The Fourth-Most Search Term by Toddlers is Porn


A study showing the top 100 search terms children used in 2009 was just released.

To no surprise the term "Youtube" is the most searched in all age groups, with "Facebook" and "Google" being the other in the top three.
The fourth most searched term is where the head-scratching beings: For teens and tweens the term is"sex" (which really isn't a HUGE surprise). However, kids seven and under apparently prefer to skip this stage and search straight for "porn."

Big FYI here: That's more than searches for the Cartoon Network, and Hannah Montana.

What's the big takeaway from all this? If you believe children are our future (which I'm sure the vast majority does): Our future is doomed.

Posted via web from Connected Marketing

Rumor: Verizon Wireless prepares for the iPhone


Either wishful thinking or evidence of the inevitable, but BusinessWeek is reporting that Verizon is supposedly bolstering its network in preparation for the iPhone.

Verizon Wireless Chief Technology Officer Anthony Melone recently told Bloomberg BusinessWeek that the company is ready for the extra traffic that the iPhone would bring. "We have put things in place already. We are prepared to support that traffic."

We all know how dissatisfied iPhone users, including myself, are with AT&T's performance. Especially, if you came over from Verizon's wireless service like I did. All us iPhone users can do now is cross our fingers and say "Please Apple, please offer your phone on Verizon!"

Posted via web from Connected Marketing

Google Browser Size - How Much of Your Website Do People Really See?


I just had to share this great new tool by Google - "Browser Size". It lets you figure out how much of your website people actually see without having to scroll. In the future, this can help determine where to place buttons, call to actions, importnat content, etc.

According to mashable "Browser Size is very simple: It overlays a transparent image on top of any website, displaying what percentage of users (on average) will see your content without scrolling. Because people use various browser settings, monitor sizes and screen resolutions."

Posted via web from Connected Marketing

The Future is now: "The Golden Triangle"


Reading a great blog post by Brian Solis on "The Future of Interactive Marketing" got me thinking about the "Golden Triangle" that I frist heard about a few weeks ago. By the way the aforementioned blog post is a MUST READ for any marketer. 

 

In a nutshell, in addition to my favorite local search, the three current big megatrends in the web/tech sector are: mobile, social, and real-time. It's like a "golden triangle.” It's why the search engines were so keen on being the first to implement real-time search (Google), design mobile apps (bing), and partner with social networks (yahoo with Facebook & Google with Twitter).

As with Brian Solis puts it "the Golden Triangle [...] facilitates a new genre of content production, distribution, and consumption as well as social interaction and collaboration. It’s borderless, untethered, and practically device agnostic.

“You” are at the center of the Golden Triangle and remain connected to your social and professional graph via devices, applications and networks hosted on mobile and Web-based (cloud) platforms."

Posted via web from Connected Marketing

BROWSER WARS: Google Chrome Beats Apple Safari


All it took was the release of the Google Chrome beta for Linux and Mac and it happened: Chrome became is the number 3 browser in the world, narrowly sliding past Apple's Safari with a 4.4 percent marketshare to Safari's 4.37 percent. The Google-Apple war is getting real, people.

Posted via web from Eric's online marketing blog

What Do Seniors Do Online? Visit Facebook and YouTube, of Course




Research done by Nielsen confirmed a trend that we’ve seen in recent years: more and more seniors are becoming active on the web. In November of 2004, there were 11.3 million active seniors online. In November 2009, that number jumped by 55% to 17.5 million. In addition, they spend more time on the web, totaling an average of 58 hours a month in front of the browser - just look at the data above.

Posted via web from Eric's online marketing blog

Twitter Users will constitute 15.5% of


Posted via web from Eric's online marketing blog

Image of Twitter's new "Fail whale"


Twitter is currently down for scheduled maintenance.
We expect to be back within 30 minutes. Thanks for your patience.

I just got this message today on Twitter instead of the usual twitter "Fail Whale" - this really makes me miss the Twitter Fail Whale :(

Posted via web from Eric's online marketing blog

Social Networking Chronological Graph with Number of Members


Posted via web from Eric's online marketing blog

B2B vs. B2C: Difference in Social Media Initiatives


Very telling statistics realeased by eMarketer this morning for B2B & B2C Socail Media usage:

Leading Social Media Initiatives Among B2B and B2C Companies in North America, September 2009 (% of respondents)

Not only are B2B firms more likely overall to maintain a social network profile, they are managing profiles across more social networks and are significantly more likely to be present on Twitter, LinkedIn and YouTube. On the other side, B2C companies are more likely to maintain Facebook and MySpace profiles.

Social Networking Sites on Which B2B and B2C Companies in North America Manage Profiles, September 2009 (% of respondents)

B2B social media users are more active in measuring most social success metrics. Although B2C companies are more likely than B2B firms to use revenues to measure their efforts, more B2Bs are looking at Web traffic, brand awareness, and prospect lead quality and volume. Web traffic was the top metric for both types of company.

Ver interesting is that 60% of B2B respondents used the online marketing best practice of Twitter search to monitor mentions of their company or brand, but only 35% of B2C companies dis this.

