vineri, 17 decembrie 2010

Seth's Blog : Weasel words are more difficult to get away with

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Weasel words are more difficult to get away with

I got a note from someone who "helps lead the internet and Media efforts" at a fairly well known venture firm.

A click over to their website indicates that he's not a Managing Director or a Partner, not a Limited Senior Advisor, nor a Founding Strategic Director, Principal, Director of Business Development, Vice President or even a Senior Associate. He's an Associate. Which is fine, of course, unless the first thing you told a stranger is that you help lead an important initiative.

Organizations have always been good at title inflation, because it's free and it serves their purposes. The net, though, makes it easy to see what the hierarchy actually looks like, so it's better to just be clear, I think.

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joi, 16 decembrie 2010

Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis

Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis


Hardball in Wisconsin; Massive Defeat for Unions in Lame-Duck Session

Posted: 16 Dec 2010 10:06 PM PST

In Wisconsin, governor-elect Scott Walker is in a showdown with state employee unions.
"Anything from the decertify all the way through modifications of the current laws in place," Walker said at a luncheon sponsored by the Milwaukee Press Club at the Newsroom Pub.

"The bottom line is that we are going to look at every legal means we have to try to put that balance more on the side of taxpayers and the people who care about services."
Union supporters did not like the idea one bit and sought legislation in the lame-duck session that would tie Walker's hands.

It was a done deal. The votes were there in the house. In the Senate it was 18-14 in favor. Or so everyone thought. Amazingly, at the last moment, two democrats including Senate Majority Leader Russ Decker switched votes sending the bills up in flames.

Please consider Dems end lame duck session after failure to pass union contracts
Democratic Gov. Jim Doyle's administration announced last week it had completed negotiations on 17 contracts covering 39,000 state workers ranging from teachers to janitors. The deals included no pay increases, factored in 16 furlough days Doyle ordered state employees to take in the current state budget and called for 5 percent increases in health care contributions.

The contracts have been a hot issue for Walker. He demanded Doyle's staff stop work on the agreements last month, saying they could hamstring him as he grapples with a $150 million deficit in the current fiscal year and a $3.3 billion shortfall in the next two-year budget.

He wants state workers to make deeper concessions and even suggested he would consider abolishing state employee unions after he takes office.

Democrats pushed on despite Walker's demands, saying he's not the governor yet. But no one realized that former Senate Majority Leader Russ Decker, D-Weston, wasn't on board.

Assembly Democrats convened first Wednesday evening and barely got the contracts through, approving 16 of them by one vote and the last by three votes. The swing voter was Rep. Jeff Wood, who convinced a judge to release him from jail long enough to travel to Madison and vote. Wood, a Chippewa Falls independent who often sides with Democrats, is serving 60 days for impaired driving in Marathon County.

The Senate convened moments later, with Republicans complaining that Democrats were so desperate to tie Walker's hands that they pulled a lawmaker out of jail.

Then, moments before the vote on the first contract, Decker got up and said he couldn't support any of the deals. He said Doyle should have had the contracts ready months ago and the next Legislature should deal with them.

He and Sen. Jeff Plale, D-Milwaukee, voted against the contract, creating a 16-16 tie with Republicans. A tie vote meant the contract failed.

Enraged Democrats immediately recessed to a closed door meeting, stomping angrily out of the chamber. Decker seemed in good spirits on his way into the meeting, laughing when a trailing reporter joked he was getting more media attention than Wood.

When Democrats remerged they had stripped Decker of his leadership post and handed it to Hansen. They returned to the floor and voted on the remaining 16 contracts, but Decker and Plale didn't change their minds and every one of the agreements failed, 16-16. Decker, a 20-year Senate veteran, sat in his chair as the votes went on, looking unaffected. He had nothing to lose; he lost his re-election bid in November and will be out of the Legislature in three weeks anyway.
I am not sure exactly what happened but I would not be surprised to see either Russ Decker or Jeff Plale, both who lost reelection bids, find jobs with the new administration.

