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BrightonSEO key conference takeaways – the April 2015 edition | |
BrightonSEO key conference takeaways – the April 2015 edition Posted: 10 Apr 2015 12:47 AM PDT
If you haven’t been able to make it to the conference, you may also find our running commentary helpful so you can stay in the loop with what’s new in the world of SEO. When you’re back in the comfort of your office make sure to revisit this post so you can refresh your memory about the key takeaways from the day. And please feel free to drop us a comment if you have any questions about what was covered at the conference as we’re always keen to share our insights and opinions. Now for the important stuff – what conference topics do you fancy reading about? Click on the internal anchor links below to find what you need quickly…
Social Content sessionsErica McGillivray: Show Your Flare and Pivot for Social Image Sharing
Vicke Cheung: Designing Content for MobileComing soon! Iain Haywood: Making your Competitions Fun
SERPs sessionsJon Earnshaw: Cannibalisation – the SEO’s biggest nightmare, and how to identify it
Internal cannibalisation
Subdomain conflict
International conflict
Semantic flux
Dave Naylor: Dave predicts the future of Search
Link Building sessionsWe love a little link building chat, so you can be sure that we’ll be posting about the following talks as soon as they’ve happened. Matthew Barby : 10 Ways to Build a Link in 20 Minutes FlatNatalie Wright : The Power of Backlink DiscoverySamuel Scott : Stop Thinking About Links. Start Thinking About Publicity!Technical sessionsKirsty Hulse : Schema, JSON-LD and the Semantic Web
Mark Thomas: A 10 Step Technical SEO Game Plan
Jono Alderson: Doing an Awesome Site Audit
Content Marketing sessionsWe are excited to listen to the content marketing sessions, and will put our takeaways here as soon as we can! Rebecca Lee : A supercharged approach to PR SEO successHannah Smith : Jaws in Space (How to Develop & Pitch Creative Ideas)Krystian Szastok : Using DIY Data Visualisation to Fuel Your Content MarketingFireside Chat with Apprentice winner Mark WrightThe last thing on the BrightonSEO agenda is to listen to Apprentice winner Mark Wright. He’ll be talking about his experience on the BBC programme as well as telling us about what he’s learned along the way. We will definitely be listening to this one, which we’ll summarise below. Mark Wright – Fireside Chat
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Hope is fuel, it moves us forward and it amplifies our best work.
Expectation is the killer of joy, the shortest route to disappointment. When we expect that something will happen, we can't help but be let down...
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Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis |
Credit Crunch Underway: Can Recession Be Far Behind? Posted: 12 Apr 2015 09:59 PM PDT Credit Crunch Underway Last week, Alexander Giryavets of Dynamika Capital L.L.C. pinged me with an article he had written on Recessionary Level in Credit Conditions. His article was based on data from the March Credit Managers' Index by the National Association of Credit Management. The report is pretty damning. First, let's take a look at some NACM snips. Emphasis in italics is mine. Following the NACM snips and some NACM explanations, we will return to a chart from Giryavets. From the March NACM Credit Managers Report: Combined Sectors [Manufacturing and Service]NACM Favorable and Unfavorable Factors ![]() click on chart for sharper image This is somewhat counterintuitive, but negative unfavorable scores are not a good thing. "When survey respondents report increases in unfavorable factors, the index numbers drop, reflecting worsening conditions." Recessionary Credit Conditions Inquiring minds may wish to read Recessionary Level in Credit Conditions by Alexander Giryavets. The charts in Giryavets' article are in his words "shifted and rescaled" so one can see how much of subcomponent movement can be explained by index movement. Some may find those charts hard to follow, so I asked Giryavets for a simple chart of the overall index, credit extended, rejection of credit, and dollar amount beyond terms. He graciously created that chart for us, shown below. Combined Index, Amount of Credit Extended, Credit Rejected, Dollar Amount Beyond Terms ![]() click on chart for sharper image Start of recession is denoted by vertical red line, end of recession by vertical green line. Can Recession Be Far Behind? NACM data only goes back to 2002. Also data prior to 2006 is not seasonally adjusted, while data from 2006 and later is seasonally adjusted. In the entire series since 2002, the only other time we have seen deep plunges in amount of credit extended and rejection of credit applications was deep in the middle of the last recession. Those are apples to apples comparisons, both seasonally adjusted. Although comparisons between seasonally adjusted numbers and unseasonably adjusted numbers are technically invalid, if anything that would have led to more volatility between comparisons, not less. This is still more supporting evidence that a recession is on the way. Heck, we may even be in the start of one right now, just as everyone is expecting rate hikes. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot 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. |
Former Fed Governor Thomas Hoenig Says US Banks Undercapitalized; Unsafe, and Unsound Banks Posted: 12 Apr 2015 12:42 PM PDT In another round of "stress" tests last month, the Fed said Big Banks Pass Muster. Anyone who has been following stress tests in US or Europe knows full well, the tests were in reality "stress free". Confirmation of the undercapitalized state of US banks comes from former Fed Governor Thomas Hoenig. He served as chief executive of the Tenth District Federal Reserve Bank, in Kansas City, for 20 years. Rules limit terms to 20 years. Hoenig is now vice chairman of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. Undercapitalized, Unsafe, and Unsound Hoenig's opinion should carry some weight. And a New York Times Editorial citing Hoenig sounded an alarm today regarding Unsafe and Unsound Banks. After the latest round of bank stress tests last month, the Federal Reserve announced that, by and large, the nation's biggest banks would all be able to withstand another crisis without requiring bailouts.Thomas Hoenig on State of US Banks Let's take a look at April 2 statements by Thomas Hoenig in the FDIC Release of Fourth Quarter 2014 Global Capital Index. For the largest U.S. banking firms, the average tangible equity capital ratio – known inversely as the leverage ratio – is 4.97 percent (column 8). In other words, each dollar of assets is funded with 95 cents of borrowed money.Banks Not Well Capitalized Banks are "well capitalized" in the US only by ignoring derivatives. European banks are "well capitalized" by treating all sovereign debt, including Greece, Spain, Portugal, as if it was risk-free. The reality is banks are undercapitalized globally. And although taxpayers were forced to cover losses, they shouldn't have been. The notion that bondholders should never take losses is absurd. The Fed assumes "derivatives are risk free because they net out". Hoenig doesn't buy that argument and neither do I. A currency crisis awaits. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot. 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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One common insightful definition of AI: Artificial Intelligence is everything a computer can't do yet. As soon as it can, we call it obvious.
And so, self-driving cars and devices that can beat us at chess don't really think, they're just doing something by rote (really really fast).
One reason we easily dismiss the astonishing things computers can do is that we know that they don't carry around a narrative, a play by play, the noise in their head that's actually (in our view) 'intelligence.'
It turns out, though, that the narrative is a bug, not a feature. That narrative doesn't help us perform better, it actually makes us less intelligent. Any athlete or world-class performer (in debate, dance or dungeonmastering) will tell you that they do their best work when they are so engaged that the narrative disappears.
I have no idea when our computer overlords will finally enslave us, but it won't happen because we figured out a way to curse them with a chattering monkey.
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