Tag Archives: traffic

Twitter Continues Beta Testing of Retweet Feature

Update 3: Continue reading

Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged article, feature, means, retweet, retweeting, retweets, social-networks, spam, traffic, trending-topics, trends, twitter, twitter-status | Leave a comment

Bing Maps Gets an Upgrade

Microsoft announced that it has made some changes to Bing Maps . Changes include the color of the navigation bar, draggble routes, zoom bar changes, command parsing, embedding, dynamic computing, new navigation, speed, and Bing Maps will no longer stop at the international date line, but will wrap around the world continuously. Draggable routes is arguably the most significant change to Bing Maps. "This is a great (and much requested) feature added to Bing Maps allowing you to generate a route, then in the case that you need to change the route, you can simply grab any part of it and drag it to where you want the route to actually go," says Microsoft's Chris Pendleton. "To use draggable routes, click the directions link in the welcome pane or the car icon near the bottom of the welcome pane. Enter a start and end, generate a route, then grab anywhere on the route to move the route line. The route will regenerate for you." With the zoom bar, you can now jump to specific zoom levels rather than just zooming in and out, and if you want driving directions or traffic info, you can enter specific commands in the search box like "Bellevue, WA to Space Needle" or "Seattle Traffic." You can now embed maps onto blogs or sites by clicking the share button when the map is where you want it to be. You can then copy the code or click the "customize view" link to bring up the embeddable map customizer. As far as navigation, there is a new selection of features on the button bar with the following: Continue reading

Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged bellevue wa, car icon, collections, design, dynamic computing, navigation bar, near-the-bottom, review and story, route, traffic, traffic info, world | Leave a comment

Google Gives AdWords Users New Alert Options

Google has introduced a couple of new alert options for AdWords advertisers. Users can of course use account alerts, and can also use custom alerts. Now Google has added new alerts for keyword and budget ideas, which are personalized tips to help users improve their campaigns' effectiveness. These are in the "opportunities" tab. "New ideas are usually generated for campaigns and ad groups every few weeks, but you may miss ideas that can expand your coverage and boost your traffic if you don't check the Opportunities tab regularly," explains Google's Dan Friedman. "Now, when there are new ideas available for your review, you'll see them highlighted along with the rest of your campaign alerts." Google has also added the ability to create custom alerts for changes in conversion volume, conversion rate, and cost per conversion for users using AdWords conversion tracking. "By setting alerts for your conversion data, you can make sure that you're quickly notified about fluctuations in your key metrics," says Friedman. Google says it is still working on bringing custom alerts to all linked accounts for My Client Center (MCC) users, but until then, you can just set custom alerts for individual accounts if you can log into them directly. Related Articles: > Google Gives AdWords Advertisers New Comparison Option > Google Launches Latest Version of AdWords API > More "Ads by Google" Across the Web Continue reading

Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged ads, alert options, bringing-custom, campaigns, client, comparison, fluctuations, related articles, traffic | Leave a comment

Twitter Begins Rolling Out its Own Retweet Feature

Back in the summer time, Twitter announced that it intended to add a retweet option to its service and the API. Twitter is now rolling out the feature to a small percentage of Twitter users. "You may remember that we shared the mechanics of this feature with developers a while back so they could think about how to work it into Twitter apps," says Twitter Co-founder Biz Stone on the company blog. "Now we're ready to start trying it on Twitter. The plan is to see how it goes first with this small release. If it needs more work, then we'll know right away. If things look good, we'll proceed with releasing the feature in stages eventually arriving at 100%." If you are a regular Twitter user, it's pretty much a given that you know what retweeting is, but Stone describes what the button does to those in the dark. "Retweet is a button that makes forwarding a particularly interesting tweet to all your followers very easy," he says. "In turn, we hope interesting, newsworthy, or even just plain funny information will spread quickly through the network making its way efficiently to the people who want or need to know." The Impact of Retweets Retweets have already been a great way for content and updates to go viral. Now as the actual feature rolls out, that should only increase. Read this article for a look at the pros and cons of retweets (there are more pros). Now that retweeting is becoming an actual feature of Twitter, you're going to want to keep in mind the tweetability of your content. Sh Continue reading

Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged api, apps, arriving-at-100, article, biz stone, developers, feature, mechanics, review and story, summer, summer time, traffic, trends, twitter | Leave a comment

By Tweeting, You Could Appear All Over the Web

Twitter has introduced a new widget for the Lists feature. If you are unfamiliar with Twitter's widgets , there is one that lets you display your most recent Twitter updates on a web page, one that lets you display search results in real time, and one that lets you show off your favorite tweets. The Lists Widget is fully customizable. You start off by selecting the username of the account you want to pull lists from, then choose the list name, title it, and give it a caption. Then you can set your preferences for things like polling for new results, including a scrollbar, if you want it to run on a timed interval or load all tweets, how many tweets you want it to show, and whether or not you want it to show avatars, timestamps, and hashtags. Then you can customize the colors of the shell background, the shell text, the tweet background, the tweet text, and the links. You can also adjust the dimensions of the widget or simply set it to auto width. Once you are done personalizing the widget, you just grab the code and stick it on your site or blog. Now you're sharing the lists you think are great with the rest of the world. The Lists feature in general has been popular among Twitter users. It brings a sense of organization to the service that was simply lacking in the past. You can pretty much set up your Twitter feed as you would an RSS feed reader. It also works as a great discovery tool. You can look at the lists that have been created by people you arleady follow and find other great people to follow (if the lists are public). The lists feature should be taken as a reason to post quality tweets. The better your tweets, the more likely you are to gain more followers. Now these followers can add you to lists and increase your follower count even more. If you appear on these lists and bloggers and other site owners post those lists via the widget, you are potentially looking at a great deal of added exposure, and maybe even traffic. Continue reading

Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged Business, choose-the-list, colors, followers, timestamps, traffic, tweet, web page, whether-or-not | Leave a comment

Using Facebook Traffic to Drive Brand Loyalty

WebProNews recently covered a study from Chitika, which found that Facebook was the most valuable social media tool for driving repeat readers to content sites. The study was based on 33 million unique users across Chitika's publisher network in September. It compared the number of visitors coming from major traffic sources Digg, Facebook, Google, Yahoo, Bing, and Twitter, to the number of times those visitors came back to the referred site. Visitors that went to a site four or more times in one week were considered loyal users. By a wide margin, Facebook led the pack in providing loyal traffic. 20% of all visitors from Facebook visited the site four or more times per week. "We've received the most clients from Facebook than any other social media website," a reader commented on the article. "Although we've received slightly more visitors from Digg and Stumbleupon, the viewers have not converted into customers the same way they had through Facebook." There has certainly been plenty of talk about how Facebook can drive traffic , but clearly there are still a lot of people struggling with just how to go about doing so. "Why am I not getting this?" another reader asked. "Blogs I've done are boosting my Google, Yahoo, and Bing ratings and getting traffic to my web site, but I'm not getting how Facebok can do this." Comments like these are not uncommon, and to be fair, this one was made prior to Microsoft's announcement of a deal with Facebook (Google has been rumored to be in talks with Facebook as well). But not all traffic has to come from search , although Facebook exposure can certainly contribute to that as well, if nothing else, than simply through promotion leading to links . When a Facebook user frequently checks for status updates, he/she is likely to see new posts made from Facebook Pages he/she is subscribed to. This means creating a Facebook page can have a great effect on page owners. Making readers aware of the page is key as well. Luckily Facebook has a widget called the Fan box , that you can put on your site, which can lead new visitors directly to your Facebook page. Facebook has also just updated another important widget - the share button . Now it will provide a live count of shares, as well as analytical information. You can find out how people are sharing and engaging with your content, and gain further insight into how your stuff is doing with the Facebook community (and adjust your strategy accordingly). Traffic is a common goal, but it is not the only one. Going back to the topic at the beginning of this article, brand loyalty is a big one. A representative for Stuzo Group , one of Facebook's exclusive development partners, shared some interesting case studies with us, looking at how they created branded applications and fan pages for brands like Doritos, Budweiser, Smashbox, and Purina. "When Stuzo works with these brands, the goals that they have most often in creating these promotions is to increase brand loyalty and recognition, boost traffic to their website, and drive sales," the representative said. "These goals all go hand in hand, and explain why Chitika's study was so valuable; hits to a website are great, but they don't mean much unless they contribute to brand loyalty and positive recognition of the brand ." ( emphasis added ) A common theme among the case studies provided by Stuzo is that they all present clear objectives for what they want to accomplish with Facebook. For example, Budweiser's were: 1. Create brand awareness through a strong fan base and social channel opt-ins 2. Incentivize users to engage with the brand on a regular basis 3. Convert new customers and drive increase in sales Budweiser went the route of contests and competitions (which are viral by nature). According to the case study, this has resulted in: - Hundreds of thousands of Unique Pageviews - Sustained high level of brand engagement by all measurements - Significant, continued growth in Budweiser’s Social CRM and social channel opt-ins Budweiser is just one example of a big brand finding success through social media, and through the use of Facebook in particular. As I recently discussed, you can find new and interesting ways to integrate social media into your own plans by looking at some of the brands you use yourself and how they employ different tools. This helps you to put yourself in the customer's shoes and determine the things that work and the things that don't. Related Articles: > Continue reading

Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged article, customer, facebook, goals, network, number, reader, review and story, traffic | Leave a comment

U.K. Social Networking Sites Account For 25% Of Display Ads

Social networking sites in the U.K. accounted for 13.8 billion display ad impressions in August 2009, representing more than 25 percent of all display ads viewed online, according to a new study by comScore. Telecommunications companies were the heaviest social networking site advertisers, serving more than 949 million display ad impressions on social networks in August, or about 7 percent of all display ads delivered in the site category. The retail advertiser category ranked second with 753 million display ad views, followed by banking brands with 248 million, travel brands with 213 million, and entertainment brands with 181 million display ad views. Among the top 10 advertiser categories on social networking sites, teen content advertisers delivered the highest amount of their ad impressions in the social networking category at 37.3 percent. Online dating advertiser (33.8%) and retail advertisers (30.1%) also delivered an above average proportion of their ads in the site category. A demographic analysis of display ads on social networking sites in the U.K. found while ad delivery skewed somewhat younger than average, all age segments were reached with a notable percentage of display ads. Display-Ad-Demographics 15-24 year olds were the highest indexing age segment, accounting for 29 percent of display ad impressions while representing 23 percent of the total category audience. Those between the ages of 25-44 received ads at a slightly higher than average rate, while those 45 and older received ads at a lower than average rate. Each of the five age segments accounted for at least 15 percent of the category audience and 10 percent of ad impressions. “CPMs on social networking sites have traditionally suffered relative to other content categories, in part because of the perception that much of the audience are younger consumers with lower spending power,” said Mike Read, comScore managing director, Europe. “However, these data suggest that every demographic segment is reached via social networking sites and that no particular age segment accounts for an overwhelming percentage of ads delivered. Given the overall reach and volume of ads delivered on social networking sites, brand advertisers who ignore this channel may be missing a significant opportunity and enabling their competitors to gain a dominant share of voice in the channel.” Continue reading

Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged among-the-top, channel, competitors, cpms-on-social, media, money, perception, replace-search, review and story, slightly-higher, social, social-media, social-networking, traffic | Leave a comment