Archive for November, 2008

Discovering Better Video Viewing: Taboola Receives Funding and Launches Video Discovery and Monetization Tools (EContent Magazine)

Sunday, November 30th, 2008

If you’re tired of watching video after video online, only to realize halfway through that it is not what you were looking for, then an Israeli company called Taboola may be just what you’ve been looking for. After three years in development, including one year of limited release with selected partners, Taboola announced on November 18 the official launch of its ViDiscovery, Taboola Analytics, …

Original post by Yahoo! News Search Results for Ecommerce

Nokia’s touchiest week

Sunday, November 30th, 2008

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Original post by Robert Scoble

Nokia’s touchiest week

Sunday, November 30th, 2008

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Original post by Robert Scoble

Another Day, Another Yahoo Rumor

Sunday, November 30th, 2008

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Original post by Om Malik

Is It Time to Buy Google Shares?

Saturday, November 29th, 2008

Eric Schmidt is fond of saying it would take Google 300 years to achieve its goals. I always thought he must have been at least partly joking. The shelf life of Internet companies is short it’s taken Yahoo and eBay little more than a decade to reach what appears to be their respective “best-if-used-by” dates.

And judging from the way investors have been treating Google’s stock, you’d think it was also on track to face an early downgrade from Internet giant to also-ran. After hitting an all-time high of $747.24 a share in November 2007, Google’s stock slid to as low as $247.30 a week ago — a 67-percent drop (the shares closed at $292.96 in a shortened trading day Friday). True, most stocks have suffered from widespread selling, but consider that rival Microsoft is down about 50 percent from its 2007 peak.

There is plenty of reason for concern in the short term. Google’s bread and butter is still online advertising, which is looking to be more vulnerable to a downturn than many initially thought. And it still hasn’t cultivated any rich revenue streams outside of search. Word of widespread contract worker cutbacks only add to that image of a giant on the ropes.

But there are signs that Google is growing slowly more integrated into many facets of our online experiences. Its market share in search expands slightly each month. Chrome is proving a bigger hit than the first reviews intimated. Google’s mail, chat, calendar, maps and feeds are becoming incrementally more useful. You may not be using all of them, but chances are you are using some of them more than you used to.

That’s because Google has been tweaking many of its far-flung offerings with new features and/or better performance. Not just Chrome, but video chat, and voice search on mobile devices. They don’t have to be perfect — and often fall short — they need to be just useful enough to steal our attention from a rival’s service.

Is Google making more money from these micro-innovations? Usually not. But they have a value that could last long after the next financial quarter. They foster loyalty, nibble up market share, and — most importantly — observe user interactions so that Google can be even more useful to you tomorrow.

The New York Times’ David Carr this week detected a larger pattern in all these micro-innovations. Confessing that he was at once seduced and creeped out by how useful Google’s programs were, he nonetheless concluded:

“Google’s Web platform, in all of its high-functioning glory, is its marketing.… If Google owns me, it’s probably because I am in favor of what works.”

When ad spending recovers, Google is going to have more ways to spread it around in front of us, and take up even more of our attention spans. But it’s not content with that, prodding its tentacles into other areas such as energy conservation. Schmidt recently spoke about the company’s early efforts to help make energy usage more efficient. Again, it’s not clear how Google would or could monetize it, but its influence in an area of changing demands is notable.

Does that make Google under $300 a bargain? In the long term, quite possibly. Remember when Google went public at $85 a share and people said its P/E of 58 was too high? Google’s 2008 P/E is now 18. And while Google’s profits are growing much more slowly, they are likely to be growing for years.

Google executives have long acted blasé about its stock price and investor obsessions like profit margins. Still, when a stock loses 67 percent of its value in a little more than a year, it has got to be worrisome for workers holding options. And so there may be a couple of stomach-churning years ahead for Google.

After that? The subtle moves Google has been making with an eye on long-term growth could lead to bigger payoffs for years to come. Maybe not 300 years, but certainly into the next decade or so at least.

Original post by Kevin Kelleher

Bloggers Digest 11/28/08 Black Friday Edition

Friday, November 28th, 2008

If you’re new here, welcome! And thanks for subscribing to Get Elastic. Friday is Blogger Digest day where we highlight posts from other blogs that are of value and interest to online retailers and Internet marketers.

  • A Get Elastic reader built a new tool called CheapTweet which is like a Digg for shopping in Twitter. If you’re a retailer you can try submitting your deals, see what happens.

Until Cyber Monday…

Next Free Ecommerce Webinar…

Dangerous Marketing Ahead: How to Break Bad Habits and Survive a Deep Recession December 10th, 2008 @ 9am PT/12pm ET
Panelists: Jeff Molander, CEO, Molander & Associates, Inc.
Jason Billingsley, VP Innovation, Elastic Path Software
Jonathan Salem Baskin, Entrepreneur, Consultant and Author of the controversial new book, &quotBranding Only Works on Cattle&quot
Register to Attend…

You may also like these similar posts:

Original post by Linda Bustos

Web 2.0 Tools And Ecommerce And How They Can Be Used, Marketing

Thursday, November 27th, 2008

Title: Web 2.0 Tools And Ecommerce And How They Can Be Used, Marketing

Keywords: Chinavasion, web 20, ecommerce, wholesale, China sourcing, web 2.0 tools

Extract: The…

Original post by default@goarticles.com (Emil Maldonado)

I’m A Celebrity…Ramblings

Thursday, November 27th, 2008

I don’t watch ITV’s “I’m A Celebrity Get Me Out Here” but was channel hopping tonight and caught it for a bit and felt compelled to make some observations.

