What is your favorite place or time to do some important work? When is the last time you had 3 hours to yourself at the office? Distractions? Interruptions? What do many employers say they fear at the thought of letting their people work from home? Distractions? Interruptions?
Jason Fried - Co-Founder 37Signals
Vicious circle? Where do we go from here? Listen to Jason Fried the founder of 37Signals pinpointing the real problem, the M&Ms problem…
What strikes me is that Jason is not the first one to raise this issue over the years but very little seem to happen in the real world. No matter how successful, you are, do you still feel uneasy about admitting that your main place of work is home? What’s been your experience?
Links are very useful and constitute the raison d’être of the internet. Problem is they look ugly, gibberish and often relay a spamy smell; especially on Facebook. Take a look at the picture below, how ugly is that?!
Additionally, but not that you specifically care, the above is a pet peeve of mine. Spammers aside, the time spent on finding good content to ultimately end up having it look ugly, makes me cringe. Doesn’t this one look better?
So here’s a quick video on how to properly post a link on Facebook. Take a look, there are two ways to post links on Facebook and you might actually learn a couple more tricks to make your posts, not only look better but, more attractive to be read and engage with. For those of you for whom this pulls out a “DUH!”; share along, you’d be surprised as to how many people have no clue.
Indonesians, who were the victims of earthquakes, a tsunami, and volcanic eruptions last month, are finding help from an unlikely source: Twitter.
Indonesia is a country composed of 17,000 islands, and organizing aid relief efforts has proved a challenge, particularly in regions where infrastructure was destroyed, reports Reuters. So enterprising and tech-savvy citizens are taking measures into their own hands, coordinating relief through Twitter. Twitter is extremely popular among Internet-using Indonesians, 21% of whom use the site (compare that to 12% for the U.S.)… read more…
Blogging has won! It wasn’t killed but emboldened, by social media. The latter is alive, well and here to stay as are SEO and search engines: Not a simpler landscape to deal with. So what are businesses looking to use the web for growth to do? Three things: Create even better engaging content, feed it through social networks to engage their communities on it and… make sure that content loads super extra fast on their screen.
The Blog Is Alive! Long Live The Blog
Last week, AOL bought the technology blog TechCrunch for an undisclosed sum (estimated to be at least $25 million) – a blog. The acquisition is a clear example of the once avant-garde company trying to “restore lost relevance” as a Bloomberg article reports.
In a recent WebProNews article, Chris Crum | @CCrum237 elegantly demonstrates the critical importance of blogging along 3 main axis, the first of which even seemingly pointing to the opposite:
Still, content sharing on Facebook and Twitter is not letting up and the number one source of this content: Blogs
Analysis of 1.2 billion tweets revealed that retweets and replies were only occurring for 3 tweets out 10; i.e. over 70% of Twitter content falls on deaf ears
This all points to the death of the still young theory arguing that social media was killing blogging. This theory actually spawned from a low hanging fruit: with the mountains of available content out there, why would anyone continue to blog when sharing any content with thousands now consists of a couple of clicks?
But with the rise of social media, the exact opposite happened. The ever increasing noise levels, far from driving users away, have in effect pent up audiences’ appetite for fresh and relevant content and its main source is — and will remain for the foreseeable future — blogs. It has reestablished the rightful standing of these mines of ideas and creativity.
The demise of the blog’s death has not been an “there can only be one” outcome. Instead, blogging rebirth has participated in better defining the function of social media as a distribution channel, at its most basic level, and as a must have channel for engagement; the life-breathing entity of the very fresh and relevant content that makes up any good blog.
Do we now agree that the blog is alive? Good, now that we all agree, what’s a blog to do to succeed?
