Pages

Friday, November 23, 2012

Zemanta Related Posts coming to Typepad - Zemanta Blog

ZEMANTA RELATED POSTS COMING TO TYPEPAD

During the Thanksgiving week, Typepad bloggers will notice a new addition to Zemanta recommendations: Related Posts. To commemorate this great day, use them to give credit to fellow bloggers as a thank you to all who put immense work into writing about topics that interest you.

Earlier this year, we announced a partnership with the Typepad blogging platform. We gave Typepad bloggers a handy feature called Recommended Links. Recommended Links show up to Typepad bloggers beneath the editor window while they write, bringing back links to their own posts as well as links to external authoritative sources.

Recommended Links allows bloggers to add links to their text with a click of a button. They are really easy to use and the benefits of adding links to your posts, Wikipedia, Google maps and other great resources are numerous. Readers get triggers to research topics mentioned in the post, search engines have more respect for posts with such links and authors can focus on writing instead of dealing with manual linking.

Thanksgiving addition – Related Posts

During the Thanksgiving week, Zemanta on Typepad will get a new feature called Related Posts. Related Posts are awesome.  They show up below related links and are contextually related to the text you are currently working on. The posts come from your blog, from a vast network of bloggers and from other content sources.

This is how it all looks like:

Zemanta on Typepad: related links, related posts (screenshot)

The benefits of using Related Posts

You can add Related Posts to the bottom of your text with a click of a button to give your post more depth and provide clues to readers on where to get further opinions and information on the subject.

Other benefits of using related posts are again numerous. First and foremost your post gains on credibility but there is another hidden value: bloggers that you link out to will notice you. You will get attention from writers who are interested in the same topics as you. This often leads to more comments, reactions and backlinks but most of all to new important acquaintances.

It is the essence of what we call Link Love:

We hope Related Posts on TypePad will help your blog grow and your network expand.

Related articles
Enhanced by Zemanta
Back to top More in Zemanta News
We love feedback so don't hesitate to comment or visit our support center and ask us anything.


Bob Cohen
Sent from my iPhone

Sunday, September 30, 2012

Join Robert Cohen’s “Bobology” Photo Stream?

Join Robert Cohen's "Bobology" Photo Stream?
People using this shared Photo Stream will see your Apple ID if you join.
Don't have an iCloud account? You can view this Photo Stream on the web 

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Google Affiliate for Blogger

google affiliate blogger signupGoogle announced a new program for Blogger blogs with a Gadget for "Advertise Products." If the blog has an active AdSense account, writing a blog post that contains copy for an available advertiser will result in the "Advertise Products" Gadget appearing with the option to add it to the blog.

From the Gadget, the available advertisers will appear. Select one, then publish the blog post. For blogs without an active AdSense account, an AdSense account will need to be setup. All of this can be done from the Google's Affiliate Publisher page.  

After signing up for the Google Affiliate terms and conditions and setting up your AdSense account, the Advertise Products gadget appears in the right sidebar when editing or writing a post. Clicking on the Gadget opens up a search box and window where advertisers are displayed based on the content of a blog post.

Monday, April 9, 2012

Twitter Ads for Small Business

American Express gave me a free $100 credit to use for Twitter advertising and I'm trying it out on my Twitter account @bobology. Two ads are possible, one promotes me as a follower and charges for each new follower, and the other promotes a specific tweet and charges for each click on the tweet link.

I selected the metropolitan areas in California where I offer my live classes, to see if promoting classes will result in any additional publicity. This is a test run before I start offering online video and audio classes available for purchase when I get my material in a Web deliverable format.

So far in just a few hours I've collected a few clicks on my tweets, and gained some new followers. I'll have a report on the stats and costs as I go along and provide updates.

Sunday, February 19, 2012

Training and Classes this Week

This week's training classes coming up:

Tuesday: Blogging for Fun & Profit  - Saddleback College, Mission Viejo

Wednesday: iPhones, iPads, I'm Lost - Santa Monica College

Thursday: Facebook and Social Networking for Beginners - Pasadena City College

Saturday Morning: Facebook Marketing for Business - Palomar College, San Marcos, San Diego County

Saturday Afternoon: Secrets of Internet Marketing - Palomar College San Marcos, San Diego County

Get additional information on the classes and links to the school registration sites on my Training Calendar.

