marți, 6 mai 2014

Climate Change Is Affecting Us Now

 
Here's what's going on at the White House today.
 
 
 
 
 
  Featured

Climate Change Is Affecting Us Now

Today, we released the third National Climate Assessment, the most comprehensive look yet at how climate change is affecting the U.S. and critical sectors of the economy.

The report, a key deliverable of President Obama's Climate Action Plan, confirms that climate change is not a distant threat -- it's affecting us now.

Watch the President's science advisor explain how climate change is already affecting us -- and check out the full climate report:

Video player: A Year of Action


 
 
  Top Stories

President Obama Hosts Cinco de Mayo Reception at the White House

President Obama hosted a reception in honor of Cinco de Mayo in the East Room of the White House yesterday. In his remarks, the President explained how Cinco de Mayo "marks a great moment in Mexican history -- one that ended up shaping the United States as well."

READ MORE

More Than 20 Actions, and Counting:

The President made something very clear in his State of the Union address this past January: Wherever and whenever he can take action to expand opportunity for more American families, he's going to do it, with Congress or without.

READ MORE

Photo Gallery: Behind the Scenes from January to March 2014

Yesterday, the White House Photo Office uploaded more than 150 photos from January through March of this year, to give you a behind-the-scenes look at what the President and First Lady have been up to.

READ MORE


 
 
  Today's Schedule

All times are Eastern Time (ET)

10:30 AM: The President and Vice President receive the Presidential Daily Briefing

11:45 AM: The Vice President delivers remarks at the Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month Opening Ceremony

12:30 PM: Press Briefing by Press Secretary Jay Carney

1:45 PM: The Vice President ceremonially swears in Puneet Talwar as Assistant Secretary of State

2:45 PM: The President is interviewed by local and national meteorologists participating in "Weather from the White House"

4:15 PM: The President and Vice President meet with Secretary of State Kerry


 

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The most comprehensive look yet at climate change

 

Hi, everyone --

Today, we released the third National Climate Assessment report, by far the most comprehensive look ever at climate change impacts in the United States.

Based on four years of work by hundreds of experts from government, academia, corporations, and public-interest organizations, the Assessment confirms abundant data and examples that climate change isn't some distant threat -- it's affecting us now.

Not only are the planet and the nation warming on average, but a number of types of extreme weather events linked to climate change have become more frequent or intense in many regions, including heat waves, droughts, heavy downpours, floods, and some kinds of destructive storms.

The good news is that there are sensible steps that we can take to protect this country and the planet.

Those steps include, importantly, the three sets of actions making up the Climate Action Plan that President Obama announced last June: cutting carbon pollution in America; increasing preparedness for and resilience to the changes in climate that already are ongoing; and leading the international response to the climate change challenge.

We've made great progress in the year since his announcement -- but there's much more work to be done.

Watch this short video to learn more about the new report and see how climate change is affecting people across the United States today:

Learn more about the new National Climate Assessment report.

Explore the full report, and find out how you can help -- because every one of us has to do his or her part to meet the challenge of climate change.

Thank you,

John

Dr. John P. Holdren
Director, Office of Science and Technology Policy
The White House


 

Is Your Content Strategy Guided by Audience Intent (or Just Keywords)?

Is Your Content Strategy Guided by Audience Intent (or Just Keywords)?


Is Your Content Strategy Guided by Audience Intent (or Just Keywords)?

Posted: 05 May 2014 05:15 PM PDT

Posted by Laura.Lippay

All too often I see content strategies that:

  1. Look at what people are searching for (keyword research).
  2. Create landing pages for as many keywords as possible.
  3. Write gobs of (often meaningless) keyword-optimized content. 

This is a typical old-school SEO strategy, but what about audience (visitor) intent?

There's a lot of focus in SEO around optimized landing pages (as there should be). An optimized landing page has a targeted topic and keywords, a targeted page title, a clean URL, a compelling meta description, intuitive layout and navigation, loads quickly, looks amazing, and has calls to action most likely above the fold.

Content, on the other hand, is more than just optimized landing pages. Content serves a purpose. Content can give a company an advantage over it's competitors. Content is a means of communicating and building a relationship with an audience

What is audience intent?

That core audience you're trying to attract needs something. Maybe they're researching the best hiking vacations around the globe. Maybe they want to know where they could go hiking specifically in Utah. Maybe they know they want to go hiking in Utah and are looking for Utah vacation packages that include hiking. Or maybe they just need to book a trip from Boston to Park City. Their intent can be very vague or very specific, and when coming up with content for a landing page you need to put yourself in the mind of your audience and consider what it is that they really want to see. The audience intent would consider:

  1. What kind of content would help to easily and satisfactorily meet the intent of that visitor? 
  2. If the intent is vague (ex: "hairstyles"), what are the various types of intents that they may have? Ex: hairstyle how-to videos, hairstyle lookbooks, short hairstyles, long hairstyles, hairstyles for curly hair, thin hair, frizzy hair, specific hairstyles like up-do's, braids, etc.
  3. What would they consider useful?
  4. What would they consider interesting or engaging?
  5. What would they consider sharable?

