Why Blog?
It happens so often. A business gets excited about the idea of blogging on their website. Post after post goes up, the bosses gush and everyone is excited. But the charm fizzles after a while, and a blog ends up totally inactive or as a catchall for sporadic self-promotional messages. Readers flee and the whole thing becomes, “Yeah, we tried it but it didn’t really work for us.”
As with any business initiative, successful blogging requires a plan. If executed properly, having a blog on your website offers many benefits to enhance your online presence. First, blogs provide current and relevant content to your site visitors. Trends in technology, new government or regulatory policies, discoveries for a new use of a product, etc. – anything that affects your industry is useful information to your readers.
You may have heard that Facebook officially rolled out the launch of their new Timeline feature today. Timeline features a radical redesign of users profile page; instead of merely listing your interests and personal info, the Timeline shows a detailed overview of your life on Facebook. Plus, it allows users to be a bit more creative in the design of their pages.
A few of us in the office activated the feature when it rolled out to developers in September. In honor of today’s public launch, we thought it would be fun to share with you some of our Timeline profiles.
Recently I had the opportunity to look at the analytics for a potential client. I had been informed that their bounce rate was upwards of 66%! SIXTY SIX PERCENT? – Holy smokes! That means of all the visitors that come to the site, two thirds of them don’t find the content relative?
As I looked at their site and the keywords driving traffic to it, I noticed that they had many branded keywords and even THOSE had a nearly 66% bounce rate. Something seemed really fishy to me – I mean, it was odd that someone would search for the brand name, land on the site and immediately leave.
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Video Blogging: What’s the Big Deal?
Vlogs are replacing blogs. They’re quick snip-its of information that would otherwise be typed up as copy and posted onto a website. A variety of information can be communicated in an entertaining, easy to understand format, and, when presented in three minutes or less, in a small amount of time.
But how can it be that just a year ago – even a few months ago – writing was simply enough? YouTube and Vimeo have been popular video sites for years, but suddenly they seem to have burst with activity. Social media sites now allow sharing of entertaining videos through their platforms, and video content is increasing in views exponentially.
Both online and traditional press releases do the same job: they spread the word about newsworthy information. Take a look at the similarities and differences, pros and cons of both traditional and online press releases.
So you’ve built a groundbreaking mobile app in the “virtual farting” genre or a great mobile website. You’re hoping people will check it out. You’ve built it, but how do you know if they will come?
Traditional Web analytics will sometimes work on mobile sites, but they are not always ideal. A more mobile-centric approach to analytics may sometimes be necessary. It really depends on how large your mobile audience is. But how will you ever find that out without mobile analytics?
Here are six solutions to mobile analytics for your mobile website or mobile app. Spend some time reviewing each one to make sure it fits your needs. I’m not endorsing them so much as compiling them here in this article as a quick round-up of the major players in mobile analytics.
In fact, the descriptions below each one are basically marketing copy pulled from their respective sites.
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First Steps with CakePHP
Starting a new, personal project in PHP, I wanted to try out a new framework for the fun of it. After doing a bit of review on many available frameworks, and ruling out the ones I have already used (Zend and OpenAvanti), I settled on CakePHP.
Are You Marketing Via Video?
According to WebVideoMarketing.org, video viewing online has officially reached an all-time high of 15 billion as of this past May. 15 billion. The population of the world is 6.9 billion. Holy mega video hits, Batman.
So does your marketing content include video? Whether you’re B2B, B2C or consume both markets, you could be missing out on a lot of business if you shy away from video marketing. Think about business videos you’ve watched. They may have had a team dedicated to organizing, filming and editing the video and had an entire studio where they could film. But your marketing department is on a budget…so how in the world are you supposed to create an amazing video like them?
Mobile Homepages Level Out Bounce Rate
I’ve been sorting through Google Analytics today to see which of our clients are getting mobile traffic. Not surprisingly, they’re all getting it. I’d say relative to the overall traffic, the mobile slice of the pie is similar on all sites. What’s not similar, though, is the the bounce rate, which is the amount of people staying on that site and the amount of people leaving without doing anything.
On a lot of our sites, the bounce rate for the normal site hovers around 30%-40%, where the mobile sites are closer to 60-70%.
It makes sense. Most of these people are accessing a regular site on their mobile phone, so it’s not surprising that the bounce rate is a lot higher. It’s just harder to use.
So I compared this to a few of the mobile sites we’ve developed and noticed that just having that mobile friendly homepage in place seems to really level out the bounce rate. It brings it right back down to that 30-40% range, similar to the desktop site.
Why do people click on the search results when and where they do? Why aren’t paid search campaigns as successful as they used to be? Are people even looking at your display ads?
Eye tracking is understanding how users look at your website or search results – there are many software programs available. Important for any business, eye tracking studies have a lot to do with what the page looks like – keeping it usable, engaging and easy to take in visually. Still, it has a lot more to do with users’ eye patterns on the screen.
When it comes to search results, we know that top organic rankings are the best. Why? Well, look at the charts below. One shows click positions, while the other shows cursor movement.






