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Predicting the Future – Web Monitoring

July 31st, 2010 IBabel No comments

Google and an investment arm of the CIA are jointly backing a company working on real-time web monitoring and prediction.

Recorded Future uses real-time analysis of tens of thousands of websites, blogs and Twitter accounts to identify relationships between people, organisations and events — both present and still-to-come.

The company says its temporal analytics engine looks at  ‘invisible links’ between documents that talk about the same (or related) entities and events. The idea is to derive, for each event, who was involved and where/when it happened or might happen.  Recorded Future plots that chatter, showing online “momentum” for any given event.

“The cool thing is, you can actually predict the curve, in many cases,” says company CEO Christopher Ahlberg, a former Swedish Army Ranger with a PhD in computer science.

This seems to be the first time that the intelligence community and Google have funded the same startup, at the same time. No one is accusing Google of directly collaborating with the CIA, but this is bound to be fodder for critics of Google, who already see the search giant as overly cozy with the U.S. government.

Full story: http://www.wired.com/dangerroom/2010/07/exclusive-google-cia/

Bing Brings Yahoo and Microsoft together

July 30th, 2009 IBabel 1 comment

Well, the on-off affair between Microsoft and Yahoo is back on again as the companies announce a partnership arrangement aimed at improving their share of the search market.

The result will see Yahoo using Microsoft’s Bing search engine technology in conjunction with Yahoo’s ad network.

I don’t see this an an attempt to try and take Google on head-on. I think we will  find that the pair have joined forces to adopt a different tactic, aimed at gradually eroding Google’s market share.

The recent introduction of more specialised and ‘niche’ search tools, such as Wolfram Alpha is leading to a slight distillation of the search market, where certain groups of people will perform their searches on specialised tools rather than using the ‘default’ tool (Google).

I wouldn’t be surprised if Microsoft and Yahoo attempt to target Bing (or variations/extensions of it) at specific niche audiences, in the hope that they can chip away chunks of the search market from Google. I don’t think a full-frontal attack on Google will work anytime soon, but by being nimbler and focussing on specific markets it may be possible for them to make decent inroads into Google’s customer base.

YouTube a drain on Google

July 8th, 2009 IBabel No comments

While YouTube is undoubtedly one of the most popular sites on the web, recent figures show that Google are feeling some big financial pain from it. The delivery model behind YouTube means that much of the content delivered is not giving a return to Google. 

Goggle hopes that the cost per impression for ads carried on YouTube will gradually increase over time to start generating more significant revenue, and of course YouTube carries some major brand recognition value.

But as things stand, YouTube is losing money in a big way – estimates from Credit Suisse suggest that YouTube will lose nearly $500 million USD in 2009. Google are a huge company, but no-one likes the thought of losing half-a-billion each year…

Google has been experimenting with various advertising models to get a better return but the figures suggest that the current CPM needs to be improved something like 30-40 times before YouTube would show a profit on the current model.

Sponsored content seems to be the way to go in order to get a more guaranteed return but how many people will be keen to watch advertorials and sponsored clips? 

Google will no doubt live with the pain for a while but expect to see a shift towards sponsored content, and who knows, maybe a parting of the ways if they can’t find a cure…

Categories: Other Web Talk, PPC etc, google Tags:

Google Wave – Heading Your Way

May 30th, 2009 IBabel 2 comments

Google have announced the pending (although as yet undated) lauch of their ‘Wave’ product/platform.

What is Wave?

Well – to quote from Google:

A “wave” is equal parts conversation and document, where people can communicate and work together with richly formatted text, photos, videos, maps, and more.

Here’s how it works: In Google Wave you create a wave and add people to it. Everyone on your wave can use richly formatted text, photos, gadgets, and even feeds from other sources on the web. They can insert a reply or edit the wave directly. It’s concurrent rich-text editing, where you see on your screen nearly instantly what your fellow collaborators are typing in your wave. That means Google Wave is just as well suited for quick messages as for persistent content — it allows for both collaboration and communication. You can also use “playback” to rewind the wave and see how it evolved.

