vineri, 25 februarie 2011

Damn Cool Pics

Damn Cool Pics


Azizulhasni Awang Finishes Track Race with Splinter Through Leg

Posted: 21 Feb 2011 05:32 PM PST

The Malaysian rider managed to get back on his bike after a high-speed crash in the Keirin final and stagger across the line, but it was only afterward that the full extent of his injury became clear. Pictures showed a large splinter of wood from the track had gone right through his left calf. Awang was given third, but missed his moment on the podium because he was on his way to hospital. Awang, who has won World Championship medals in the past two seasons, is set to go under general anesthetic for the removal of the splinter at Manchester's Royal Infirmary. A scan late on Saturday night assessed the injury, but medics opted to wait until tackling the splinter, which was around 7.9in (20cm) long.




















Source: flickr


The Man with 39 Wives, 94 Children and 33 Grandchildren

Posted: 21 Feb 2011 05:17 PM PST

Welcome to the world's largest family. The Chinese fathers name is Ziona Chan and he has 39 wives, 94 children, and 33 grandchildren. Altogether there are 181 members of this family. The family lives in a four story, 100-room house that is located in the hills of the Baktwang village where Chan's wives sleep in large communal dormitories.








Source: dailymail


Escher’s Waterfall in Real Life

Posted: 18 Feb 2011 07:42 PM PST

How can this be real? Here to learn more about the original model.


Finca Bellavista: Incredible Tree House Community in Costa Rica

Posted: 18 Feb 2011 06:56 PM PST

Finca Bellavista is a self-sustaining community in the jungles of Costa Rica. So if you are fan of everything that is eco-friendly and like to merge with nature this can be what you need. Finca Bellavista encompasses 300 acres (1.2 km2) of rainforest.

The community features houses built right on top of the trees in the Costa Rican rain forest, connected by zip lines and sky bridges. These tree houses are accessible by stairs and ladders from the ground, reminds me of the Swiss Family Robinson.

The sustainable tree house community was founded by Americans Erica and Mathew Hogan not just as their own private escape from the crazy city life but as a community that attracts permanent residents and travellers from all over the world. New residents can purchase plots starting from $55,000 and build their dream tree-home; travelers can rent room for the short or long term.



And just because you're in the rain forest doesn't mean modern amenities aren't available; limited solar powered electricity, hot showers, and even wireless internet can be accessed. But the whole point of this community is to get away from it all and get closer to nature. Two rivers run around the community with crystal clear water and plenty of waterfalls for taking a dive on a hot summer day. A small town is a few miles away and the ocean is a short hike away. Some of your neighbors will include monkeys, lizards and lots of bugs; Finca Bellavista is like living in an episode of Natural Geographic.












































































SEOmoz Daily SEO Blog

SEOmoz Daily SEO Blog


Outreach for Linkbuilding - Whiteboard Friday

Posted: 24 Feb 2011 12:45 PM PST

Posted by Aaron Wheeler

 Linkbuilding: can't do it alone, can't not do it! While some people may prefer to avoid interaction with people they don't see every day, others flourish when communicating with strangers. The field of SEO is flush with both of these personality types, though to an outsider it could seem like SEO is an inherently non-social career. It's not! In this week's Whiteboard Friday, Tom Critchlow, head of search marketing at Distilled, shows us just how important interpersonal interaction is in SEO land. More importantly, he shows us some tips on how to reach out to webmasters and online marketers and more easily get the links we so badly want. All it takes is efficient contact-gathering, enthusiastic communication, adamant (but not overbearing) follow-up, and, well... maybe a little bit of hustle.

 

Check out Tom's slick resources:

  • Followerwonk is an awesome tool for running queries across Twitter profiles to find influential people in a given niche. You can filter by location or by keyword in users' bios, which is a great way to find contacts.
  • Alltop is a great place to artificially get the breaking news in a given niche. It's no replacement for actually living and breathing a given niche but it's very quick and easy to use.
  • The Distilled Linkbuilding Conferences are taking place in London on March 18th in New Orleans on March 25th. Check it out!

Video Transcription

Howdy, SEOmoz fans. Welcome to another edition of Whiteboard Friday. I'm Tom Critchlow, and I'm here in Seattle helping out with some SEOmoz SEO bits and pieces. I'm sharing Whiteboard Friday because Rand is out of town.