Regardless of what did happen, I definitely look forward to some hardball from governor Jim Doyle. Specifically, I want to see him decertify public unions. If he can get that done, I would support him for president.

Nationally, we need to kill collective bargaining for all public unions, scrap Davis-Bacon and all prevailing wage laws, mandate Right-to-Work laws, and do something to cleanup untenable public union pension promises, not just going forward, but existing benefits as well.

To do the latter, I propose taxing public union pension benefits above $120,000 at 90%, returning the excess to the pension plans until the plans are fully funded using a reasonable rate of return estimate of the long-term T-Bill rate. That rate is currently 4.25%.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List


Dear Santa Letters Ask For Clothes, Shoes, Not Toys

Posted: 16 Dec 2010 02:25 PM PST

Looking for the reason behind soaring apparel sales and weak sales at Best Buy? You can find an explanation in Sad Santa Letters that the United States Post Office opens a reads as part of "Operation Santa".
With just nine days to go until Santa shimmies down those chimneys, letters to the big, jolly guy are coming in fast and furious. "The common theme this year seems to be a single mom with young kids, the parent has left -- they don't know who the father is, or the father left -- and they can't pay the bills," said Pete Fontana, head of the United States Postal Service Operation Santa in New York.

"We had one little girl write in and say all she wants is a winter coat for her mom. Nothing for herself," he said. "We had another letter for grandparents and they wanted to put a turkey with the trimmings for the holiday dinner ... but they couldn't even get their medicine."

Other letters are similarly heartbreaking.

Eight-year-old Skayla told Santa that her mother doesn't have a job and her father lives in the Dominican Republic, leaving it up to her grandmother to buy everything. She asked for clothes and shoes for herself, her 7-year-old sister and their infant brother, even including their sizes.

"Thanks Santa," she wrote," I LOVE YOU."

How You Can Help

If you want to help make a Christmas wish come true, the best way is to Contact a local post office participating in Operation Santa.


Industrywide Demand for Electronics is Soft

Please consider Best Buy cuts outlook as results disappoint.
Dec. 14, 2010, 12:55 p.m. EST

The No. 1 U.S. electronics retailer's profit fell as lower demand for televisions, notebook computers and videogames led to a sales shortfall in the U.S. While margin widened slightly, analysts said they were concerned that it came at the expense of sales.

Best Buy Co. shares tumbled more than 15% Tuesday, their biggest decline in more than eight years, after the retailer reported an unexpected decline in fiscal third-quarter profit and cut its outlook.

"There's interest there from consumers on the latest and greatest, but really they are making trade-offs in their discretionary spending, not only across CE [consumer electronics], but within CE categories, where there are periods of time we may have historically seen them buy multiple large products in a year, they are being more choosey at this point in time," said Muehlbauer [Best Buy's CFO] on a conference call with analysts.
Ample Warning

There was ample warning for that huge miss at Best Buy. On December 3, a report from SpendingPulse showed Retail Sales Led by Apparel, Consumer Electronics and Appliances Down.
Retail sales are way up year-over-year and apparel is leading the way. I have this email from SpendingPulse to share: ....

Year-over-year Total Apparel sales in November saw another sharp monthly increase. At 9.6% this was the largest year-over-year growth in 2010 for that sector following the previous record in October. Total apparel has enjoyed 8 out of 11 months of year-over-year gains so far in 2010. In November, all of the sub-sectors posted year-over-year growth.

For the second consecutive month, the Consumer Electronics and Appliances segment posted a year-over-year decline, although at -1.1%, it was not as severe as October's decline. The Consumer Electronics sub-category was down by 1% while the Appliance sub-sector fell by 1.6% year-over-year.

Pent Up Demand For Clothes

The SpendingPulse report shows a pent-up demand, not for junk, electronics, or appliances, but for specifically clothes.
Repeating my ending comment from the above article: It's nice to see shoppers focus on real needs instead of electronic garbage. However, pent-up demand for apparel cannot last forever, nor can apparel sales form the foundation for a lasting recovery.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List


Plowing Into Junk While Insiders Bail

Posted: 16 Dec 2010 10:06 AM PST

After an enormous rally in junk bonds in 2009 and 2010, Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan, Neuberger Berman, Guggenheim Partners, and Schroders Investment Management all recommend increased risk.