Posted via web from Eric's online marketing blog

Shoppers use Smartphones to Study, Find, and Buy



By Colby E. Ware for USA TODAY

Mobile phones are now commonplace anywhere: the office, the home, in the car, and of course while shopping. With the increased capabilities that Smartphones offer it's only natural that they are now doing the heavy-lifting for shoppers when it comes to doing their homework. Phones help shoppers find coupons, store locations and even discover nearby restaurants.

2009 will go down as the first holiday season that retailers are (finally) trying to capitalize on the still niche, but quickly expanding, market of mobile shoppers.

According to a Deloitte survey, about 20% of Americans will use their mobile devices for shopping during the 2009 holiday season. As is to be expected, the percentage is twice as high for young consumers (18-29). Young Shoppers say they'll use their phones to find store locations, receive coupons and information for sales and to research products and prices.

Now for the most exciting statistic: One-quarter of all who plan to use their phones to shop say they will make purchases on the devices.

Given, the mobile shopping market is still relatively small, even if the sales numbers look impressive at $750 million. But looking at the bigger picture this represents about half of 1% of all online sales.

The trade publication Internet Retailer reported month that 112 retailers have "m-commerce" sites or apps.

Here are a few big boys joining the fun: Toys R Us, Walgreens, American Eagle, Best Buy and  Victoria's Secret recently added mobile sites. Sears and Kmart were one of the first major U.S. retailers to offer a mobile site, last year. 

 

THE ANTI-BLACK FRIDAY


Given the crazies out on Black Friday, the ability to use a mobile device from your couch, bed or kitchen to do price comparisons, check product availability and simply look for other bargains can be invaluable.

How Black Friday Works: Stores offer "door-buster" deals to entice people to come in, knowing they'll buy more once inside the store. Many such discounts are advertised in advance, letting shoppers do price comparisons from home. But many deals aren't promoted ahead of time, and other products that aren't deals are strategically placed around stores.

Here's where the Smartphone comes in: Consumers now browse the Web from the sales floor for product and price comparisons can save time and money. According to Nita Rollins, a futurist with the digital marketing agency Resource Interactive, "the majority of American consumers will be mobile device-centric in a few years. Now that it's technologically feasible, possessing such power literally in the palm of our hands is quite irresistible."

 

M-COMMERCE EXAMPLES


 

  • Best Buy has had a mobile site since June 2009, however it did not became fully functioning for purchases until the end of September. Michele Azar, Best Buy's vice president of emerging channels, says even though the retailer thought it important for customers to be able to buy easily on their devices, she says that wasn't the driving force behind the move to mobile.
  • Toys R Us added a mobile site right before the Black Friday craziness. Greg Ahearn, senior vice president of marketing and e-commerce, says it's designed so consumers can quickly find stores, get "mom ratings" and product descriptions, and make purchases.

"Mobile technology use is growing among all age ranges," says Ahearn. " Some youngsters have their own phones and are looking things up, showing them to Mom and Dad and putting the items on their holiday wish lists."

  • EBay's mobile website attracts 1 million visitors a day. They  expects its mobile commerce – which includes a new iPhone deals app – to quadruple in 2010, and says it will have $500 million in revenue in 2009.

"It's quite possible more people this year will use mobile commerce through eBay and avoid the stores altogether," says Steve Yankovich, eBay's vice president of business solutions and mobile.

 

USING MOBILE TO HELP TEENS AND MOMS SHOP

 

According to a Resource Interactive study mothers remain the "chief purchasing officers," and children are the "chief influencing officers." Teens are using the Internet and their mobile devices influence the brands and products their families bought.

A Mom's perspective after conducting a purchase via a Smartphone: "I still have much greater comfort level with my PC, but if I came to find (buying) was quick and efficient on my phone, I most definitely would do that - I'm on the road a lot."

To facilitate the way young shoppers use their phones as tools of influence, Resource Interactive developed a prototype app that would allow teens to e-mail their parents photos from retail websites and get theirs and others' opinions. If the parents approved, at the click of a button they could authorize the teens to buy the product using an alternative payment site such as BillMyParents.com.

 

THE FUTURE OF MOBILE COMMERCE?


Is Mobile the future of eCommerce? No not yet but we should definitely start talking about mCommerce, as people never have their cell phone more than 1 foot away from them, so it's only logical that the combination of more power, faster internet, and more tech-savyness are leading to the rise of "mCommerce."

 

Posted via web from Eric's online marketing blog

General Motti Star Wars Status Update


 

Posted via web from Eric's online marketing blog

Han Solo Star Wars Facebook Status Update (by Brian Murphy on CollegeHumor)



Facebook, what would the world be like without you? Good question. Now at least we know what Facebook would be like with Han Solo on it.

Posted via web from Eric's online marketing blog

How to Try the New Google Search - Google Search (via @Gizmodo)


Confirmed. The rumors about Google's redesign are true, and you can try it for yourself with a very simple method.

1. Go to Google.com.
2. Once it loads, enter this code into your web browser's URL address field:

javascript:void(document.cookie="PREF=ID=20b6e4c2f44943bb:U=4bf292d46faad806:TM=1249677602:LM=1257919388:S=odm0Ys-53ZueXfZG;path=/; domain=.google.com");

There shouldn't be any http://google.com in front of that. Just that code.

