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Browsing Posts published in March, 2008

Our team has a real affinity for free-spirited types, and so we spend a lot of time thinking up ways to make Google Docs friendlier even to people on the go. If you’re one of those, you already know how you can access your Google Docs from anywhere, how nice it is to avoid having to email yourself files or back up docs with a thumbdrive, and how easily you can collaborate with others.

Of course there was a teeny thing missing: you needed an Internet connection to make Google Docs work for you. Now, for documents, that’s no longer true. As you’ll read on the Google Docs blog, starting today and over the coming weeks we’re rolling out offline editing access to word processing documents to Google Docs users. You no longer need an Internet connection when inspiration strikes. Whether you’re working on an airplane or in a cafe, you can automatically access all your docs on your own computer.

To see how offline access works, watch this video:

Read the original here:
Offline access to Google Docs

One of the great things about the internet is that it can be a great resource and a learning tool. Recently, many companies and individuals, especially Google, have been adding instructional videos and tutorials to Youtube. It is a great concept, watch a quick video and get a basic understanding of what you are trying to learn.

But how do you improve on that or more importantly how do you make what could be a boring video more interesting, you can of course make it humorous, or you could have it set to music, or even better rapped over a hip hop track.

For instance, check out the Poetic Prophet (aka the SEO Rapper) and his rhymes on Design Coding.

Excerpt from:
Youtube as a Learning Device

“Sales and Profits”, to incorporate these two words into your marketing world you will always need another word that is, traffic. Every successful internet marketer would always include the importance of generating traffic into their websites to earn more profit and sales.

View original post here:
Seven Ways To Get Targeted Traffic To Your Website Posted By : Ranju Kumar

Starting up a website, promoting it, driving traffic to it and making money
from it requires time and also a lot of skills. Wouldn’t it be great to have
someone explain all this to you from scratch ?

Go here to see the original:
Tip for Beginners #20 : Learn from the pro’s

Many brick and mortar companies that are catering to their local clientel find it hard to optimize their website for local markets despite targeting the best keywords. Quite naturally this is not a surprising matter as many of them, although efficient in running their off line businesses, typically stumble over two critical blocks.

Stumbling Blocks and SEO for Local Markets

When local businesses set to do SEO for local markets, many of them invariably ignore the need to think rationally because they are advised by SEO experts to target the big three search engine users and sometimes get confused and tackle this feat on a global level resulting in global traffic. The direct fall out of this step is exposing your business offers, products or services to the world at large only to dilute all other local online SEO efforts. If your product is not global you are in trouble.

So here is the stumbling block number one.

1. Not using localized target keywords, however good they are, will leave your new websites way down the SERP’s locally. Actual localized keywords you should be targeting in which will bring you a steady stream of natural traffic.

The second block where you might probably stumble, especially if you are new to web and optimization is wrongfully assuming internet marketing techniques as something radically different and for removed from the earthly- worldly affairs that we all do by trial and errors over and again. The crux of the matter here is SEO for local markets is only a small part of larger marketing exercises, with certain twists, to get exposure with local locations.

Here is the second stumbling point in SEO for local markets.

2. SEO for local markets is not a marketing technique but a sophisticated local technique of optimizing websites on a local basis. Obviously, the one who knows the pulse of the market is not the SEO expert but can contribute his knowledge to SEO expert.

So, What Is Actually SEO For Local Markets?

Let me dash you through steps involved in SEO for local markets in short.

1. Localize your target keywords. This includes prefixing or suffixing local terms, names, and names of areas, cities or zip codes with target keywords. Example: “remodeling contractors Orange County”, not “remodeling contractors”.

2. Submit to local search engines (find one, if you don’t know already), directories and web based yellow pages.

3. Display your mailing address with street address and zip code. Once your site is indexed, these words gain prominence as a part of content.

4. Submit to local listing sections of Yahoo and DMOZ which is in addition to generalized listing.

5. Don’t leave out general SEO techniques because you want to SEO for local markets which the power of link building which can be done globally as there might not be enough local sites to beat you competition.