Meanwhile investor sentiment on US treasuries is at a record low and the bull-bear spread on equities has widened out to 36.3. According to Dave Rosenberg, that bull-bear spread is within striking distance of the 42.4 all-time high posted in October 2007.

Please consider Junk Spreads Narrow to 2007 Level on Fed's QE2
The extra yield investors demand to own high-risk debt rather than government bonds has dropped 82 basis points this month to 540 basis points, or 5.4 percentage points, the lowest since Nov. 16, 2007, according to Bank of America Merrill Lynch's U.S. High-Yield Master II index.

Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and JPMorgan Chase & Co. are advising clients to buy speculative-grade debt in 2011, even after gains of 14 percent this year and a record 57.5 percent in 2009.

"We're going to start taking more risk as we go into next year because the economic fundamentals are better," said Thomas O'Reilly, a managing director in Chicago at Neuberger Berman Fixed Income LLC, which oversees $11 billion in junk bonds.

Spreads on high-yield debt have tightened 187 basis points from this year's high on June 11, according to Bank of America Merrill Lynch index data. The riskiest tier has narrowed the most this month, falling 122 basis points to 906, according to the bank's US High Yield, CCC and Lower Rated index. Investment- grade bonds have dropped 13 basis points to 169.

"The sweet spot is high yield," said Alberto Gallo, a credit strategist at Goldman Sachs in New York, which favors bonds with B ratings. "You want to gain as much spread exposure as possible, and you want to decrease your rate exposure, which is what you achieve with high yield."

JPMorgan says investors should be "overweight" CCC ranked securities as the economy grows faster than expected, the New York-based bank's Peter Acciavatti wrote Dec. 8 in a report. Overall, high-yield bonds will return 9.8 percent, he wrote.

"Certainly in my mind, QE2 is working," said Scott Minerd, chief investment officer at Guggenheim Partners LLC in Santa Monica, California, where he oversees more than $100 billion. "As the availability of credit continues to increase as a result of monetary expansion, the prices of high yield relative to other assets should continue rising. And that makes high yield a safer place to be."

Junk bonds should help shield investors from losses stemming from rising interest rates and inflation, said Lucette Yvernault, who helps oversee the equivalent of about 7 billion euros ($9.3 billion) as a money manager at Schroders Investment Management Ltd. in London.

Total return money managers, hedge funds and proprietary trading desks are all "eagerly" boosting their exposure to credit risk across asset classes, Ken Hackel, head of securitized product strategy at CRT Capital Group LLC in Stamford, Connecticut, wrote in a Dec. 15 note.

The U.S. default rate for junk-rated debt is expected to drop to 2.2 percent by this time next year, from 3.6 percent in October, Moody's said in a report.

High-yield bonds will return about 7 percent to 12 percent in 2011 as defaults are "near zero" for the next few years, said O'Reilly of Neuberger, which in the past 13 years has owned one security that defaulted.

Guggenheim's Minerd is adding junk bonds, focusing on those with B ratings in the 7- to 10-year range that yield more than 10 percent, and shorter-term notes that pay at least 6 percent.

"The forward momentum in the economy is very strong," Minerd said. "We expect that next year will be one of the best for the economy that we've seen over the past 10 years."
That is about as lopsided sentiment ever gets. The time to buy asset classes is when everyone hates them, not when everyone loves them. Nonetheless, extreme sentiment is only an indicator of extreme risk (or opportunity), not a timing mechanism.

The Inside Bet

Meanwhile corporate insiders (those most likely to actually know something), are bailing stock at a near record pace as Mark Hulbert explains in The Inside Bet.
Vickers Weekly Insider Report is a service that analyzes the insider data, calculating each week a ratio of the number of shares that insiders have sold that week to the number that they have bought. Over the last four decades, according to Vickers, this ratio has averaged between 2 and 2.5 to 1. As a result, the firm considers any reading above 2.5-to-1 to be bearish, since it indicates an above-average pace of selling on the part of insiders.