Today I'm going to be talking about outreach for link building. There's a lot of talk online about how to get links, creating great content for links, but a lot of focus goes on creating the content rather than actually doing the outreach for the content. So, I thought I'd do a video on how you can actually get links from your content.

There's an assumption here that you've already created some great content and that that content is targeted to a particular niche. Obviously, great content works much, much better when it's targeted to a particular community that they can be passionate about, they can comment on, and so on. The really broad content doesn't typically do so well.

So, let's assume that you've created some great content, whatever it might be, whether an infographic or a competition or a video, etc. Then there are a few tips that we've used in doing outreach that I just want to share here.

The first thing that I've noticed when doing outreach is that you want to have efficient contact gathering. There are lots of ways of getting bloggers in a particular niche or getting Twitterers in a particular niche, but the more that you can make that process quick, scalable, and efficient, the better the whole process is going to be.

There is the usual stuff that you can do. You can run some Google searches for things like top ten blogs about your niche. So, let's say it is photography. You can run, "top ten photography blogs." Run a search like that and you're going to end up with lots of blog posts and articles talking about what the top blogs are in that niche. You can go through and you can find those. That is obviously a great source. One thing that I really love to do is go find these top blogs that get talked about individually and then go through their blogs rolls. A lot of blogs will have a little blog roll or recommended blogs or friends section. Those kind of talk about all the people that they read, that they subscribe to. In fact, Rand wrote a post about all the blogs that he subscribed to at one point. That might be a list that you might find if you were searching for SEO blogs or recommended SEO reading, etc. Go find the influencers, find who the influencers link to and who they recommend.

You also want to find Twitter followers or rather influential Twitter accounts. And Follower Wonk, which I have written out here, FollowerWonk.com is a fantastic tool that will do this. They've indexed a whole bunch of Twitter accounts, and you can search through all of the bio text. So you can search for Twitter accounts that have a particular follower count and are interested in a particular niche. So, let's say it's photography, you can go through and you can find a whole bunch of people that are interested in photography. You can also search by location on Follower Wonk. This is a great way of finding niche accounts in a particular area that you can then go out and you can contact.

One of the key points here that I love to do is actually categorize these people as I am finding these contacts and finding these blogs. Go through and categorize them depending on what kind of outreach you're going to do to them. Some people you might find and you might think, well, they've got a pretty mediocre blog. It's all right. They have semi-interesting content. I'm not going to spend a huge amount of time personalizing my response to them or sending a really detailed email. I'm just going to send them something pretty standard. Some people you might find, however, might be journalists or they might have a really popular blog or it might be somebody that you found Twitter that doesn't have a blog but they maybe own a forum or an email newsletter, something like that.

So categorize these people into broad buckets. The buckets I like to have are your standard contacts, your extraordinarily contacts, and kind of left field. That kind of separation means that you can quickly and efficiently send your mass email to all the standard contacts. The extraordinarily contacts you can go through and you can say, "These people I'm going to really craft an email to. I am going to send something specific and personalized and fun and creative to these people." The left field contacts are those that you might not want to send an email to. Maybe they're left field because they live near you. Maybe they have an email newsletter and you want to subscribe and send them an email dedicated to that. So, something maybe a little bit different. With that categorization, I find really useful when I am going through my contacts so that I can save time later.

That is the first thing. The second thing, being enthusiastic I find is more important than being unique. So when you're doing outreach, everyone will tell you to find something personalized to that person that you're speaking to and put it in the email. Say, "Hey, I read this blog post you recently read and it's really awesome." That will somehow make the outreach more effective. In my experience, I find that being enthusiastic trumps that every time. Even if you don't put much in the email that shows that you've read their site or that you've really tried to engage with them, rather just write an email that's awesome. Right? Take a leaf out of the SEOmoz newsletters that go out and so on. Put some personalization in there. Put some fun in there. Talk about maybe you're a really small company, maybe you're a startup, maybe you've got some exciting tools or content. Whatever it might be, tell people about that. Come across as genuine.

The trick here is that people control links. Websites don't link to people, people do. You want to reach out to people and make them like you. You really want to get on their good side. In my opinion, always write an enthusiastic email over a unique email. And what's your USP? Maybe you're more fun than people. Maybe you're more creative than another company. Many you're smaller. Maybe you have content that is more interesting. Whatever it might be, leverage those things when you are crafting the contact.