3. Hit enter.
4. Reload or open a new Google.com page and you will have access to the new user interface.

It's fast and sweet, although the changes don't affect all the available sections. [Thanks Matt Karolian]


Send an email to Jesus Diaz, the author of this post, at jesus@gizmodo.com.

Very cool! I wonder how the new interface will really turn out. It does look lot like bing though :)

Posted via web from Eric's online marketing blog

iPhone and Android now total 75% of U.S. smartphone web traffic


Filed under: Odds and ends, Surveys and Polls, iPhone

iPhone and Android now total 75% of U.S. smartphone web traffic

by Mel Martin (RSS feed) on Nov 23rd 2009 at 2:30PM

It's a rather stunning number from AdMob in an October report. The firm reports on web requests from thousands of sites world wide. In the latest report, Apple has 55% of the domestic Smartphone traffic share, and Android has 20%. Interestingly, the Blackberry share dropped 2% to a 12 percent share, and Palm's webOS dropped from a 10% share to 5%.

Windows Mobile OS has 4% of the U.S. Smartphone web traffic.

The AdMob statistics do not show handset sales, but rather are calculated by measuring traffic on more than 15,000 web sites and applications.

The Motorola Droid, running only on Verizon, has captured 24% of all Android traffic, even thought it has been out only a few weeks.

The iPhone has been on the market for 28 months. That 55% share of traffic is a pretty robust number for such a relatively new product. The Android numbers, especially those of the Droid are also good news for Google, Motorola and Verizon.

The balance of Smartphone data may change dramatically as the holiday season unwinds, and it will be interesting to watch the ebb and flow of the competing brands.

AdMob was recently purchased by Google. Apple also had reportedly had some interest in the company.

Incredible statistics for both the iPhone and the Android (the Verizon Droid in particular).

Posted via web from Eric's online marketing blog

Adidas Originals Star Wars Collection Preview (via KicksOnFire.com)


Adidas Originals Star Wars Collection Preview

adidas-star-wars-2

Star Wars fans will get a chance to add another piece of memorabilia to their collection in 2010. adidas honors the timeless intergalactic tale with a few of its classic models in what looks to be a very promising collaborative. The shoes take inspiration from scenes and characters for a literal interpretation and while we only have these sneak peak images you can only imagine how soon the hi res detailed photos will be online. Who’s excited? Or were you all trekkies? Via Hypebeast

Wow, first Marc Ecko brings Star Wars into pop culture and now Adidas? Looks like I'll need to save up for a new wardrobe.

Posted via web from Eric's online marketing blog

Kanye West your website with Kanyelicio.us


Kanye West kanyelicious MTV VMA 2009

I know that the the tool to add Kanye West to any site has been out for a while. But, it's so awesome that I wanted to make sure that everyone out there knows about. Plus, I recently rediscovered it in my bookmarks :)

Remember when Kanye West toally punk'd Taylor Swift at the 2009 MTV VMA awards? Here's a refresher:

 

So, why am bringing up Kanye West again after the incident that happened earlier this year? Well, if you haven't discovered "kanyelicious" yet you are really missing out! This simple website features an app that is rumored to have been developed by none other than the Barbarian Group.

How do you go about turning every site known to man into a kanyelicious site? It's as easy as 1,2,3:

  1. Go to kanyelicious http://kanyelicious.appspot.com/
  2. Enter your URL into the field
  3. Hit "DO IT!"
That's it! Just follow those simple three steps and you can have Kanye West interrupting any site that you want him to. There is even an option to have a bookmark that "automatically" adds Kanye to any site you are currently browsing.

P.S. To see my personal favorite Kanye West joke from Ima let you finish check out my earlier blogpost here.

Posted via web from Eric's online marketing blog

Facebook Uncool for 18-24s? All of this has happened before


To steal a line from Battlestar Galactica: All of this has happened before and all of it will happen again:

A group, in this case college age kids, discover an online sanctuary just to find out that everyone they have ever been in contact with including their parents are on it. First it was MySpace and everyone moved to Facebook, a safe haven for college age kids that required a .edu email address to join. This meant no parents, no relatives, no spam, no junk.

Then Mark Zuckerberg, the founder of Facebook decides that he needs to monetize Facebook and rake in the ca$h. He opens it up to everyone and there was only a tiny initial wave of users that committed Facebook-icide including myself (I only came back 2 years later because as a marketer I couldn't miss out on this phenomenon). Then around this time last year, so November 2008, I started hearing stories that people's parents, grandparents, aunts and uncles were now on Facebook and seeking them out - as if it wasn't already awkward enough dodging Aunt Beth at the annual Thanksgiving dinner, but now people had to do it online? That's where where many people are drawing the line.

Now Adweek throws out an article today about how Facebook is "getting" uncool for 18-24s (a.k.a. the college crowd) - to the surprise of many, but not people that have been following the pulse of this development.

Back to Battlestar Galactica: All of this has happened before and all of it will happen again.

So, now the (1 Billion Dollar) question is: What is next great thing that the kids are going to migrate to?
Twitter? I see twitter more as a compliment to Facebook and not a direct competitor. Sure there are people that only use twitter or Facebook, but they are such different beasts that they don't directly compete.
Leapfish? I doubt that they can fill the shoes of Facebook as Leapfish is an aggregator, but not a source like Facebook or Twitter.

