Posts tagged increasing

Madd Web SEO Promotes Earth Day By Increasing Internet Marketing Awareness – Online PR News (press release)

Madd Web SEO Promotes Earth Day By Increasing Internet Marketing Awareness
Online PR News (press release)
Madd Web SEO promotes Earth Day by increasing awareness on internet marketing vs. paper marketing. Online PR News – 26-April-2011 –By switching from paper marketing to Internet marketing, businesses can cut their marketing costs by up to 75%.
SEO Consulting Services India provides quality work at affordable pricesIndiaCompanyNews (press release)

all 2 news articles »

View full post on SEO – Google News

The State of the Platform and its Increasing Diversity

Cloud platform As RedMonk‘s Stephen O’Grady points out, platform-as-a-service wasn’t a hot topic for most of 2010. But interest has exploded since Salesforce.com purchased Heroku and Red Hat purchased Makara. Last week Amazon Web Services launched its Elastic Beanstalk PaaS, week before last PHPFog raised $1.8 million and we’ve been seeing Node.js hosts cropping up steadily for the past few weeks.

We predicted last year that PaaS would emerge as the hottest area of cloud computing. Today we’ll take a look at the state of PaaS. If you’re still confused about the difference between IaaS, PaaS and SaaS check out CloudAve’s guide to the terminology.

Sponsor

The Big List of PaaS Providers

We were going to make a list of all the “Heroku for X” type PaaS providers we could find. Then we found Roch Delsalle’s big list. It’s the most comprehensive list we’ve seen, and Delsalle has been good about updating it with newcomers.

Delsalle lists PaaS providers for the following platforms:

  • Ruby
  • Python
  • PHP
  • Drupal
  • .NET
  • Java
  • Node.js
  • RingoJS

The 3 Types of PaaS

For an interesting take on the different approaches to PaaS, check out Subraya Mallya’s article “Multiple Personalities of Platform-as-a-Service.” Mallya looks at the different types of PaaS:

  • Application Development Platforms
  • Application Management Platforms
  • Data Processing Platforms

Mallya also covers what capabilities you should look for in each type of PaaS.

What Developers Look for in PaaS

RedMonk’s Michael Coté takes a look at how developers decide on a PaaS. Coté notes that for many developers, the financial opportunities presented by proprietary platforms with established user bases (for example, Force.com) will often trump fears of vendor lock-in. However, those building full applications with an eye to the future tend to prefer open platforms like Heroku. Coté also looks into why companies, particularly middleware vendors, are getting into the PaaS business.

The Future: Certification

Last week we made the case for the need for third-party certification to ensure customers that PaaS providers follow best practices. In 2009, Alan Wilensky wrote a four part series examining the case for cloud provider certifications, including some ideas for what to include.

For a further look at PaaS and the future of the cloud, please see our report The Future of the Cloud: Cloud Platform APIs are the Business of Cloud Computing.

Photo by LukeGordon1

Discuss



View full post on ReadWriteWeb

Year-End Stats from MIT Point to Increasing Popularity of Open Educational Resources

mitopencourseware150.jpgLike many sites and services, MIT OpenCourseWare has released some of its user statistics from 2010. An initiative of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, MIT OpenCourseWare (MIT OCW) provides open access to the core academic content – syllabi, lecture notes, problem sets and solutions, exams, reading lists, and video lectures – from over 2300 MIT courses, almost the entire curriculum of the school.

The figures show strong growth for what is one of the world’s premier open educational resources, with an increase in visits and visitors between 2009 and 2010.

Posted by MIT OpenCourseWare’s Steve Carson, here are some of the statistics from MIT OCW’s 2010:

Sponsor

  • 17.5 million visits
  • 9.6 million visitors
  • 1.82 visits per visitor
  • 98.3 million page views (a little lower than 2009)
  • 5.63 page views per visit
  • 1.9 million zip files downloaded
  • 11.8 million files downloaded from iTunes U
  • 7.3 million videos viewed on YouTube
  • 275,000 visits from the MIT community
  • 446,000 visits referred by StumbleUpon, 172,000 by Reddit, 112,000 by Wikipedia, 95,000 by YouTube, and 78,000 by Facebook
  • 38% of visits used Firefox, 33% used IE, 15% used Chrome, and 10% used Safari

Notable among these figures are users’ preferences for content delivery via iTunes U and YouTube, as opposed to downloading a zip file containing a course package. Also interesting: visitors from the MIT community are only 1% of those who use the service, successfully fulfilling the program’s mission of “open sharing of MIT teaching materials with educators, students, and self-learners around the world.”

mitocw_where.jpg

Erroneous reports last year suggested that MIT OCW was investigating a paywall for its courses, but as we reported in October, that’s not in the works. And as part of building a sustainable opencourseware ecosystem, MIT OCW has teamed up with the social learning network OpenStudy in order to provide study groups for those working their way through OCW curriculum.

