Get on with it.

Rand: So we have some tactics this week, some tips for folks who are thinking about Google+. The first question that I get, I got this from someone who is speaking at MozCon, he said to me, "Boy, Google+. Feels like it is really early to be adopting that. Very early to be jumping in. Not yet a ton of value from participating." And I strongly disagreed.

Will: This is the time.

Rand: Now is the time. Jumping in early is when marketers can get outsized returns, and by learning the system early and growing your participation early on, I think you can do exciting things. One of the things I noticed is that my profile on Facebook has, I believe, 1,780 followers right, but my Google+ profile circles has 9,980. So Facebook is a lot bigger.

Will: I haven't checked mine, but I am sure it is right up there.

Rand: I am sure it is. But Google+ is clearly getting adopted by some people.

Will: And I think the problem, I guess the thing people are raising, is they feel like those people aren't relevant to them. So, if you are an in-house marketer at, I don't know a pet store, if these are all other marketers, are they the people that you want to be talking to?

Rand: Or tech people or startup people . . .

Will: Exactly. I guess to that we are saying, "Yes, start now, but pay attention to the fact that that is the current audience."

Rand: I couldn't agree more. So, the first tip that we have is to build out a robust, complete, useful profile. What are the essentials of this?

Will: Well, I think the number one, for me, well, apart from genuine contact detail, your name and so forth, is the photo.

Rand: Yes.

Will: I think that's the most memorable thing. There are so many people where you know their avatar.

Rand: Yeah.

Will: I think bright colors work well. I think headshots work well. Especially here, where it's you. It's a person.

Rand: Right. Well, and they won't allow brands at this stage.

Will: Right.

Rand: So using a non-authentic photo, I agree with you.

Will: So I would go with a brightly colored . . .

Rand: I have actually done background color testing on photos for my personal account to see whether my Twitter account would get more followers or less with certain ones. Orange works very well for me.

Will: We have people from different Distilled offices have different colored backgrounds.

Rand: Perfect. I love A/B testing everything in marketing, including the background color of your photo. So, tip number two, share content targeted to early adopters. What do we mean by this? Especially for someone who is that in-house pet store owner.

Will: Right. Well, one idea if you are creating content is talk about the marketing stuff you're doing. So I love the idea of sharing case studies and stuff that is going to be interesting to that audience. The immediate return isn't that they know that you're marketing. The immediate return is getting the traction, getting the early adoption, getting involved in the platform at this stage.

Rand: And with Google+, the more circles that you're in, the more that your content has secondary effects. It is not just the circle I shared with, but it is everyone who is connected to those circles. The Venn diagrams overlap, and the second levels and third levels mean that more people can see it, more people can share it.

Will: Right.

Rand: So every person that you can potentially reach on Google+ is a valued added influencer maybe for the future when you share the things that really matter.

Will: Absolutely. So I like that stuff. Then there is a whole bunch of stuff that is the kind of thing you would see on Hacker News, I guess.

Rand: News and technology? Sure. That startup stuff.

Will: That kind of overlap, but it's the same people.

Rand: Right. And you also see a lot of stuff that is like Reddit focused. There's entertainment, news, politics . . .

Will: Absolutely. Politics. Yeah, and especially because it is such a good platform for replying because you get the threaded stuff.

Rand: Yeah.

Will: I think we get a lot of particularly news and politics stuff where people go back and forth a little bit.

Rand: Yeah. That's quite good. All right. So we can share this type of content. We just have to find ways to make whatever we do relevant to these things.

Will: Or whatever we find. You're building your persona as well. So it can be stuff you're interested in.

Rand: Right.

Will: We were both sharing that thing about the space shuttle flight the other day, right, which is nothing to do with our day jobs.

Rand: But that was a great article.

Will: That was an amazing article.

Rand: Great article. So last tip we've got, oh, sorry, tip three of four, use circles to bias your sharing. This is something I can only do with Google+.

Will: It is a platform thing. Yeah, absolutely. This is the thing that I want in a social platform that I am going to use. This is the thing that means that I can segment the people I am speaking to. I kind of feel sometimes like Facebook in particular gets a raw deal here, my Facebook friends, because most of them are my real, like they're my basketball friends or guys from school or college . . .

Rand: And yet you're talking SEO and tech.

Will: . . . and I am talking SEO all the time. They're like, "Really? You're boring." Which I'm not saying I am actually more interesting than that. But here you can segment it. So you can talk SEO to your SEO people, you can talk tech and family and friends and so forth.

Rand: This is a brilliant way to make sure that you are not flooding these people with the wrong stuff.

Will: Right. And it means that you can start now, and in the future as all your real target market gets on there, you're not going to be boring them. You can still keep talking to the people who you built . . .

Rand: Great future of Google+.

Will: We love this one, right? This is . . .

Rand: Yeah, this is an amazing one. So, Gianluca Fiorelli, who of course is a frequent contributor to the blog, possibly he is watching Whiteboard Friday from the couch right now.

Will: Live.

Rand: It's amazing.

Will: Hey.

Rand: He was noting that he can take his Spanish marketing friends, his Italian marketing friends, his English marketing friends, and share different content with each of them in their appropriate language, which is absolutely an amazing feature.

Will: Which is great, because it means we can follow him without getting all of the Spanish and Italian stuff.

Rand: Bombarded with. Right. I follow Fabio Ricotta, for example, on Twitter, and he tweets in Portuguese very frequently.

Will: Yeah, you just have to skim past it.

Rand: Yup.

Will: But here you don't have to.

Rand: That's amazing.

Will: It's great.

Rand: So the last tip we've got.

Will: Yes. They have this, much like Facebook, I guess, when you throw a URL in that you want to share . . .

Rand: You can choose the image from . . . .

Will: Yes, it pulls the thumbnail. I guess what we're saying is that realize that if it pulls the wrong one or if it doesn't pull one . . .

Rand: You need to change.

Will: . . . you can upload your own one.

Rand: That's right. You can upload your own. So, even if there is content that you are sharing, for example, just a little complaint, a rant, a whatever, I am always using minus, I'll upload a little photo, and I'll have an arrow that points to it so that there is some URL associated with it and that way I can also measure click-through rate.

Will: Perfect.

Rand: Which is great. All right, Will. I am excited. I will see you on Google+. What's your Plus? plus.google.com/100170499799078378149?

Will: Yeah, that's me. See you there.

Rand: You can follow Will, too.

Will: Should we put a link in?

Rand: Hopefully. Hopefully, they'll get real profile names sometime soon.

Will: I'm sure they will.

Rand: Will, thanks for joining me again. Thanks to all of you. We will see you again next week for another edition of Whiteboard Friday.

Will: Bye.

Video transcription by Speechpad.com


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