May 31st, 2007

100,000,000 Ways To Invest In SEO

There are over 200 signals analyzed by search engines, creating an endless combination of tactics and strategies that can be employed to achieve exposure, rankings, and—by far the most important—conversions.

To successfully deploy these tactics and strategies, however, requires a tremendous investment of time. To say that SEO is a full time job is a vast understatement. One can spend weeks or months dedicated to learning and employing just the more common aspects of SEO. Add to that quality copywriting, link building, usability testing, data analysis, and the myriad of social networking opportunities that seem to spring up over night, and you can see why today’s SEO is not just one, but several, full time jobs!

This is a very good article about how, when and where to invest in SEO.

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May 24th, 2007

TechCrunch: Google Is Buying FeedBurner

$100 Million Payday For Feedburner - This Deal Is Confirmed from TechCrunch has Michael Arrington saying last week’s rumors of a Google purchase of FeedBurner are true:

Feedburner is in the closing stages of being acquired by Google for around $100 million. The deal is all cash and mostly upfront, according to our source, although the founders will be locked in for a couple of years. The information we have is that the deal is now under a binding term sheet and will close in 2-3 weeks, and there is nothing that can really derail it at this point

So still nothing official, but TechCrunch has a pretty good track record on these things.

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May 17th, 2007

Mission as strategy – connecting the dots at Yahoo!

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Last year, the executive team at Yahoo! made the decision to re-organize the company with one of the central themes being the evolution of a culture from one largely organized around products, to one that is far more organized around our customers. The goal behind the re-org was to help us rationalize and consolidate duplicative products, create greater focus on key priorities, clarify strategic direction, and ultimately develop an environment where we could accelerate the speed and quality of our decision-making. We also wanted to do a better job creating value for our customers, from delighting our consumers with great product experiences to delighting advertisers and publishers by maximizing their ROI when using our products and services.

As part of the realignment, we formed the Yahoo! Network Division, which includes the majority of Yahoo!’s consumer-facing products — our Communications products such as Mail and Messenger; our Community and Social Media properties including Groups, Flickr and Bix; our Search products including Web Search and Answers; the Media properties comprising our News & Information and Entertainment business units; and our Front Doors including the Yahoo.com home page and My Yahoo!.

So, what’s the rationale behind putting all of these assets under one roof? The answer to that question lies no further than our mission statement: “To connect people to their passions, communities, and the world’s knowledge.”

In this statement, we not only define our sense of purpose as a company, but also a strategic framework for the Network Division as well. Let me explain further by breaking the mission statement down into its component pieces (and bear with me…this is a bit longer than our average blog post, but it’s an important area of discussion and one we thought was worth the additional detail):

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May 10th, 2007

Google Map & Google Earth Get Official Blog

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Finally, Google Maps and Google Earth get their own official blog: Google LatLong, which has just gone up. Given the amount of activity going on with both services, it’s long overdue. Welcome! I’ve added to my list of reading, along with the excellent unofficial blogs of Google Earth Blog, Google Maps Mania and Ogle Earth. Check them all out!

Via

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May 2nd, 2007

Differences Between Yahoo Search Marketing & Google AdWords

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You’re probably tired of reading about cultural differences between the two search marketing leaders, Google and Yahoo. Does Semel have better hair than Sergey? Does Yahoo really hire people based on softball prowess?

If you’re actually using the search marketing platforms, or for that matter, interacting with Googlers or Yahoos to accomplish a marketing-related task, none of this matters. Let’s run down some of the most impactful real-world differences between the two search marketing platforms, in the wake of Yahoo’s Panama rollout and some recent Google AdWords updates.

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