Tag Archives: video

Mark Hendricks of ClickBooth, interviewed on Shop.org TV

Mark Hendricks of ClickBooth speaks with Bill Bass onShop.org TV. These Shop.org TV interviews were conducted at the 2008 Shop.org Annual Summit at the Mandalay Bay Convention Center in Las Vegas on September 15, 2008. Produced by SilverDock.com, specialists in online video for retailers and marketers. Continue reading

Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged 2008, advertising, bill bass, ecommerce, hendricks, indigo, retail, shop.org, tv shop, video | Leave a comment

Content Syndication Is Your Friend

Content duplication has been a buzz topic in SEO for a while now. You can read about it til you puke and never have to leave WebProNews.com. It’s one of the modern webmaster’s favorite things to fret over and has been for at least two years. Google doesn’t like duplicate content. Continue reading

Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged assurances, content syndication, googlers, niche, reputation, require-further, seo, traffic, video | Leave a comment

Hulu Falls Short In Comparison To Blockbusters

If you massage the stats enough, Hulu’s an entertainment giant, hanging neck and neck with this year’s most popular movies. Continue reading

Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged Business, buzzpoint, hangover, hollywood, objective perspective, review and story, seeing-record, twilight-saga, video, webcast-brings | Leave a comment

Paramount Launches Clip Website For Businesses

Paramount Pictures has launched an online service to sell its movie clips to businesses in an effort to combat declining DVD revenue. ParamountClips.com is powered by Digitalsmiths VideoSense platform. Users can search the Paramount library by actor, locations, or lines of dialogue. VideoSense combs through the collected metadata to locate the relevant clip. Continue reading

Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged Business, digitalsmiths, dvd, music-videos, online-video, paramount-movie, revenue streams, technology, top gun, video, viewing-sees, youtube | Leave a comment

Online Video Viewing Continues To Boom

DVR and online video continue to show considerable growth in the U.S., up 21.1% and 34.9 percent respectively, in time spent in the third quarter of 2009, according Nielsen’s latest Three Screen Report. In Q3, the average American watched 31 hours of TV per week, with 31 minutes spending playback mode with their DVR. In addition, each week the average consumer spent 4 hours on the Internet and 22 minutes watching online video. The average consumer spent 3 minutes watching mobile video each week. “Americans today have an insatiable appetite for not only content, but also choice,” says Nic Covey, director of cross-platform insights at Nielsen . “Across all age groups, we see consumers adding the Internet and mobile devices to their media diet – consuming media anytime and anywhere possible.” Online video viewing is also on the rise, with Internet users watching 53 more minutes of video online in Q3 compared to the previous year. Time spent among overall mobile video viewers remains consistent, with teens reporting the most time spent on average watching mobile, at just over 7 hours per month. Older mobile video users age 45-54 reported viewing 3 hours on their mobile phones each month. Social networks are becoming a popular source for online video. Time spent viewing video on social networking sites increased 98 percent from October 2008 to October 2009. Older demographics are also helping to drive the growth in video consumption with in social media. The 35 to 49 year old segment increased their viewership time by 37 percent and those over 65 increased their viewership 47 percent year-over-year. Mobile video viewing continues to grow, with 15.7 million Americans viewing video on their mobile phone in Q3, an increase of 53 percent over last year. Continue reading

Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged average, cross platform, insatiable appetite, mobile, mobile devices, nielsen, online-video, review and story, video, video time, videos, viewership, viewing-sees | Leave a comment

Google Doesn’t Know if Your Site is in the Cloud

Google’s Matt Cutts discussed how the search engine handles sites that that are “in the cloud” with regards to how listings are affected. Matt’s explanation was a response to the following user-submitted question: Can moving my website to “the cloud” harm my listings? Say my server’s in Germany and I move the website to Google’s App Engine or Amazon S3. Does this harm my listings for German results – or is it enough to set the “geographic target” in GWT to Germany? Matt broke the question down into separate parts to answer them. First, he took on the part about moving a site to “the cloud” harming the users’ listings. His answer for this is basically that Google doesn’t even know if your site is in the cloud, so it can’t use that information to affect listings. “We don’t know what is happening on the side of your web server. Your web server could be running Perl, PHP, Python, or Ruby on Rails,” said Cutts. “All we know is what the web server returns. So your web server could be running code that would go talk to Amazon’s cloud or Appspot or anywhere else in the cloud, but we wouldn’t even know that. We don’t even know whether a page is dynamically created or statically created. All we know is what the web server sends back.” He says if your site is talking to the cloud behind the scenes, there is now way for any search engine or bot to know about that. Watch the video above to hear Matt’s explanation for the second part of the user’s question. Related Articles: > Continue reading

Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged amp nbsp, Business, geographic target, german, gwt, listings, meta tag, moving, page titles, ranking-factor, related articles, review and story, video | Leave a comment