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Tag Archives: feeds
Facebook Wants You To Post to Twitter
This week Facebook will reportedly be rolling out the ability to send status updates to Twitter directly from the publisher box. There are apps that cater to the cross-posting of updates between the two social networks, but this would mark the first time Facebook itself actually encouraged it. The move is an interesting one, considering that Facebook has spent much of its time making itself more Twitter-like. Nick O'Neill at AllFacebook has a good piece chronicling the company's "Twitterfication" over the past year, which includes events like opening the Status API, letting users subscribe to their friends and Pages and receive status updates via text message, releasing @replies-style tagging, and encouraging users to make status updates public. O'Neill says the only step left is to open a search API. Of course Facebook has also just released its own URL shortener . Facebook employees are already testing the Facebook-to-Twitter functionality: The feature will utilize the new Facebook URL Shortener, which could actually lead to more widespread awareness of it. Once Twitter is flooded with Facebook links, people may start gravitating to that to shorten their own URLs, although the service at FB.me is not live for everyone to use yet. Either way, things are really starting to heat up in the URL-shortener space. Not only does Facebook now have its own, but so does Google . On top of that, Twitter-favorite Bit.ly has just launched Bit.ly Pro . Related Articles: > Facebook URL Shortener Makes Appearance > Facebook Shows a Glimpse of Twitterness > Continue reading
Google Now Has Its Own URL Shortener
Google made a couple of announcements today that actually combined for perhaps a more interesting announcement than either of them as stand-alone news items. First, Google has added a new share button to the Google Toolbar , which allows users to share any site on the web via their social network of choice. Second, Google announced that with Feedburner, you can now set your feeds up to post to Twitter . The thing that these two announcements have in common is that they both utilize a new URL shortener from Google. They tried to slip that in their quietly a couple of times, but then went ahead and made an announcement about the service itself. The shortening service is located at goo.gl , but it is not available for broad consumer use at this point. Google is just using it itself to compliment the aforementioned services. In other words, you can't just go to goo.gl and shorten a URL yourself. However, Google says that in time, it may offer such an option. "We think people who use the Google Toolbar and FeedBurner will benefit from a shortener that is easily accessible — making it faster and easier to share, post and email links," Google says. They also say the core goals of the Google URL Shortener are: - Stability – ensuring that the service has very good uptime - Security – protecting users from malware and phishing pages - Speed – fast resolution of short URLs Google's standard privacy policy applies to goo.gl. The company says that it may choose to publicly display aggregate and non-personally identifiable statistics about particular shortened links, such as the number of end use clicks. On a related note, Facebook also now has its own URL shortener. Continue reading
Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click
Tagged feeds, nbsp, new era, policy-applies, short urls, spam, twitter, url shortener
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Online Ad Spending Up 7%
U.S. advertising spending in the first nine months of 2009 fell by 14.7 percent compared to the same period in 2008, according to a new report by TNS Media Intelligence. Ad spending during the third quarter of 2009 was down 15.3 percent compared to last year, marking the sixth consecutive quarter of year-over-year declines. There were some bright spots with Internet display (+7%) and newspaper Free-Standing Inserts (FSIs) up 3.9 percent. Online growth was driven by telecom, travel and auto advertisers. FSIs benefited from CPG companies expanding their couponing efforts as consumers became more value-conscious. Among television media, cable TV networks audience gains led to a larger share of ad revenue. Year-to-date cable TV spending slipped by just 2.9 percent, a much stronger performance than the TV sector as a whole. Network TV saw year-to-date spending fall 11.5 percent and Q3 spending fell 25.1 percent. Magazines (-19.7%), newspapers (-22.8%) and radio (-22.8%) lagged the overall ad market during the January-September period. Third quarter losses for each of these media categories were less severe compared to the first half of the year. "The updated monthly trend line on total advertising expenditures still shows no meaningful improvement through October," said Jon Swallen, SVP Research at TNS Media Intelligence. "The slump has now passed its first anniversary and year-on-year comparisons will become easier in the upcoming months. Going forward, the timing, strength and durability of an advertising recovery will ultimately be determined by the way consumer activity rebounds." Continue reading
Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click
Tagged browsing, Business, feeds, line-on-total, quarter losses, research, research-at-tns, review and story, television media, trend line
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Blogger Gets AdSense For Feeds Integration
Google launched AdSense for Feeds all the way back in 2005. Now the company is integrating it right into its Blogger property. "One of the things our publishers have always asked for are ways to make it even easer to configure their blogs to work with FeedBurner and AdSense for Feeds," says Steve Olechowski on behalf of the AdSense for feeds and Blogger teams. We're happy to announce that Blogger users, with just a few clicks, are able to do both at the same time." Users can can use AdSense for Feeds for Blogger the same way they set up AdSense on their blogs. Just go to the Blogger Dashboard and select "monetize". This gives the user options for configuring ads. If the user's blog is already connected to FeedBurner, you can confirm that the proper feed is being configured. AdSense for Feeds will pick the ad size automatically. Users can view AdSense reports after setup to view feed revenue right from the Blogger Dashboard. You can of course see the reports in your AdSense account as well. Google launched AdSense for Feedburner last year . This came just after Google closed down the Feedburner Ad Network. Related Articles: > AdSense For RSS Feeds Launched > Google's New Blogger Features > Feedburner and Adsense Together at Last Continue reading
Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click
Tagged ads, adsense, feeds, feeds-launched, gives-the-user, make-it-even, our-publishers, revenue-right, review and story
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