The only thing that is for sure is that "All of this has happened before and all of it will happen again."

Posted via web from Eric's posterous blog

The next big thing? Leapfish Launches Portal & Search For "Living Web"


Is Leapfish the next big thing? That has yet to be determined, but from my initial browsing it has a great chance of becoming my next internet portal along the lines of my yahoo or iGoogle. I love how it has embraced and integrated Social right from the beginning.

Thanks to @nikolhillman for the heads up on Leapfish!

Posted via web from Eric's posterous blog

Young People Tweeting More and More - eMarketer


Status update services catch on with Gen Y

More evidence of Twitter uptake among young people comes from the Pew Internet & American Life Project. According to a September 2009 survey, 33% of online adults ages 18 to 29 use a status update service, a significant difference from the research firm’s previous poll on the subject.

This meant young adults were more likely to tweet than users ages 30 to 49, who had previously been considered the core group for Twitter.

Posted via web from Eric's posterous blog

Seinfeld back with the Mac - Sorry Microsoft


I guess Bill Gates didn't make too much of an impression on him during their short-lived advertising campaign.

Posted via web from Eric's posterous blog

46% of Local Online Searchers Visit Brick and Mortar Businesses


46% of Local Searchers Visit Businesses In-Store

46% of local searchers make in-store visits, according to data released to eMarketer by TMP Directional Marketing and comScore. The number is up 12% over last year.

Meanwhile, for "general searches," 34% visited stores, but this was only up 1% over last year. Internet yellow pages searchers also came in at 34%, up from 29% last year. The overall average of searchers ending up in-store was 37%.

localsearchers46percent102309.gif

Don;t think online searches are important? Think again. SEO will make or break your business over the next few years.

Posted via web from Eric's posterous blog

Seven Patty Windows 7 Whopper Is Real, and It's Horrifying (via @Gizmodo)


They weren't kidding: The Seven Patty Windows 7 Burger does exist in Japan and you can have it for $14.

What does this mean for Microsoft and burger king branding? Good question...

Posted via web from Eric's posterous blog

Apple plays hardball: New Get a Mac Ad - "Broken Promises"


Apple is getting really aggressive in light of the launch of the Windows 7.

Posted via web from Eric's posterous blog

Windows1.0 - ORDER TODAY! (except in Nebraska)


Steve Ballmer deserves an award of some sort.

Posted via web from Eric's posterous blog

Japan Welcomes Windows 7 with Seven Layer Whopper Burger (via @Gizmodo)


The Japanese are truly the kings of cross-promotion...

Posted via web from Eric's posterous blog

Apple: "People Are Still Just Trying to Catch Up With the First iPhone"


I love this image.

It makes me smile every time I see it. I don't know if it's because of the Futurama style of the drawing, Windows being portrayed by a Monkey, or the laser beam coming out of the iPhone :)

Posted via web from Eric's posterous blog

Want Teens to Notice Your Product Placement? Use the Web


For many marketers product placement remains a viable way to create brand awareness among young people--but with this generation having been marketed to on multiple screens pretty much since birth, does product placement even work?

The answer is yes, but not in the way marketers are hoping. We found that 72% of teens and 77% of college students notice product placement, and the top three products they notice on television shows are beverages, cell phones, and cars. But only one in seven report that those product placements have any effect on their perception of the brands.

But it turns out there is one "product" teens and college students say they not only notice but actively pursue: Web sites. 38% of teens and 26% of college students noticed Web sites in a TV show or movie. And 53% of them reported going online to check the site out.

Web sites

So while we don't have tangible evidence that the products youth notice most are having much of an impact, we do know that getting your Web site featured on a popular TV show or in a film is a great way to drive youth awareness, not to mention traffic. Maybe we'll start seeing fewer soda cans on TV, and more characters playing a game on the soda maker's Web site.

So the new product placement is (drum-roll please): A Vanity URL website! What does this mean? Instead of putting your product in the show/movie/etc. put your vanity URL (e.g. CheckThisOut.com) and the kids will check it out.

The key here is to make sure that your website that you are sending the kids to delivers. Does it have good call to actions? Is it branded properly? What do expect people to do once they are there?

Posted via web from Eric's posterous blog

Gator Game


Posted via web from Eric's posterous blog

Florida Gators Swamp Entrance 2009


Go Gators! I recorded the Jumbotron entrance video during yesterday's homecoming game.

Posted via web from Eric's posterous blog

Newest Data: Facebook Soars, MySpace Shrinks and Twitter Slows


Twitter specific: According to comScore the monthly traffic has leveled off at about 20 million visitors since July, after jumping from 4 million in February to 17 million in April. Mediapost speculates that the microblogging service could just be in a lull before another growth spurt.

Posted via web from Eric's posterous blog

Notes from Days Two & Three of #SMX East 2009


Due to burnout, my brain being over capacity and client work I've had to combine days 2 & 3 into one post :) Following are the most important notes and thoughts from the sessions I attended. Head over to flickr to check out my SMX set.

