joi, 30 iunie 2011

SEOmoz Daily SEO Blog

SEOmoz Daily SEO Blog


The New Google Social Network - Google+

Posted: 30 Jun 2011 02:34 AM PDT

Posted by caseyhen

Last night I got my first look at Google+, I spent just over three hours diving in and playing with all the features they have to offer. For those of you who already have access, please share your thoughts in the comments and those without access, enjoy this preview and share your thoughts on what this new social network could mean for SEO.

First Look

Below is the "Home" screen, which seems vaguely familiar to a different social network I use but seems to be somewhat more streamlined. You can simply sort your friend groups, called Circles, by clicking on the "Streams" in the left sidebar. This give you a chance to only see things shared from your family or other Circles, for example I can select "Family" and see only their content. This looks like it makes it really easy to combine all your work and personal contacts into one network.

Circles

The first thing I got right into was creating Circles, which are much like Facebook groups where you can categorize people. This is helpful for people like myself who don't like to share my SEO related stories/posts with my friends/family members. The process of adding people to these Circles was relativity easy, granted I only had 8 people in my list, but this process seems very streamlined.

Hangouts

An interesting feature that Rand, Space, Mike and I got to try last night was Google Hangouts. It's a feature that allows you to chat and video chat with up to 10 friends. We found the feature to work, though it wasn't as great as I thought it was going to be. The cool thing is that when you start a Hangout, it alerts other people in your Circles that you have started a Hangout so they can join. You can limit who sees that you have started a Hangout this prevents you from starting a business Hangout and having your Mom show up.

Sparks

Next up was something that Google calls Sparks and describes Sparks as “an online sharing engine.” To me, Sparks seems to be a way to add a "live" SERP into your social network. I added SEO and Cycling as my first two Sparks to see what happens. Basically I got a list of webpages, press releases, and videos that relate to the term I entered and they seemed to update over the few hours I watched them. The content listed in each Spark has a Share link, which allows you to easily share that content with your Circles.

Photos

As with any social network, having the ability to share photos with your friends is key! Google+ has a few different ways of displaying and sharing photos with your friends. Below is the first way to see the photos that your friends have shared. It is quite a user-friendly way of seeing what images are included in each album your friend shared.

If you click on one of the options above, it opens a slideshow of all the images your Circles have uploaded. It allows you to quickly flip through your friend’s images and add comments quickly, along with seeing all other comments. Like other networks you can tag your friends in photos that you upload.

Next is what it looks like when you share a picture within an album that you created. When you roll over the image it increases in size and displays the whole images, which is helpful for some images. I found the ability to upload photos very easy and the uploads happened very quickly.

Overall I found that the ability to share photos was not as streamlined as I would have liked it to be but I'll leave the final judgment up to others.

Security

Below are some of the security options that you can set when sharing things with your circles. It allows you to stop people from commenting on the thing you shared and you can stop them from resharing it with their circles. Also when you first share something it allows you to pick what Circles you want to see the thing you shared. So if you don't want your Mom to see the picture of Carlos from Agillian below, then you should make sure you share it only with your SEO friends.

My Takeaways

In closing, I have to say I was impressed with some things but overall I think they have some work to do before this really catches on with the main stream public. Google+ seems to have a large learning curve which could deter many new users. I spent just over 3 hours on it and don't feel like I really touched the surface of what it can do, nor do I fully understand what the purpose of some of their new features. Rand may have said it best with what he shared on Google+ last night:


How Does This Effect SEO

How do you think Google is going to integrate Google+ with your search results? We did some quick tests last night to see how sharing things on Google+ will effect the SERPs of the friends in your social Circles. So far we couldn't see any noticeable difference when your friends share something or +1 it within Google+. Now this doesn't mean anything as Google often rolls out products early and works them into the SERPs later.

We will be doing more testing to see how this new release from Google will effect the way we do our jobs, so stay tuned. Also if you have seen anything that I may have missed, please do share it in the comments below.


Do you like this post? Yes No

How Much Does Google Make?

