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miercuri, 18 decembrie 2013
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Hanging Out for the Holidays
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Easing the Pain of Keyword Not Provided: 5 Tactics for Reclaiming Your Data
Easing the Pain of Keyword Not Provided: 5 Tactics for Reclaiming Your Data |
Easing the Pain of Keyword Not Provided: 5 Tactics for Reclaiming Your Data Posted: 17 Dec 2013 03:17 PM PST Posted by timresnik October 18th, 2011, the day Google announced "Secure Search," was a dark day for many search marketers. We had hope, though; we were told only a small fraction of search referrals from Google would apply. This was proven false in just a few weeks as (not provided) quickly hit 10+% for many sites. Then, a year later, seemingly out of the blue, Google started to encrypt almost all searches. Today, we are approaching the dreaded extinction of Google organic keyword data:
Oh keywords, how I will miss thee. Knowing the keywords that send us traffic from Google Search has always been a major pillar on which search marketers execute and measure the effectiveness of an SEO strategy. With Google "Secure Search" and keywords being stripped from the referral string, it's starting to look more like a crutchâ"or worse, a crutch that will very soon no longer exist at all. Here are five ideas and two bonus resources to help nurse keyword targeting and search ROI back to health. Will they solve all your problems? No. Will they inform a direction for future "provided" solutions? Maybe. Are they better than nothing? Most definitely. 1. Use custom variables to tag content with categories/topicsMost web analytics software allows site owners to pass custom variables through. In Google Analytics, a custom variable can be inserted into your code, and as the name implies, you can pass custom name/value pairs of your choice. It's one of the most useful analytics tools for web traffic segmentation with many different applications. Mix this functionality with category, topics or tags from a page on your site and you can now analyze your organic web traffic based on those variables. If you are discipline and creative in understanding and tagging your content, you will get insight about what topics are sending your traffic. If you have some programming chops and can extract these variables from your CMS yourself and append them to your tracking code, more power to you! If not, and you are a WordPress user, I have some good news: There is a free plugin from our friends at Yoast. Install it and then simply select the following:
Once it is in GA there are several ways to get at the data. One is to simply go to Acquisition > Channels > Organic Search, then select the primary dimension of "landing page" and the secondary dimension with your custom variable. You now have a list of your landing pages that received organic traffic and the categories/tags related to each. Valuable stuff.
If you want some ideas of what tags you should be using, there are several auto-tag generator plugins for WordPress, Zemanta being one. Requirements:
Watch out:
2. Combining rank data with landing pages from Google AnalyticsWe can recapture some Google keywords by joining our rankings and analytics data. Download your rankings data from your favorite rankings tool; the more data you have the better. In Google Analytics, go to Channels > Organic Search > Source = Google and add the secondary dimension of "Landing Page." View the maximum number of rows and download the data into a CSV. Put your data in two separate tabs in a spreadsheet. Now, all you need to do it join the keywords from the rankings tab with the keywords from the analytics tab. This can be done using VLOOKUP. While you're at it, add the ranking data to the analytics tab. The end result will look like this:
Requirements:
Watch out:
3. Site search: what users are searching for on your siteIf you get enough people using the search feature of your site, it can be a gold mine for keyword data. After all, this keyword data will always be "provided." Configuring Google Analytics to capture your internal search traffic is pretty straightforward. Once you have done so, you will be able to see the top keywords people are searching for on your site. Step 1: Open the Google Analytics profile you want to set up Site Search for Step 2: Navigate to Admin > Settings and scroll to the bottom for "Site Search Settings." Enter in the parameter that is designated for a search query on your site; for example /search_results.php?q=keyword. If you use a POST-based method and do not pass through a parameter in the URL you can either configure your application to append one, or you can trigger a virtual pageview in your Google Analytics snippet, such as: analytics.js: ga('send', 'pageview', '/search_results.php?q=keyword') The category option allows you to look for an additional query parameter that can later be used to group the site search data. For example, if you had search on your site in different sections that you wanted to keep separate: help, content, documentation, etc.
Step 3: Let GA collect some data for a day or so and check out your results. Navigate to Behavior > Site Search > Search Terms to see a complete list that users search for on your site. To dig deep add the secondary dimension of "destination page" to see where the user landed after seeing the search results. Then, be sure to check out the secondary dimension of "search refinement" to see which keywords your users searched for after they searched for the original content. This can clue you into gap between what people are looking for and not finding on your site.
Requirements:
Watch out:
4. Google (and Bing) Webmaster ToolsGoogle has created the headache with "Not Provided," but they have also given us a bit of medicine in the form Webmaster Tools. Released a few years back within Webmaster Tools, "Search Queries" provides webmasters with some basic information around their keywords, including average position, impressions, number of clicks, and click-through rate (CTR).