Day 2 at SMX East 2009 started with a Keynote: What’s Next In Search: The Bigwig Crystal Ball Panel. The panel was fun had a great amount of knowledge to share. Here are some of my notes/thoughts/and learning from the panel:

 

  • Asking to be followed on Facebook & Twitter creates a way to stay in front of the consumer beyond the media buy. It keeps and opens up a conversation. This is what makes Social Media so exciting for marketers: In the past, after the exposure to the ad the consumer there was noway to continue the conversation. In addition, Social Media offers opportunity in Direct Response Marketing, Awareness, and Feedback.
  • Twitter is essentially a RSS feed and and email marketing on steroids. It takes Customer Service to a whole new level.
  • Here's a quote by Google taken totally out of context: "We are not always accurate."
  • Something I did not know but learned from Greg Boser of 3 Dog Media: Google has a 30 minute cookie that they place on your computer and there is no way of opting out of it.
  • The Panel was in consensus that the bing and Yahoo merger is a good thing.

 

 

Ecommerce Search Marketing Tactics – This session was full of tactics for ecommerce merchants on how to do well in search results.

 

  • Talk to the Ecommerce Engines to see what the terms are that people search for
  • YouTube is the number two search engine with 3.5 billion searches in August 09
    • Ecommerce opportunities on YouTube:
      • There are many generic searches conducted 
      • Less crowded ad space with sponsored links
      • Opportunity with long tail keyterms
  • The biggest opportunity to improve ecommerce conversions is by adding relevant copy to the product and category pages
    • Category pages are the most important pages on an ecommerce site
    • Optimizing these pagers can increase conversions by up to 23%!
  • The average conversion rate in August 2009 was 2%
  • Conduct a ecommerce PPC audit every 13 months: "Don't ask for more budget: Reallocate!"
  • Optimize your site and product pages for SEO

The Interplay of Social Media & Paid Search – This session was very theoretical. It went over how exposure to social media has influenced search behavior
  • There has been a move from Media Delivery (Traditional Advertising) to Media Discovery (interactive: search, etc.)
  • Putting all terms (SEO, PPC, social) in silos makes sense from a tactical standpoint, but not from an interplay and analytical attribution sense
  • Search is the best direct response channel available online
  • There has been a huge shift in online behavior from the portals to social media, especially for search
    • Heavy searchers are 43% more likely to be Facebook users than the average user
  • No surprise here: Social Media Users are very desirable with their buying power
  • "Supportive social media" is growing rapidly in importance for consumers
    • "I need to know something about it"
  • The Click Through Rate for Ads are much higher if there was prior exposure to social. This is especially true for branded search terms
  • Takeaways: 
    • Conversion happen in Search -> Social can influence this
    • Social will pump up branded searches
    • Slow and steady social is the best. This means no viral. Constant influence is much more beneficial than a burst or 'sometimes' influence.
    • Listen: Where are the gaps? What do people want to know? Provide Relevant information.
Video Search Marketing Beyond YouTube – This session looked at other types of video search marketing opportunties other than YouTube.
  • Video Marketing is becoming more and more fragmented
  • right now Video SEO is like SEO for altavista in the late 90s
  • Use YouTube for :30 to 3:00 videos. Host longer videos on your own site
  • Put all your videos on YouTube - a video is 50x more likely to show up on a Search Results PAge versus a text page
  • Filenames for videos matter
  • Include your URL in the end-slate
  • The video Thumbnail is your call to action
  • New Video Marketing Oppotunites:
    • Google Products pages
    • Google Local Listings
    • People are looking for higher quality videos
Universal & Blended Search Opportunities – This session focused on “vertical” search results is through “blended results” (Yahoo & bing) or “Universal Search” (Google): Blending mixes results from news, blogs, shopping, local search, video search, images, and more into the “regular” result page.
  • You can take up space on the results page with universal search in the search engines. This is great for reputation management!
  • How to dominate universal search:
    • PPC Ad
    • Core Listing
    • Publish / Refresh news about yourself
  • Yahoo now offers really cool "rich ads" with images and videos
  • Google reiterated as usual that it's "all about relevance"
  • The future, according to Goggle, will be more and more local results

Check back tomorrow for my final blog post on day three and my summary of SMX. Head over to flickr to check out my SMX set.

 

Posted via web from Eric's posterous blog

Notes from Day One of #SMX East 2009


 

37 pages. That's how pages of notes I took today at SMX East. Given they were small pages, but nevertheless that's still la lot of notes - but, also a reflection upon the vast amount of knowledge that you learn at SMX. Don't fool yourself, you better be ready to learn, A LOT, at SMX because the learning is something that never stops at SMX.

I learned about the rel=canonical tag from the search engines, local vs. organic SEO, and all about Maps. How local search and maps are evolving. And finally, I had the pleasure of sitting in a keynote by Ben Huh.

 

Here a few of the highlights of things that stood out to me today:

 

Mobile Search Ads -

  • Always send Mobile PPC ads to Mobile sites or Mobile Landing Pages.
  • Geo-target with your Mobile PPC ads
  • But, you don't need a mobile site as you can send mobile ads to: Google Maps, Apple Appstore, Android Marketplace or YouTube.
  • The Mobile Relevance Formula has a lower relevance on Quality Score and a higher relevance on Click Through Rate
  • Click To Call Converts 10x more than Clicks
  • Test if users prefer a limited mobile or a full site

 

 

Duplicate Content Issues: The Search Engine Edition -

  • The biggest news here was that during the Q&A session Google announced that the rel=canonical tag will work across different domains
  • This means that by year's end Yahoo and bing will use the canonical tag and Google will be ahead once again by accepting the tag across domains

 

 

Ranking Tactics for Local Search -

For a local search Connoisseur like me that was probably the most insightful panel of the day.