You better be sitting down before reading what this sell-to-buy ratio was this past week: 7.07-to-1. In other words, corporate insiders on balance are selling more than seven shares for every one that they are buying.

The last time this ratio was this high was the week ending Feb. 14, 2007, almost four years ago.

Does this mean the market will immediately tank? Of course not.

In fact, Jonathan Moreland, editor of the Insider Insights advisory service, advises clients to not prematurely give up on the rally, despite the worrisome recent trend of insider behavior: "Experience has taught us that it is usually best to stay the course until the indices themselves begin to show a change in trend. There is still good money to be made staying long in the late stages of a rally."

Therefore, Moreland concludes, even as he remains on "high alert for a trend change," for the moment he will continue to be fully invested.

David Coleman, editor of the Vickers Weekly Insider Report, is not willing to give the rally the benefit of the doubt that Moreland is willing to do. His two model portfolios currently have an average of about 60% allocated to cash, and in addition, one is hedged with a put option on the S&P 500 index
Insider sales, together with extremely bullish equity and junk bond sentiment, and extremely bearish treasury sentiment, along with numerous technical divergences in the stock market, sounds one of the biggest warning bells in history.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List


EU Agrees to Agree in 2013, Bickers Like Mad Now; Smoldering Greece, Smoldering Politics

Posted: 16 Dec 2010 01:37 AM PST

Pretty speeches regarding solidarity will not solve the European debt crisis. Yet, as Greece smolders in riots and firebombs over various austerity measures, pretty speeches, untenable pledges regarding haircuts, and continual bickering remain the only action items of note coming from Europe.

Smoldering Politics

Greece is not the only thing smoldering right now. Eurozone politics is on the front burner, with the heat on high. Please consider Europe Staggers as Critical Summit Looms
Europe's smoldering financial crisis flared up on Wednesday, with riots over austerity spending in Greece, new signs of troubles in Spain and little indication that European leaders were moving any closer to agreement on a systemic approach to long-term stability.

In remarks to the German Parliament on Wednesday, Germany's chancellor, Angela Merkel, tried to reassure the markets and answer some of her own critics by allaying fears about the future of the 16-nation monetary union.

"No one in Europe will be left alone, no one in Europe will be abandoned," Mrs. Merkel said, offering an olive branch to her European partners, some of whom have questioned her commitment to the union. "Europe succeeds when it acts together and, I would add, Europe succeeds only when it acts together."

Mrs. Merkel's soothing words were undercut, for example, by her adamant rejection of euro bonds, European-wide bonds that would provide a way for the euro zone to pool its debt and risk, allowing weaker members to borrow at lower rates.

With Irish elections scheduled for early next year, investors worried that the opposition's threatened move could soon become reality.

"Those who think we can unilaterally renege on senior bondholders against the wishes of the E.C.B. are living in fantasy land," said Ireland's finance minister, Brian Lenihan, referring to the European Central Bank.

In Greece, in a reminder of the social and political costs of extended austerity programs, Athens was hit with its seventh general strike this year, grounding flights, keeping ferries in ports, halting trains and closing government offices and schools.

Opposition to the measures, and to the pressure being applied by international creditors, was clear in the streets on Wednesday. Angry protesters wielded placards reading "I.M.F. out!" and "Let us not live as slaves!" while others chanted "Thieves, thieves!" and "Shame on you!" to unseen deputies in Parliament.

Recently, Merkel has been criticized for opposing an increase in the size of the nearly $1 trillion bailout fund operated by the European Union and the International Monetary Fund and for dismissing the euro-bond plan.

"Germany's thinking was a bit simplistic on this," said Jean-Claude Juncker, prime minister of Luxembourg and chairman of the group of euro-zone finance ministers, in a blistering attack last week in the German newspaper Die Zeit. "They are rejecting an idea before studying it.