The basic requirements of content strategy

A great piece of content requires all of the things a great landing page does (when the content is indeed a landing page, as opposed to other types of content like white papers, videos, guides, maps, etc.). A great content strategy, though, considers a bit more beforehand, primarily:
  • What are the goals of this content (why are we creating it)?
  • What are the goals for the business (how do we make money)?
  • What does it need to solve for the consumer (what is the audience intent)?
And after thoughtful research around the audience needs and competitive landscape, it addresses this question:
How do we build something that meets (and exceeds) user intent, while satisfying our business goals, and is better than anything else out there?
Let's look at these considerations in real-life examples of content strategies. These examples clearly differentiate between simply building landing pages and writing copy vs. coming up with creative ways to meet audience intentions and business goals.

Content strategy example 1:
Content vs. lifestyle

The company in this scenario is currently purely transactional. 

The setup (in brief):

  • Audience: Women age 25-55, typically moms.
  • The audience need/intent: Discover smart and innovative ways to be awesome and live fabulously while being budget-conscious.
  • Content goals: Extend the currently purely transactional brand into a lifestyle brand through an extensive, multidimensional content plan.
  • Business goals: Sell product online.
Previous attempts at content by the company have fallen flat (as have similar attempts by their primary competitors). No one reads their blogs and hasty attempts at launching content pieces have been more or less crickets.
Much of this has to do with a transactional company trying to have a voice when no one is expecting them to talk. A brand without a clear voice and no authoritative experts or influencers, launching random bits of content is not a likely win situation. From an audience standpoint it raises more questions than advocacy - Why is this content here? Will there be more? Why should I consider them the authoritative voice in (topic), especially when there are many more authoritative voices out there dedicating entire websites and lifestyles to these topics?
Lifestyles in this case is the key. Producing content is very different than immersing your brand in a lifestyle:
CONTENT LIFESTYLE
Landing pages Self-expression
Articles Community
Blog Posts Culture
Videos Identity
Slideshows Associations
Guides Experience
Maps Emotion

Consider these brands embracing lifestyles through content. They're all there to sell product, but their content attracts and engages audiences, draws them in like moths to flames. Their content isn't based on keywords and optimized landing pages, it's based on giving their audiences what they need and getting them excited about it in the process.

GoPro: Be inventive, buy cameras. Nike: Do sports, buy shoes.
Airbnb: Travel hip, rent places. Martha Stewart: Be crafty, buy products.

The approach proposed for this particular client in this example:

  • Client: Live fabulously on a budget, buy products.
See how that's different from this?
  • Client: Optimized landing pages derived from high-volume keywords, buy products.
The content strategy involves weekly collections, guides, a magazine-style approach to daily content, evergreen marketing pieces and special approaches to holidays, plus acquisitions and partnerships with influential people in the space and potentially a branded "voice of the company" personality doing TV appearances and PR and promoting the content.
Of course this content strategy took several months and a lot of research. In a future post I'll go into detail on the process and tools available for putting together a comprehensive content strategy.

Content strategy example 2:
Articles vs. awesome content

This client was an online magazine targeted at women, with several top-level categories on the site like fashion, beauty, etc. presented in one of two formats: slideshows or articles.
The setup:
  • Audience: Primarily women, primary age group: 35-55.
  • The audience need/intent: Get fashion and beauty inspiration, tips, ideas.
  • Content goals: Reach and engage more women.
  • Business goals: Page views (ad impressions).
The easy part of this content strategy was the architecture. The current architecture was so basic that keyword research alone was enough to provide some great insight into what the audience was looking for that the online magazine was providing but in no clear architectural way. There were quick wins to be had like creating subcategorical landing pages like Spring Trends and Summer Trends under Fashion Trends.
The bigger challenge: The competition. Women's fashion and beauty is a highly competitive space online. Creating landing pages does not mean they will come. This content needed a more creative "how can we do something better" eye. From the typical SEO mindset you can think of it as "how can we create something that people will link to, share and engage with more than our competitors?"
We utilized several research avenues, primarily:
  • Market research on online beauty and fashion trends.
  • Extensive competitive research.
  • Extensive research into trends on what's popular in beauty and fashion online and in social networks.
And we found all kinds of cool things that the online magazine could be doing to attract and engage more women. In the end the content strategy proposed features like:
  • Videos or slideshows comparing different makeup brands (example: different thick lash mascaras or long-lasting lipsticks).
  • Makeover tools.
  • Various types of "lookbooks" for things like pixie hairstyles, colorful eyeliner ideas, nail trends, etc.
  • Working with brand partners to deliver samples boxes to subscribers.
  • A series on recreating celebrity looks for less (and where to buy).
  • Local fashionista bloggers in major cities who blog on where the latest coolest fashion finds, fashion events and fashionable places to be are in that city.
  • Weekly collections/series around various topics like This Weeks Cutest Shoes (in your inbox), Must-Have Dresses, Craziest Fashion Trends, etc.