Search Is Alive, Well And Social Is The New Back Link
Before the advent of social networks, Search Engine Optimization (SEO) was the primary mean by which bloggers could get to and build communities of subscribers. Search is alive, well and here to stay. Its battle is to stay relevant to its users and one way to do so is by incorporating the ever expanding social output. Search engines have already taken a jump on the issue. In early 2010 all three majors, Google, Yahoo and Bing each cut a $25 million check to Twitter for the right to have direct access to their “firehose”. Now, Google is turning to Facebook and its wealth of “like” data. In its search for business relevance as a revenue-generating entity, Facebook does see Google as competition. Google CEO Eric Schidmt recently declaring that, like or not, they will suck Facebook data into their voracious index.
This brings us a few conclusions about Lady Search:
It’s still the life blood online
It’s no longer only about keywords and back links, it also needs to be social to be relevant and thus rank
It’s now incoporating an element often overlooked: speed, web pages loading time type of speed
Why speed? The likes of Google are constantly refining their algorithms not only to make them faster, more comprehensive and relevant to users but also to squash the smarty pants looking to play their system via black hat tricks. This is all the more crucial that we are headed towards the “Internet of Things” — Speed (real-time data); scale (“unprecedented processing power”) and Sensors (“new kinds of data”) — where the volume of available online data is exploding every passing moment. Google VP Marissa Mayer | @marissamayer made a presentation last August at Xerox PARC entitled “The physics of data” and where she reported that in 2002 there were 5 exabytes — that’s 5 billion Gigabytes — of data online, which had risen in 2009 to 281 exabytes or 281 billion Gigabytes. The more data there exists and the more people consume it, the more there will be of it (noise levels notwithstanding) and the faster the means of consumption will need to be.
In the real-time web era if everyone can upload anything anywhere anytime and social networks already allow for that content to be super SEO friendly, then there has to be other criteria by which search engines sift through and prioritize mountains of content. This means that now, a site’s position in Google is not only judged by the keywords it contains, the fancy URL it is titled with, the number of back links its home blog boasts or how often it is updated or even how much content it has; it is now also judged by the speed it loads on users screen. This may seem obvious to many but Google only actually officially added speed to their algorithm this past April and if the latest Google enhancement dubbed “Instant” doesn’t convince you, I’m not sure what will.
Many web properties now offer to tell you how fast is your site. Some will boast a unique way to measure, for you to only start suspecting they’re trying to sell you their ‘optimization’ services (WebSiteOptimization) . Other offer scant details that are really of no use in bettering performance. Good resources are mentioned in Google’s official announcement, note the Firefox add-on PageSpeed in particular it provides great details as to how to improve a site (requires Firebug). A couple other have caught my attention that provide as much details as PageSpeed but don’t require messing with add-ons bloating a browser: WebPageTest and Pingdom.To get a quick sense as to your site’s performance run it a few of these tools and several times, it seems results are “moment-dependent”.
Either way it does seem for now that speed optimization is still subject to different “cuisines” with each tool giving slightly different recommendations: Yahoo’s YSlow for example differs from PageSpeed. Still, there are several easy wins most can handle, web-optimizing images is one and just being aware of the change is another.
Which speed measuring tools have you used and found useful?
So How Techie Should Businesses Be?
To the excellent Shannon Paul’s | @ShannonPaul question: “How Techie Should We Be?“, well not as much as necessary to build a whole website but definitely more than before. I believe there’s more “to developing a sustainable social media strategy” than just letting “technology take care of itself”. In the coming “Internet of Things”, devices and features are integral part of the way the communities, from whom we seek engagement, consume content and can sometimes make or break that content’s relevance: Flipboard on an iPhone is irrelevant but is very much à propos on an iPad. Gone are the days when a marketer only needs to remember channels: print, radio, signage and the big — for now still — one way tube, television.
Both Brian Solis‘ statements are very true but what is this rarity really? ‘Influence’ is one of, if not THE holy grail of social media. In plain English, social influence: it is the ability for a brand to make people do things they want them to do through using social tools.
