joi, 14 octombrie 2010

Damn Cool Pics

Damn Cool Pics


Surprise Party

Posted: 14 Oct 2010 11:50 AM PDT

This funny guy imitates the lady from the SNL's skit "Surprise Party".


The Tallest Blonde in the World

Posted: 14 Oct 2010 11:03 AM PDT

This 23-year-old blonde is one of the tallest women in the USA and in the world. Lindsay Hayward is 6'9″ tall. Her weight is 240 pounds. She can easily spin a man over her head before throwing him across the room. Lindsay's fans know her as professional wrestler, Isis who can leg press an astonishing 50st.

At the age of 9, Lindsay was 6ft tall, and by 13 years old she had shot to 6ft 9ins, her today's height. Still, despite her attractive looks and 38G bra size, Lindsay has so far been unlucky in love. Would you date her?


This is how Lindsay (at the left) looked like when she was 11.






































Other Tall Women:
The World's Tallest Model
The Tallest Girls of the World
Two tallest living women in the world
Elisany Silva, the Tallest Teen Girl in the World


German Brothel vs German Prison

Posted: 14 Oct 2010 09:09 AM PDT

These photos were taken by the German photographer Juergen Chill. They show the remarkable likenesses between a brothel and a prison cell. As much as they are alike I still think I would prefer the brothel.

Brothel












Prison











Epic Fails - Part 5

Posted: 14 Oct 2010 08:36 AM PDT

Here is a new set of the best and the most epic fails. Enjoy.

Previous parts:
Epic Fails
Epic Fails - Part 2
Epic Fails - Part 3
Epic Fails - Part 4






















































































The Craziest Soccer Tattoo

Posted: 14 Oct 2010 08:16 AM PDT

25-year-old Colombian soccer fan Felipe Alvarez has been tattooed with a soccer jersey tattoo of Atletico Nacional team in honor of Andres Escobar, a Columbian soccer player who was killed in 1994. It is widely believed that he was murdered due to his own goal in the 1994 FIFA World Cup, which supposedly would have caused gambling losses to several powerful drug lords. In that game Columbia has lost 1:2 to the USA and was eliminated from the tournament in the first round. Anyway, it's the craziest tattoo I've seen in a while.


















Meat Cake

Posted: 14 Oct 2010 07:38 AM PDT

Although it may not sound too appetizing, it actually looks rather tasty. It is made from some sort of ground meat, iced with mashed potatoes, and frosted with ketchup. Basically it is a meatloaf dinner all in one cake.




























Technology in the Classroom

Posted: 14 Oct 2010 07:26 AM PDT

Laptops, e-readers, smart phones and ipads are everywhere, even in the classrooms. From homeworm to class work, computers and their mobile counterparts have changed the way students learn and how classes are taught. Every year more technology comes into the classroom, and for better or worse, it's here to say.

Click to Enlarge.



Source: onlinecollegesanduniversities


SEOmoz Daily SEO Blog

SEOmoz Daily SEO Blog


So You Call Yourself an Analyst? Part 3: Less Talk, More Do

Posted: 13 Oct 2010 02:02 PM PDT

Posted by JoannaLord

Alright fellow data crunchers, you ready for the final post in our three-post series, "So You Call Yourself an Analyst?" I was really hoping to get this post up last week but instead I was putting the final touches on our new affiliate program (more on that very soon)! For those of you that missed Part 1 or Part 2 of this series, I suggest checking those out before reading this one.

In Part 2, we outlined ways to analyze the data for valuable insights. We walked through GA features, as well as strategies to help you prioritize your analysis efforts. We should all be sitting here with tons of great data just waiting to be used.

Assigning Value to the Data

So what do we do now? Buy ourselves a pumpkin spice latte, and call it a day? No, no, no.  It's our job to take all of this data and figure out how much we are making (or not making) from our efforts. We can begin to create options based on data to help steer our companies down a more profitable path. By assigning value to the data you are now speaking a language everyone understands--money.

You need to explain the current situation in dollars. Too often analysts show up to meetings with great data but they explain it in weekly increases or decreases. This can be hard for people to conceptualize. Instead translate the data into actual dollars. I find the value per visit (VPV) metric to be one of the most overlooked calculations an analyst can use. Let's roll through an example;

Let's say we wanted to know if we should allocate more resources to the Learn SEO section. We would want to know how much each visit, on average, makes us. How do we calculate the value per visit? We pull how many people visited the section last month, and see how many conversions took place. We then multiply the # of conversions by $99 (you can also use your lifetime value if you want) and we get a monetary value the section brough in last month. We take that value and divide by number of visits to the Learn SEO section, and we have a practical data point to report. Looks like this;

Value per visit calculation

Reporting good data with an attached value to your boss or client is only half the battle. The other part is making those numbers compelling. For example, let's say your marketing team needs to know what section of the site they should focus CRO efforts on. You may be inclined to throw that data in excel, but why not throw it in a pie chart? The data really pops, right?

 





When reporting the value of data you should lean on things like bar graphs, pie charts, and ranges of success. Go dramatic folks! You just spent days throwing back caffeinated drinks so you could find data they want to see. Help them see it better.

Last but not least...Take Action!

Now that we have the value nailed down, we can move onto my favorite part--taking action.  Yup you read that right...it is your responsibility to hand the rest of the company with suggested "next steps" {mind explodes!}

Now I want you guys to be honest, how many of you have said something like this,  "If we can increase traffic to this page by 10% we will increase signups by 2% and add X number of dollars to the bottomline?" Ugh, come on people! You have the data. You know how the traffic is getting to that page right now. You know what referrals are increasing, and which are dropping. You know what sections of the site are funneling to that page and which have no way for a visitor to access that page. Make actual suggestions when presenting the data!

You should be saying, "Here are my suggestions for increasing traffic to this page..." and list a number of referring sources for PR to work on, or give a handful of keywords for your SEO to target, etc. These are things you can suggest based on the numbers. You can have confidence that you are suggesting smart moves for your company.

That is what this was all for friends. As analysts we aren't just tasked with making sure everything looks okay, we are also expected to find ways to improve. If you aren't walking away from the data with action items you can get started on, you shouldn't be walking away from the data.

Well that about wraps it up for this series folks. I hope I have helped some of you reevaluate your current analytical process. I know it all seems like quite a bit of work, but trust me when I say time invested in analytics is well spent. Hopefully this series has given you a roadmap to follow, and at the very least motivated you to log in, check it all out, and start analyzing.

Want to start from the beginning and check out Parts 1 & 2? Here they are:

Part 1: Asking the Right Questions
Part 2: Analysis Redefined


 


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Seth's Blog : The book of the year

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The book of the year

Kevin Kelly publishes books rarely. Each one is a keeper, and a new one is a special event.

His new one is out today. If there's justice, it will win the Pulitzer Prize.

Kevin's book could be sketchily summarized in fifteen or twenty blog posts, and I'm tempted to do so, but I think you should do the more direct thing and just read it. That way, as I steal from it again and again going forward, you'll nod your head in recognition of the power of what he's writing about.

Hint: it's as good as Guns, Germs and Steel, which I consider one of the most important big-thought books ever.

Bonus! Steve Pressfield's The War of Art is coming to ebook format for $1.99...

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