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Yahoo - Ever Corner a Wild Animal?

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by The Guy
April 10, 2008

Jerry Yang, Yahoo! co-founder and CEO
Image Courstesy Businessweek.com

HOLY SMOKES!  I am completely blown away by the moves of Yahoo this week, in an effort to stave off the Microsoft takeover.  As of yesterday for a two week trial, Google will handle advertising for a tiny piece of the searches carried out on Yahoo.  In fact, Google will place ads alongside 3% of the U.S. queries on Yahoo’s site.  GOOGLE SEARCH RESULTS ON YAHOO!!!  It would appear that instead of being eaten by the lion, Yahoo would prefer to throw itself into the dragon’s mouth!  I’d LOVE to hear what you all have to say about that, or what your thoughts on this maneuver are!  Doesn’t that actually reduce Yahoo’s perceived value as a search engine, having results served up by the competition?  Wouldn’t that also drive down the stock price, making it even easier for Microsoft to be able to pick it up?

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Friend Promotion - Step 3 of the Authority Building Process

Jeff Quipp by Jeff Quipp
April 9, 2008

Ever heard it said … “to have a good friend, you’ve got to be a good friend”?

Teamwork
Image courtesy: Prosoundweb.com

Well its absolutely true! A group of friends with similar interests but complementary skills is beneficial for all involved, especially where each works to help the others in the group. If each member is an authority in their respective realms, and truly respects the work and skills of the others, the whole becomes greater than the sum of the members … which tends to elevate the “authority” of each of the members.

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The world without search engines

Mark Guest post by Mark
April 9, 2008

The search engine has become an integral part of life in the 21st century. The ability to type in a few words and then get some results that are interesting and useful for you – it’s as transforming to a culture as the introduction of the VCR, the audio CD, the personal computer, the microwave oven, and the cell phone..

Can you imagine having to remember or having a list of every website that you’d ever want to visit, especially the ones with URLs of 30 characters or more that don’t use many recognizable words? Search engines take that burden away from us.

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Mobile Users Are Checking Out Ads

Ruud Hein by Ruud Hein
April 8, 2008

mobile marketing

According to a bi-annual report from Nielsen Mobile found that 58 million, or 23%, of all U.S. mobile phones users, have viewed mobile advertising in the last 1 month. Of these, 28 million subscribers say they responded to the ad in one way or another.

The findings are based on a study of over 22,000 mobile users, carried out in the last quarter of 2007. Overall there was a big jump in the number of users who recalled seeing mobile advertising, up 38 percent from the last report. In the second quarter of 2007, Nielsen reported 42 million subscribers saw mobile ads, while the number rose to 58 million for the fourth quarter.

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Business Blog Benchmarks

Jennifer Osborne by Jennifer Osborne
April 7, 2008

What are realistic measures for your clients blog?

You’ve sold your client on a blog and you’ve developed a Blog Strategy. Plus you’ve made the blog much more implementable by coming up with 30 to 50 Blog Post ideas. But for this Blog Strategy to be really successful, one of the most important things that you can do is to manage your clients expectations.

Metrics without some point of comparison are just numbers. What turns that meaningless data into useful information is having a point of comparison.

Blog Benchmark figures are difficult to find.

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How Search Really Works: Relevance (1)

Ruud Hein by Ruud Hein
April 4, 2008

This post is part of an ongoing series: How Search Really Works.
Previously: Simple Query Optimization.

Search is always boolean: yes or no. True or false.

Either the words are in the document or not.

boolean-search

But as you see, not all documents are “born alike”. Some are about our topic, some just mention it.

What we need, what we want, is not just a big list of results — we want a relevant list of results, preferably sorted so that the best bet appears on top.

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Friday Funnies: The First Community

Ruud Hein by Ruud Hein
April 4, 2008

The very very early years of Web 2.0.

the first online community

Source: Geek And Poke

Permanent link to this post (13 words, estimated 3 secs reading time)

Driving Social Networking Home

Tom Tsinas by Tom Tsinas
April 3, 2008

Full Disclosure Confession: I don’t get the whole social networking phenomenon. Perhaps it is because I am a gentleman of a certain age. MySpace is mine and I have no real desire to share it with anyone beyond my other half… and my dog. I leave the Twittering to my parrot. I am not Facebooked as I have no overwhelming desire to make contact with my primary school cohorts. I am LinkedIn, but that’s about that.

And I actually don’t get it from a SEO/SEM perspective simply because there is far too much beyond my control which implicitly and necessarily implies I am a control freak. I am a control freak. And I like numbers that have relevance. Who. What. Where. When. Why.

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In This Corner…Google vs Microsoft

by The Guy
April 3, 2008

The auditorium is packed with spectators there to cheer on their favorite contender!  In one corner, weighing in as the largest search provider the world has ever seen, with creative genius that seems to never falter, and a “the sky is the limit” develop and deploy stance that has seen them through to the development of robust search tools, you have Google - The search engine that would, could and did, also known as the search engine that will, can and does!

Fight The Good Fight
Image Courtesy of ahajokes.com

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The Swirling Vortex of Social Networking

Donna Fontenot Guest post by Donna Fontenot
April 2, 2008

Social networking is increasingly becoming a vital aspect of our search marketing efforts. The connections we form amongst our online social communities can provide ever-expanding avenues of awareness of our sites, brand recognition, and ultimately buzz and link-love.

Sadly, however, there is a dark side to social networking. This dark side is one that we’d rather not talk about because we are afraid we might see it within ourselves. What could possibly be so scary? I call it the swirling vortex of social networking.

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