Posted: 29 Jun 2011 11:35 AM PDT

Posted by Dr. Pete

This post has nothing to do with SEO tactics, but every once in a while I find myself trying to wrap my head around how much money Google makes. For the record, they made $29.3 Billion in revenue in 2010. Now, it’s easy to say that number and smile and nod like we understand how much money it is, but I doubt any of us really appreciates the sheer enormity of what we’re talking about.

So, I thought it might be fun to try to illustrate exactly how much money Google makes.

Let’s Write It Out

This may sound obvious, but I think writing the number out is an important first step. The financial industry has a way of using shorthand to hide gigantic numbers. They can say things like “We only made $1B in profits last year!” with a straight face, as if they’re implying “C’mon, guys, it’s just a 1 (the smallest non-zero integer there is) followed by a ‘B’ (only the 2nd letter in the alphabet). It’s hardly anything!”

So, let’s write it out in all its glory, just to keep from fooling ourselves:

$29,000,000,000

The color scheme has no significance – I just thought it was pretty. You can’t prove I didn’t.

$29B = 29 Taj Mahals

One of the most famous homes ever built, the Taj Mahal has ample living space at 500,000 square feet and 16 bathrooms. According to the internet, building your own Taj Mahal today would run you just over $1B US Dollars. Google could build 29 every year:

29 Taj Mahals

Even if Larry, Sergey, and Eric each have a summer and winter Taj Majal, that still leaves 23 for the rest of the staff to live in.

$29B = 17,000 Bugatti Veyrons

The most expensive production car of 2011, according to Forbes, is the Bugatti Veyron 16.4, coming in at a sticker price of just $1.7M. Google could drive 17,058 of these bad boys off of the lot, but let’s call it an even 17,000, after your trade-in and destination fees. This is a Bugatti Veyron (yeah, it’s pretty sweet):

Bugatti Veyron 16.4

The Bugatti Veyron 16.4 is listed as 106.7 inches long. Parked end to end, 17,000 Bugattis would be roughly 150,000 feet or just shy of 29 miles of luxury car:

29 miles of Bugattis

Somehow, that picture above just doesn’t do the number justice. Let’s say that we reduced each Bugatti to a 4x2-pixel red rectangle. Here’s what 17,000 of them would look like from space:

17,000 Bugattis from space

Go ahead, count them if you want. I’ll wait.

As of Q1 2010, Google employed 20,621 people full time, so each and every Google employee could be driving a Bugatti 9 months of the year, with just enough left over for gas.

$29B = 3.6B Justin Bieber Albums

If a Bugatti isn’t your style, maybe you’d like the latest Justin Bieber album, “Never Say Never” – it retails for $7.99 on iTunes. The cover looks something like this (the lightning bolts are magical Bieber aura):

Justin Bieber's Album

If you were Google, you could buy a copy of the album for just 3,600,000,000 (3.6B) of your closest friends. I guess the other half of the Earth is out of luck…

Bieber for half the Earth

Don’t worry, rest of Earth, there’s always next year. Google’s revenues jumped 27% in Q1 of 2011.

$29B = A Lot of Money

In summation, I leave you with one of my favorite clips from Spaceballs (PG-13). So, what does any of this mean for SEO? I’m no anti-Google conspiracy theorist, but I do believe that money talks, and $29,000,000,000 is a lot of conversations. Google is going to protect its interests, and we have to stop being surprised when they do.


Do you like this post? Yes No

Tasks to Help You Establish Your Brand on Facebook Graywolf's SEO Blog

Tasks to Help You Establish Your Brand on Facebook Graywolf's SEO Blog


Tasks to Help You Establish Your Brand on Facebook

Posted: 29 Jun 2011 10:03 AM PDT

Post image for Tasks to Help You Establish Your Brand on Facebook

Starting a fan page on Facebook is easy, but how do you get it to grow and become successful? It's much harder than many people realize; this is why you often see dead and abandoned fan pages. Establishing your brand on Facebook and creating a successful fan page actually takes some time, dedication and hard work. If you're not ready for the long haul, then you may need to put it on the back burner until you are ready. However, if you're ready to do what it takes, here are some tasks that you'll need to complete in order to get it done.