It is going to be in developer preview for a while, so expect some changes to occur, but looks like it’s going to be big and open-source with a full developer API and toolkits to develop your own apps based on the Wave protocol.

I don’t suppose Big G will be buying Twitter now.

Full details at the Official Google Blog

Online Advertising spend up in 2008 – Some Thoughts

April 1st, 2009 IBabel 3 comments

Recent figures show that the 2008 online advertising spend in the US showed an increase of over 10% on 2007, despite the Financial Crisis that was beginning to take hold in the latter part of the year.

2008 US revenue (MOT Worldwide, just the US) came to a record $23.4 billion, surpassing 2007′s record of $21.2 billion by 10.6 percent.

The figures indicate a continuing shift from traditional to online modes of advertising, and a realisation that online provides a more targeted and measurable approach, which can be important when every advertsing dollar needs to be accounted for.

Search related advertising kept its position as the main player, accounting for almost half of the total spend, with an almost 20% increase over 2007. ‘Direct’ advertsing is also growing.

The largest vertical markets were, as in 2007, retail, financial services, computing and automotive.

The full article can be read  here:
http://www.webpronews.com/topnews/2009/03/30/online-ad-revenue-up-106
Some points that arise from this article:

  • Given that Search showed such a healthy increase in spend, this didn’t seem to be reflected in Adsense publisher’s incomes. This is anecdotal evidence of course, and there are always some publishers/sites who can show good growth but from looking around on the forums it certainly seems that the increase didn’t generally make it through to Adsense publishers’s wallets.
  • It could well be that the increased spend was spread more thinly over the ever increasing amount of Web Real Estate, or inventory. More sites, more advertsing spots, more spend but distributed across an ever increasing pool of publishers.
  • If that is the case, then will there be a ‘saturation point’ where the amount of available Web Inventory becomes just too big? Will the growth in advertising outstrip the growth in available traffic, and returns start to flatten out naturally?
  • If the online spend is being spread ever thinner, that only goes to highlight the importance of providing something different, regular site reviews, updates & changes (unlike this site recently – haha) and effective SEO to make a site stand out.
  • Is it going to be better to run loads of sites to try and catch some of that thinly spread advertsing spend, or concentrate on a few key names that you can really push – and sell off the rest of your stable?
  • Publishers should look more and more into ‘direct’ advertising (something that IM/MMO Bloggers in particular do anyway). Advertisers like PR and content, and the knowledge that traffic will be targetted, so activley pursue direct advertsing/sponsorship opportunities for all your sites.
  • Only park domains when you have to. Parking can be good as a holding option, but you’re getting an even smaller slice of that spend when you do it. Review your parked domains, pick the best potential ones (through keyword analysis, seacrh temrs, parking stats etc) and stick a minsite on them, with a combination of static and RSS/Video type feeds. Throw Adsense, Adbrite or whatever floats your boat on there – you’ll see an increase over parking revenue, the chance of gaining some PR and backlinks, a growth in organic/search traffic – and open up the potential for adding direct advertising or selling the developed site on at a profit.

Just some thoughts.

Nice to be back ;-)

Adsense CTR dropped

March 23rd, 2009 IBabel 2 comments

What’s going on chaps? My Google Adsense CTR has died in the arse.

I know the big G has been making some changes to it’s targetting lately, and introducing the new personalised visitor cookie stuff – but seriously, something bad has happened to the clicks. Early March I was doing just fine, but in the last 10 days or so views have stayed the same but my CTR has fallen through the floor.

Anyone else out there noticed this?

Coming soon: An explanation about my completely shite start to 2009 and why I’ve been so slack.

Categories: Internet Babel, google Tags:

Google Adsense for Parked Domains

December 17th, 2008 IBabel 2 comments

Google are rolling out their Adsense for Domains product, initally in North America but soon to be worldwide.

