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This BMW Ad Will Blow You Away

August 29th, 2006

Via the Blogaholics, these wind powered moving structures have word of mouth written all over them.

Update: Embedding YouTube videos still isn’t working, so click the link above to feast your eyes on these great ads from South Africa.

The Long Tail of Internet Search

August 28th, 2006

At BarCamp this weekend, I sat in on a half-hour presentation on what the presenter, Jason Billingsley (can’t find his name on his site he dropped by to comment, below) called Seo and the Long Tail (with a nod to Chris Anderson).

His message was pretty simple: You have access to only a few meta-tags and description for SEO, so make them count for you. Then, fill in ALL of the gaps with content, by becoming an expert on the topics that are related to your business. And wherever possible, those that are unique to your business. An example he used was that a search time like “digital camcorder” would be impossible (and extremely expensive) to rank #1 on, but a “long tail” term like “the best digital camcorder for scuba diving” will not only be easier to own, but will convert better than the more broad terms.

Just to explain that really quickly, the concept is simple: If someone searches for “digital camcorders,” it’s difficult to pinpoint exactly what they want, so there is a snowball’s chance in hell that the first site they look at will have what they’re looking for. Whereas a search term like “how do I get people to tell ten friends about my company” is several steps closer to being a perfect match for the searcher. (Heheh)

At the presentation, there was much discussion among the brains there about the science of SEO, but I think his point was to not lose sight of the “art” of search: use words, publish relevant content, and people will come.

A few examples:

My Alabama buddy Mack Collier is #1 for the search termwhy companies should blog.” Lucky devil.

Here’s some terms people used to find me this week:

1. “breakfast social networking toronto” -Huh? Qu’est-ce que c’est?

2. “meet pr guys” -Okay, this one is cool, and proves my point some.

3. “need glasses myspace” -They were searching for a video, and found me. Who knew?

4 “tell friends about products through myspace” -Not a topic I’ve covered, but certainly words I’ve used.

5. “friends of katherine mcphee” -I can’t help but think this one has more to do with my friendship with JD than anything else, (I was a closet Soul Patrol member, after all) which reinforces the importance of links too.

Anyway, I think you begin to get the point. Speak, dear friends, and the world will listen. And I do mean the world. This week, my humble rag saw traffic from Meeandah, Rome, Istanbul, Contern, Theux, Wolfsheim, Alameda, Brittania and one of “the other” Surreys, just to name a few. And I’ve never heard of most of those places. If you’re reading and you hail from any of these wonderful locales (or something equally obscure to a West Coast Canadian), leave a comment and tell us more about your corner of the earth. We’d love to hear from you.

Update: Andre took better notes from Jason’s presentation than I did, and Jason has done a follow-up on his blog as well.

Web 2.0 Logos Made Easy

August 28th, 2006

I’ve seen this little tool making its rounds of the blogosphere, and vowed I would waste a minute or two with it as soon as I had a chance. The Monday morning coffee hasn’t kicked in yet, so instead of thinking, I used this to build a new Web 2.0 logo. Tell Ten Friends already has a slick logo built by Rob, so rather than blaspheme his work, I built this one for YoboMedia, the company my wife and I started last year for our various small media projects:

Generated Image

After all this time, we’re still in beta! I saw Sean had tried it last week, and this week it was Joe Thornley who gave it a whirl, and so I figured it was my turn. If your image needs a makeover and you have a $0 budget, why not use this?

People will think you paid a branding company a small fortune for it!

Estimated time to build: 7 seconds.