6. Get on the local maps of Google, Yahoo, as this generally puts you on front of the local search engines.

7. Exchange links and banners with local businesses as the local traffic exchange will bring you new business. Avoid changing banners or links with competitors but exchange them with businesses that will complement you. Verify their traffic so it’s an almost even exchange.

Dominating local SEO can be done fairly easily, you just have to either hire a professional with a proven track record or take time to learn local SEO. The main concern is to be patient as it takes at least 3 months to start seeing results.

About the Author: Michael S. Francis the author is a seasoned local SEO expert. Michael S. Francis is the owner of www.seovida.com a Local Business SEO company.

See the original post:
Search Engine Optimization Goes Local

Google has been conducting a private beta for it’s new TV ad brokering exchange, and soon will roll this service out on a wider scale. The platform will enable marketers to log into the Google interface and place a buy for cable spot ads.

According to an article in Media Daily News, Google’s head of TV Ads, Michael Steib, says that the testing of the automated system has been “successful in proving the concept, and the challenge now is to expand and scale it”.

During the beta phase, advertisers have ranged in size and Google has specifically shown interest in the smaller advertisers, by enabling spot creation by Google producers. The aim of the program from this angle is to eliminate barriers of entry for the smaller tv ad buyers that are often using Google’s Ad Sense for Internet ads. These smaller advertisers and other larger advertisers will be able to search programming based on keywords, and buy tv advertising based on content.

The Google television advertising product will potentially also enable analytic insight into the relationships between television advertising and Internet interaction. This will undoubtedly also lead to new and improved set-top boxes to capture some of this data.

Ultimately, the goal of the product will be to expand the advertiser base for television and this seems like a fertile ground for the next wave of Google revolution. Possibly, soon we will be doing SEO for TV shows. Of course the partnership with Google’s You Tube will further enhance distribution in this arena too.

Originally posted here:
Google to Revolutionize Television Ad Buying

Because we’re strongly committed to protecting your privacy, we want to present our privacy practices in the clearest way possible. Over the past year, we’ve been experimenting with video to clarify and illustrate the privacy practices set forth in our Google Privacy Policy. We’ve used videos to communicate with you about things like cookies, IP addresses, and logs. (Check out the Google Privacy Channel on YouTube.) And you’ve told us that the screen shots, whiteboard drawings, and pointers from the engineers and product managers we’ve captured on video are helping you better understand the fine points of our Privacy Policy.

With that in mind, today we’re announcing a revamp of our Privacy Center. The new Center is a one-stop shop for privacy resources, with various multi-media formats aimed to help you further understand how we store and use data, how to control who you share your data with, and how we protect your privacy. We hope this new Center will help you make more informed privacy choices whenever you use Google products and services.

Read the rest here:
Privacy made easier

With blogging becoming a full time or part time job for people these days, it’s definitely a challenge to keep on top of updating your blog with all the other things to do in our everyday lives. We all feel like there isn’t enough time in the day sometimes, so it’s important to make good use of the time we have.


Planning Ahead
A great way to keeping fresh content going on your blog is to plan ahead. Create a list of topics and ideas that you know you can write about. You can also create a schedule of when you will post to your blog. Fresh content is important, but from my past experience, it’s better to have quality posts spread throughout the week, rather than multiple short posts a day.

Having Deadlines
Making deadlines to when a post should go up on your blog is another way to keep your blog flowing with content. Bloggers that run a blog alone tend to be lazy at times with putting up content, which can become a habit, resulting in an abandoned blog. An example would be posting a blog post by 4pm, which will motivate you to get it finished. You’ll feel better about yourself that you got the job done.

Continued here:
Time Management Tips for Bloggers

LinkedIn, a professional social networking site added a new feature last week where companies can create their own company profiles to be listed in the LinkedIn Company Directory. In the past, LinkedIn only permitted individuals to sign up and create a personal profile that somewhat resembled a resume. This profile could be used for networking, finding jobs, or staying in touch with old friends or colleagues. Now, in addition to the personal profiles, companies can build their own profile page broadcasting their areas of specialization, location, number of employees, new hires, website, etc.