What is Adsense for Domains?

This allows Adsense publishers to carry Adsense adverts on undeveloped, or parked domains – thus opening up another income stream that can be managed via your Google account.

Publishers will be able to add and manage parked domains through their Adsense account, customising (to an extent) the page appearance. The product will apparently allow you to do some analysis of stats on these domains as well. You then just have to point your Domains to Google’s nameservers and your parked Adsense domain will be up and running.

Parking

Previously, people wishing to get some revenue from undeveloped domains have had to use services such as NameDrive, Sedo, WhyPark etc. to park and monetize their domains – unless they wanted to develop and host mini-sites. These parking companies do, of course, take a percentage of all advertising revenue before it is passed on to you.

Initial Thoughts

  • I believe that the standard restrictions/Terms will apply with regard to domain names/nature.
  • I would imagine that Google may not pass on the ‘full’ Adsense payment when Ads are clicked on a parked domain, but will set the payout somewhere between their normal amount and what you’d get from a Parking company but that’s just a guess.
  • Parking with Google almost certainly won’t make any difference to how (or if) Google indexes your domain either. 
  • It doesn’t look like there will be any opportunity to mark the domain as ‘For Sale’ or to carry any other affiliate ads on the page. 

I’m not in North America so haven’t seen the product first-hand yet, but I’ll be trying a selection of my undeveloped domains on it as soon as I can – and I’ll be comparing results against what I’ve been getting at NameDrive.

What’s the Impact?

The parking companies are bound to be concerned by this development, as Google extends its reach/dominance even further – but until Google offers a range of templates/skins and keyword customisation options that can compete with what you get at NameDrive for example then they won’t be panicking to much just yet.

Time will tell if it’s going to be a good thing for Publishers. If the idea takes off then Google will almost certainly expand the feature range to make it more flexible for Publishers – but I would guess that many people only use Parking services as a ’holding’ area or use them as a test-bed for domain names to see what kind of type-in traffic they get before developing a proper site or mini-site on them.

Categories: Domains, google Tags:

Google Friend Connect Hits The Streets

December 9th, 2008 IBabel 3 comments

A few months back, Google announced that they would be releasing a product that would allow easy integration of Social Networking features within websites and Blogs.

As of 4th December the Beta release of FriendConnect has been unveiled – and Google are accepting signups (to go on a wait-List i believe) for a phased roll out of the product.

What is FriendConnect?

Using OpenID, FriendConnect will allow you to add a range of social interactivity tools onto your website, in just the same way that you ad Adsense or analytics code. This will allow people to sign-up as Members of your site, post messages, reviews and ratings plus expected features such as sharing of apps, videos and pictures. 

Benefits and How-To:

Members wil also be able to invite others to join, so the potential for spreading the word about your site is obvious. There may also be tools to allow easy communication between Friend Connect and other social apps such as Facebook and Hi5.

As with other Google tools, you will need to sign up under your Google account and apply to join the program, but after that it seems that adding the Social features to your site really will be just the same as adsense – i.e. generating and pasting the required code into your site/template.

FriendConnect will of course be competing against a number of established players, but I’d be very surprised if they don’t grab a large chunk of the market with this – and they will almost certainly be adding a host of media and application type features into it.

It certainly opens up new possiblilities for smaller sites and new developers who would like to integrate social/membership type features into their sites.

Here’s a handy little video about Google Friend Connect (from CampFire one):

Of course, Facebook have also launched a Friend Connect tool so let battle commence ;-)

See more at: http://www.google.com/friendconnect

Google Adsense and Analytics Integration

November 17th, 2008 IBabel 2 comments

Well, it wasn’t a hoax and at last Google have finally introduced a level of integration between Adsense and Analytics.

This is still being rolled out at the moment – I don’t have any details on the rollout process so I’ll just have to wait for my invite but it looks to have some useful features for Adsense publishers.