  • The most intriguing thing to me was the discussion of the difference between Organic and Local SEO. Without getting into this: Yes, there are major differences here
  • One thing to keep in mind is that services such as Localeze, Axiom, and infoUSA feed the search engines and feed secondary search directories. These secondary directories in turn passively feed Google.
  • There are differences across the three major search engines 

 

 

Maps, Maps, Maps! -

This was nice run-through of the three maps (Google, bing, Yahoo!) by the representatives of the actual search engines

  • Yahoo demoed their new features (very impressive!)
  • Yahoo uses localeze, USAlocal,etc to pull in data
  • bing showed off their advancements as well. The "1-click" directions stood out the most as the pre-populate directions from North, South, West, and East
  • Google reminded the audience to not keyword stuff the listings (e.g. Categories, etc.)
  • The importance of Reviews were driven home by Steve Espinosa from Cherrp: a minimum of 4 reviews are required to be in Google's top 3

 

 

Keynote by Ben Huh, the CEO of ICANHASCHEEZBURGER network -

This keynote really made the day and was stuffed full of great quotes and insights. Among these were:

  • "To succeed you must turn other people's dreams into reality"
  • " It is Human Nature to admire complexity but to reward simplicity"
  • Don't waste your time developing things created by others: spend 10% on off-the-shelf and 90% on your core
  • This means use products others have developed, such as: YouTube to host videos, JS-Kit for reviews, Google Docs, and Word press for blogging

Posted via web from Eric's posterous blog

Meet the Mobile Web Audience - eMarketer


Mobile Internet users grew 34% to 57 million from 2008 to 2009, according to The Nielsen Company.

As is to be expected from previous research findings, Men browse for tech, sports and news. Women, on the other hand use the mobile web for celebrity news, shopping sites and social networks.

Most surprisingly to me, only12% of mobile web users are under age 18.

Posted via web from Eric's posterous blog

What is Google Wave? 2 Minute Animation To Explain


Posted via web from Eric's posterous blog

Insane Rocket Takeoff Photo Destroys Camera Lens


By Adam Frucci, 5:40 PM on Thu Oct 1 2009, 56,612 views (Edit, to draft, Slurp)

Photographer Ben Cooper took this photo of a Delta 4-Heavy rocket launching at Cape Canaveral using a sound-activated camera. And when your camera is that close to a launch, your lens probably won't survive.

The particular setup for this was sound activated. The lens was destroyed (worth it of course) but the camera survived this one despite being severed from its ratchet straps and thrown to the ground, and the sound device used for this one disconnected from the camera and thrown about 200 feet backwards into the pad perimeter fence (still worked!). All settings are preset manually. No one is allowed closer than several miles from a launch.

Well, that's awesome. [Airliners.net, Thanks, Jason!]

Well, what do you expect? However, the photo that the camera took before being destroyed is unbelievable!

Posted via web from Eric's posterous blog

Nearly 50% of US Facebook users are over 35 - almost 20% are over 45


An interesting demographic trend that started earlier this year on Facebook is that users over 45 are still growing the fastest in the US.

Will the younglings start jumping ship soon? If yes, what's the next BIG THING?

Posted via web from Eric's posterous blog

Best remake yet? | Star Wars: Uncut Trailer


Wow! I remember when this project started up. It's great to see it all come together.

For those of you who don't know: The First Star Wars movie was divided into individual scenes and then fans from all over the world started recreating that one scene. Now all the scenes are being put back together to create the ultimate Star Wars fan-made tribute.

Posted via web from Eric's posterous blog

AT&T MMS launch: How was it for iPhone users?


So, what's the fallout of the AT& MMS update from last Friday? It seems that according to initial feedback nothing too exciting happened. There were just a few isolated reports of failures to get the update, failures to get the MMS functions after an update, and late delivery of MMS messages.
According to a non-scientific poll conducted by TUAW.com it seems that 46% of respondents had no issues at all and an additional 15% had initial issues that went away.

Is this a WIN for AT&T? In my opinion no because getting this right was expected after such a long delay. The iPhone is finally capable of performing rudimentary functions that any 13 year old's cell phone that they sneak into school on a daily basis.

How did the AT&T MMS release go for you?
It worked well. No problems
5739 (45.9%)
It seemed slow at first, but got better
1827 (14.6%)
MMS is missing some features I wanted
237 (1.9%)
MMS isn't of any interest to me. I use email for sending pix
1912 (15.3%)
Doesn't run on my older iPhone. I'm not happy
708 (5.7%)
Slow delivery yesterday. Much better today
795 (6.4%)
Not happy at all
1297 (10.4%

Nine Reasons to Twitter in Schools



“Ballmer says they screwed up with Windows Mobile. Wishes they had already launched WM7." - windows mobile 7


The interesting thing will be to see what Microsoft does moving forward: Windows Mobile has been a real FAIL for years and Microsoft better bring their A Game to get it right with WinMo 7. Especially with the pressure and lead growing from Apple and the iPhone Microsoft will need to throw more than money for marketing at this venure and we all know how Ballmer feels about Apple...