I'm going to switch over here, now, to the purple section. The other thing here is that when you are doing outreach, not everyone is going to respond to you. In fact, anyone who has actually tried outreach will know that not that many people respond to you, which is kind of unfortunate, but you want to make sure that anyone who does respond to you, even if they come back and say, "Ah, I'm not interested right now. You're content was okay, but it doesn't really fit with my audience." Really make sure that you follow up with those people. In the same way that you would have a sales channel and a sales funnel, make sure that you really cultivate these people. Go back to them and say, "Hey, why didn't you like it?" Or, "What can we do better next time?" Or, "Maybe next time we're doing this, we'll include you in the content that we're writing." So, really, anyone that responds to you, you really want to cultivate a relationship there. At the end of the day, outreach is all about getting relationships with people whether they have a blog, a forum, or they're just an influential Twitter account. You really want to create a relationship, because those relationships are worth so much more than the individual outreach that you're doing. They can be useful for future pieces of content that you're releasing. You can get them involved in things like surveys that you do and things like that.

If they do come back and they're really positive, then you still want to cultivate that relationship. If somebody comes back and says, "Great. Sure. I put it on my blog," don't end there. Find out if where else they blog, for example, is a great one. A lot of people that blog online will have multiple blogs. I think I have about 17 last time I counted, not all of which are recently updated. Do they have any friends? Find out who else they know in the blogging space that might also want to post your content. Anyone that responds to you, really, really go after them really strongly.

Then the final thing is hustle, which is a really hard thing to define. When we've been doing outreach, the most effective thing that we've done is just think laterally. It's all very well building the contact list, sending email to all these people, but actually, at the end of the day, the thing that gets you the results is usually either a random contact or it's leveraging some kind of hot news. Something like that. It's really hard to come up with a process that will get you those things. In my experience, there are a few things that you can do to give you a greater chance at success.

The first thing is, make sure you follow all of the Twitter and RSS feeds in that niche. A lot of people will think, this is a niche I'm engaging in. I'm doing research. I'm trying to find good bloggers. But they don't actually bother living and breathing the niche. You have to go in. You've got to actually engage these people. Read their blog posts. See what gets them riled. See what gets them hot. Really engage with them. That's where you can really win above and beyond just doing the kind of outreach. If you actually understand what this community is about, you'll have a much better chance at success. So, go through and actually follow a lot of these people, and actually see what makes them tick.

Watch forums as well. I think forums are massively underrated when you're doing outreach because that's where a lot of the people that are really passionate about the niche hang out. You can actually capture them in their natural environment so to speak. When you go to forums, you can actually see, you know, what do they chat about that's not in their niche? People are in that niche just chatting. Just shooting the breeze, right. See what they're interested in. See what they're passionate about. You might spot opportunities there that you might otherwise miss.

I find Alltop is a great way of very, very quickly and easily finding a particular niche and then looking at all of the top news in that niche. So, you kind find out what's hot. Alltop has kind of categories all over the place so that it kind of aggregates Twitter users and blogs in a particular niche. You can very quickly see if there is breaking news or if there is a hot topic. Alltop will show that up quite nicely. That's a great way of kind of artificially getting yourself embedded in a particular niche. At the end of the day, don't forget that this is where a lot of the success comes from is that kind of extraordinarily luck basically. You stumble across somebody talking about something or you happen to be doing outreach at the same time as some hot news. You need to give yourself the best chance of success with that kind of activity. These are some good tips to get that.

Those are my main tips. There is one thing here, which I have kind of put in very light blue that you probably can't read up here, which is that you need to manage expectations. Whenever you're doing outreach, there is a tendency to think that every single time you do outreach for content, you're going to get amazing results. That is simply not true. What you can do with outreach is even the failed outreach, even the outreach that you've done that resulted in zero links, that will still build your relationships. When you're doing this whole process again, when we come back to efficient contact gathering, don't forget the people that you've reached out to previously. Don't forget the people that you reached out to that were semi- lukewarm leads last time, but this time maybe it is a different piece of content. Or maybe you took in to account some of their feedback. Make sure that when you're doing outreach, even if you are not getting links, you're building relationships.

That's a great way of kind of managing expectations. Whether it is your boss, maybe you're an agency and you've got a client, when you're positioning the outreach work you're doing, don't just report on the links, also build a rapport on the relationships you've built. They can be really, really useful. This particularly applies when you're doing the really high- level outreach to people like journalists and your high-level bloggers. You're not going to get in the first time most of the time with these. You want to build a relationship, get an email conversation going, and then you can get some really great content that they're going to link to.