Dani Behr is gorgeous. Simply lush.

What is Martina Navratilova doing in there? She’s arguably the best female tennis player ever. Surely she doesn’t need the publicity?

Likewise why is George Takei in the jungle? The man is awesome, he was Mr. Sulu in Star Trek and also appeared in Heroes for heaven’s sake. Legend!

David Van Day is the most irritating annoying obnoxious little man ever.

Ant and Dec are still the best TV presenters in the UK.

Who is Brian Paddick? Nicola McLean? Joe Swash? Carly Zucker?

Simon Webbe seems a good guy, just needs to work on his music a bit is all.

I feel kind of sad for Esther Rantzen. She just doesn’t seem to want to be there and kind of sad.

Timmy Mallett is no Biggins.

What I’m listening to right now: Prince - “Funk”

Post from: Affiliate Marketing Blog Here.org.uk

I’m A Celebrity…Ramblings

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Original post by Kieron

I’m A Celebrity…Ramblings

Thursday, November 27th, 2008

I don’t watch ITV’s “I’m A Celebrity Get Me Out Here” but was channel hopping tonight and caught it for a bit and felt compelled to make some observations.

Dani Behr is gorgeous. Simply lush.

What is Martina Navratilova doing in there? She’s arguably the best female tennis player ever. Surely she doesn’t need the publicity?

Likewise why is George Takei in the jungle? The man is awesome, he was Mr. Sulu in Star Trek and also appeared in Heroes for heaven’s sake. Legend!

David Van Day is the most irritating annoying obnoxious little man ever.

Ant and Dec are still the best TV presenters in the UK.

Who is Brian Paddick? Nicola McLean? Joe Swash? Carly Zucker?

Simon Webbe seems a good guy, just needs to work on his music a bit is all.

I feel kind of sad for Esther Rantzen. She just doesn’t seem to want to be there and kind of sad.

Timmy Mallett is no Biggins.

What I’m listening to right now: Prince - “Funk”

Post from: Affiliate Marketing Blog Here.org.uk

I’m A Celebrity…Ramblings

Share This

Original post by Kieron

How To Apply Google Search-Based Keyword Research

Thursday, November 27th, 2008

Last week Google introduced a new twist on its Google Keyword Tool, the Google Search-Based Keyword Tool.

Barry Schwartz has already posted a good overview on what the search-based keyword tool does last week. In a nutshell, the new tool shows you what the most popular keywords related to your site are that you are not bidding on, and suggested landing pages to go along with each keyword suggestion if you have access to the Google Adwords account for a given site.

The Ad/Search Share feature you see when logged in shows you what percentage of time you appear in paid search and organic listings which every PPC and SEO marketer loves to know.

Without Adwords or Analytics account access, you will only see a sampling of 100 keywords related to the site’s pages. As Barry mentions, that might leak what terms a website is bidding on to competitors.

How to Apply Google Search-Based Keyword Research

Pay Per Click Campaigns

Obviously, you can use this tool to identify new keywords to bid on in pay per click but I caution you, Google’s suggested landing pages are not always the best ones:

For example, “Bob Marley t-shirt” gets 6,600 searches per month so Google suggests a landing page for BustedTees.com which is actually for a Bob Marley poster, not a t-shirt.

Identify SEO Problems

If BustedTees did carry Bob Marley t-shirts, and Google suggested the poster’s page as the best match, that could be an indication that Google can’t “see” the Bob Marley t-shirt page, indicating a crawling and indexing problem, which may be affecting more pages on the site.

New Product Ideas

BustedTees may consider adding Bob Marley t-shirts to its catalog.

Prioritize Optimization

Another great way to use this tool is to prioritize which landing pages to optimize if you want to focus on terms with the highest potential keyword volume, not necessarily the most keyword referrals you actually receive (which your analytics would tell you). You could optimize for better search engine rankings (and increase your traffic) and conversion (to maximize ROI) together. A keyword research tool alone doesn’t match keywords to your specific site, so this is helpful that Google does both.

Site Search

You should also give your internal site search tool a quality check using the most searched for keywords. How people search in Google is often what they type in your site search box. Do you deliver the right, relevant products customers want to see or does your “searchandizing” need optimizing?

Use Your Noodle

As with any SEO or keyword research tool, use your judgment whether the suggested keywords (and landing pages) are relevant to your business. So what if “cheap cologne” gets 56,000 searches per month if you sell luxury brands? Or what if the average hides a seasonal spike in February? Do you want to pay more to advertise for cheap cologne in September?