Posted via web from Eric's posterous blog

Social Media Marketing isn't just a fad


Another day, another emarketer graph. The question is: What does this graph tell us?

1. Social media success is many-sided and complicated (nothing new there)
2. People want to hear the nitty-gritty tactics and not waste time with other things
3. Most importantly: Social Media is being accepted as an important part of the marketing mix and not just a fad

Posted via web from Eric's posterous blog

Is AT&T ready for iPhone MMS rollout tomorrow?




We've just heard from AT&T that new carrier settings for the iPhone 3G and 3GS will be available "late morning" Pacific Time (which would be early afternoon Eastern) this Friday, September 25, which will finally enable MMS support. Owners will have to tether up to iTunes to grab those settings, so fish out your cable (as if you don't have it permanently attached to your machine already) and make sure you've got some solid time in front of the computer to check for the update over and over (and over) again, alright?


How long have iPhone owners been waiting on this? Too long!!!! Still WAY to overpriced. AT&T, quick question: Where would you be today without the iPhone? Huh?!?! This could be potentially disastrous for the AT&T brand if they don'r pull this off - no wonder they are scared right now. We'll know more in 24 hours.

AT&T doing Social Media? - Go check it out!



via att.com
Very interesting how AT&T is trying to embrace social media to it's fullest. Should be interesting to watch, to say the least.

84% DO NOT measure ROI of Social Media - eMarketer



This is a really scary statistic! People and companies need to start realizing that Social Media needs to be measured just like any other Media.

Is Apple toying with Google? [iPhone and Google Voice]



According to Google's statement from last Friday, in contrast to previous statements Apple rejected the Google Voice app outright.
So, it Google yelling: "You're a Liar!" to Apple? Sort of, but not fully. This may be the first chapter in the Apple Google war of the second decade of the 21st Century. It all started when Eric Schmidt, Google's CEO, left Apple's board earlier this year after sitting on it since 2006.
The issue is that Apple ahs always run a very tight ship, maybe a little too tights. But, now that all of a sudden there are millions of Apple users via the iPhone they are just "enjoying" this tight ship that Apple runs. There really is nothing wrong with what Apple is doing - it is doing waht Steve Jobs loves: Controlling the end-user experience to the t. However, why doesn't Apple simply come out and admit to this? Well, becasue there would be about a millin and one lawsuits files that day by companies that want their apps or programs to run on the iPhone regardless of what Apple thinks.
This brings us to the problem that Apple does not have the structures in place to properly monitor app submissions to the app store. Apple is making 30% of every app sold, so wouldn't it be in their own best interest to approve as many apps as possibel to increase revenue? That's where Steve Jobs and his tight ship come in.
So, in other words what we are witnessing is not the prelude to Google versus Apple, but rather Google versus Steve Jobs.
Since this story broke laste last week, Apple has again denied rejecting the Google Voice App to spite Google.
Read more: Gizmodo and Macrumors.

Everything's Local in Mobile Search


Looking for local online advertising? Consider mobile advertising. In a short period of time mobile advertising has gone from an experimental media to a proven one. According to comScore, Inc. the number of local searches on a mobile device grew 51% from March 2008 to March 2009, and the preferred method of search is by using a mobile browser.

Due to the increase in browsing patterns, more and more online advertising is moving to wireless devices such as the Blackberry, the iPhone, or the Palm Pre. In 2006, U.S. advertisers spent $4.8 billion, or about 3 percent of total ad spending, on mobile ads. That's expected to increase to 12 percent by 2011, according to eMarketer.

 Mobile local search is still in the development stages, but it is catching up quickly in many business categories and it will very soon be an essential channel for companies looking to get business from local searches.

According to CTIA, over 70 percent of the US population has a mobile phone. In general, there are two choices for local searches using a mobile device: SMS or browser based searches. Each is great at serving a different kind of search need.

SMS & Mobile Browsers: Tools Tailored to Search Requirements

SMS ads have hit the mainstream, with about 15 percent of mobile phones receiving at least one SMS ad according to M-Metrics.  SMS are great at fulfilling a quick information need, such as a sports scores, weather, or stock quotes.

On the other hand, consumers typically perform mobile browser searches when they want more subjective information. For example, a mobile browser based search can help find a restaurant with reviews at Yahoo or Google.

Local Marketing Choices

Where should you look to make take advantage of this rapidly growing trend of mobile local search? On the one hand, SMS has some advantages over Web-based browser searches.  But, users have to opt in to receive sponsored SMS messages. Mobile Search Browsing on the other hand is as simple as putting a PPC ad on a search engine.  However, instead of seeing them on a monitor, customers are seeing them on the screen of their mobile device.  This has many advantages including the possibility of prompting consumers to call a certain number or map a route to your location.

Pizza is already onboard – Others are catching on (quickly)

A large percentage of mobile searches are for local businesses. A majority of those are for restaurants and pizza places in particular. Next in popularity is a group that includes taxis, banks, and searches for specific brands, such as Starbucks, Wal-Mart, Target, Blockbuster, Costco, etc.

Online directories, with an increase of 73%, have seen the largest increase during the past year among the various local content categories, followed by restaurants (70%), maps (63%), and movies (60%).