Saturday, February 18, 2012

The Price Tag for "Free" Internet

Just how much are people willing to do to get something for free? When television appeared it was accepting commercial time, with grocery stores it's club cards for discounts, and with the Internet it's tracking and access to behavior.
Of course the issue with the Internet is ones behavior and the data may or may not be well protected. Privacy hasn't stopped millions of shoppers for signing up to get a club card at their grocery store. People gladly let someone track their shopping by what is spent, how often, what days, and the types of products. Start buying diapers and someone knows you have a new baby (or are baby sitting one).
Just what do our credit card companies do with the data they collect, and how about the bank debit cards that we use for convenience. Where does that data go? I've seen privacy disclosures from banks saying they may share data with partners.
So we've already established that as consumers we'll give up a lot of data about ourselves in exchange for something that's convenient, free, and saves us money.
So where does the Internet come in? Would you be willing to give up the convenience of comparison shopping, finding when your movie was starting, getting maps and directions, and free cloud storage?
Once you establish that you're willing to trade something for these free services and discounts it's just a matter of negotiating what price you're willing to pay. In a capitalist society "free" doesn't really exist since profit drives it so much.
So is our solution to pay for privacy, change behavior and forgo free services, or give up and be part of the global database? So far the choices seem to be to opt for free services and until that changes very little else will.

Friday, February 17, 2012

Google + iPhone App Adds Instant Upload

Google released an update to their Google+ iPhone app that adds Instant Update. This now allows iPhone users to share photos and video just like the Android users of the mobile app could.

Considering the impact that Google + has on search, it's likely to make a dent in apps like hips tamarin and Pinterest for
people and brands using them for
marketing.

As for everyday users, Google + is being adopted by more tech savvy users, while Facebook is where you find family and friends everyday.

Until a social app appears on Google + to entice users to interact more, Google
still has a chasm ahead.

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Anthem agent presentation

P69

To get the audience to use their phones for taking pictures I asked them to take some of me and email them to me. Here's one of them so the exercise worked.

Wednesday, January 4, 2012

New Models for Web Publishing


As we begin a new year, I thought I would take a moment to review where Web publishing has come and where it seems to be going. We certainly stand at a crossroads, as we move from the "golden age of blogging" into whatever we are going to call things this year or this moment. I tend to think of this as the post-blogging era.

That isn't to say that blogs are over: we at RWW certainly don't think so. But the very nature of the blog is changing. The days are coming to an end when, as Scott Fulton has said most recently: "You can have freedom from bias or you can have freedom from oversight. You cannot have both." Jon Mitchell wrote earlier in December about new ways of writing, publishing and advertising online.

And there are other smart folks out there who have figured some of this stuff out already. As a recent example, look at what Jeremiah Owyang wrote on his blog last week that all future blogs will share all of these traits:

  • There will be an opportunity for new stars to emerge,
  • It also will be harder for personal brands to rise,
  • New models to emerge and long form content won't be the only way, and
  • A new mix of media will emerge.

The culture of celebrity

Let's look at what he means. First, the old days of blogging were about celebrating individuals' points of view, and oftentimes one POV per blog. Today's blogs, such as the one you are reading now, move beyond a single POV and have lots of contributors, and sometimes these opinions are at loggerheads (we did this most recently with two perspectives on whether you need the 3G radios in your tablet: No you don't, said Paul Singh, and Yes you do, said Dan Rowinski. I think there is plenty of room for variations on this theme and we should expect more op/ed kinds of features this year.

But building a blog around a celebrity is so over. As an example, look at what happened over at Engadget.com when Patel and Topolsky and others left the site last March. Here is a graph of their page views from the last two years, showing that their traffic took a dip but it wasn't fatal.
engadget.png

Alternatives to long-form content

As we get more impatient, the notion of the appropriate length on a blog post is changing and it is getting shorter: It used to be that a 600-word post was considered about right, now that is way long. (And this article is off the charts!) Videos too: three minutes is about all we can seem to pay attention to.

Over the past few years, blogs have discovered that infographics can attract lots of clicks. But typically those are created by PR firms or other outsiders. A few blogs have begun experimenting with their own in-house graphics and data visualization teams. That is certainly the way of the future. Why should someone else's pretty pictures get all the link love?

These infographics don't have to be just eye candy but can be more substantive. Especially where a reader can interact more with the Web page. The daily newspapers have been experimenting with this for some time. As one often-cited example, it took the Washington Post two weeks to build a database of soldiers killed in our current wars into what is now a public, searchable database called Faces of the Fallen.

Adrian Holovaty, who helped to take that information and put it online, defines the three functions of a journalist as gathering information, distilling that information and presenting it. That is still the same; just the external parameters have changed. It is important to keep that in mind.

Feeds and reach are changing

Take as one example the venerable RSS feed, which predates blogging. Today's feeds are being reworked as a way to syndicate content in interesting ways. Witness what CNN:Tech is doing by presenting at the bottom of its page feeds from six different tech blogs. The New York Times (which used to feature a feed from RWW, among others) has something similar. But yet these forms of syndication haven't had much traction among readers.