In her remarks to Parliament on Wednesday, Mrs. Merkel tried to redefine the narrative of events shaking the union: "It is undeniable," she said, "that some euro-zone countries face difficult challenges. But it is also undeniable that the euro has shown itself to be crisis-proof."
Untenable Pledges Regarding Haircuts and a "Crisis-Proof" Euro

Does that look like a good backdrop for heading into a summit? I think not, and given that the Euro is in the midst of a crisis, Merkel's statements about crisis-proof certainly look absurd.

Moreover, once Ireland's finance minister is thrown out on his ass, we will see just who is in fantasy land regarding haircuts on bonds.

My position is that the sooner Ireland tells the IMF and EU where to go, the better off Ireland will be. For more on this angle, please see To Ireland With Love.

Agreement to Agree in 2013

The summit is about to start but there is so much bickering going on that the current discussion pertains to what the agreement will look like post 2013. Bloomberg reports EU Faces 'Gridlock' on Debt Crisis, Nears Deal on Post-2013 Tool
European Union divisions widened over how to contain the debt contagion that threatens the euro, limiting a summit starting today to agreeing on a crisis- management mechanism that takes effect in 2013.

Strife among Merkel, the European Central Bank, Luxembourg Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker, and the German domestic opposition intensified on the eve of the Brussels summit, marring confidence in Europe's handling of the fiscal woes that forced Greece and Ireland to fall back on financial handouts.

EU governments are close to agreeing on a two-sentence amendment to the bloc's Lisbon Treaty foreseeing a "mechanism to safeguard the stability of the euro area as a whole" with financial aid for distressed governments "subject to strict conditionality," EU officials told reporters in Brussels yesterday.

Germany has failed to get a reference to possible costs for bondholders enshrined in the treaty and is virtually alone in pushing for the amendment to say that any financial assistance will only be offered as a "last resort," the officials said.

Merkel continued to hold out against calls by ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet to put more money into the aid fund. The ECB has bought 72 billion euros of weaker countries' debt since May under a policy without unanimous support on the bank's council.

Driven by a German public outcry against aiding fiscally reckless countries, Merkel also ruled out retooling the support facility to buy troubled governments' bonds and opposed further entwining Europe's economies by consenting to joint borrowing.

Luxembourg's Juncker, the promoter of the joint bond-sale proposal, said it won't go anywhere at the summit. Juncker told Luxemburger Wort newspaper that Germany is "allergic" to the idea, fearing it would push up German borrowing costs.
Crisis Won't Wait

One thing I am sure of is the crisis won't wait until 2013.

Frank-Walter Steinmeier and Peer Steinbrück, former German foreign minister and former German minister of finance respectively, came up with a multi-point proposal that could conceivably work. Please see PIGS Exposure Table, Explaining the Panic by Numbers; Credit Warning in Spain, Belguim; Piecemeal Proposals Doomed for details.

That's the good news. The bad news is the Steinmeier-Steinbrück plan would require agreements on haircuts, debt guarantees, E-bonds, fiscal policies, and debt rescues.

Good luck with that.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List


SEOmoz Daily SEO Blog

SEOmoz Daily SEO Blog


6 New Tools Every SEO Should Check Out

Posted: 15 Dec 2010 03:27 PM PST

Posted by randfish

There's some terrificly useful new tools on the market that very few SEOs are aware of or using (at least, if my experience is any indication). It's my duty, therefore, to share with some of these shiny new sites and let you explore, engage and apply to your campaigns and efforts. Hopefully, these will add great value for you, and expose them to folks who really need their help.

Ontolo: An Expert Link Builder's Dream

Link building is hard - really, really hard. Ontolo tries to productize many of the manual tasks, searches and tracking processes of link building with an extensive, diverse toolset. You can see a big list of their link building tools here, everything from .gov/.edu finders, to competitor link searches, to content research and backlink tracking/monitoring. They even have some nifty "productivity hacks" (small, simple tools to help with menial tasks like combining keywords or removing duplicates from lists).