The great thing about LinkedIn is that personal profile pages are public and get crawled by the search engines. Therefore your profile page can show up in the search results. If the company profile pages go public, there is the potential for your company’s LinkedIn profile page to show up in the search results, which is an additional way to promote your product or business.

Many companies, such as Yahoo and Google (screen shot below), have already created their LinkedIn company profile page.

To read more on LinkedIn’s company profiles, you can visit their blog.

Continued here:
LinkedIn.com Adds Company Profiles

Well, you’ll have plenty of time to live in a van down by the river when you’re..[ tries to be clever ] ..living in a van down by the river! Now, you kids are probably asking yourself, “Hey, Matt, how can we get back on the right track?!” Well, as I see it, there is only one solution! And that is for me to get my gear, move it on into here, ’cause I’m gonna bunk with you, buddy! We’re gonna be buddies! We’re gonna be pals![ picks Brian up ] We’re gonna wrassle around! [ puts Brian down ] Ol’ Matt’s gonna be your shadow! [motions] Here’s Matt, here’s you! There’s Matt, there’s you! [ trips and falls flat on the coffee table, sending it crashing to the floor ] Whoops-a-daisy! [ stands up ] We’re gonna have to clean that up later! Me and my buddies! My pals! My amigos! I’m gonna go get my gear! [ heads for the door ]

Such a simple a script, but the concept of friends, buddies, and down by the river are what make it so memorable.


Reveal


When exiting a local grocery store one evening, I saw a great bumper sticker on a car parked next to mine. It simply stated: “The shortest distance between two people is a story.” That’s powerful stuff!

Remember these two items the next time you start constructing a story. This is an approach that is encouraged by CEO of Parade magazine, Walter Anderson. Great stories are built off these main principles. Your story needs to have:

1) Tension – You need to create a problem. There needs to be some type of dramatic hook.

2) Discovery – This is the reason why you are telling the story. What is everything leading up to?

In essence, it’s all about the power of the anecdote – leading from one point to the next. Keep in mind,the best anecdotes are the most simple.

It’s amazingly captivating. The story builds from one point to the next. It doesn’t hurt that the character of Buddy is easy to love. After all, he would like to do nothing more than build snow angels for two hours and then snuggle.

Good news! We are all storytellers. You have stories. Your parents have stories. Your grandparents have stories. Your company even has a story. You should have plenty to write about, so what are you waiting for? Don’t be a cotton-headed ninnymuggins! Start writing. Maybe one day you’ll have book published about your own story just like Buddy the Elf.

Revamp

Storytelling produces results. It will change and grow your business. Here is the bottom line. (Highlight this or write it down somewhere. It’s the heart of this article):

Stories create emotions. Emotions create motivation. Motivation creates action. Action creates results.

Repeat. Reveal. Revamp. These three R’s will change the way you look at storytelling and your presentations moving forward.

So what are you waiting for? Go tell a story or suffer the consequences for procrastinating. Here’s a great quote from Stewie from Family Guy to help light your fire:

Stewie: “How you uh, how you comin’ on that [story] you’re working on? Huh? Gotta a big, uh, big stack of papers there? Gotta, gotta nice litte story you’re working on there? Your big novel you’ve been working on for 3 years? Huh? Gotta, gotta compelling protaganist? Yeah? Gotta obstacle for him to overcome? Huh? Gotta story brewing there? Working on, working on that for quite some time? Huh? (voice getting higher pitched) Yea, talking about that 3 years ago. Been working on that the whole time? Nice little narrative? Beginning, middle, and end? Some friends become enemies, some enemies become friends? At the end your main character is richer from the experience? Yeah? Yeah? (voice returns to normal) No, no, you deserve some time off.”

Be different than your competition. For starters, begin today. Second, go tell an epic story with your next presentation.


About the Author:
Scott Schwertly is an epic storyteller. Scott works with a wide spectrum of clients that includes Fortune 100 companies, Silicon Valley start-ups, and various other organizations throughout the world. Scott is also the author of an awarding-winning blog – PresentationRevolution: Revolutionizing Presentations Through Storytelling – as well as a Top 100 ChangeThis.com manifesto. Scott has a B.A. in Communications and an M.B.A. from Harding University. Today, Scott owns and operates Ethos3 Communications at http://www.ethos3.com.