It is defined in the same way as in real life; i.e. the ability to effect a change in behavior in another person, intentionally or unintentionally, as a result of the way the changed person perceives themselves in relationship to the influencer. Except that this influence exerts itself online.
Thus the higher level of social influence a brand has, the more ROI it will extract from its social activities; i.e.not only have people act upon what’s asked of them but have them further spread the request or even happily ‘work’ on that brand’s behalf.This is why it’s not only important to have a large audience and provide it with value but also to engage it, to be viewed as approachable and personable so that the audience can relate back, be influenced as well as have influential people on its side.
A level of social influence is calculated by factoring in different elements which vary depending on who you talk to. Klout is one of the forerunners in the field of Twitter influence measurement (they recently raised $5 million), defines it as a score over 100 that combines the following 3 factors:
“True Reach” which is the size of the “engaged audience” size: total audience minus spamming and inactive accounts, overlaps of friends between accounts, among others
“Amplification probability” which is the likelihood the brand’s content will be spread and acted upon: consists mainly of retweets and @ mentions
“Network Influence” Klout uses this to basically reinject its own sauce into the equation and measures how influential are the people who follow, retweet, mention, list, … the brand.
You can see more details about your current Klout score. For context you can check FasTake’s Klout score details, which I’ve been nursing over the past year. Good news is that Klout provides very helpful hints to improve and don’t forget to refer back to this excellent article from @EFulwiler, I previously shared.
You can also see more details about the KScore calculation. There are others that dabble in this field but this one is the most prominent.
So next time you hear “Klout Score”, think: size + reach + entourage. Keep this equation in mind as you go about your daily activities as well as they do encompass the elements that drive your social activities if you are looking to generate actual ROI from it.
But is Klout the ultimate way to measure influence? What’s been your experience ? Have you used other scoring systems?
Numbers that can help you convince clients of social media marketing through ROI http://bit.ly/bM4pj3
– ubervu (ubervu) http://twitter.com/ubervu/statuses/21670773117
I just read another article predicting Facebook spiral death – This PCMag post dates from 2008 http://bit.ly/9DnW0Fhttp://bit.ly/9uIK04
– Karima-Catherine (karimacatherine) http://twitter.com/karimacatherine/statuses/21605494500
KILLER! via @FasTake 7 Ways to Sell Social Media to Your Marketing Department http://om.ly/rVAU: KILLE… http://bit.ly/a1UNLq #socialmedia
– socialmedia247 (socialmedia247) http://twitter.com/socialmedia247/statuses/21555166260
Not a TV buff by any stretch of the imagination to begin with, I usually shun the MTV awards type events but the social experiment underlined by the Twitter firehose that MTV put up was well worth watching as it may much farther reaching implications than promoting simple music videos. MTV’s spokesman Kurk Patat said it’s all:
“The conversation is already taking place, we want to be where that conversation is taking place.”
The best way to describe the MTV Tweetracker is visually, check out the video below. The site can basically be displayed in either stripped or cloud view.
Once you open the site, simple instructions appear: the visual graph contains pictures of the most popular topics/people at that moment, as a topic or person becomes more popular the image grows, with the most popular topic keeping steady in the center of the graph, if you click on an image you can access all the related tweets. The stripped provides a view a bit more structured, with ranking list of subject/people and tweets shooting out firehose style. You even get a scrubber at the bottom to go back in time; very helpful as the whole thing is actually pretty overwhelming… as a firehose would feel like if it was shooting you right in the face.
The interesting thing about this stunt is that the immediate question that popped in my mind was, how might this look in the context of elections where we wouldn’t be talking about a quick 2-hour stream but a month long firehose. Many people could be putting a similar Tweetracker together since Twitter data is open.
But who would it be and which attributes would make it the winner against its competitors? Political parties will probably jump at the opportunity; by 2012 Twitter will only have ingrained itself further in society. Would unfiltered Twitter data, and an ability to handle counter trends gracefully, be the key to the winning firehose platform?