Discuss



View full post on ReadWriteWeb

Search Market Growth Shows Increasing Breadth of SEO Uptake Says Punch – Last Click News

Search Market Growth Shows Increasing Breadth of SEO Uptake Says Punch
Last Click News
due to search marketing becoming more prevalent across a wider spectrum of industries according to PR, social media and SEO agency Punch Communications.

View full post on SEO – Google News

Search Market Growth Shows Increasing Breadth of SEO Uptake Says Punch – Marketwire (press release)


Brisbane Times
Search Market Growth Shows Increasing Breadth of SEO Uptake Says Punch
Marketwire (press release)
due to search marketing becoming more prevalent across a wider spectrum of industries according to PR, social media and SEO agency Punch Communications.
SEO Predictions for 2011Hit Search
Localisation and Good Copywriting Keys to Online Marketing in 2011Online Media Direct Ltd (blog)
Is Google Doing It's Part to Rid Twitter of Spam Bots?B2C Marketing Insider

all 55 news articles »

View full post on SEO – Google News

The Key To Increasing Inquiries, Leads, Sales…

If you want to increase __________________ <inquiries, opt-ins, leads, sales etc> by ______% <5, 10, 30, 50, even 100%> then you need to pay close attention to this post.

There is one thing most site owners could do to increase results that they aren’t doing.    What is that one thing?  Split testing!

So, testing – that’s nothing new.  What’s the big deal?  The big deal is that most people overlook this and miss the opportunity to significantly improve their response rate.

Let’s look at an example: You run a PPC campaign on Google AdWords and you have one ad running. Let’s say you sell shoes, and here is the ad you were running.

Designer Shoes are Affordable

Women’s Designer Shoes

Big names, great prices

Now, let’s say your click through rate (number of people that click on your ad) is 4.2%.  You are happy, because that’s better than you’ve ever done before. What most people do is keep running with that ad.  What we want you to remember to do is Split Test.

All that means is create a second version of your ad, to compete against your first version and see which one wins.  So, now look at version 2:

Designer Shoes are Affordable

Lady’s Designer Shoes

Big names, great prices

Do you see the difference?  Only one word (more about that in a minute).  In the first ad we have Women’s Designer Shoes and in the second ad we have Lady’s Designer Shoes.

So, let’s look at the results.

Ad 1 – 4.2 click through rate

Ad 2 – 5.1 click through rate!

You just increased your response rate by 21.4%!  No extra costs, simply changing one word and getting an improved response.

Why did more people click on Lady’s than Women’s?  We don’t know, we may never know, but we also don’t care (well that’s not entirely true, if you can understand the reason why something performed better, you could learn from that for your next round of tests but for now, let’s just say the reason doesn’t matter….all we know is have now improved our click through rate!)

Now are we done?  Not even close.  Now we take Ad 2, and create another ad to split test against Ad 2.  You can constantly test 2 ads against each other and incrementally increase your response rates.

What can you test?  Anything and everything!  Test your ads, test headlines on your site, test your pricing, test colors.  Test, test, test.

There’s so much more about testing that I could go into, but we’ll have to save that for another

time.  For now, just remember these 2 important points…


1. Test EVERYTHING!

2. Only make one change in each test for accurate results.  If you were to change the headline and the middle text on Ad 2, you wouldn’t know which was the cause of the higher response.  So, take one thing at a time and test, test, test. (that is assuming you are doing A/B split tests – if you do multivariate testing you can test more than one thing but we’ll leave that for another day)

Here are a few other testing case studies:

  • Girls versus Women in a dating ad increased response by 30%
  • “Get Top Google Rankings” as a headline increased my leads (opt-ins) by 13% over “Get Top Rankings”
  • A smaller header graphic on my landing page got me 7% more leads from that page than the larger version of the same header graphic.

You can see the power, if you keep testing and improving your results, you are going to like your new bottom line.

Does every test produce huge results?  No!  But if you keep testing, then you’ll find over time the incremental improvements add up.