Do Your Research

There are some things that you will need to know beforehand like who your target audience will be, what your audience wants to read, who your competitors are, etc. You also should be keeping up with the latest buzz so that you can provide the type of information that your audience wants to read. Also, if you're not targeting the right audience and demographics, then you definitely will not get the results you're looking for. Your intended audience needs to be able to find you so that they can "like" you.

A tool like CheckFacebook can give you in-depth demographics, statistics and reports about Facebook. Knowing this kind of information will help you setup your page for success.

Get Organized

There is so much to include here. Before you even get started, you should have a some kind of plan and strategy mapped out. Set goals for your page as far as what you want to accomplish. Create task lists so that you can complete everything in a timely order. Get help from colleagues and even friends if needed. Trust me, your fans will be able to tell if your page is unorganized and if it's not, they won't be fans for long.

You will then need to figure out the specific products or content you'll be targeted and know exactly how you'll use your page. Some companies choose to use their Facebook fan page as a customer service center, while other are used as a resource of information and discussion board. Doing both can get messy and confusing so it's a good idea to stick to just one.

A good marketing strategy is also important. How will you promote your page? What methods will you use to continuously bring in new fans? How will you integrate your page into your other social media profiles? Will you have frequently contests and giveaways? How will you measure the effectiveness of your efforts? These are all important questions that you need to answer so that you can be sure that all of your hard work won't be in vain.

Spice It Up

A dull looking page is sure to be a dead page. All Facebook fan pages come in the same default design and layout. Many companies choose to leave theirs in default mode, but if you really want to stand out then you have to spice it up. Be creative and do something different with your page. Add more tabs and interactivity to make your fans want to get involved. Find some applications for contests and giveaways and see what other kinds of Facebook apps your fans might enjoy. A nice touch is to change the landing tab of your page; when visitors first arrive, show them a stylish welcome tab instead of just having them go directly to your page's wall.


Get Social

Lastly, you have to make sure that you are constantly publishing quality wall posts, sharing relevant links and engaging with your fans. Don't just have your company's RSS feed automatically imported into you're wall. While this is a good starting point, you need some personal interaction and fresh content mixed in there as well. People are less likely to join a page that is dead: without interaction or quality content.

Also be sure to integrate some Facebook social plugins into your website so that your customers can interact with your page right from your site. Also be sure to remind your friends and the fans of your page to "like" and share your content. A simple "please be sure to share this with your friends" can help spread the word quickly. Also, using Facebook's tagging system is a great way to promote your page on your own personal profile.

While most of these tasks are ongoing, you still need to complete them a first time in order get your brand properly established on Facebook. While you may want to rush so that you can have your fan page up as quick as possible, you should really take your time to complete each task. In the end, you'll see much better results and progress using a slow but steady process, rather than with a rush job.

This was a post by Lior Levin who works for iAdvize and also acts as a marketing consultant to a neon signs store that sells neon signs and led signs.

photo credit: Photospin

tla starter kit

Related posts:

  1. What Are You Doing To Earn Facebook Likes and Facebook Fans It seems everyone in social media and SEO is obsessed...
  2. Your Facebook Fan Page – 5 Ways to Make the Most of It If your business targets consumers, do you already have a...
  3. Don’t Put All Your Eggs in the Facebook Basket While Facebook may be a hot marketing tool right now,...
  4. How Small and Local Businesses Can Use Facebook If there’s one aspect of social media that mainstream press...
  5. How to use Hootsuite to Publish to Your Facebook Page The following is part of a series on using the...

Advertisers:

  1. Text Link Ads - New customers can get $100 in free text links.
  2. BOTW.org - Get a premier listing in the internet's oldest directory.
  3. Ezilon.com Regional Directory - Check to see if your website is listed!
  4. Need an SEO Audit for your website, look at my SEO Consulting Services
  5. Link Building- Backlink Build offers customized link building services
  6. Directory Journal - Get permanent deep links in a search engine friendly directory
  7. LinkWheel SEO - Get Web 2.0 Backlinks
  8. Links From PR9 Sites - - Get In Top 3 Google ASAP
  9. TigerTech - Great Web Hosting service at a great price.