Certainly, one of the main beneficiaries of syndication has been Mashable, which now republishes its stories to ABC News, CNN, Forbes, Metro, USA Today and Yahoo News. Expect more of this kind of reach in the future, especially as more niche experts replace the personal brands.

But even so, these examples are pretty much old school. How about what VerveWireless.com is doing for old-line newspapers? They create mobile tablet apps that repurpose the paper's RSS content, but also make it easier for the daily newspaper sales teams to insert their own local ads. Flipboard and Google Currents, among others, are also changing how content is presented and read online.

Others are working on newer efforts, such as Matt Galligan, the force behind SimpleGeo with what he calls news, re-imagined at Circa. No word on when that will be out. LinkedIn has its social news feed, something developed by one of RWW principals. And then there is DocumentCloud.org that is used by a large number of blogs and traditional media to show the sources behind their reporting. You click on the button at the top of each article, and then yellow highlighted text appears that has hyperlinks to the original source materials. Think of it as when you had to show your work in high school math class. It is an intriguing idea.

propublica.jpg

And the ultimate feed is our Facebook and other social media tools, which bring the ultimate in personal customization to these "news" items. The paradox is as your network grows, you can quickly get overwhelmed with this feed.

Pay attention to mobile access.

Our mobile traffic has increased tremendously in the past year, and I suspect we are typical of other sites. But this presents challenges for content creators: is it better to sell ad units around the content, even ads that have sub-par browsing experiences on mobile devices? Or code up your own iPad app (or use Verve's or something equivalent)? Certainly, the level of engagement with the custom mobile app is greater, but it amazes me that sites with just static pages still aren't optimized for mobile browsers yet.

The rise of custom publishing

Finally, the last trend seems to be replacing traditional Web publishing with some form of hybrid or custom publishing. RWW published a number of white papers that were at the request of one of our advertising sponsors, but produced with an independent editorial voice and vision. Other sites are doing the same, because these sponsorships can be big money. The trick is keeping the voice independent and maintaining a strict separation of church and state, or even avoiding any appearance of collusion. That continues to be a challenge, especially as some sites open up their own venture funds and incubators for start up vendors.

As you can see, blogging is far from dead but becoming richer and more varied. We'll see if 2012 brings about other changes to Web publishing.


ReadWriteWeb encourages comments, but please remember: Keep it nice, keep it clean, and avoid promotional comments. We do pre-moderate some comments with links. For more information, please read our full comment policy.

New Models for Web Publishing
As we begin a new year, I thought I would take a moment to review where Web publishing has come and where it seems to be going. We certainly stand at a crossroads, as we move from the \"golden age of blogging\" into whatever we are going to call things this year or this moment. I tend to think of this as the post-blogging era.\n\nThat isn't to say that blogs are over: we at RWW certainly don't think so. But the very nature of the blog is changing. The days are coming to an end when, as Scott Fulton has said most recently: \"You can have freedom from bias or you can have freedom from oversight. You cannot have both.\" Jon Mitchell wrote earlier in December about new ways of writing, publishing and advertising online.\n
Please enable JavaScript to view the comments powered by Disqus.
<img src="" width="1" height="1" /> <div style="display:none;"><img src="//pixel.quantserve.com/pixel/p-eb0xvejp1OUw6.gif" border="0" height="1" width="1" alt="Quantcast"/></div>

Original Page: http://m.readwriteweb.com/enterprise/2012/01/new-models-for-web-publishing.php

Sent from Feeddler RSS Reader

Bob Cohen

Office: 562-598-8091
Mobile: 562-547-9060
Sent from my iPhone 

Mashables Facebook Timeline Customization

  • Facebook Timeline Customization: 5 Tools for Killer Cover Photos

Now that Facebook Timeline has rolled out to everyone, we’re seeing some great services that let you customize the new “Cover Photo” banner space at the top of your profile.

While similar services we looked at last year enabled you to select a great stock photo for your banner, these new sites offer more advanced personalization.

Take a look at the services we’ve showcased in our gallery above — they are tons of fun! And if you’re short on design ideas, browse our slideshow of inspiring recent examples in the gallery below.


Facebook Timeline Inspiration


Show Comments

3 Responses to “Facebook Timeline Customization: 5 Tools for Killer Cover Photos”

  1. Ray_Toolbear says:

    You should consider trying myfacebookcover(dot)com for the facebook covers. It is actually a great tool to use. It offers a wide variety of covers designed by an artist.

    Great Recommendation!

  2. this is so cool!!!!

  3. Probably helps to be photogenic for starters. Lol. Jus’ sayin’.

Leave a Reply

XHTML: You can use these tags: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong> -->

Hide Comments
iframeiframeiframeiframe