The bigger and more drastic the thing you test the more likely you’ll see a bigger improvement.  But it’s also more likely the test could bomb (and real marketers love it when tests bomb, it gives them data for going forward).  So make sure you monitor your test results – if you see something bombing you can halt it and revert back to the control only (the original version) until you come up with your next test.

So hopefully you understand the power of testing.  Now let’s talk about how you go about it.

Start by brainstorming a list of things to test (it could literally be anything – here are just a few ideas).

  • Background color
  • Header graphic versus no header graphic
  • Large header graphic versus small header graphic
  • Price
  • Headline text
  • Opt-in box graphics
  • Picture of a man versus a woman
  • Anything else you can imagine

Even font color and font face have impacted my results!

Once you know where you are going to start, build 2 versions of your page, the original or control being your page as it exists now and the B version will have the one thing you are split testing.  Once you are done, upload both pages to your server (if you can’t work within HTML or a site tool, have your webmaster do this step for you)

I suggest you use Google’s free testing tool (it allows multivariate testing as well as A/B split testing).  It’s a great tool, it’s free and it’s easy to use.  You can create an account here: www.google.com/websiteoptimizer

Once you login you click to start a new experiment.

Give the experiment a name – name it something meaningful and I also find it helpful to use the date, so I may call one test “AdB-Headline-November17” – AdB is the source of traffic for this page, Headline is what I am testing and the date is the date I started the test.

Then you paste in the URL for the control (remember this is your original page)

Next you paste in the URL for the test page.

Lastly you page in your “conversion page” – this is the page people will land on after they take the action you wanted them to on the above page (so it may be a thanks for ordering, or a thanks for opting-in page).

The Google tool will verify that the pages are live on line and then you click to the next step.  Here you tell the tool if you want to add the java script code that is needed to the page yourself or if you want your webmaster to do it for you.  If you choose to it, it will provide the code and the instructions.  If you want your webmaster to do it, Google will put all the data on to a page and give you a link to send to your webmaster to do.  You can check the status from within Website Optimizer and see when it’s been added to the pages.

You can then validate the pages to be sure that the code is added correctly to the site.

Then you click to start the experiment.

As I mentioned, you should monitor the results.  The tool will analyze the data and tell you when there is a winner.  And then you can turn that experiment off and start a new one.  You should always be testing the latest winner against a new idea and always be improving your results.

You can split test pages on your site, you can split test ads, email subject lines, landing pages for specific ad campaigns and more.

Get testing and be sure to share your results and feedback below!  We can all learn from people’s tests.

Check out the SEO Tools guide at Search Engine Journal.

The Key To Increasing Inquiries, Leads, Sales…



View full post on Search Engine Journal

Increasing SEO Competition and Change: Survival Not Mandatory – Search Engine Journal


Search Engine Journal
Increasing SEO Competition and Change: Survival Not Mandatory
Search Engine Journal
Is SEO changing, though? Think about it: Since people first started using the Web to advertise their business, they've been hiring other people to figure
SEO Analyzer Announces Affordable SEO Services for Business OwnersPRLog.Org (press release)
SEO for marketing: How to tap into the power of searchSilicon.com

all 3 news articles »

View full post on SEO – Google News

Increasing SEO Competition and Change: Survival Not Mandatory

Increasing Use of Search Engine Optimization Among Site Owners – PowerHomeBiz.com (press release)


Last Click News
Increasing Use of Search Engine Optimization Among Site Owners
PowerHomeBiz.com (press release)
This total process is considered as the Search Engine Optimization or SEO process. Search Engine Optimization is a complex and lengthy process which is
Why Social Media Should be a Part of SEO Packageslonad News
Mobile SEO: the futureLast Click News
Optimization SEO Services And Search Engine Marketing SolutionsFPRD (press release)
Resource Nation (blog) -openPR (press release) -Market Press Release (press release)
all 10 news articles »

View full post on SEO – Google News

Coping With The Increasing Complexity Of International SEO – Search Engine Land


StuckOn
Coping With The Increasing Complexity Of International SEO
Search Engine Land
I could write the ubiquitous “SEO is dead” piece, but while that's great link bait, I don't remotely believe it. In fact, as Mikkel de Mib Svendsen said at
SEO Specialistashdowngroup.com
Renowned Education Portal Seeks PPC Services Of #1 SEO India Company Profit By FPRD (press release)
Google's New WebP Image Standard Is All About SEOZDNet (blog)
Search Engine Watch -BigNews.biz (press release) (satire) -Mashable
all 30 news articles »

View full post on SEO – Google News

Get Adobe Flash player