This data should be used, but has a few major limitations. First, only a small, Google-selected subset of the keywords is represented. There is no transparency about how or why they select the keywords, so using it to measure results of specific content optimization efforts can be inaccurate and even misleading. Second, the data is limited to 90 days. If you ranked for a query 91 days ago, you'll never know. Webmaster Tools also has an API, but unfortunately the "search queries" data isn't available through it yet. According to Mr. Cutts, that is imminent. If you want to store your data for longer than 90 days and know how to program, you can use this PHP library or this Python library. Finally, there is a limitation in how you can use Webmaster Tools data in Google Analytics. The good news is that you can integrate this data into Google Analytics with some basic authentication between the services. The bad news is that you can only segment the data in Google Analytics with 2 dimensions: country and Google property. Joining this data with behavior, demographics, goals, etc. would be extremely valuable.
Requirement:
Watch out:
5. Deeper topical analysisAvinash Kaushik, one of my favorite speakers MozCon this year wrote about understanding the "personality" of the page as a future solution for "not provided". He says: "I wonder if someone can create a tool that will crawl our site and tell us what the personality of each page represents. Some of this is manifested today as keyword density analysis (which is value-deficient, especially because search engines got over "density" nine hundred years ago). By personality, I mean what does the page stand for, what is the adjacent cluster of meaning that is around the page's purpose? Based on the words used, what attitude does the page reflect, and based on how others are talking about this page, what other meaning is being implied on a page?" I think this could be accomplished by performing topical analysis on body content of pages as they are published and then passed through to Google Analytics with custom variables; similar to what I described above with categories. This could be done by using DBpedia and one of the annotation open source application that uses it, such as DBpedia Spotlight. Spotlight detects mentions of terms in your content and scores the relevance of those mentions against structured data created from Wikipedia. Once the topics of the page are "extracted" and passed to your web analytics platform, you'll be able to use it as a dimension against organic search referrals to landing pages. (Thanks to Jay Leary for walking me through Spotlight) Bonus: some other "not provided" resourcesMike King is not too worried about "Not Provided." His deck argues we should be focusing on segmenting our data by personas and affinity groups, and paying more attention to "implicit" rather than "explicit" intent. Good stuff. Ten industry experts, including two Mozzers, weigh in here and answer a series of questions on the "Not Provided" landscape, including tools and techniques that they use, and even a few "Top Tips for 2014." ConclusionKeyword data from Google organic search is owned and controlled by Google and can never be replaced. Secure Search is here to stay and nearing 100%. There is no cure-all solution. That being said, search marketers are a GSD and generous group, and will continue to hack away at the problem and share solutions. What are some of the data sources and hacks you are using to deal with "not provided?" Are there future algorithmic solutions to this problem, or are we doomed to have to take our Google medicine and be happy with what they decide to provide in Webmaster Tools? Sign up for The Moz Top 10, a semimonthly mailer updating you on the top ten hottest pieces of SEO news, tips, and rad links uncovered by the Moz team. Think of it as your exclusive digest of stuff you don't have time to hunt down but want to read! |
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Seth's Blog : A productivity gap
A productivity gap
You'd think that with all the iPad productivity apps, smartphone productivity apps, productivity blogs and techniques and discussions... that we'd be more productive as a result.
Are you more productive? How much more?
I wonder how much productivity comes from new techniques, and how much comes from merely getting sick of non-productivity and deciding to do something that matters, right now.
Isaac Asimov wrote more than 400 books, on a manual typewriter, with no access to modern productivity tools. I find it hard to imagine they would have helped him write 400 more.
Sure, habits matter. So does getting out of your way. But if you want to hide, really want to hide, you'll find a way.
The instinct to produce great work doesn't require a fancy notebook.
More Recent Articles
- What's attention worth?