Below is a screenshot of Ontolo's Authority Links searching tool. As you can see, there's a multitude of options including clever sorting/filtering systems.

Ontolo's Link Finder Beta

Ontolo isn't for everyone - you should be a professional or semi-pro link builder (the tools and their results, rely on a lots of prior knowledge), but for those it's geared toward, the reviews have been outstanding and Ontolo's team (Ben Wills + Garret French) are constantly upgrading the service and functionality.

_

SEO Gadget's Keyword Research Beta

Richard Baxter is constantly lauded as one of the SEO industry's best, brightest and most driven minds. I curse myself for not smuggling him into the US, forging documents so he can stay, slapping an American accent on him and chaining him to a desk at SEOmoz (OK, maybe that's a little extreme).

Luckily for you, my evil plans are for naught, and Richard's talent has born fruit for all of us in the field with his remarkable new keyword research tool (currently in beta).

SEO Gadget's Keyword Tool

You create campaigns (similar to the SEOmoz web app), plug in your Google Analytics account, and sort keywords into relevant groups. The tool then lets you visualize potential opportunity for keywords you're already ranking for and those you haven't yet targeted by combining rank data, traffic data + search volume data (via Google's AdWords API). It's a brilliantly useful tool for those seeking new ways to ID the keywords that matter and take action on the low hanging fruit.

_

Trunk.ly: Terrific Tracking for Your Twitter Links 

Trunk.ly is a deceptively simple, currently free, application from the brilliant minds at BinaryPlex (who also built the much more full-featured Tribalytic, an Australian-focused social platform for measuring influence and share of voice).

Plug Trunk.ly into your Twitter account and you'll get a page like the one below that shows a timeline of the links you (or your friends) have tweeted. 

 

How is that useful you say?

Because people tweet some pretty brilliant stuff and they show, through tweets, what they care about. Whether you're relationship-building with a new contact, seeking topics for linkbait or content creation, attempting to determine the impact a particular individual has on clicks/rankings via their account or just interested in what someone has to say, Trunk.ly's a great way to do it.

I've been surprised at how often I use it just to find the things I tweeted!

(BTW - Trunk.ly's currently in private beta, but Alex + Tim, the creators, may have some invites if you leave comments in the post or tweet at them)

_

Markup.io: Flawlessly Simple Screenshots + Notes

You know what's a pain in the butt? Taking a screenshot of a page, pasting it into Photoshop, adding notes to it, saving the file to be small and emailing it as an attachment to a developer/designer/marketer/manager/co-worker.

Markup.io to the rescue!

Markup.io on the NYTimes Most Read

In a stroke of simplicity made brilliant, markup.io lets you drag a bookmark to your broswer that will, on click, show an overlay that lets you "mark up" any page on the web with text, lines, arrows, boxes and circles of various thickness, size and color. From there, you can directly export or share the resulting screen image. It works so intuitively that our team at SEOmoz has been finding massive utility and time savings by employing it vs. a manual process.

_

Content Optimizer: Leveraging LDA for Keyword Suggestions

I already knew Russ Jones and the team at Virante were pretty smart, but this time they're just making me look bad :-)

One of the biggest frustrations with our Labs LDA tool (warning, it's still in super beta and may not be particularly performant if lots of folks are actively using it) is that it doesn't recommend words and phrases to add or take away from a piece of content to help make it more "topically relevant" to a query. Building that would require a ton of very hard computer science work... Or would it?

Content Optimizer from Virante

The team from Virante got impatient (a great trait in any startup) and built their own recommendation system. It's not perfect, but in many cases, like the example above, it can help. Basically, it grabs the top results from Google, checks for words those pages have that your page doesn't and runs LDA scores for your page (through the labs tool) with and without those keywords. Pretty sweet hack, right?

_

Andrew Wright's + Ben Huff's SERPs Analysis Worksheets (MS Excel)

A couple months ago, I presented a methodology of how to understand the ranking algorithm for an individual search result graphically to help figure out why the top ranking results are ahead of those below them (and what metrics you might need to tweak/improve to reach the top). It's certainly not a perfect strike, but many folks were excited and interested.

