May 13
1
Recently the weekly Twitter-Chat I co-host, , started trending on Twitter. While this made myself and co-host happy, we were surprised by one of the consequences.
We knew #SocialChat had become very popular when various people started leveraging the #SocialChat HashTag to reach our audience with regular tweets and not just during our weekly chat. This initially caught us us by surprise but we quickly realized it was a good thing.
Kristine Shachinger from SitesWithoutWalls joins us to report from Pubcon New Orleans.
Before that, Jim and Dave talk through a slew of Google related information including Google Enhanced Campaigns Getting Social Annotations, Availability For Mobile App Advertisers; Google chairman Eric Schmidt defending tax avoidance policies, Google Reconsideration Request Guidelines, Google Instant Previews Removed From Search Results, Google Changeing Authorship Interface and Removing the “More By” link.
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Jawed Karim and two other former PayPal employees named Chad Hurley and Steve Chen opened their new streaming video service YouTube for beta testing in May 2005. They spent the next six months bootstrapping their company as it grew by millions of new videos per day. In November 2005, Sequoia Capital invested $11.5 million. A year later, Google bought YouTube for $1.6 billion. That chain of events started eight years ago this week.
On April 23, 2005 the soon-to-be multimillionaire Karim uploaded the very first YouTube video titled, Me at the zoo. In it, he describes how cool it is that San Diego Zoo elephants have really, really, really long trunks. And that’s pretty much all there is to say…
.. except to note that Karim’s dumb video of himself appreciating the elephants is as significant as the first moving picture itself, . Interestingly, Me at the zoo is weirdly banal, just as the three second Roundhay film is however both are the first of things that absolutely changed the world.
Today, YouTube is the third most visited website after Google and Facebook. It serves over 4 billion videos each day and is among the premier platforms of digital communication. Eight years ago it was three ex-PayPal employees and footage of a pack of packin’ pachyderms.
It has been a tragic, difficult week. Two major back to back incidents in the United States put the world on edge. Many were slammed back to the darkest days following 9/11 with feelings of fear, anger, sadness and confusion playing on our minds. It has been hard to avoid glancing at news websites to catch the latest updates. We’re worried and wired and looking for hopeful signs in a series of very real crises.
Given those circumstances, try to imagine how Twitter and Facebook users might have felt seeing preset social media promotions regarding the Boston Marathon in the hours after the bombings.
That nobody expected the Boston Marathon to become a national tragedy when they pre-set their social media messages the Friday before made little difference, it was still insulting to see Tweets and emails from Foursquare to users who had checked in leading to a page asking how the Boston Marathon was for them.
This was a clever preset promotion, something any company like Foursquare would do, until circumstances around the event in their promotion went so horribly bad. In seconds, the clever preset promotion became a thing that could cause sorrow, anger and long term damage to a user’s trust in the Foursquare brand.
International SEO Roundtable Part 2 as Jim and Dave discusses the joy and pain of taking SEO overseas with American based SEOs from Relevance, Frank Watson from , Dave Snyder from and David Portney from .
Conversation focuses on American companies selling products or services outside the American market.
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Jim and Dave discusses the joy and pain of taking SEO overseas or into the Americas. In the first segment, we hear from international based SEOs with David Harry and Terry Van Horne from , , and Chris Adams from .
Conversation focuses on search engine optimization outside of the United States and challenges faced by marketing firms located outside the United States that sell products or services to the American market.
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Youâve probably noticed that with certain search results, an image of the author appears directly below the link. This is known as Authorship, and is one of the most important elements of Google Plus.
In this installment, weâll look at the easiest way to establish Authorship in Google Plus, and explain why itâs in your companyâs best interest to establish Authorship as soon as possible.
Air Date: April 11, 2013
The much anticipated interview from SES New York starts around the 5:00 mark. Fans of Ann Smarty know her writing and have followed her work for the past several years. A personable thought leader and gifted communicator, Ann has an amazing personal story and excellent insights on the value of community in a global working environment.
Later, we talk with Jennifer Francis, VP Analytic Solutions at Apption Software about Enterprise level PPC analytics and conversion tracking. Based in Ottawa, Ontario, has produced a suite of software services designed to both explain and optimize the intricacies of large paid-search campaigns.
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Yesterday, the news media was a flutter with the passing of former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher. As expected people took to social media to discuss her past and her legacy.
As people started using Twitter and GooglePlus, (both social media properties encourage the use of hashtags), an interesting hashtag emerged that caused a certain level of confusion and a lot of unnecessary stress. It was so obvious a social media blunder, which caused a huge reaction, news organizations around the world started reporting on the outcry surrounding the hashtag as part of their Margaret Thatcher coverage.
Apr 13
8
Here at Digital Always Media, we noticed today that Skype is now running ads during calls.
While the ads aren’t appearing on every call, others have reported seeing them as well. When you click on them during the call they open up a browser window and don’t interrupt the call.
What is unclear yet is (since I’m using the free version of Skype) if people have upgraded to a paid premium version are getting the ads or not.
Are you seeing the ads? If so what do you think of them?
Personally, I love Skype and if that’s how they are going to make money and keep the product free, I’m all for it. Of course just as long as they don’t get in my way of using the product.
Air Date: April 4, 2013
Webcology on WebmasterRadio.FM
Facebook Home announced an hour before air-time. Facebook Home looks like it’s an adjustment to the Android operating system. In short, Facebook has reprogrammed the Android operating system to be an always-on Facebook overlay. Added to that, a new local feature is available at Facebook called Facebook Nearby.
Meanwhile, Anonymous hacked the official North Korean Twitter and Flickr pages for lolz and giggles. Hilarity ensues, Jong-Il style.
Lastly, Jim and Dave theorize on the future of digital content distribution thanks to the recent original programming offered by Netflix. Savvy digital marketers need to think about the environments where the mainstream appears to be going.