- The care and feeding (and shunning) of vampires
- Soft tissue
- The semiotics of type
- Getting lost on the shelf
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marți, 17 decembrie 2013
Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis
Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis |
- Rand Paul Ponders NSA Class-Action Lawsuit Options; Senator Recruits 'Hundreds of Thousands' of Plaintiffs; Rand Paul 2016
- Laughable Eurozone Banking "Non-Union"; Expect Disorderly Breakup
- Fed Study Shows Drop in Participation Rate Explained by Retirement; Let's Explore that Idea, in Depth and in Pictures
Posted: 17 Dec 2013 04:31 PM PST In the wake of a welcome court ruling that NSA mass collection of phone conversations is unconstitutional (see District Court Judge Rules NSA Phone Taps Likely Unconstitutional; 68 Page Ruling Cites "Orwellian Technology" and Unreasonable Searches), come more welcome news that senator Rand Paul is going to turn up the heat further. Rand Paul Ponders NSA Class-Action Lawsuit Options Please consider Rand Paul Plots NSA Class-Action Lawsuit Options After months of consideration, Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., is moving closer to filing a lawsuit in federal court against National Security Agency surveillance programs.Rand Paul 2016 I salute Rand Paul for his efforts. And as noted on numerous occasions, I also salute U.S. hero Edward Snowden who revealed the unconstitutional data collection efforts. Finally, I wish Rand Paul well, hoping he wins the Republican nomination, then replaces president Obama as the next president of the United States. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Mike "Mish" Shedlock is a registered investment advisor representative for SitkaPacific Capital Management. Sitka Pacific is an asset management firm whose goal is strong performance and low volatility, regardless of market direction. Visit http://www.sitkapacific.com/account_management.html to learn more about wealth management and capital preservation strategies of Sitka Pacific. |
Laughable Eurozone Banking "Non-Union"; Expect Disorderly Breakup Posted: 17 Dec 2013 11:07 AM PST On December 12 the Financial Times reported EU reaches landmark deal on failed banks with a "common rule book for handling failed banks". Gunnar Hökmark, the lead negotiator for the parliamentary side, said: "We now have a strong bail-in system which sends a clear message that bank shareholders and creditors will be the ones to bear the losses on rainy days, not taxpayers. At the same time we also established clear rules to deal with the most exceptional cases in which overall financial stability is in danger." The next day, a friend commented the banking union agreement proved me wrong. I replied "wait for the details". Laughable Details Now Pouring In Let's start with a look at Eurozone Red Tape in the Financial Times just three short days later. Fears are growing that the eurozone's proposed new banking regime will be too bureaucratic for the task of handling a sudden collapse of a cross-border institution.Germany Backtracks on Banking Union MarketWatch reports Germany appears to backtrack on EU banking deal EU finance ministers have promised to agree on a so-called single-resolution mechanism--consisting of more centralized decision-making and financing for the shuttering or downsizing of failing banks--before the end of the year. But a letter sent by Wolfgang Schäuble to some of his counterparts sets clear limits on how far Europe's biggest economy is willing to go.EU Ministers Set to Define Banking Union Today, the Financial Times reports EU Ministers Set to Define Banking Union Europe's banking union is at a crucial juncture. Three late-night meetings of finance ministers this week, culminating on Wednesday, is likely to define the eurozone's system for policing how its banks live and die, including a common fund to cover rescues. It marks the biggest surrender of sovereignty since the creation of the euro.Serious Questions Sweeping reforms? Lightening Speed? When only €12.5bn of joint funds would be available by 2020? When the first line of defence is imposing losses on the bank's shareholders and creditors? Please be serious. Banking Union Not Worth Supporting Staunch eurozone supporter Wolfgang Munchau concluded on December 15, Banking Union Not Worth Supporting Many advocates of banking union, including me, underestimated the economic costs of the banking union. ... Against the costs, one must obviously also consider the potential benefits. ... If done right, this could have been a hugely important project. Banking Union Math Munchau's reasons are important. He notes that the ECB will end up as "supervisor" of 128 banks with an aggregate balance sheet "somewhere between €26 trillion and €27 trillion." How big is the proposed bailout fund? €55 billion, not available immediately, but built up over 10 years. It will take 10 years to build up a fund equivalent to a mere 0.2 per cent of the asset base. Munchau asks "Would you call it insurance if the payout depended on whether the German parliament voted in favour?" That's a good question, but what about the other nine panels and up to 143 votes it would take for approval? Munchau concludes "It is not a banking union, and should be rejected." Indeed. There is no banking union, nor will there be one even if the various finance ministers agree to double or triple the alleged "impressive sum" of €55 billion built up over 10 years. Expect Disorderly Breakup Lost is the debate about "impressive sums", is the simple fact there should not be a banking union in the first place. In practical terms, there still isn't, but no one wants to admit that. And given that there isn't a genuine union (which is the only way to realistically hold this mess together a bit longer), the eurozone ministers ought to focus on a meaningful task: how best to break up the eurozone with minimal disruption. Unfortunately, they won't. Thus, the resultant eurozone breakup will prove to be very disruptive. The only other possibilities (and I have mentioned them before) are 1. slow growth and extremely high unemployment in the peripheral countries for another decade 2. Germany and the Northern countries pony up hundreds of billions of euros in more support (debt forgiveness, not loans). Pick your poison, but a breakup is the most likely result. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Mike "Mish" Shedlock is a registered investment advisor representative for SitkaPacific Capital Management. Sitka Pacific is an asset management firm whose goal is strong performance and low volatility, regardless of market direction. Visit http://www.sitkapacific.com/account_management.html to learn more about wealth management and capital preservation strategies of Sitka Pacific. |
