SEW Experts: Writing Sales Copy for Conversions
One of the most common components you can test is sales copy. In today's By the Numbers column, "Writing Sales Copy for Conversions," Tim Ash explains that changing your approach to writing can often lead to a double-digit increase in conversion rates.
Posted by Kevin Newcomb on January 7, 12:00 AM | Permalink | Comments (0)
Related: Analytics & ROI: Landing Page Optimization, SEW Experts
SEW Experts: Forget Tibet; Free the Content
In China, search engines are responsible for the content to which they provide links. This means anytime the Chinese government decides that a certain type of content isn't worthy of its people, they can tell search engines not to list them. In today's Searching for Meaning column, "Forget Tibet; Free the Content," Kevin Ryan discusses the Chinese government's ongoing efforts to censor the Internet.
Posted by Kevin Newcomb on January 7, 12:00 AM | Permalink | Comments (0)
Related: Legal: Censorship, SEW Experts
hakia Updates Search Box
hakia has updated their Search Box, which is a site search feature you can place on your website. The biggest change is the ability to search multiple domains. Here's a mockup, via the hakia blog:

Another update is the highlighting of the semantic relevant words in the results:

Search box is available for free, up to 30,000 searches per day.
Related Reading:
hakia Launches Personalized Search Feature
Meet the New hakia
hakia Calls for Librarians to Contribute Credible Web Sources
Posted by Nathania Johnson on January 6, 12:12 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)
Related: Other Engines
Judge Rejects Universal Music's Arguments in Another Veoh Copyright Case
You might remember that online video site Veoh recently had a copyright lawsuit thrown out by a judge. That lawsuit was brought by adult entertainment company IO Group.
But Veoh has other lawsuits it's facing, one of them brought by Universal Music Group. Techdirt reports that one of the main arguments being made by Universal was that Veoh didn't have DMCA safe harbor protection because it changed the format of the video and made smaller chunks than the original.
The judge in the case has now said Universal's argument doesn't fly. The lawsuit isn't over yet, but it's another good sign for Veoh and online video in general.
Related Reading:
Big Music Companies in Negotiations to Form Hulu-Like Site
Viacom and NBC Take Note: Universal Music (and Others) are Making Tens of Million$ on YouTube
Warner Music Not as Thrilled As Universal, Says Goodbye to YouTube
Posted by Nathania Johnson on January 6, 11:25 AM | Permalink | Comments (0)
Related: Social Media
Online Video Views for November 2008 Up 34% Year Over Year
comScore has released the stats for online video viewing in the United States for November 2008. Overall, the number of videos viewed was up 34% from November 2007.

YouTube-fueled Google sites saw almost the same number of visitors as they did in October, which saw 100 million unique visitors. This time, it was 98 million.

Other interesting tidbits:
- 77 percent of the total U.S. Internet audience viewed online video.
- The average online video viewer watched 273 minutes of video.
- 97 million viewers watched 5.1 billion videos on YouTube.com (52.3 videos per viewer).
- 52.5 million viewers watched 371 million videos on MySpace.com (7.1 videos per viewer).
- The duration of the average online video was 3.1 minutes.
- The duration of the average online video viewed at Hulu was 11.9 minutes, higher than any other video property in the top ten.
Posted by Nathania Johnson on January 6, 10:46 AM | Permalink | Comments (0)
Related: Stats: comScore
Yahoo Gives Itself Permission to Change Your Search Marketing Campaigns
If you conduct search advertising through Yahoo, you just got a brand spanking new addition to your search marketing team: Yahoo.
Through an update to their terms and conditions, Yahoo gives itself permission to hijack your search marketing campaigns. Check out the new language:
Sponsored Search 3. OPTIMIZATION. In the U.S. only, for those advertisers not bound by an Insertion Order, we may help you optimize your account(s). Accordingly, you expressly agree that we may also: (i) create ads, (ii) add and/or remove keywords, and/or (iii) optimize your account(s). We will notify you via email of such changes made to your account(s), and can also include a spreadsheet of such changes upon your written request. If you would like any of such changes reversed, please reply to such email within 14 days of the change(s), and we will make commercially reasonable efforts to reverse the change(s) you specifically identify. Notwithstanding the foregoing, you remain responsible for all changes made to your account(s), including all click charges incurred prior to any reversions being made. It is your responsibility to monitor your account(s) and to ensure that your account settings are consistent with your business objectives.
