Tag Archives: work

Increase Search Traffic with Horizontal Content

Those new to blogging or article writing have often been told to focus on one very niche topic. One narrow vertical. That has commonly been considered the way to gain credibility, readers, links, and ultimately traffic, which assuming the blog/site itself isn't your primary source of income, could lead to sales of your products/services. But is keeping it narrow really the best way to go? For some, it is. Another way to go would be to cover as much ground as you possibly can. Throw a wide net out there and see what you catch. Once you see what you've caught, maybe you can catch more in the same area. The thinking is that the more ground you cover, the more people you are potentially exposing your work to. It's going horizontal, rather than vertical. Do you think you could find greater success by keeping it narrow or broad? Continue reading

Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged amazon, aol, deep pockets, media, primary source, review and story, thoughts, travel gadgets, walmart, work | Leave a comment

Why Horizontal Content Sites Make for Attractive Models

Those new to blogging or article writing have often been told to focus on one very niche topic. One narrow vertical. That has commonly been considered the way to gain credibility, readers, links, and ultimately traffic, which assuming the blog/site itself isn't your primary source of income, could lead to sales of your products/services. But is keeping it narrow really the best way to go? For some, it is. Another way to go would be to cover as much ground as you possibly can. Throw a wide net out there and see what you catch. Once you see what you've caught, maybe you can catch more in the same area. The thinking is that the more ground you cover, the more people you are potentially exposing your work to. It's going horizontal, rather than vertical. Do you think you could find greater success by keeping it narrow or broad? Continue reading

Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged attractive models, Business, horizontal, horizontal content sites, small-business, travel gadgets, work, writing | Leave a comment

Making Money with Content By Covering More Ground

Those new to blogging or article writing have often been told to focus on one very niche topic. One narrow vertical. That has commonly been considered the way to gain credibility, readers, links, and ultimately traffic, which assuming the blog/site itself isn't your primary source of income, could lead to sales of your products/services. But is keeping it narrow really the best way to go? For some, it is. Another way to go would be to cover as much ground as you possibly can. Throw a wide net out there and see what you catch. Once you see what you've caught, maybe you can catch more in the same area. The thinking is that the more ground you cover, the more people you are potentially exposing your work to. It's going horizontal, rather than vertical. Do you think you could find greater success by keeping it narrow or broad? Continue reading

Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged algorithm, aol, content, fashion food, games sports, internet, internet auto, mea, primary source, travel gadgets, user, video-games, work, writing | Leave a comment

Now LinkedIn Will Be Featured in a Lot More Apps

LinkedIn has opened up its platform to developers. It can be accessed at developer.linkedin.com . "Over fifty million users entrust their professional identities and relationships with LinkedIn, helping build LinkedIn into the largest global professional network today," says LinkedIn' Adam Nash. "However, professionals around the world use a wide variety of applications and Web sites to get their work done, and they have spoken loud and clear that they want the ability to leverage their professional networks wherever they work." Now developers can integrate LinkedIn into their business applications. LinkedIn's developer site has APIs and widgets. "Over the past months, LinkedIn has supported integrations with some of the most prominent and critical software applications in the enterprise," says Nash. "Partnerships with companies like IBM, Blackberry (Research in Motion), and most recently Microsoft, have given us time to invest in both functionality and scalability of the platform." Developers interested in using LinkedIn in their apps need only fill out a form at the site. The LinkedIn platform leverages the open OAuth standard, so integrations should be that much more simple. On a related note, Twitter client TweetDeck is already utilzing the LinkedIn platform . They just announced that you can view or take action on your LinkedIn network updates from within the TweetDeck application. It should be interesting to see the kinds of apps that start taking advantage of LinkedIn's APIs. This could turn out to be a very significant event for increasing business networking, and even matching prospective job candidates with jobs. Related Articles: > LinkedIn, Microsoft Outlook To Forge Ties > LinkedIn Tests a New Design > LinkedIn, Twitter Connect Through Status Updates Continue reading

Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged adam nash, business applications, developers, linked, microsoft, professional, related articles, review and story, social-networks, widgets, work | Leave a comment

How Important is Natural Language to the Future of Search?

