duminică, 28 aprilie 2013

Seth's Blog : The hard parts

 

The hard parts

In an industrial setting, the obvious plan is to seek out the easy work. You're more likely to get it done with less effort and then move on. The easy customer, the easy gig, the easy assembly line.

Today, though, it's the difficult work that's worth doing. It's worth doing because difficult work allows you to stand out, create value and become the one worth choosing.

Seek out the difficult, because you can. Because it's worth it.

[An aside for entrepreneurs and anyone starting a new project: if you can't describe the hard parts, how will you focus on them? And if there are no difficulties ahead, what makes you think your project is valuable? When I meet an entrepreneur, I always ask this question first--which part of your project is hard?]


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sâmbătă, 27 aprilie 2013

Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis

Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis


Is Capitalism Killing Our Morals and Economy?

Posted: 27 Apr 2013 09:24 AM PDT

In one of the most hopelessly incorrect collections of drivel that I have ever seen, Paul Farrell of MarketWatch writes Capitalism is killing our morals, our future.
Yes, capitalism is working ... for the Forbes 1,000 Global Billionaires whose ranks swelled from 322 in 2000 to 1,426 recently. Billionaires control the vast majority of the world's wealth, while the income of American workers stagnated.

Over the years we've explored the reasons capitalism blindly continues on its self-destructive path. Recently we found someone who brilliantly explains why free-market capitalism is destined to destroy the world, absent a historic paradigm shift: That is Harvard philosopher Michael Sandel, author of the new best-seller, "What Money Can't Buy: The Moral Limits of Markets," and his earlier classic, "Justice: What's the Right Thing to Do?"

New free-market capitalism trapped in American brains. Yes, it's everywhere: "Markets to allocate health, education, public safety, national security, criminal justice, environmental protection, recreation, procreation, and other social goods unheard-of 30 years ago. Today, we take them largely for granted."

Examples ... for-profit schools, hospitals, prisons ... outsourcing war to private contractors ... police forces by private guards "almost twice the number of public police officers" ... drug "companies aggressive marketing of prescription drugs directly to consumers, a practice ... prohibited in most other countries."
Something Trapped in Our Brains

Yes, something is trapped in our brains, or rather the brains of Farrell, Harvard philosopher Michael Sandel, and those who think like them.

The first problem is Farrell and Sandel do not know what free market capitalism is. We certainly do not have it.

The free market would not have fractional reserve lending. The free market would have gold and silver as money.

The primary reason for the major disparity in wealth is bank leverage of fiat money created at will via fractional reserve lending. The most redeeming feature of capitalism is failure, but the Fed has a moral hazard policy of "too big to fail" that promotes massive risk-taking.

There would be no Fed in a free market and there would be bank failures, not bailouts on the backs of taxpayers.

In a free market, money would not be inflated at will, nor would credit be handed out to anyone who could breathe as happened in the housing bubble.

Anyone who equates what is happening now with "free market economics" has something much smellier than mush for brains. So does anyone who thinks the socialist model would serve us better. If the socialist model was better, and more regulation and rules were the solution for everything, France would be the booming leader of the world economy.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com

SEO Blog

SEO Blog


Seven Amazing Tips For Combining Public Relations And SEO

Posted: 27 Apr 2013 01:19 AM PDT

PR and SEO tend to go hand-in-hand more than ever now days. The key is to make the most out of both for particular events ranging from media coverage to conferences you attend. We've put together a list of the top ways to maximize both PR and SEO at the...
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Top 10 SEO Tips For 2013

Posted: 27 Apr 2013 01:14 AM PDT

Search engine optimization is undoubtedly one of the most fast-changing industries which doesn't seem to slow down. Techniques that you used effectively for your website promotion a year ago may turn to be worthless today. Thus, it is crucial to stay abreast of the freshest changes in this sphere. In...
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4 Easy Ways To Get Free Traffic To Your Website

Posted: 27 Apr 2013 01:07 AM PDT

There are one million and one ways to get free targeted traffic. I’m just going to touch the basics here. There are so many free manuals about getting traffic, that it would be a waste of time to spend too much effort on this subject. Forum Posting If you join...
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Why SEO Needs High Quality Content

Posted: 27 Apr 2013 12:07 AM PDT

We've heard the phrase a million times- that content is king. But do you know why? Content you create and publish on your website can also be very helpful for SEO purposes. Anything that goes on your site text/copy, videos, and images, even podcasts and news, are all parts of...
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3 Simple But Very Effective Email Marketing Tips

Posted: 27 Apr 2013 12:03 AM PDT

As with most forms of online marketing, there are some very advanced and technical strategies you can use to maximize the results you get from email marketing. While those strategies are definitely worth pursuing once you hit a certain point, it can be overkill during the earlier stages of establishing...
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Social Authority Now Has A Free (and generous) API

Social Authority Now Has A Free (and generous) API


Social Authority Now Has A Free (and generous) API

Posted: 26 Apr 2013 02:47 AM PDT

Posted by @petebray

You read that right. Social Authority now has an API. And it's free. And you can grab a ton of data (i.e. you can query for data on up to 500,000 Twitter users per day). That's a whole lot to be excited about!