Posted: 17 Dec 2013 02:54 AM PST A November Fed study on the Causes of Declines in the Labor Force Participation Rate by Shigeru Fujita at the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia concludes "The decline in the participation rate in the last one-and-a-half years (when the unemployment rate declined faster than expected) is entirely due to retirement." Fujita based that statement on BLS surveys that look at the underlying reasons people give for nonparticipation. The CPS divides nonparticipants into three broad categories: disabled, retired, and others. The last category includes nonparticipation due to "discouragement." Based on respondents' reasons for nonparticipation, weighted by age group, Fujita produced this chart (trendlines in red by me). Nonparticipation Rates by Reason I do not doubt for one second the chart represents responses given to the BLS. But is there any evidence the answers given to the BLS are correct? Let's explore the question in a series of step-by-step charts. First a chart by Doug Short at Advisor Perspectives that shows participation rates of various age groups. Age 50 and Older Participation Rates Interestingly, the biggest decline in labor force in percentage terms is in the 50-54 group. However, that is not conclusive. Because older workers' participation rates are lower, the increase in the share of old workers by itself pushes down the aggregate participation rate. To determine what is really happening, we need to look at age-group weighted effects on the participation rate. I asked reader Tim Wallace to explore that idea in a set of charts. Note: Both Doug Short and Tim Wallace have better charting skills than I have. I frequently ask them for charts of this nature to explore ideas that I have. Here's the specific question I asked: What age groups account for the decline in labor force? For this question, we need to look at all groups, not just 50 and older. As customary, Wallace uses not-seasonally adjusted data. For all of the following charts, Wallace compares November of 2013 to November in prior years. As with the earlier chart, the decline in age group 50-54 relative to 55-64 is suspicious but inconclusive. We need stats on the population itself to draw valid conclusions. Percentage Makeup of Civilian Non-Institutional Population by Age Group Note the recent rise in the 65+ population demographic, the rise in 55-64 demographic, the decline in the 25-49 group, and the flattening of the 50-54 age group. All of these are as expected. Now let's hone in on what has transpired since 2010. Participation Rates by Age Group 2010-2013 By multiplying the age group population % by the age group participation rate, we can calculate contributions to the overall participation rate. The next chart does that. Focus on Percentages is Wrong The impact on the overall participation rate of the 55-64 age group only increased from 9.8% to 10.2%. Similarly, the impact on the overall participation rate of the 65+ age group only increased from 2.9% to 3.3%. Does that prove or disprove the Fed thesis? The answer is neither. Looking at participation rates (percentages) in isolation cannot address the question. Because of demographic shifts, we need to look at the hard numbers, specifically the growth (or decline) in labor force relative to the growth (or decline) in population. I asked Wallace to do just that. Here are the results. Overall Labor Force and Civilian Population by Age Group The above chart does answer the question as to whether or not the Fed thesis is reasonable. However, it's not easy to see. A chart of relative growth will be easier to understand. Change in Labor Force and Population From Previous Year In the above chart, the change in labor force and the change in population in hard numbers (not percentage terms) are side-by-side. Consider the numbers for 2012 for age group 65+: The population rose by 2,349,000 but the labor force only rose by 621,000. What happened to the rest? Retirement? To make it even easier to see, please consider this final chart, with subtractions made. Delta of Change in Labor Force to Change in Population The decline in labor force relative to the growth in population is heavily concentrated in the 65 and older demographic. This is proof that the analysis by the Fed is indeed reasonable. A rally in the stock market is one possible reason. Also, there may be a lot of teachers, police officers, and firefighters who just put in their required number of years to be eligible to collect their pensions. Implications Regardless of why, the number of retirees collecting pensions or social security is increasing at a rapid pace while the number of those contributing to social security is declining. Moreover, those retiring are in general making more money than new workers coming into the system. The already stressed pension and social security programs will be coming under increased stress. We all knew this would happen sometime, and it started in a big way about 1.5 to 2 years ago. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Mike "Mish" Shedlock is a registered investment advisor representative for SitkaPacific Capital Management. Sitka Pacific is an asset management firm whose goal is strong performance and low volatility, regardless of market direction. Visit http://www.sitkapacific.com/account_management.html to learn more about wealth management and capital preservation strategies of Sitka Pacific. |
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Damn Cool Pics
Damn Cool Pics |
This Guy Dressing Up Like Local Realtors Posted: 17 Dec 2013 02:58 PM PST This guy spent the last month dressing up like local realtors and pasting himself over their bench ads.. Via: phildesignart.com |
The Ultimate Girls Fail Compilation 2013 [Video] Posted: 16 Dec 2013 08:16 PM PST |
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