Where Google is a search engine, and Bing is a "decision engine," Ask.com seeks to be an answer engine. Ask thinks the future of search is in questions and answers. This means, you should be able to ask a direct question and get a specific answer, rather than pages of results, which can lead you to finding the answer on your own. It's natural language search, and it's not exactly a new concept. However, Ask says it is dedicated to improving how well this works. It makes sense, since the Q&A niche has been the area of search, which Ask has carved out for itself. Rather than trying to compete directly with Google as Bing does, Ask appears to be more interested in setting itself apart as a place to go simply to find answers. "Asking a question isn’t the same as searching," says Ask. How imporant will natural language search be in the future? Share your thoughts . Ask illustrates the difference with a couple sample queries, saying that the most successful answers won't get clicked: The company says it is seeing increased loyalty from users who conduct question searches, and has seen "a pronounced increase" in the percentage of users who conduct queries in the form of a question . In fact, they claim to see three times more questions as a share of total queries than their competitors. "Indeed, the information that is directly relevant to many questions most certainly exists; it's just that it’s locked in people’s heads or captured in unpublished conversations, and therefore inaccessible by traditional search," says Ask President Doug Leeds. "Obviously, this is not a trivial deficiency in a world that is increasingly interconnected and clamoring for perspective, guidance, and shared knowledge at an interpersonal level online." Ask is setting out to extract and rank existing answers, and index sources of answers that have not yet been published. "To extract and rank existing answers, as opposed to merely ranking web pages that contain information, we have and are continuing to develop a unique set of algorithms and technologies that are based on new signals for relevance specifically tuned to questions and answers," says Leeds, outlining these signals with the following images. Right now, Ask is focused on developing a new algorithm that utilizes the signals highlighted above. "But our work doesn’t end with extraction and ranking of existing, published answers," says Leeds. "Where our vision really comes to life is in our efforts to index the sources of unpublished knowledge that can generate answers specifically in response to a question, in the moment it’s asked. This is the long tail of questions that are nearly impossible for search engines to answer, but which create incredible value for users when they are." These include complex questions (like "What is the cheapest way to get to the Austin airport from downtown Austin?"), temporally dependant questions (like "When will the Oakland Bay Bridge re-open?"), and subjective questions (like "What should you do to save a withering tomato plant?"). Ask has reached a milestone of 400 million Q&A pairs in its database, so the engine is already capable of answering a significant amount of questions you might have, but there's a lot of work to be done in order to give users the "best answers on the planet" in real time, as the company intends to do. It will be interesting to see how Ask's progress comes along. Leeds promises updates on the company blog as they work their way along. Do you think Q&A search is an important part of search's future? Do you think Ask will play a key role in it? Do you ever use Ask to find answers? Talk to ArisYulianta and Friends... what you think in the comments . Related Articles: > Ask Gets More Serious About Answers > Ask.com Gets New U.S. Leadership > Microsoft Tipped As Most Likely Ask.com Buyer > Searching for Answers Google Doesn't Have Continue reading

Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged ask.com, Business, conversations, future, google engine, leeds, president, queries, review and story, search, thoughts, work | Leave a comment

The Majority Of Nonprofits Embrace Social Media

The majority (88%) of nonprofit organizations are experimenting with social media to engage audiences, but 79 percent are not sure of its value for their organizations, according to a new survey by Weber Shandwick's Social Impact team and KRC Research. "We know from our work with nonprofits that most realize the potential of social media and are experimenting with it, but many are not maximizing the full opportunity," said Paul Massey, Social Impact co-lead. "This survey validates that there is widespread experimentation, and suggests that, in the future, nonprofits that fully participate in the two-way conversations that make this medium so powerful will reap the greatest benefit." Social Impact Nonprofit Social Media Survey View more presentations from Weber Shandwick Social Impact . The majority of nonprofits believe their online presence helps raise awareness (92%), keeps audiences engaged (86%) and reduces costs compared to traditional media (77%). Social media is viewed as being successful in helping nonprofits reach broad audiences (67%). Sixty-one percent say the rewards outweigh the risks. For these reasons eighty-five percent plan to make greater use of social media in the next two years and (78%) most require more social media expertise to keep communicating and receiving support for their work. While social media is viewed positively among nonprofits, there are still a number of challenges. Sixty-seven percent of nonprofits feel that traditional media, including coverage in newspapers, magazine, television and radio are more effective at supporting fundraising efforts than social media (67% vs.22%). Executives in nonprofits are more skeptical about social media's ability to help them with hard-to-reach audiences such as donors (45%), media (39%) and policy makers (31%). "While two-thirds of nonprofit executives believe social media has a positive impact on their communications with external audiences, they are less convinced about social media's resonance with donors, journalists and policy makers," said Social Impact co-lead Stephanie Bluma. "What these results imply is that organizations need to develop more targeted and sustainable digital connections with these critical yet narrower audiences. In the months ahead, digital engagement strategies will need to show value on multiple fronts from brand-building to advocacy to fundraising." The one area where social media is widely believed to have more impact than traditional media is in mobilizing supporters (58%), an important audience for nonprofits. Continue reading

Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged amazon-offers, Business, external audiences, new survey, nonprofit executives, nonprofit organizations, viewed-as-being, weber-shandwick, work | Leave a comment

Google Integrates World Bank Data

Students and statistics hounds now have even more reason to love Google. Continue reading

Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged co2 emissions, energy use, gdp deflator, google-gives, gross domestic product, income, internet, official-google, screenshot, search google, search-feature, work | Leave a comment