Original post:
Is Your Marketing Telling A Story


What is being “Rick Rolled” you might ask? One thing we know for sure about the Internet, it is a place for creativity, surprise and a hefty dose of shenanigans.

The latest Internet prank involves sending someone a link to a video that sounds promising – something you can’t wait to see (like Whitney Houston ACTUALLY smoking crack, or Britney having her latest meltdown). But, when you click on it, you end up here where you are subjected to what is surely one of the most cheeseball music videos every created.

As of this posting, the video has been viewed 8,119,804, with 29,048 comments.

Not that’s viral. :)

In an attempt to capitalize on the popularity of this prank, there is even a website www.YouGotRickRolled.com which features advertising and an explanation of where it originated.

Read the rest here:
Have You Been Rick Rolled?

We’ve given you many optimization tips over the years, and, as you know, it’s important to consider how your ad implementations affect not only your click-through rate, but your users’ and advertisers’ experience as well. To support this, we’d like to remind you of the following two guidelines when optimizing your site.

1. Ads shouldn’t be placed under a title or section heading in a way that implies that the ads are not ads.
For example, ads shouldn’t be placed under titles such as “Dallas Business Opportunities” or “Today’s Hot Deals”. Placing ads directly below titles such as these implies to your users that the links in the ads are publisher-created content. The example below shows a placement that does not follow this guideline.


2. Ads should be easily distinguishable from surrounding content.
Similarly, you should not place an ad unit by a group of links that has identical colors and line spacing. Doing so may cause users to think the ad unit is content created by you. In this situation, we recommend using a different color for the ad titles or indenting the ad unit to help distinguish the ads from your own content. This screenshot shows an implementation that does not follow this guideline:

As you can imagine, users who click on ads that they think are publisher-created content may lose trust in your site and decide not to return in the future. It’s important to keep their interests in mind, as well as your own.

Also, advertisers can tell which sites have a high conversion rate for them using Placement Performance reports. A conversion occurs when a click on an ad leads directly to user behavior that the advertiser deems valuable, such as a purchase, sign-up, page view, or lead. Advertisers have the option to exclude your site from their campaigns and may do so if it is not leading to conversions.

We believe these guidelines invest in the long-term health of the relationship between AdSense publishers, AdWords advertisers, and your sites’ visitors, and that they will help ensure your continued success in the AdSense program.

Excerpt from:
Another look at optimizations

I remember the first time a video I posted to YouTube cracked 100 views. I wasn’t so much surprised as curious: Who were these people? How did they find this video? Where did they come from?

Today we’re taking our first step towards answering these questions with YouTube Insight, a free tool that enables anyone with a YouTube account — users, partners, and advertisers — to view detailed statistics about the videos that they upload. For example, uploaders can see how often their videos are viewed in different geographic regions, as well as how popular they are relative to all videos in that market over a given period of time. You can also delve deeper into the lifecycle of your videos, like how long it takes for a video to become popular, and what happens to video views as popularity peaks. For now, you can find currently available metrics by clicking under the “About this Video” button under My account > Videos, Favorites, Playlists > Manage my Videos.

Insight gives the creators an inside look into the viewing trends of their videos on YouTube, and helps them to increase views and become more popular. Partners can evaluate metrics to better serve and understand their audiences, as well as increase ad revenue. And advertisers can study their metrics and successes to tailor their marketing — both on and off the site — and reach the right viewers. As a result, Insight turns YouTube into one of the world’s largest focus groups.

There’s more about this on the YouTube blog.

View original here:
Insight into YouTube videos

Today, the world is celebrating the first-ever Document Freedom Day. More than 200 teams in 60 countries are spending today raising awareness about document freedom by hosting speakers, events, and literally raising the DFD flag. Through such activities, these teams are committed to spreading the word about the importance of open documents and the workable open standards that ensure your access to your documents now and in the future. We at Google wholeheartedly join the community of users, organisations, businesses, governments and individuals around the world in today’s celebration.