In fact, Andrew Wright, one of the crackerjack consultants from Bloom Media in the UK, put some serious time into improving my models and the Excel spreadsheet to make it more usable, understandable and useful.

SERPs Analysis from Ben Huff

SERPs Analysis via Andrew Wright

But, that's not all. SEOmoz's own Ben Huff looked over Andrew's work and had some tweaks of his own. In the Box.net folder I've linked to, you'll find both versions of the Excel worksheet. By Q2 of next year, we hope to have this SERPs analysis system included in our web app (so they'll be no need to go crazy in Excel). In the meantime, though, we invite you to check out the work of these two, building one on the other (Ben Huff worked on the initial version with me for the face-off in London) and give feedback. It may not be the most scalable way to analyze a search result, but currently, it's the most comprehensive and likely to produce a good answer.

_


If you've got any other great, lesser-known tools that will benefit web marketers and SEOs, please feel free to share them in the comments.


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White House Tribal Nations Conference

The White House Your Daily Snapshot for
Thursday, Dec. 16,  2010
 

White House Tribal Nations Conference

Today President Obama is hosting White House Tribal Nations Conference to provide leaders from the 565 federally recognized tribes the opportunity to interact directly with him and representatives from the highest levels of his Administration and strengthen our nation to nation relationship with Indian Country.

Watch the conference live on WhiteHouse.gov/live.

Photo of the Day

Photo of the Day

Bo, the Obama family dog, sits behind President Barack Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama, as the President delivers remarks during a holiday reception in the Grand Foyer of the White House, Dec. 15, 2010. (Official White House Photo by Pete Souza)

In Case You Missed It

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

Protecting Seniors, Military Families and Their Doctors
The President signed important legislation into law to help strengthen Medicare.

President Obama Meets with CEOs on the "Path That Will Lead to Economic Success"
As the President prepared for a meeting with some of America's top CEOs on ways to get the economy moving again, he explained the importance of the tax cut compromise in that mission.

Elmo Visits the White House Kitchen
Elmo and Assistant White House Chef Sam Kass to talk about healthy, delicious school meals and do a "melon dance."

Today's Schedule

All times are Eastern Standard Time (EST).

9:30 AM: The President delivers remarks at the White House Tribal Nations Conference WhiteHouse.gov/live

10:00 AM: The President and the Vice President receive the Presidential Daily Briefing

11:45 AM: The President delivers a statement to the press on the Afghanistan-Pakistan Annual Review WhiteHouse.gov/live

12:05 PM: Briefing by Press Secretary Gibbs, Secretary of State Clinton, Secretary of Defense Gates and General Cartwright WhiteHouse.gov/live

1:45 PM: White House Tribal Nations Conference: Closing Session WhiteHouse.gov/live

3:15 PM: The Vice President and Secretary of Commerce Gary Locke present three U.S. organizations with the 2009 Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award WhiteHouse.gov/live

WhiteHouse.gov/live   Indicates events that will be live streamed on WhiteHouse.gov/live.

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Seth's Blog : Lady Gaga and me

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Lady Gaga and me

Do you think it bothers her that I don't listen to her music and wouldn't recognize her if she stopped by and said hi?

It shouldn't.

Even if you're a pop star, you don't need everyone to be a fan or a customer. And especially if you're not a pop star, worrying about whether everyone laughs at your jokes, buys your product or even likes you is counterproductive.

Unless you're running for something that requires a unanimous vote, it's a mistake to focus on the frowning guy in the back of the room or the dolt who doesn't get your subtle references or the miser who isn't going to buy from you regardless...

You're on the hunt for sneezers, for fans, for people willing to cross the street to work with you. Everyone else can pound sand, that's okay. Being remarkable also means being ignored or actively disliked.

BTW, I'm virtually certain that Lady (do her friends call her that?) doesn't read my stuff, so we're even.

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