This was presented within the newly proposed architecture with cross-linking opportunities and optimization recommendations (especially around video, images and social sharing) for a complete content strategy.

Content strategy example 3:
Selling vacation packages

An airline sells vacation packages that include flights and tours of the area they mainly fly into. They have the packages on the site but they're performing pretty poorly.
The setup:
  • Audience: Adult international travelers coming from the United States.
  • The audience need/intent: Find things to do in the area, find tours in the area, find vacation packages, plan a vacation in the area.
  • Content goals: Attract, engage and convert more people.
  • Business goals: Primary: sell flights. Secondary: sell packages.
Here are the things I looked at in preparation for their content strategy:
  1. What do searches tell us about the various types of intent the searchers have? People may be searching a specific attraction or they may be looking for hiking tours. We found at least 4 high-level ways to slice and dice intent (in addition to looking for packages): By specific attraction name, by town, by type of attraction (ex: waterfalls), or by activity (ex: bird-watching).
  2. Does the site architecture currently meet those intents? In fact, no. The architecture was somewhat random. It is difficult to find some of the things on the site based on those 4 types of intent. Some of the content that could be easily cross-sold was also buried as landing pages in the packages section.
  3. How do visitors with these intents navigate the site now? We did user testing asking visitors to find and book a specific attraction and to find and book a specific activity. Many were unable to complete the tasks, and all of them went about it in completely different ways. We learned a lot about what people expect to find and how they expect to find it that could help guide our content strategy (including additional types of intent like time of year the package is available for instance).
  4. What content assets do we have to work with? A content inventory was done with a sample size of content currently in season and live on the site, and content out of season that they currently remove from the site. Each page was "tagged" with the specific attractions, towns, type of "thing to see," and activities that were included in the package along with package price, travel period, whether or not it includes a flight, departure airport, number of nights.

With all of this in mind, the end content strategy proposed things like:

  1. Architecture: An updated architecture with landing pages to meet the specific major intents.
  2. Navigation: A newly proposed navigation (which is slightly different from the architecture).
  3. URLs: Of course.
  4. Tools: A proposed filtering tool/system to filter anything from type of activity involved to price range to number of nights and everything in-between.
  5. On-Page: On-page content recommendations based on what we learned from user testing + adding in related content for higher engagement and search-friendly cross-linking of relevant content and pulling things like transportation options out from being a buried landing page under packages to being a module cross-linked from relevant package pages.
  6. Seasonal content treatments: Adding the ability to book packages that aren't in season right now + how to address long term landing pages for seasonally available or annually changing content.
Rather than just creating landing pages and optimizing them based on what people are searching for, we took an approach to this content based on the various types of user intents people may have that may bring them to the site and ultimately book a package.

Remember, we're creating content for people, not search engines  

It all goes hand-in-hand. When you create something that your audiences like, that they link to more, share more, and engage with more, it's likely to affect search engine rankings and traffic, too. Of course this isn't your good ol' typical "SEO," but its also not 1999. The best SEO is—and for many years has been—a good product, so taking the time to consider your audience intentions when creating a content strategy can pay off in more ways than one.


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Tools For Writing PPC Ads

Tools For Writing PPC Ads

Link to White.net

Tools For Writing PPC Ads

Posted: 06 May 2014 01:00 AM PDT

Ads are obviously important. They're the tip of the paid search iceberg: you need the campaign structure, keywords, bidding strategies and so on to keep everything afloat, but the ads (along with extensions) are the part that people actually see.

But if you're writing text ads you have limited space, and a host of editorial restrictions. Even when you have a good idea for your messaging, ads can be challenging to write. Fortunately there are a few tools to help!

Never use a long word when a diminutive one will suffice

We’ve all written the perfect piece of prose that’s just one character too long. Sometimes you can correct that with just a word substitution.

If you just want a shorter word Thsrs will give you shorter synonyms. Of course thesauruses aren’t precise – always substitute words with care!

Also try WordHippo – it doesn’t care about the length of words, but as well as synonyms you can find different forms of the word, antonyms and rhymes. Even if you don’t find a precise substitution you may see something that lets you go down a slightly different track – like using a different tense, or a noun instead of a verb.