From what I can gather we’ll be able to sign-up to use your existing or a new analytics account to track your Adsense performance.

  • Once integrated, there will be a new ‘Adsense’ section within your analytics account where you’ll be able to see some good metrics at a ‘Page’ and ‘Referrer’ level – and will be able to drill down and analyse those metrics by such things as day, time of day, geographic location etc.
  • As well as providing useful information on tour best performing sites and pages, this will also let you to assess the effects of any Adsense optimisation you do, and allow a basic form of split-testing where you could experiment with different ad formats and locations on similar pages.

It doesn’t look as though you’ll be able to analyse (yet) at an individual ad level (maybe heat maps could help?) – but from first appearances this could be a very handy tool for all you Adsense publishers out there and all from the comfor of your analytics account.

Now i’ve just got to wait for my invite ;-)

Categories: PPC etc, google Tags: ,

Wag the Search tail to drive quality traffic to your site

August 6th, 2008 IBabel 1 comment

Quicker & better search engine functionality and more savvy users continue to drive the trend of using longer keyword search phrases. A growing proportion of search phrases contain 5, 6 or more words

Internet BabelWhat this means is that that people are increasingly searching with more specific service, goods or information related phrases rather than simpler generic terms. For the ‘smaller’ site owner offering a product, service or comparison tool (who isn’t already operating in a very tightly defined ‘niche’) this presents an opportunity to focus on these less competetive key phrases.

It is highly probable that people who type in more specific keywords are more likely to know what they are after – i.e. chances are they are looking for a specific item/service and are more likely to be a prospective buyer/customer rather than someone who is just browsing on generic terms.

Trying to compete with the big players on generic terms is going to see you languishing in the back-end of search results. Let them fight it out over the big phrases, and let the casual browsers go to those sites. Focus some effort on more specific and longer key phrases – the people finding you will be a lot more likely to convert.

A few simple steps to implement this approach:

1) Decide on a candidate list of potential multiple-word search terms that people may use for your site, based on the product/service you sell and the target audience.

2) Use any historical stats you have (e.g. from Analytics, stats or any Affiliate tracking tools you may have access to) to see the kind of search terms that have brought the kind of traffic you want to your site in the past (i.e. conversions).

3) Use the SEOBook Keyword search tool or similar (Google, WordTracker etc) to see search volumes for the phrases you have identified (and potentially throw up more candidates) from past search data.

4) Trim down and customise your list to suit. Keywords/phrases with results in the hundreds/thousands are  likely to be pretty much covered already. Longer phrases at the lower end of the results are potential candidates for your ‘long key phrase’ experiment (as long as they are still relevant to your site and audience). Always bear in mind that even if a phrase yields just a handful of searches, hits on your site using those terms are likely to show a good conversion ratio, so low-volume phrases shouldn’t be ignored.

5) Finalise your list, based on the results from the steps above, and SEO tweak your site/landing page/content accordingly. Where appropriate, use brand & model names and features.

6) Monitor, assess, review and repeat as required….this is important as the exact pattern of longer search phrases will change more frequently than straight generic terms and will be influenced by trends, current events etc. Using highly focussed key phrases to draw traffic to your site requires regular monitoring and tweaking to ensure that you stay relevant to the popular search terms of the moment. Use your agility to stay ahead of the game.

 
You should still SEO for your generic terms and phrases of course – treat these longer phrase tactics as an additional weapon in your SEO/traffic arsenal. Any existing generic type traffic you get will still be there, and although the volume of extra traffic actually driven to your site by the longer terms may seem small these extra visitors are much more likely to be of a high-quality.

It’s true of course that being on Page 1 for something that no-one searches for is of little benefit in itself, but I’m not talking about getting traffic just for the sake of it - what we’re trying to do here is driving quality traffic to your site. Highly specific and targeted multi-word key phrases will allow you to get a higher ranking than in your generic terms AND attract the kind of visitors you want most.