This post originally came from Michael Gray who is an SEO Consultant. Be sure not to miss the Thesis Wordpress Theme review.

Tasks to Help You Establish Your Brand on Facebook

Video: "Now is the Time to Go Ahead and Make the Tough Choices"

The White House Your Daily Snapshot for
Thursday, June 30, 2011
 

Video: "Now is the Time to Go Ahead and Make the Tough Choices" 

Yesterday President Obama held a news conference in which he addressed the American economy, the deficit talks and what Congress can do right now to help create jobs. You can see the full news conference by the President and also read a transcript of the remarks.

Watch the video


  

In Case You Missed It

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

LGBT Pride Month at The White House
President Obama speaks to LGBT grassroots and community leaders, youth champions, and advocates from around the country at an event to observe LGBT Pride Month.

WNBA Champion Seattle Storm Visits White House, Shoots Hoops with Local Kids
The Seattle Storm visits the White House to celebrate the team's WNBA championship and lead a basketball clinic for area kids.

Hiring America's Veterans
Matt Flavin, Director of Veterans and Wounded Warrior Policy, discusses the first Veterans on Wall Street Conference, an example of one community coming together to hire veterans. 

Today's Schedule 

All times are Eastern Daylight Time (EDT).

9:50 AM: The President delivers remarks at the Armed Forces Farewell Tribute in honor of Secretary Gates; The Vice President attends WhiteHouse.gov/live

11:00 AM: The President and the Vice President receive the Presidential Daily Briefing

11:30 AM: The President meets with senior advisors

12:00 PM: Press Briefing by Press Secretary Jay Carney WhiteHouse.gov/live

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

3:15 PM: The President departs the South Lawn en route Joint Base Andrews

3:30 PM: The President departs Joint Base Andrews en route Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

4:15 PM: The President arrives in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

5:35 PM: The President delivers remarks at a DNC event

8:30 PM: The President delivers remarks at a DNC event

9:50 PM: The President departs Philadelphia, Pennsylvania en route Joint Base Andrews 

10:35 PM: The President arrives at Joint Base Andrews

10:50 PM: The President arrives at the White House

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

 

     
 

Seth's Blog : Unbetterable

Unbetterable

The two best ways to break through a rut and to make an impact:

  • Find things that others have accepted as the status quo and make them significantly, noticably and remarkably better.
  • Find things that you're attached to that are slowing you down, realize that they are broken beyond repair and eliminate them. Toss them away and refuse to use them any longer.

When a not-so-good software tool or a habit or an agency or a policy has too much inertia to be fixed, when it's unbetterable, you're better off without it. Eliminating it will create a void, fertile territory for something much better to arrive.

 

More Recent Articles

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

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




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

 

miercuri, 29 iunie 2011

Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis

Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis


Medicaid Annual Spending in 1965 $1 Billion, Today $450 Billion, Projected $900 Billion by 2019; Three Things to Fix Medicaid

Posted: 29 Jun 2011 05:52 PM PDT

Medicaid was created in 1965 as a supposedly small program with expenditures of $1 billion. It has since ballooned to $450 billion and now the Department of Health and Human Services projects Medicaid will cost $900 billion by 2019.



The solution is simple. Abolish Medicaid and give states block grants so they have the flexibility to figure out how best provide healthcare for their citizens.



Two Perverse Elements of Current System


  1. States have an incentive to spend more money to get matching funds
  2. Consumers do not care about costs with government footing the bill

Three Proposals to Fix Medicaid

  1. Cap Medicaid Spending
  2. Give Block Grants to States
  3. Allow states Full Flexibility to Define Eligibility and Benefits


Congressman Paul Ryan and Alice Rivlin former Director of the White House Office of Management and Budget under President Bill Clinton have teamed up to propose a block grant program. Rivlin was also appointed by President Obama to his National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform.

Paul Ryan - Alice Rivlin Proposal




If you agree with the approach outlined above, please contact your congressional representative and urge them to cap Medicaid and replace it with block grants.