Our mission concerning the world’s information is well known. Naturally, your access to your information is also important to us. When you save a document, you need to be sure that the information in it will be accessible tomorrow, a month from now, ten years from now. How and where you choose to access your documents shouldn’t make a difference. This is what Document Freedom Day is about.

Five years ago, who would have thought that we’d be accessing the documents we created then on our cell phones? And yet today we expect this. The standard by which your document is formatted today absolutely needs to be readable and available to those who design the technology for tomorrow. This is the only way that you will know for sure that the information you entrust to your documents now will be yours for as long as you want it to be.

So wherever you are, join the fun and support your freedom to access your information. Find out more and help to spread the word: Document freedom means freedom of information for all of us, now, later and long, long into the future.

See the original post:
Today is Document Freedom Day

We recently began a series of posts on how we harness the power of data. Earlier we told you how data has been critical to the advancement of search; about using data to make our products safe and to prevent fraud; this post is the newest in the series. -Ed.

One of the most important uses of data at Google is building language models. By analyzing how people use language, we build models that enable us to interpret searches better, offer spelling corrections, understand when alternative forms of words are needed, offer language translation, and even suggest when searching in another language is appropriate.

One place we use these models is to find alternatives for words used in searches. For example, for both English and French users, “GM” often means the company “General Motors,” but our language model understands that in French searches like seconde GM, it means “Guerre Mondiale” (World War), whereas in STI GM it means “Génie Mécanique” (Mechanical Engineering). Another meaning in English is “genetically modified,” which our language model understands in GM corn. We’ve learned this based on the documents we’ve seen on the web and by observing that users will use both “genetically modified” and “GM” in the same set of searches.

We use similar techniques in all languages. For example, if a Catalan user searches for resultat elecció barris BCN (searching for the result of a neighborhood election in Barcelona), Google will also find pages that use the words “resultats” or “eleccions” or that talk about “Barcelona” instead of “BCN.” And our language models also tell us that the Estonian user looking for Tartu juuksur, a barber in Tartu, might also be interested in a “juuksurisalong,” or “barber shop.”

In the past, language models were built from dictionaries by hand. But such systems are incomplete and don’t reflect how people actually use language. Because our language models are based on users’ interactions with Google, they are more precise and comprehensive — for example, they incorporate names, idioms, colloquial usage, and newly coined words not often found in dictionaries.

When building our models, we use billions of web documents and as much historical search data as we can, in order to have the most comprehensive understanding of language possible. We analyze how our users searched and how they revised their searches. By looking across the aggregated searches of many users, we can infer the relationships of words to each other.

Queries are not made in isolation — analyzing a single search in the context of the searches before and after it helps us understand a searcher’s intent and make inferences. Also, by analyzing how users modify their searches, we’ve learned related words, variant grammatical forms, spelling corrections, and the concepts behind users’ information needs. (We’re able to make these connections between searches using cookie IDs — small pieces of data stored in visitors’ browsers that allow us to distinguish different users. To understand how cookies work, watch this video.)

To provide more relevant search results, Google is constantly developing new techniques for language modeling and building better models. One element in building better language models is using more data collected over longer periods of time. In languages with many documents and users, such as English, our language models allow us to improve results deep into the “long tail” of searches, learning about rare usages. However, for languages with fewer users and fewer documents on the web, building language models can be a challenge. For those languages we need to work with longer periods of data to build our models. For example, it takes more than a year of searches in Catalan to provide a comparable amount of data as a single day of searching in English; for Estonian, more than two and a half years worth of searching is needed to match a day of English. Having longer periods of data enables us to improve search for these less commonly used languages.

At Google, we want to ensure that we can help users everywhere find the things they’re looking for; providing accurate, relevant results for searches in all languages worldwide is core to Google’s mission. Building extensive models of historical usage in every language we can, especially when there are few users, is an essential piece of making search work for everyone, everywhere.

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Making search better in Catalonia, Estonia, and everywhere else