I think those are my main top tips. I've probably said, as I just said right now, about a million times, and again, because I am kind of new at this. But that's fine. I hope you enjoyed it. If you want to learn more about link building, we're running some conferences in London and New Orleans in March. There will be a link so you can find out more details. Sign up to that. I'll see you there. Thanks, guys.

Video transcription by SpeechPad.com


Do you like this post? Yes No

Seth's Blog : 30%, the long tail and a future of serialized content

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

30%, the long tail and a future of serialized content

The 1960s and 70s were the golden age of magazines. Why?

  • Lots of people wanted to read them
  • The newsstand could only hold a few of them (barrier to entry permits some to win)
  • The winners had no trouble selling ads because they had motivated readers, in quantity
  • The cost of making one more edition of the magazine was relatively low

Enter tablets. To some, it feels like the dawn of a new golden age. People page through apps like Wired and gasp at the pretty pictures and cool features. Surely, we're going to recreate that moment.

Here's the problem, and here's how Apple is making it much worse:

The newsstand is infinite. That means that far more titles will have far fewer subscribers. There are more than 60,000 apps on the newsstand. Hard to be in the short head when the long tail is so long...

plus, the cost of each issue is far higher, because it costs a lot more to pay a videographer, a video editor, a programmer, etc. than it does to pay John Updike to write 4,000 words...

plus, advertisers are harder to come by, because the number of readers is always going to be lower than it was back then, and the ads are easier to skip.

Of course, the good news is that the publisher doesn't have to pay for paper, so the profit on each subscriber ought to be way higher. Except...

Except Apple has announced that they want to tax each subscription made via the iPad at 30%. Yes, it's a tax, because what it does is dramatically decrease the incremental revenue from each subscriber. An intelligent publisher only has two choices: raise the price (punishing the reader and further cutting down readership) or make it free and hope for mass (see my point above about the infinite newsstand). When you make it free, it's all about the ads, and if you don't reach tens or hundreds of thousands of subscribers, you'll fail.

In a rare glitch, John Gruber got Apple's decision about the 30% subscription task completely wrong. By his logic, Apple would have been just as good for its users if the tax was 60%.

For content to be fabulous, for tablets to be more than game platforms, folks like Apple need to do two things:

  • Reward creators instead of taxing them.
  • Create promotional channels so that curated great stuff (not merely things from big companies) has a chance to reach a mass audience.

The web has been a hotbed of siloed content, of deep dives for small audiences. The large scale stuff, though, has tended to be mostly about gossip and other quick reads that's cheap to produce. Tablets offer a new chance to create content worth paying for. Paving the way for that to happen is a smart move for anyone who cares about the audience and the devices.

 
Email to a friend

More Recent Articles

Don't want to get this email anymore? Click the link below to unsubscribe.


Click here to safely unsubscribe now from "Seth's Blog" or change your subscription, view mailing archives or subscribe

Your requested content delivery powered by FeedBlitz, LLC, 9 Thoreau Way, Sudbury, MA 01776, USA. +1.978.776.9498

 

West Wing Week: "Don't Bump My Atoms"

The White House Your Daily Snapshot for
Friday, Feb. 25,  2011
 

West Wing Week: "Don't Bump My Atoms"

West Wing Week is your guide to everything that's happening at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. This week, President Obama held events in Oregon and Ohio focused on winning the future through investments in innovation and small business, and convened his Council on Jobs and Competitiveness at the White House.

 Watch the video.

In Case You Missed It

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

The President & His Council on Jobs and Competitiveness: "My Main Purpose Here Today at This First Meeting I Think is To Listen"
Chaired by Jeffrey Immelt, Chairman of GE, the President’s Council on Jobs and Competitiveness meet for the first time, with the President explaining his vision on the Council's work.

Behind-the-Scenes Video: "Thurgood" Screening at the White House
President Obama hosts a screening of Thurgood at the White House movie theater -- an HBO film about the life and career of the remarkable Civil Rights lawyer and the first African-American Supreme Court Justice. Go behind-the-scenes with the Justice's sons and writer George Stevens, Jr.

The Energy of Entrepreneurs
Energy Secretary Steven Chu encourages entrepreneurs to keep driving the American economy, and to submit feedback on what the government can do to help bring their ideas to market.