Other categories are quickly becoming more widespread as two things start to occur: consumers become more aware of the capability and the companies that compile listings for local merchants expand their databases of dentists, doctors, florists, and other businesses.

Some businesses can generate a return more quickly from mobile local search. If your business is in a category that benefits heavily from impulse buying, you are trying to expand your company’s footprint, or you want to take your brand to where consumers are going, mobile is a great fit.

From a branding perspective mobile advertising can be invaluable. But it’s important to remember that people won't make large purchases based on mobile searches, but it will help with your company’s branding and can help develop a sale down the road. Keep in mind that the majority uses their mobile devices to find the nearest oil-change center, gas station, florist, ATM, or particular restaurant.

What's Next?

Before you can participate in this brave new world it’s important to ask yourself a few questions: Do you have a website that shows up correctly on mobile browsers? Are you tapping into the local searches coming from mobile devices? Is your Google Map Listing Correct? Let Bayshore help you assess our mobile strategy and develop mobile tactics with you.

 

Posted via web from Eric's posterous blog

Will metrics become part of the content-creation process thanks to Adobe-Omnitre deal?


So, Adobe bought Omniture yesterday. I know a lot has been said about the financial and business impact of this, but what does this really mean for marketing and advertising? 

In the one corner you have Adobe the number one tool that aids in the creation of just anything using a computer, which according to Wikipedia has "historically focused upon the creation of multimedia and creativity software products." In other words, every creative on this blue planet has, will, or does use an Adobe product to some extent - most likely more than less.

In the other corner you have Omniture the golden standard of online marketing web analytics software, which has historically grown from purchases of smaller but very relevant companies. In other words, if you want to be taken seriously as a website, you use Omniture just like a newspaper uses ABC (Audit Bureau of Circulations).

Combine these two opposite end of the spectrum entities - one creates the content, the other company measures it - and what do you get? A one stop solution, or as Adobe President-CEO Shantanu Narayen calls it: "end-to-end platform." Some people are saying that now creatives will have to think about metrics from the beginning of the content-creation process. 

After the deal, Omniture CEO Josh James said that it will "allow creatives to integrate measurement into the front end of the ad-creation process" and that "marrying the two companies would improve content engagement, ad effectiveness and the overall user experience that's driving the shift of ad dollars from offline to online." This means that moving forward with this new deal in place, agencies will build Adobe Flash creative with Omniture tracking codes implanted from the beginning - this will enable them to track the views and consumer engagement of the creative across the web, and maybe even begin to micro-charge for every view, partial view or forward of their content versus just seeing measurements for impressions or clicks.

I believe that the ultimate outcome of this deal is that in the world of media analysis there will be more clarity and better metrics - definitely a move in the right direction!

Posted via email from Eric's posterous blog

What is up with Mobile Advertising?


I've been intrigued by the potential of Mobile Advertising since 1999. Back then grand articles were written on websites, in books, and magazines of how a grand revolution in advertising is upon us and that it will shake the very foundation that makes up marketing. Well, here we are 10 years later and not too much has changed. Do we receive coupons from Dunkin' donuts as we walk by them on our phones? No. Do we get special offers from Target when we enter the store on our cell phones? No.

Then, where are we?

A story that I read today got me thinking. According to this story on AdvertisingAge.com from September 15th, the mobile apps which constitute the majority of the mobile marketing channel are "just an appetizer." As the author puts is: "In grand historical terms, this whole mobile app thing is only now climbing out of the primordial ooze." Well, Mr. Kevin Maney I hate to tell you but we've been in this state of climbing out of the ooze for at least a decade now. When will we finally move on to the next step?

I know some people will say that text message advertising is doing well, but I must point out that it is nowhere near its potential and I'm sure that it never will reach it as far as advertising goes.

While the iPhone, and in particular the app store, have moved us ahead by leaps and bounds in terms of branded communications and marketing on mobile devices, everything is still all over the place. Where would Video tapes be if both VHS and BETA survived until now? Or for that matter next gen DVD if the battle between BluRay and HD-DVD was still going on?

While competition does drive innovation, standardization can create a more focused effort with ultimately greater results. As much as people here in America lament the "big brother" approach of European or Asian economies, being light-years ahead in terms of cell phones, cell phone service, and technology in general does paint a picture.

Now back to the point by the AdAge article that we are clawing our way out of the "primordial ooze" in terms of mobile apps. Are these mobile apps he future of marketing communications to consumers on cell phones?  Apple showed a picture at its most recent iPod event that showed the superiority of its iPod touch - essentially a mobile phone without cell service - over current tablets or net books on the market.

So, does the future of mobile, mobile apps, and ergo mobile advertising in essence lie with smaller computer that happen to be phones as well (e.g. the iPhone)? That is something that only time will tell, because as Master Yoda says "The future, always in motion it is." But, if I had to put my money on it right now, I'd say that smart phones will become more and more like small computers. And the billion dollar question will be to find out how to spam people with ads on there, just like advertisers have on any other channel known to man, is the future.

One final thought: Is the reason that mobile advertising is not catching on that a moblie phone is seen as the last "sacred" advertising-free sanctity by people?

Posted via web from Eric's posterous blog

 
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