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Tag Archives: people
The Future Of Online PR
In the olden days, PR professionals might have gotten an hour or more of face time in which to sweet talk someone over a meal. Continue reading
Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click
Tagged face time, media tools, people, press-release, public-relations, t amp, telling your story, tv networks, videos, weintraub
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Google Gives Life to the Online News Story
Google has been working with the New York Times and the Washington Post on a Google Labs experiment, which the company has unveiled today. It's called Living Stories , and aims to provide a different online news experience by creating a singular page where readers can follow one story line in the news as new developments occur. "A typical newspaper article leads with the most important and interesting news, and follows with additional information of decreasing importance," says Google. "Information from prior coverage is often repeated with each new online article, and the same article is presented to everyone regardless of whether they already read it. Living Stories try a different approach that plays to certain unique advantages of online publishing. They unify coverage on a single, dynamic page with a consistent URL. They organize information by developments in the story. They call your attention to changes in the story since you last viewed it so you can easily find the new material. Through a succinct summary of the whole story and regular updates, they offer a different online approach to balancing the overview with depth and context." Components of a "Living Story" include: - A summary at the top of each story. Summaries are rewritten to reflect updates. Changes will be highlighted. - A running catalog of info related to the story. The latest info is always at the top. - Filters on the left-hand side of the page to identify the important moments in an ongoing story, the people involved, source material, images, audio, and quotations. - A timeline, which provides a snapshot of the story's most important developments. The pages are personalized to readers' reading patterns, so when they leave a story and come back, the newest updates are presented at the top. Previously read updates are collapsed. Readers can subscribe to a page via email alerts or RSS feeds to stay updated. Google says it hopes to eventually make Living Stories available as a tool for publishers, so they can implement a similar functionality into their own content. One reason this format may not be attractive to some publishers is that by creating a singular page for a storyline, as opposed to separate article pages, you're essentially creating less places to put ads, which is how most content publishers make money on the web. That said, the more content that appears on a single page, the more room there is for ads on that particular page. "Are Living Stories the 'future of news?'" asks Google. "Maybe. Are all these concepts correct? Probably not. Can this collaboration kick off the debate and encourage innovation in how people interact with news online? We certainly hope so." Being a Google Labs experiment, there is plenty of room for improvement with Living Stories. Google is heavily encouraging feedback from publishers and news readers alike. It will be interesting to see how this project develops in time, and whether more publishers embrace the concept down the road. Living Stories are currently only available in English, and are not designed to necessarily support mobile devices yet. Continue reading
Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click
Tagged aggregators, Business, discuss-future, left hand side, media, new york times, news, online news, people, project, snapshot, source material, story, succinct summary, timeline
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What Would You Change About Google Search?
Google's Matt Cutts, as you may know, frequently appears in videos for Google's Webmaster Central YouTube channel . In these videos he answers questions submitted by Google users. One of the latest ones features a different kind of (and perhaps more fun) question: If you could improve one thing or add a feature to Google Search right now, what would it be? ( Talk to ArisYulianta and Friends... what your answer would be . ) Every Google user probably has an answer for this question, and the differences among those answers are limitless. It is interesting to hear what Cutts himself has to say on the subject though, considering he has kind of become the unofficial posterboy for giving webmasters information about the inner-workings of the world's most popular search engine. Matt says there are actually a lot of things he would like to see added to Google Search, but one thing comes immediately to mind for him. When you do a search on Google (for example for "flowers"), the URL you get for the results is not just www.google.com/search?q=flowers. There are always other parameters such as "hl=en" and others. Cutts finds this annoying because he emails search results a lot, and English is the only language he speaks. He says he has even considered writing a Greasemonkey script that would eliminate the extra parameters. He also says he's tried to get some people at Google to consider changing it, but nobody is very exited about the idea because not that many people email search result URLs around. "But who knows? Maybe some day I will prevail," Cutts proclaims with a smile on his face. It's interesting to look at the comments for Matt's video . Other people have made suggestions for what they would change about Google search. Suggestions include more control over regular expressions, a date limiting factor on search results beside the search box, and Google Alerts recognizing hyphens in searches. What would you change about Google Search? Is there a feature you would add? Is there one you would like to see removed? Comment here . Continue reading
Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click
Tagged Business, flowers, google-search, hl en, inner workings, parameters, people, regular expressions, search box, smile, videos, webmaster central, www google, youtube
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