Actually, Yahoo began invading its customers' personal space about a month ago. Al Scillitani was alarmed when he got an email from Yahoo saying they had made changes to his account - after the fact.
Now, it's just official.
This is kind of like a fast food restaurant going into your burger after you've take a bite and removing or adding pickles, ketchup and cheese. Or your cable company going into your DVR and choosing which programs to record.
Have you received the new Terms and Conditions? Has Yahoo made changes to your account? Let us know in the comments!
Related Reading:
Yahoo Snags Search Ad Marketshare Gain at Google's Expense
Yahoo's Conversion Tips: Optimize, Navigate and Track
Yahoo Releases Three Updates to Traffic Quality Center
Posted by Nathania Johnson on January 6, 9:01 AM | Permalink | Comments (8)
Related: Yahoo
SEW Experts: There's No Shortcut to Good SEO...Or Is There?
If search engines want all SEOs to operate in an ethical manner, they should show us that they're penalizing the Web sites that abuse their guidelines, and reward those who follow their guidelines. In today's organic search engine optimization column, "There's No Shortcut to Good SEO...Or Is There?," Mark Jackson explains that anything less makes it hard to justify following the rules.
Posted by Kevin Newcomb on January 6, 12:00 AM | Permalink | Comments (1)
Related: Link Building: Paid Links, SEO: Best Practices, SEW Experts
SEW Experts: E-mail Marketing Tips for Small Business
Any well-rounded Internet marketing campaign must include a strong e-mail marketing campaign. In today's small business search engine marketing column, "E-mail Marketing Tips for Small Business," Carrie Hill shows how search plays a role when you use PPC or organic search to grow your subscriber list.
Posted by Kevin Newcomb on January 6, 12:00 AM | Permalink | Comments (1)
Related: SEM Tips: Small Business SEM, SEW Experts
Track Google Rankings With Google Analytics
Guest blogger for Yoast Andre Scholten has come up with what I think is the best filter ever created for Google Analytics. He has given us a way to track keyword rankings!
The filter is so good it even has options of how deep to go, a choice between word rank by number or page number. Click now - rush to this one - everyone has to read this.
Bravo mate - this goes down as the Best Damn Google Analytics Filter Ever. Mr De Valk - a truly great guest find.
UPDATE: Was linking to wrong page but corrected.
Posted by Frank Watson on January 5, 10:55 PM | Permalink | Comments (1)
Related: Google: Analytics, Google: Web Search Listing Tips
Call Secret Service Someone Hacked Obama's Twitter Account
Hackers usually are smart, but can be really, really stupid. The person who hacked Twitter - not the Direct Message phishing expedition that started over the weekend - could have picked pretty much anyone else on the planet and be less concerned of being tracked down.
This person hacked President-elect Obama's Twitter account! There has to be Secret Service people - like the Diane Laine character in Untraceable - crawling through the internet tracking him/her down. That is if the person has not been quietly killed already (for my conspiracy theorist readers).
Barack's account was one of 33 hacked, according to the Twitter blog.
"This morning we discovered 33 Twitter accounts had been "hacked" including prominent Twitter-ers like Rick Sanchez and Barack Obama (who has not been Twittering since becoming the president elect due to transition issues). We immediately locked down the accounts and investigated the issue. Rick, Barack, and others are now back in control of their accounts," the site stated.
If the Secret Service kill the person during the arrest, I have a nomination for the Darwin Awards.