Today's Schedule

All times are Eastern Standard Time (EST).

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

11:00 AM: The President and the Vice President meet with Democratic Governors

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

12:30 PM: The President and the Vice President meet for lunch

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

Get Updates

Sign Up for the Daily Snapshot 

Stay Connected

 


 
This email was sent to e0nstar1.blog@gmail.com
Manage Subscriptions for e0nstar1.blog@gmail.com
Sign Up for Updates from the White House

Unsubscribe e0nstar1.blog@gmail.com | Privacy Policy

Please do not reply to this email. Contact the White House

The White House • 1600 Pennsylvania Ave NW • Washington, DC 20500 • 202-456-1111 
 
 
  

 

 

 

SEOptimise

SEOptimise


30 Ways to Optimise Your Site for Speed

Posted: 24 Feb 2011 06:29 AM PST

speed*

Site speed has been the foremost discipline of website optimisation since even before SEO appeared. In the early days of the Internet, connections were so slow that people jokingly referred to the WWW as the world wide wait. I remember those days. I used to type in a URL and then take a book to read while it was loading.

I’ve been using a high speed connection (DSL) for a decade now and most people now do too. Nonetheless, some people are still using modems, while mobile Web use has emerged as an important part of Web traffic. Many people still pay by volume, and mobile connections are not usually really fast yet.

That’s not all though. Users with a fast connection tend to be very impatient. Waiting a few seconds for a loading page makes many users bounce (or flee) straight away. Thus in 2010 Google decided to take site speed into account as a direct ranking factor. Some SEO experts argue that it’s not a really important ranking signal, but the proof is rather anecdotal.

So at the end of the day you still need to optimise your website (or re-optimise it) for speed for a bunch of reasons. The good news is that there are plenty of ways to do so. I’ve listed 30 ways to optimise your site for speed below: I’ll start with the obvious ones which  many people nonetheless tend to forget these days, as they use fast connections themselves.

 

Media

1. Use smaller images – while images are not a problem for most Broadband users, they will still slow a site down significantly. You can resize and compress the same .JPG image so that it’s 50kb instead of 200 and still bring the point across. A very simple program like IrfanView can do it for you.

2. Use fewer images or gallery scripts instead – unless your site is about images, you don’t need to load several images at once. For more than a few images you can use gallery scripts.

3. Use fewer Flash animations or elements – you don’t use Flash as a web design element these days. Flash is used for webware, audio and video players, but most animations and Flash enhancements are obsolete by now.

4. Don’t use video – do you really need to load this video on your homepage? Consider video an additional asset that you show on demand on an extra page.

5. Don’t use audio – the worst thing to do on the Web is autoplay an audio file. I have a special tool that blocks unwanted music installed. In all other instances you can stream it on demand once the user clicks on it.

 

Files

6. Make fewer http requests – some simple websites send a hundred or more http requests; that means for each tiny image or script the site sends a request to the server. Consider whether you need each of the requests.

7. Merge image, style and script files – the most obvious way to limit http requests is to merge files. Having several CSS or Java Script files is, in many cases, not needed anyway. Use so-called CSS sprites to merge images.

8. Server side compression – you can compress files using Gzip or PHP.

 

Scripts

9. Use external scripts – don’t use inline scripts in actual HTML pages. Use external script files, or even better just one file.

10. Use short names for variables, functions and the like – a function like removeelementfromgroup() can be called refg() as well.

11. Use object oriented programming – OOP provides reusable script elements which you have to define once and can use all over your site instead of redefining them for each function etc.

12. Don’t use several redundant JavaScript libraries – while Java Script libraries provide great OOP elements you can reuse, I see more and more sites using several JS libraries at once, despite the fact that those libraries provide basically the same features.

13. Don’t use font replacement – font replacemnt tools for headlines look neat, but they are  either built in Flash or in Java Script or both, and require considerable resources.

14. Cache your AJAX – apparently it’s quite easy to cache AJAX in order to save time on repetitive requests.


Web hosting

15. Switch to a faster server – SEOptimise switched to a faster server, or rather web hosting provider, a while ago. The old one was slowing down the site significantly.

16. Use a local server – take at a look at your analytics and find out where most of your users come from. Then host your site there instead of sending them to the other end of the world each time.