Excel for Checking

A spreadsheet is a good way to write ads – it's easy to check character length.

The basic way to check length is with the len() function. Then use conditional formatting to highlight in red anything that's over the limits.

As I explained in one of my Excel tips posts, you can modify this to take into account dynamic keyword insertion. Using just len() will tell you "{KeyWord:Things and Stuff for Sale}" is 35 characters, but 10 of those characters are {KeyWord:} and don't count towards the limit. So you can use a different formula to remove those non-counting characters:

=LEN(D2)-10*COUNTIF(D2,"*{KeyWord:*}*")

You can't automatically test for everything, but there are a few more checks you can make. AdWords won't let you use an exclamation mark in the headline, and won't let you have more than one exclamation mark in the description lines. You can count the number of exclamation marks by comparing the length of the headline with the length when !s are removed:

=LEN(D2)-LEN(SUBSTITUTE(D2,"!",""))

So you can check if the headline is wrong with

=LEN(D2)-LEN(SUBSTITUTE(D2,"!",""))>0

And you can check if the description lines are wrong with

=LEN(F2&H2)-LEN(SUBSTITUTE(F2&H2,"!",""))>1

(Note that Bing Ads allows you to have one exclamation mark in the headline and one exclamation or question mark per sentence in the main text. So if you're writing for Bing you can ignore this test.)

Also, correct spelling is crucial – mistakes can look unprofessional, and could get your ad disapproved! On Windows, you can press F7 to do a spell check.

Excel for Writing in Bulk

Using Excel is also handy if you want to make a bunch of ads with the same structure but with a few words replaced. You can add columns for the varying info and use formulae to generate the ad text from them. See the sample spreadsheet!

Screenshot of using Excel to write ads

In this example you can quickly see the third ad is wrong – description line 1 is too long because 'thingamajiggers' is a long word. You can copy and paste as values to manually edit it down to size.

You don't have to use this to just make cookie-cutter ads – you could use the generated ads as a starting point and then tweak them into more tailored ads. You could also use something like this to see what your DKI ad text looks like, by copying in your keyword list.

Phenomenal Selling Powers, itty bitty writing space

I've not really talked about what to put into your ads – that's because there's already a tonne of articles on that! If you're looking for tips on how to write ads, see this massive list from 3Q Digital.

And if you have any other tools for writing ads, please share them in the comments!

 

Image credit: 'Pen is mightier than the sword…' by V.v

The post Tools For Writing PPC Ads appeared first on White.net.

Seth's Blog : Thoughts on HugDug

 

Thoughts on HugDug

We've spent the last few months working on a new project, and I wanted to share an executive summary with you...

It's called hugdug.

The backstory: So far, hundreds of thousands of people have posted millions of reviews on Amazon.

If you're aggrieved, the negative review makes sense to me. Someone is on Amazon, about to buy something that you don't like, and here's your chance to make a stand, to say your piece...

On the other hand, the positive review, particularly the long, well-written, impassioned review, feels a bit out of place to me. After all, the shopper is already here, finger poised on the Buy It Now button, and has already found the item in question. A simple, "I love it," ought to be sufficient.

But what if there were a third-party site, a place just for rave recommendations, a place where you could help people discover stuff they didn't even know they were looking for? Not just books, but anything sold on Amazon?

What if we can elevate the art of the review, what if we can make what you a review a way to tell the world what you care about?

Since we started Squidoo, we've paid our users and their designated charities more than $18,000,000. That's far more than sites like Twitter, Facebook and Instagram, which of course pay those that create content nothing at all.

Hugdug is our new project aimed at spreading positive reviews about great products. And we're earmarking half our profits to good causes.

The design goals for HugDug were to make it mobile, generous and beautiful. We wanted to create a platform that makes it easy to speak up and speak out about products you love, and we wanted to make it easy to connect with people who respect your opinion.

Why charities? Because it's the right thing to do and because it feels good. The Amazon products reviewed don't cost anything more on our site (we get paid an affiliate fee by them) and the idea of giving away half our profit is really powerful. What if every site that used user-generated content did this? By all means, I hope you'll donate as much as you can afford to the causes that you care about. Along the way, though, a commerce and recommendation engine that also generates good feelings and worthy donations is a step in the right direction, no?

The best way to understand HugDug is to give it a try. Perhaps you're interested in:

Wrinkle-free packing,

an executive shaving secret,

a future of work, or even,

the best dog toy ever.

(Here are all of my reviews).

And, if you want to try writing a review about something, here is a list of movies to choose from, or even some of my favorite books...

Thanks for giving it a try and for sharing it. I'll be posting some great reviews by my readers next week, would love to see what you care about.

PS by request, there's a bonus link about presentations added to yesterday's post.

       

 

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