What is Social Authority?

Social Authority is our transparent, business-focused metric that measures influential activity on Twitter. We introduced it a few weeks ago, and we love how it's adding real value for our Followerwonk customers.

One of the biggest benefits of Social Authority is that it helps drive engagement tactics; namely, who is best going to ricochet your message around their network when you @mention them. Our score helps find those standout prospects to engage by analyzing your social graph, comparing your relationships with others, and tracking your new (and lost) followers.

Social Authority also augments content strategy. We're upfront that our metric is based on retweets. At core, we're measuring a person's activity on Twitter (that is, the content they produce), rather than the person herself. This means that those with high Social Authority are producing content that gets noticed and retweeted. As such, finding those with high Social Authority in your industry (and looking carefully at their tweets) offers insight into what content works well for your audience.

Mashing it up

At Moz, we're all about giving our customers data that they can use in creative ways for their specific purposes. And with Social Authority, it's no different. We think that our score can be useful in all sorts of unique ways, and as a foundation for new metrics, too.

As I've mentioned before, the key in social often comes down to this little puzzle. Here's a quick little example.

Namely, we need to find influential people who are likely to listen!

Finding these people is often tough. Folks who are influential, pretty obviously, have a lot of folks trying to get their attention. This means that it's hard for you to break through with your message to them.

We've helped this situation in Followerwonk by computing an overall "engagement rate" for a lot of the top Twitter influencers. Quite simply, on mouse over of many users, we'll tell you that user's @mention rate (what percent of his timeline consists of leading @mentions of others), RT rate, and URLs in tweets rate. Those folks with 0% @mention rate... well, you're not likely to get through to them.

How do you get around this issue? Well, here's what I do.

I create a useful comparison between competitors. I bring up the list of followers shared by all three (because these folks are likely to be super attuned to my message). I download the data into Excel.

This download will include the Social Authority for all users, as well as the other engagement metrics for many users. What I like to do is the following:

Namely, I create a new column that is simply the sum of Social Authority and percentage @contact rate. This produces a score between 1 and 200. I like to do this because it's a simple way to find users who have both high engagement and influence.

Of course, this is a simple example of how we use Social Authority. We're eager to see what you come up!

But that means you need access to the data beyond just Followerwonk. Here's where the API comes in.

Cue the API...

One of the early struggles we had at Followerwonk was the need for a large amount of influence data. We needed influence metrics on pretty much every user on Twitter! That data wasn't easily available, and it's one of the reasons why we developed our own metric.

With that in mind, we want to make this data available to all. For free. And generously.

Here's how to get started with our API:

  1. Get your access credentials by clicking on the link in the top section of our Social Authority page.
  2. Read the docs on how to use the API.
  3. Do a simple test to get someone's Social Authority. You can learn how here.

After that, you're all set! You can do 20,000 calls per day day, requesting up to 25 users per call. That works out to a daily limit of 500,000 users. Hopefully that's enough for all your needs (and if not, contact us and we can see what we can do). 

Here are some areas you might consider as you start thinking how you'd use Social Authority:

  • As a low-cost alternative (or complement) for any current use of other 1 to 100 scores like Klout or PeerIndex.
  • As the foundation for other metrics that might use Social Authority as an input.
  • As a supplement to any software that you develop that surfaces Twitter users in any capacity.
  • As an Excel add-on with the ability to quickly grab scores for your own spreadsheets.

A quick example

I've written a little Chrome extension to give an example of how to use the API. You can download it and play around with our API. (As I said, it's really rough!)

Once installed, you can mouse-over any Twitter name on any other Web page. Once you do, you'll see a small hovercard that reveals their Social Authority. In the example below, I'm browsing the SEOmoz team page for our Help Team Leader, Aaron Wheeler:

Notice the little blue hovercard? It reveals Aaron's Social Authority by making an API call behind-the-scenes.

This has immediate value. As you start to browse the Web, you can quickly get the Social Authority of any Twitter user mentioned on blogs, news articles, and so on. It's a great way to opportunistically judge the value of any referenced Twitter user.

Of course, this is a very basic example. (And we invite you to fork that quick code to come up with something even better.)


We're eager to see how you'll use Social Authority, and we'd love to help you develop even more robust applications that make use of it. To share your feedback, please feel free to comment or to contact me directly (tweeting me @petebray is a good way) if you'd like any help or advice.

Please let us know where you integrate, and any other changes you'd like to see in the comments below. Cheers!


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