Posted by Frank Watson on January 5, 8:19 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)
Related: Social Media
The 5 Web Resources You Need to Find a Job in Search
It's a New Year, but we've got that same old economy from 2008. If you find yourself looking for a job in search, these five resources should be the foundation of your efforts:
- Indeed.com - Culls results from a variety of jobs sites as well as job listings from company web sites. Searching here keeps you from having to go individually to a variety of sites. You can pull an RSS feed of your job search into your news reader, making your search process even faster. You'll find results from:
- SEMPO
- Monster
- HotJobs (owned by Yahoo)
- CareerBuilder
- Dice
- TalentZoo
- Twitter Let your followers know you're looking for a job. I once did and had three leads in 24 hours. I got offers from all three. The Twitter community is generally a very compassionate bunch, raising money for good causes. Helping people find jobs is something I think we'll see a lot of in 2009 - 2010.
- LinkedIn Not only does LinkedIn have its own job listings, but here you can many times find the people who are doing the hiring or at least work in Human Resources at the company you're interested in. Use your network to get introduced and create connections.
- Craig's List Answering an ad for a Search Marketing Copywriter on Craig's List is how I got my start in search. Well, that and the great Marketing Don taking a chance on me.
- Search Engine Watch Board - Rounding out the list is a completely shameless plug for our very own jobs board.
What resources do YOU recommend? Leave a comment and let us know!
Related Reading:
The Purple People Collective: Freelance and Job Listings for Laid-Off Yahoos
Yahoo, Zillow to Cut Jobs
Recruiting SEM Employees: Job Boards, Headhunters & Account Planning Boot Camp
SEMPO Institute to Develop Career Opportunities for Young Chicagoans
Posted by Nathania Johnson on January 5, 10:19 AM | Permalink | Comments (3)
Related: SEM Industry
Google, Microsoft Higher Ups Dish Out the Dough for Obama Inauguration
Execs from Google and Microsoft are ponying up big time for President-elect Barack Obama's big day. On January 20, the former junior Senator from Illinois will become the 44th President of the United States.
Who from search is giving big for the shindig?
From Google:
- Eric Schmidt (CEO) $25,000.00
- Larry Page (Co-founder) $25,000.00
- Marissa Mayer (Vice President, Search Products & User Experience) $25,000.00
- Richard Costolo (former Feedburner CEO) $25,000.00
- Chad Hurley (YouTube co-founder) $25,000.00
- David Drummond (Senior Vice President, Corporate Development and Chief Legal Officer) $25,000.00
From Microsoft:
- Steven Ballmer (CEO) $50,000.00
- Bradford Smith (Senior Vice President, General Counsel, Corporate Secretary, Legal & Corporate Affairs) $25,000.00
- Craig Mundie (Chief Research and Strategy Officer) $25,000.00
- Steven VanRoekel (Senior Director, Windows Server Solutions Group, Microsoft) $50,000.00
So far from Yahoo, one lone donation, from an attorney:
- Laura Covington $10,000.00
For a full list of donors, click here.
via SFGate
Related Reading:
Vote Obama/Google in '08?
Google CEO Schmidt Will Not Be Obama's CTO
Obama's Link Strategy Fuels Election Victory
Obama is Winning the Internet War
Posted by Nathania Johnson on January 5, 9:28 AM | Permalink | Comments (0)
Related: Noteworthy
China to Crack Down on Search Engines
Bloomberg is reporting that China plans to crack down on search engines, among other sites they deem harmful. This certainly wouldn't be the first time.
The reason this time is concerns over pornography. Of course, search engines don't host pornography on their sites, they simply provide links to searchers. If China feels it has a pornography problem, the origination of that problem begins with the searcher, not the engine.
Web sites and search engines that ignore their new found regulations will face penalties and possible closure.
Related Reading:
Chinese Internet Portal Sina Buys Focus Media for $1 Billion
Baidu Responds to Accusations of Questionable Practices
Baidu Launches C2C Site, Youa.com
China's Sohu.com Posts 600% Jump in Profit
1.8 Billion Internet Users by 2012, China to Overtake US Internet Use by 2011
Posted by Nathania Johnson on January 5, 9:10 AM | Permalink | Comments (2)
Related: Legal & Policy




