Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Google Will Change Web Marketing in 2012 - Harvard Business Review

Brian Whalley

Brian Whalley

Brian Whalley is a search marketer at HubSpot, a marketing software company in Cambridge, MA. He focuses on search engines and developing strategies for how businesses can get found online. You can follow him on Twitter at @bwhalley.

Google Will Change Web Marketing in 2012

Google is poised to completely alter how websites market themselves over the next year. While easing users into changing search results pages, Google has also designed a new method for websites to structure data so that its crawler can better pull information. This is a tremendous strategy. Google doesn't need to own all of the information in the world, but does own the methods of accessing that information — as well as the ability to advertise to people who use that access.

Search results will include more direct information.
Early in 2012, Google will expand how it incorporates data into its search results. For search queries that are direct questions, it will no longer be necessary to click through to a website. In Google's parlance, it's like getting both the search results and the immediate result of the "I'm Feeling Lucky" button at once. It's not hard to see how this is better for the average Google user. Questions will be answered faster and more simply. No parsing of information will be required. This change, however, will take value away from marketers who rely on visitors clicking through to deeper pages.

Google is looking to collect more data by providing ways for website owners to structure their information so that it can be easily read by a computer. Google's plans revolve around metadata (literally, special data encoded in the page) that will allow it to access more rich data about a topic, including hours of business, names of products, and virtually anything else that you can think of. Marketers will see better search rankings if they document information using this new format.

Google is entering new industries and markets. The expansion of data into search results pages is also breaking into markets where Google is not yet a force. Google acquired ITA Software in 2010, a software company that created airfare and travel management software for airlines and resellers. Since then, they have worked to become a powerful competitor in the travel industry by promoting their own offers and packages directly on the search results page ahead of other providers. To see this in action, try searching for "BOS to SFO" in Google. This is a tremendous advertising presence that others cannot match.

If you're a marketer working on making sure your site is visible in an area where Google is competitive, remember that you may need to do more than an organic search or paid advertising in order to be successful. Google has created a system where people must pay in order to compete against it. Regardless of whether the information and options available to searchers are free or paid for by marketers, people will continue to use Google in overwhelming numbers as long as Google continues to have the best results for a given search.

The data that Google makes available will be reduced. Google now sees its ownership of data as a competitive advantage to be protected from marketers and other advertising networks. In the latter half of 2011, Google began to roll out changes that have taken data away from marketers, specifically about how and where visitors found their website. Since October, between 10-15% of visits to websites from Google have no longer sent information to webmasters and marketers. It is safe to assume that Google will continue to expand these changes, further limiting the data available to marketers unless they're willing to pay.

Google's activity in the second half of 2011 represents just the beginning of the changes that it will be pushing throughout 2012 as it establishes even stronger relationships with its partners, affiliates, and advertisers. While this happens, every marketer on the web will need to carefully consider and revisit how they are positioned with the search giant and its interests.

More blog posts by Brian Whalley

Required reading for all internet marketers.

Posted via email from MEDIA CHECK

Tuesday, December 20, 2011

Must Have Hair Care: Oribe Supershine Moisturizing Cream

How Many Hair Products Do You Use?

Curly_hair_tips


This morning as I was doing my hair, I felt decidedly low-maintenance for using only two products. Yes, "only." That's not because I'm a beauty product hoarder—it's because I have naturally unruly hair that requires three to four different products at a time. Maybe this is just a curly hair problem, since when I blow-dry and flat-iron my hair straight, I just use one product: a finishing shine spray (Kérastase Vernis Nutri Sculpt Shine Spray). But when I want to show off my natural hair, I go through a very unnatural process. First there's an anti-frizz serum I apply to my hair when it's wet. After it dries, I apply a leave-in conditioner to make it soft, like Oribe Supershine Moisturizing Cream. Then I spritz on the Kérastase, and then I use—depending on the weather, how recently I've washed my hair, and other ridiculously specific calculations—a mousse, gel, or pomade-ish wax to keep it that way; right now I'm obsessed with Shu Uemura Cotton Uzu Defining Flexible Cream. What about you—how many products are in your morning hair routine?

WHAT IT DOES:
Tames frizz and adds softness and shine to hair

KEY INGREDIENTS:
Kaempferia galanga root extract (provides natural UV protection); soy protein biopolymer (fights frizz); lychee extract (protects from oxidative stress); amber extract (strengthens and conditions); edelweiss flower extract (protects hair from drying, damaging, and color-depleting effects of the sun); watermelon extract (protects against deterioration of natural keratin); active keratin (fortifies and provides anti-aging protection and shine)

HOW IT FEELS/SMELLS/LOOKS:
It is a silky cream with a mild floral scent.

WHY WE LIKE IT:
It calms frizz and adds shine without weighing down hair or making it look greasy. It's also a good way to tame flyaways and smooth dry ends after a blowout.

AWARDS:
Best of Beauty 2010

 

VIA Allure BY SARAH WEXLER, WRITER, SEPTEMBER 23, 2010, 3:00:00 PM

Posted via email from Style Check

Monday, December 19, 2011

59 New Digital Media Resources You May Have Missed

good list for your bookmarks

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Five Things You Should Stop Doing in 2012 - Dorie Clark - Harvard Business Review

7 Things Highly Productive People Do | LinkedIn

Schedule your email. Pick two or three times during the day when you’re going to use your email. Checking your email constantly throughout the day creates a ton of noise and kills your productivity. Use the phone. Email isn’t meant for conversations. Don’t reply more than twice to an email. Pick up the phone instead.
Check out this website I found at linkedin.com

Posted via email from MEDIA CHECK

Wednesday, December 07, 2011

Facebook's Secret to High Emotional Engagement? Faces [STUDY]

If you’re trying to understand why Facebook elicits such an emotional response, look no further than the name.

A study commissioned by Facebook examined how consumers’ brains responded to the site as well as to Yahoo’s and The New York Times‘s homepages. NeuroFocus, the Berkeley, Calif., firm that executed the study, found that of the three, Facebook scored highest on attention, emotional engagement and memory retention.

A.K. Pradeep, the CEO of NeuroFocus, says the presence of faces on Facebook are a major reason why. “As you can see, one of the dominant features of Facebook is the human face,” he says. “The face is a window to the emotions.” Pradeep says that since childhood we are trained to read people’s faces to discern emotion, and that such information is key to survival: Thus the stimulation we experience when scanning our newsfeeds.

In the study 84 adults, split evenly between men and women, were wired with EEG sensors, which measured their brainwave patterns as they visited the sites. All three sites scored better than average on the three areas. However, The New York Times did slightly better than the others on memory retention and Facebook was notably higher when it came to emotional engagement.

Pradeep says that faces explain much of the emotional appeal of Facebook. He says if Yahoo or The New York Times have recognizable faces in their articles, the emotional levels even out more. Even though faces on those pages are likely to be public figures rather than friends of yours, they still spur an emotional response. (Facebook’s launch of Subscriptions in September ensures that more users will see both in their news feeds.)

Facebook commissioned the study to display its emotional connection with consumers to advertisers. Though the report didn’t look at how an ad might work in one or the other platforms, an earlier NeuroFocus study compared a Visa ad on Facebook to one that ran on TV. That study found that the Facebook ad scored higher for emotional engagement than the TV spot.

Take away: Photos of smiling faces can be used to engage your audience on an emotional level.

Posted via email from MEDIA CHECK