Click Here For Congresional Phone And Fax Numbers

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


Uneven Aging of America; Cultural Shift Coming; Competition for Resources Between Young and Old Will Be Intense

Posted: 29 Jun 2011 12:14 AM PDT

William H. Frey, Senior Fellow, at the Brookings Institution discusses the Uneven Aging and "Younging" of America as noted in the 2010 census.
America is beginning to show its age as the baby boom generation advances toward full-fledged senior-hood. But the pace of this aging will vary widely across the national landscape due to noticeable geographic shifts in the younger population, with implications for health care, transportation, and housing, and possible impacts upon our ability to forge societal consensus.



An analysis of data from the 1990, 2000, and 2010 decennial censuses reveals that:

Due to baby boomers "aging in place," the population age 45 and over grew 18 times as fast as the population under age 45 between 2000 and 2010.

Although all parts of the nation are aging, there is a growing divide between areas that are experiencing gains or losses in their younger populations.

Suburbs are aging more rapidly than cities with higher growth rates for their age-45-and-above populations and larger shares of seniors. People age 45 and older represent 40 percent of suburban residents, compared to 35 percent of city residents.
There are far more charts, graphs, and analysis, in the Complete PDF The Uneven Aging and 'Younging' of America: State and Metropolitan Trends in the 2010 Census. The excerpts above were from a summary.

Cultural Shift Coming

The Washington Post discusses demographic changes in If baby boomers stay in suburbia, analysts predict cultural shift
During the past decade, the ranks of people who are middle-aged and older grew 18 times as fast as the population younger than 45, according to Brookings Institution demographer William Frey, who analyzed the 2010 Census data on age for his report, "The Uneven Aging and 'Younging' of America." For the first time, they represent a majority of the nation's voting-age population.

The political ramifications could be huge as older voters compete for resources with younger generations.

"When people think of suburban voters, it's going to be different than it was years ago," Frey said. "They used to be people worried about schools and kids. Now they're more concerned about their own well-being."

The nation's baby boomers — 76 million people born between 1946 and 1964 — were the first generation to grow up in suburbia, and the suburbs is where many chose to rear their own children. Now, as the oldest boomers turn 65, demographers and local planners predict that most of them will not move to retirement areas such as Florida and Arizona. They will stay put.

"If you ask younger boomers, who are 45-ish, a lot say they expect to move and retire elsewhere," said John Kenney, chief of aging and disability services with the Montgomery County health department. "But as people get to 65 and 70, whether because of choice or default, they end up staying. We are planning on people being here."

"Retirement used to be the golden years," said Kenney. "No more."

Local governments are starting to grapple with the implications.

"Clearly, the age wave is coming," said Pat Herrity (R-Springfield), a county supervisor who heads the 50-plus committee.

Although Florida and Arizona remain retirement magnets, 17 of the 25 states with the highest concentrations of senior citizens are cold-weather states.

Older Americans now represent 53 percent of voting-age adults.

"The political clout of older Americans will be even more magnified if the traditional higher turnout of this group continues, and as the competition for resources between the young and the old becomes more intense," Frey writes.
Retirement No Longer Golden Years

I have been discussing social trends and changing social attitudes for quite some time. Here is a snip from May 2008 on Demographics Of Jobless Claims
Structural Demographics Poor

Structural demographic effects imply that prospects in the full-time labor market will be poor for those over age 50-55 and workers under age 30. Teen and college-age employment could suffer a great deal from (1) a dramatic slowdown in discretionary spending and (2) part-time Boomer reentrants into the low-paying service sector; workers who will be competing with younger workers.

Ironically, older part-time workers remaining in or reentering the labor force will be cheaper to hire in many cases than younger workers. The reason is Boomers 65 and older will be covered by Medicare (as long as it lasts) and will not require as many benefits as will younger workers, especially those with families.

In effect, Boomers will be competing with their children and grandchildren for jobs that in many cases do not pay living wages.
One of the many consequences of boomer demographics is the longer the US opus of reform of Medicare, and Social Security, the more difficult it will become because of voting demographics.

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