marți, 5 martie 2013

SEO Blog

SEO Blog


Why Easy Guest Blogging Is Bad Guest Blogging

Posted: 05 Mar 2013 06:27 AM PST

Guest blogging is easy, right? All you have to do is come up with a Google operator search which features a relevant keyword and something like “inurl:guest post” and you’ll have hundreds of prospects to evaluate. And you will. But more likely than not you’ll find most of them are...
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What Kind of Phone Do You Need? A Market Overview

Posted: 05 Mar 2013 06:23 AM PST

When it comes to choosing a new mobile phone it has to be down to your own personal choice. Not everyone has the same taste in handsets or the same needs and for this reason most manufacturers offer a wide range of handsets. If you are a businessman and you...
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Online Surveys Are A Great Way To Make Quick Money And Give Opinions

Posted: 05 Mar 2013 12:03 AM PST

It is morning. You've just drunk your first cup of coffee of the day. You walk to your mailbox. Along with today's paper there is a stack of letters. You flip through them and you realize that one of them is a check. But you don't remember having done anything...
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Get Passive Traffic with Your Blog’s Existing Content

Posted: 04 Mar 2013 10:20 PM PST

There is a great traffic building strategy that most bloggers never try: Instead of worrying about writing new posts to get new traffic, worry about using your old posts better to get more traffic. There is no reason to banish your old posts to the archives, and let them get...
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When It Comes to Analytics, Are You Doing Enough?

When It Comes to Analytics, Are You Doing Enough?


When It Comes to Analytics, Are You Doing Enough?

Posted: 04 Mar 2013 06:12 PM PST

Posted by JoannaLord

We all know analytics are important. As marketers, we spend a great deal of time in the data. We all, hopefully, consider ourselves part analyst in many ways. At the foundation of a good marketing team, there is an accessible analytics platform that is set up to provide actionable insights. We should always feel that the data is just a log in away. We should feel we have the data to make great recommendations, troubleshoot issues, and forecast our efforts accurately. We should all feel totally in control of our analytics, and use them daily.

But then unicorns jump out of pink clouds and fly around our heads, because that is simply not the case. Ever.

Maybe a handful of you work on teams that are doing all they can do as it relates to analytics. Maybe some of you have even staffed your team with a handful of full-time analysts. More likely, you may all be trying to use data in your jobs, but not doing it as thoroughly or as effectively as you wish you were.

So let's talk about that. Let's talk about the different types of analytics and common places to start with them. I believe the number one reason marketing teams aren't as data-driven as they should be is because data is intimidating. However, knowledge trumps intimidation. The more you know, the more comfortable you will be to put on that analyst hat. And analyst hats are cool. So let's jump in.


What are the different types of analytics?

The goal of all data analytics is to leave us more educated than before so we can perform better in the future. Sounds simple, right? Well, not really. A common misconception among marketers is that all analysis is equal, which isn't exactly the truth. There are actually three types of analytics; predictive, prescriptive, and descriptive. Most marketers spend the majority, if not all, of their time on only one of them: descriptive. As you can imagine, that leaves a lot of awesome data and innovation on the table.

Let's run through the three and talk through the differences...

Descriptive analytics:

Descriptive analytics is when we data mine our historical performance for insights. Often, we are just looking to get context or tell a story with the data. This is most certainly at the heart of what most marketers do on a daily basis, particularly in their web analytics. We look at how we are doing, and we try to understand what is happening and how that is affecting everything else.

Typical questions include: "How did that campaign do?" "What sort of performance did we see last quarter?" "How did that site's down time affect other performance KPIs?"

Predictive analytics: 

Predictive analytics takes that one step further. It's less about the questions, and more about the suggestions. It involves looking at your historical data, and coming up with predictions on what to expect next. This is most readily used in our industry when we try to predict how next month will perform based on this month's performance (month over month predictions or MoM). While it seems like an obvious next step for analysis, it's amazing to me just how many marketers stop at descriptive, and fail to push into this arena of predictive analytics. Often, it's because this involves predictive modeling which can, again, be very intimidating.

Typical statements include: "Based on the last few months of data and our consistent growth, we can expect to increase another 25%," or, "Knowing our seasonal drop trend, we can expect to slow down by 10% in the next 6 weeks."

Prescriptive analytics:

This is where things can get fun. Prescriptive analytics takes forecasting and predictions a step further. With prescriptive analytics, you automatically mine data sets, and apply business rules or machine learning so you can make predictions faster and subsequently prescribe a next move. Marketers tend not to think of this "as their responsibility." That is for someone else to think about and solve. I think that is a super dangerous mindset, given we are on the hook for hitting the company's business KPIs. Prescriptive analytics can be a very powerful catalyst for success at a company. 