So, my verdict is this tool is great if you’re logged in to a Google Account for your site and can have application beyond PPC, but is not so helpful for general keyword research or competitor research.

Next Free Ecommerce Webinar…

Dangerous Marketing Ahead: How to Break Bad Habits and Survive a Deep Recession December 10th, 2008 @ 9am PT/12pm ET
Panelists: Jeff Molander, CEO, Molander & Associates, Inc.
Jason Billingsley, VP Innovation, Elastic Path Software
Jonathan Salem Baskin, Entrepreneur, Consultant and Author of the controversial new book, "Branding Only Works on Cattle"
Register to Attend…

You may also like these similar posts:

Original post by Linda Bustos

Kolkata sixth largest eCommerce hub in India (New Kerala)

Thursday, November 27th, 2008

Kolkata, Nov 26 : eBay India, leading online business company, today announced that Kolkata was the sixth largest eCommerce hub in the country.

Original post by Yahoo! News Search Results for Ecommerce

Mumbai, Maharashtra top national ecommerce hub list: survey (Deepika)

Wednesday, November 26th, 2008

Mumbai, Nov 25 (UNI) Maharashtra and this economic capital topped their respective categories as the biggest eCommerce hubs in the country, according to a survey.

Original post by Yahoo! News Search Results for Ecommerce

Bangalore eBay’s fourth largest eCommerce Hub (Deepika)

Wednesday, November 26th, 2008

Bangalore, Nov 25 (UNI) eBay India, country’s leading online marketplace, announced Bangalore as the fourth largest eCommerce Hub in the country, according to the eBay India Census.

Original post by Yahoo! News Search Results for Ecommerce

eCommerce, a cost-efficient technique for doing biz in tough times (Deepika)

Wednesday, November 26th, 2008

New Delhi, Nov 25 (UNI) Amid global economic crisis forcing firms to adopt cost-cutting measures, eCommerce can be an economical medium for the entrepreneurs who want to expand their footprints, industry experts say.

Original post by Yahoo! News Search Results for Ecommerce

Marketing Experiments Conversion Sequence

Wednesday, November 26th, 2008

If you’ve been trekking with Get Elastic, you’ve seen me reference Marketing Experiments webinars and research in blog posts about shopping cart recovery, the psychology of numbers in PPC ads, hunters vs browsers (vs howsers) and value propositions. I have also highly recommended attending Marketing Experiments’ free web clinics and watching the replays because I simply get so much value from them and I know you will too.

About Marketing Experiments

Marketing Experiments does exactly what its name suggests — it’s the first internet based research lab to conduct experiments in optimizing sales and marketing processes (yes, there really is a lab). This organization is dedicated to providing free information through its website and blog and paid services like on-site landing page and email optimization workshops, online site testing certification courses and published research reports. (FYI, Marketing Experiments recently acquired Marketing Sherpa). It also works with in-depth with research partners (businesses to run experiments for) each year and are currently taking applications for next year.

I had the privilege to attend the live Landing Page Optimization Workshop in Santa Monica last week which included a Professional Certification Exam (I am now a charter member of the community of MEC Landing Page Optimization Professionals, thank you very much). This workshop had around 100 attendees, with about half representing Omniture (just kidding, but there were a bunch of them).

Conversion takes place in the mind, not on the page

Marketing Experiments’ approach to landing page optimization, based on what the customer experiences, can be summed up in the Conversion Sequence formula:

C = 4m + 3v + 2(i-f) - 2a

Don’t worry, this is not an equation that requires solving, rather its a helpful heuristic that ties together the components of the Conversion Sequence. A customer must be motivated to stay on your page (m), be met with a clear value proposition (v), have an incentive to take action (i), will experience a degree of friction (f) or resistance during the process and anxiety (a) about entering information or committing to a purchase.

How the clinic works

The Conversion Sequence formula also serves as an outline for the on-site optimization clinic. Dr. Flint McGlaughlin spends about 1 hour on the theory behind each variable and about 30 minutes of “live optimization” on clinic attendees’ sites. Of course, there’s not time to critique everyone’s pages in the session, so the dream team of optimization experts Dr. Flint McGlaughlin, Aaron Rosenthal, Bob Kemper, Jimmy Ellis, Tony Valcarcel and Boris Grinkot are also available on networking breaks (and even during breakfast) to help you with questions relating to your own site. After about 12 hours of training, you should be ready to write your certification exam.

What to expect next week

For my Marketing Experiments Conversion Optimization series, I’ll be going deep on each of the Conversion Sequence variables to share what I gleaned from the workshop and apply it to online retail sites, with a special emphasis on holiday landing pages (something not addressed in the clinic).

Stay tuned…


Next Free Ecommerce Webinar…

Selecting the Right Ecommerce Software in Six Weeks or Less

When: January 21st, 2009 @ 9am PT/12pm ET
Panelists:
Bill Mirabito, Founder and Principal Analyst, B2C Partners
Jason Billingsley, VP Innovation, Elastic Path Software
Register to Attend…


You may also like these similar posts:

Original post by Linda Bustos