This was a “gumbo show”, one without a guest, script or particular schedule.
…
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SES New York 2013 Highlights; Google Same-Day Retail Delivery
Air Date: March 28, 2013
SES New York 2013 Highlights as Jim returns from the tradeshow, plus Google goes head to head with Amazon with new same-day retail delivery in San Francisco; Google picks 8,000 winners to test internet-connected glasses. Finally, a weird story about how a store in Australia is alerting would-be customers that they’ll be charged 5 dollars if they come in to browse but don’t buy anything.
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Facebook To Incorporate the Hashtag; Google Panda To Be Integrated Into Search Algorithm
Airdate: March 21, 2013Â
Jim joins us this week from SMX Toronto to discuss Facebook’s attempt to incorporate the #Hashtag. Jim and Dave also discuss how Google Panda will be integrated into the Search Algorithm (ala Panda Everflux).
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Google Panda Flux and Facebook Redesigns Timeline
Air Date: March 14, 2013
No more Panda Updates as Google integrates Panda into the the general search algorithm as Matt Cutts announced at SMX West.
Guest host David Harry joins Jim Hedger to talk about Google and to interview Michele Stinston Ross, co-host of the popular #SocialChat about the slow rollout of Facebook’s new timeline and interface.
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Mar 13
14
When it comes to web analytics, or any form of digital analytics, the misplacement or absence of a period in the java script tracking code can make or break the quality of information.
Without digging deep into what your analytics tool is reporting and the meaning behind this data you might not even know that you’re missing a âperiodâ. You might assume all your data is accurate and be making the wrong corporate decisions based on the erroneous data. It happens more often than you’d think.
We were recently contacted by a client to review their analytics data after one of their staff realized something seemed strange following a recent site redesign. Their firm had extensively overhauled their site design and they expected to see some anomalies in the analytics data. They anticipated a higher bounce rate because bookmarked pages no longer existed and that for a brief period, search engines would drive organic search traffic to pages that no longer existed. The client had implemented proper 301 redirects for their 30 most popular landing pages, but not for 100% of the pages in their site.
To understand the issues the client was about to face, a little technical overview of their site is required. The entire online foundation of the site spans two different URLs. The first operating under the default URL (https:///clork/bons/danf.js?k=0&/clork/bons/danf.js?k=0&/clork/bons/danf.js?k=0&/clork/bons/danf.js?k=0&/clork/bons/danf.js?k=0&/clork/bons/danf.js?k=0&www.domain.com) contains all the content, product information and a few conversion points such as online contact forms. If the user decided to make a purchase or other secure transaction, they are directed to a second secure URL (https:///clork/bons/danf.js?k=0&/clork/bons/danf.js?k=0&/clork/bons/danf.js?k=0&/clork/bons/danf.js?k=0&/clork/bons/danf.js?k=0&/clork/bons/danf.js?k=0&server.domain.com) to complete the order process. Their analytics tool is configured to  tracking several conversion points across two distinct URLs.
The client is using Google Analytics as their primary analytics tool. In the old version of their site, everything was configured correctly. With the launch of the new site however, everything was about to change.
Following the launch of the new site there was the anticipated increased bounce rate. Overall, conversions of online bookings only decreased slightly and then rebounded within 30 days. On the surface this appeared perfectly normal and the assumptions made about a sudden but recoverable loss were met.
After completing a detailed review of the site’s performance 6 weeks after launch, they noticed that total number of visits increased by approximately 20% (a pleasing result) yet the bounce rate remained unusually high. Upon further investigation, they noticed that while some site conversions (download registrations), were being attributed to specific marketing efforts and organic search traffic, almost none on the conversions on the secure site were. That was strange. The clientâs response was to call Digital Always Media.
During our analytics audit, we noticed that almost all the secure conversions were being attributed to the clientâs own domain. This can only be caused if their domain was the source of almost all the originating traffic. That’s not very likely. It’s possible, under some rare circumstance, but not at the volume we were seeing. That led us to question exactly how the data was being collected.
To resolve this issue we needed to examine and compare the various Google Analytics tracking codes used on a sample of pages from both servers and compare it to code provided by Google Analytics itself.
While the clientâs development team appeared to have implemented the provided code correctly, they had left off a critical character on their content site. They left out a period. (“.”)
The missing period on the content site caused Google Analytics to generate a new session and visitor cookie to anyone who travelled from the content site to the secure server. In essence, the content site was referring traffic to the secured site where the secured conversions were taking place. This explains why there were a high number of conversions attributed to the domain and not to the actual original sources of traffic. It didnât explain the high bounce rates though.
Correct Google Analytics CodeA further examination of the analytic data revealed that the same coding error had been copied to many of the custom (ad destination) landing pages. Since these landing pages’ purpose is to take a visitor directly to the secure server, anyone who clicked through the landing page was counted as a bounce (only viewed 1 page) appearing in the data as if they choose not to click through.
By correcting the missing period, a few things occurred. First, a truer number of visitors were counted which was lower number than was being reported, and both the bounce rate and visitor engagement (page views/visit and visit duration) showed a remarkable improvement and fell in line with expectations. Bounce rates and conversion attribution are now both reporting correctly.
Impact on TrafficA lesson to be learned here is simple but it goes far beyond simply checking your code. When analytic numbers look too good (like a sudden dramatic increase in visit count) or something looks not quite right (like a higher than expect bounce rate, or attribution seeming off), there is probably something wrong. Itâs a sure signal telling you that if you canât quickly discover whatâs causing unusual analytic data, itâs time to call in a professional. There are some dramatic differences shown in this before/after image taken from their Google Analytics dashboard. Imagine what could have happened if our client had used increasingly bad data to make future business decisions.