17. Use cloud hosting – shared hosting, or even dedicated servers, are fine most of the time but under a heavy load they become slow or can even time out. Cloud hosting, at least theoretically, does not, as your content is spread across many servers as is possible or needed in case of a large spike in traffic.

18. Use CDN – so-called Content Delivery Networks combine some of the advantages of local and cloud hosting. In a CDN, content is served from a server physically in the vicinity of the request.

 

Code

19. Load external scripts at the bottom – back in the day, you had to add Google Analytics to the head of an HTML page. So when GA was down, the whole page didn’t load. Make sure you load external scripts at the bottom of the page whenever possible.

20. Clean up your code – every site I check has some redundant code; sometimes even whole parts are not used, or they are enclosed in a comment. Clean up everything you don’t really need.

21. Don’t use tables – back in the day, people used tables to structure page content. With CSS and web standards this way of using HTML became obsolete, but many people (or rather programs) still do it to this day. Consider replacing tables with lists and layers (divs) to save lots of redundant code.

22. Compress your scripts (by removing white spaces in script files, for example) – even the most effective files still have lots of white space which enlarge them unnecessarily. While HTML and CSS may be a bit more difficult to compress, it’s easily done with scripts.


Databases

23. Don’t do URL rewrites – clean URLs are very important for SEO and usability, but it can increase the load time. Consider using clean URLs from the start instead of merely rewriting them. Also, Google can now index dynamic URLs that aren’t too complex. Something like shop?p=shoes&b=adidas&s=45 gets treated like shop/shoes/adidas/45.

24. Make fewer requests – again, you can save time by sending fewer database requests, especially for popular websites. For instance, you could use the same field for the html title tag, h1 and alt attribute of the header image. That’s one request instead of three.

25. Cache files as static data – instead of building each page for every user, each time you can save pages as static files – aka cache them. WordPress has a plugin for this WP Super Cache.

 

External services

26. Don’t activate Gravatar – sadly, Gravatar, which is used on WordPress by default, sends lots of requests. Even the default graphics are unique for every user who comments on your blog. You can save a lot by dumping Gravatar.

27. Don’t embed Facebook elements – while including Facebook tools on your page makes your content more shareable, you have to think twice before doing it. Do you have a significant audience on Facebook? Facebook tools loads dozens of elements to your site. Even Twitter buttons can slow down your site.

28. Use fewer web analytics tools or self-hosted ones – I have to admit I’m a web analytics junkie; I use Google Analytics, Piwik, Woopra, Reinvigorate on my sites at once. That’s a risk, of course; whenever one of them takes longer, your page does as well.

29. Use the faster Google Analytics embed code – there are at least two ways to include Google Analytics in your pages:  the traditional one and the asynchronous one. The latter loads data in the background without halting your page load.

30. Don’t integrate third party widgets – widgets are all the rage now, especially third party ones. You can add all kinds of widgets to your site. Most of them are not really earning you money, while they increase load time.


You probably noticed that some of the techniques described above ask you to remove some features you might miss, and indeed the removal of some of them might even harm your SEO. So you always have to consider both sides of the equation and decide what’s more important in a given situation:  speed or the actual feature.

We face many of these issues ourselves, as I have been testing SEOptimise for site speed recently. Do you optimise for site speed or do you ignore it? What changes did you implement?

* Image by Stig Nygaard

© SEOptimise – Download our free business guide to blogging whitepaper and sign-up for the SEOptimise monthly newsletter. 30 Ways to Optimise Your Site for Speed

Related posts:

  1. 30 Ways to Use Blekko for Search & SEO
  2. Track Google Site Preview Bot in Google Analytics
  3. 10 Ways to Use Google Buzz for SEO & SMO

Seth's Blog : Making a straighter ruler

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

Making a straighter ruler

It's not easy. It's hard to get straighter than straight.

Over time, processes that seek to decrease entropy and create order are valued, but improving them gets more difficult as well. If you're seeking to make the organized more organized, it's a tough row to hoe.

Far easier and more productive to create productive chaos, to interrupt, re-create, produce, invent and redefine.

 
Email to a friend

More Recent Articles

Don't want to get this email anymore? Click the link below to unsubscribe.


Click here to safely unsubscribe now from "Seth's Blog" or change your subscription, view mailing archives or subscribe

Your requested content delivery powered by FeedBlitz, LLC, 9 Thoreau Way, Sudbury, MA 01776, USA. +1.978.776.9498