Typical questions include: "What if we could predict when customers leave us before they do, what could we surface prior to that to change their minds?" "What if we can predict when they are ripe for a second purchase and suggest it along side other products?" "What if we can predict what they would be most likely to share with a friend, how would we surface that?"


So, are you doing enough?

I ask this because somewhere along the way, marketers began to believe that descriptive analytics was our job, and "that other stuff" was for someone else to figure out. At SEOmoz, we are working hard to have each team working on all three types of data analysis in a variety of capacities. It's not easy. There is a stereotype out there that you have to break through. Data can be fun. It can be accessible, and it can be part of everyone's job. In fact, it really should be.

Imagine this for a second: just think about how much could get done if every team felt empower to tell a story with the data, make predictions off of it, and then brainstormed ways to operationalize that data to prescribe next steps for the biggest gains.

That is what being an analyst means and I believe we are all becoming more of an analyst as this industry continues to evolve. The platforms out there make it easier than ever, and the competition is more intense then ever. Why not be part of something more than just telling a story with the data? Why not suggest the next move? Why not create crazy ways to use the data? I think it's time we all put our analyst hat back on and had a little fun with it.

Hopefully, breaking down the types of analytics above is a great reminder that there is more than just descriptive analytics. At the very least, you can share with your team to inspire them to do more with the data in front of them. Best of luck to you fellow data lovers!


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All the President's Picks

The White House Your Daily Snapshot for
Tuesday, March 5, 2013
 

All the President's Picks

Yesterday, President Obama announced three new nominees for his Cabinet: Ernest Moniz as Energy Secretary, Gina McCarthy as EPA Administrator, and Sylvia Mathews Burwell as Director of the Office of Management and Budget.

So who are they? Find out about the President's picks.

President Barack Obama announces the nominations of, from left, Ernest Moniz as Energy Secretary, Gina McCarthy as Environmental Protection Agency Administrator, and Sylvia Mathews Burwell as Director of the Office of Management and Budget, in the East Room of the White House, March 4, 2013. (Official White House Photo by Lawrence Jackson)

President Barack Obama announces the nominations of, from left, Ernest Moniz as Energy Secretary, Gina McCarthy as Environmental Protection Agency Administrator, and Sylvia Mathews Burwell as Director of the Office of Management and Budget, in the East Room of the White House, March 4, 2013. (Official White House Photo by Lawrence Jackson)

In Case You Missed It

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

Hanging Out with First Lady Michelle Obama
Mrs. Obama joins a virtual conversation about Let’s Move!, her initiative to ensure our nation’s kids grow up healthy and reach their full potential.

President Obama Holds First Cabinet Meeting of Second Term
The President welcomed new Secretary of the Treasury Jack Lew and new Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel to his Cabinet.

Helping Military Families Protect Themselves from Buyer's Remorse
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau offers tips to help servicemembers avoid buyer's remorse when making big financial decisions.

Today's Schedule

All times are Eastern Standard Time (EST).

10:15 AM: The President and the Vice President receive the Presidential Daily Briefing

11:00 AM: The President meets with senior advisors

12:45 PM: Press Briefing by Press Secretary Jay Carney WhiteHouse.gov/live

2:05 PM: The President departs the White House en route to Bethesda, Maryland

2:20 PM: The President arrives in Bethesda, Maryland

2:35 PM: The President visits the Walter Reed National Military Medical Center

4:10 PM: The President departs Bethesda, Maryland en route to the White House

4:25 PM: The President arrives at the White House  

5:00 PM: The President and the Vice President meet with Secretary of Defense Hagel

WhiteHouse.gov/live Indicates that the event will be live-streamed on WhiteHouse.gov/Live

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Seth's Blog : Understanding local media

 

Understanding local media

Local media was an essential business for a century, largely for three reasons:

1. Broadcast signals and newspaper trucks could only travel so far, so 'local' was the natural category.

2. Commerce (and thus advertising) was local.

3. Interests tended to align locally as well.

Today, of course, the signal travels around the world, so newspapers, radio stations and TV have no incentive to limit themselves.

Commerce too.

And finally, we're discovering that when given the chance, people are a lot more interested in what they're interested in, as opposed to what their physical neighbors are doing.

Going forward, then, the real kings of media will be local in a totally different sense. They will be the narrators and arbiters of interest for groups that actually have aligned interests. The daily newspaper for families wrestling with juvenile diabetes, or bi-weekly email op ed for the pop music industry. If one of those categories happens to be, "lives in zip code 10706," that's just fine, but it's an exception, not the default.

Many of these categories are in flux, available to an adroit, remarkable, generous media mini-mogul who wants to lead.


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