We ran another webinar today and there’s an interesting new feature. GoToWebinar can tell if the participant’s window is active or not. In other words, if someone is watching the webinar and they switch to another window (to surf the web or check email). A flag shows up on the presenter’s window and there’s an overall score for the percentage of people that are presumably paying attention. Pretty cool… and fun to fire off a quick IM to friendly attendees that aren’t paying attention.
Category: Daily Life
SEO is Dead
Last week I had heard some rumblings about Google continuing to use individual search history to influence results. There are differing opinions on this but I am all for it. If, after months of searching, Google realizes that I can’t speak spanish, then it would be great if I never had to see any results in spanish.
But this begs the question: What will SEO vendors do when there are no consistent results? At first I thought they would become some sort of modified copywriters, a few best practices, but mainly focused on writing quality content. Now I’m thinking it may even go beyond that – who’s willing to tie conversion results to the work they do?
Fun Saturday
In a rare turn of events there is nothing planned this weekend. I’m playing around with a bunch of side projects and catching up with Galactica. Carin and I saw Little Miss Sunshine last night and she was laughing so hard she couldn’t breathe. I hope your weekend is as relaxing as mine will be.
Zen and Gadget Jones
I’ve been itching to upgrade my phone, I have a Treo 600 and there’s so much more cool stuff if I were to go to the 700. The problem is that I have been thinking all week about something I read from the Dalai Lama (who has a rockin’ website by the way, but no RSS or podcasts that I could find) – pleasure is not happiness. Yes, I would enjoy the upgrade, but I already have a bunch of features that I never use. I would get the consumer’s rush but that would probably fade within a week.
Unless I also installed the 24 ringtone…
Greg had kicked this over to me when I did a video on using smart playlists in iTunes. I was hoping to wait until my blog template was updated so I could show it in Revver, but that won’t be for another couple of weeks and I’m tired of waiting.
If you are going to sync podcasts across multiple machines or need to do some other funky stuff, check out: using Juice, Podnova and SmartPlaylists.
I thought this was cool:
[youtube]hgqZMgRijXo[/youtube]
Have you made a difference?
Today I was asked how I would like to be remembered. I always have an easy answer for that one – philanthropist. Someone who proved they could generate enough wealth to live well and then give enough back to make something positive happen.
I have tremendous respect for those who endeavor to improve the human condition. I even shop at Sears just because they sponsor EMHO.
If you are able, perhaps you might consider throwing a few dollars towards the New York City MS Walk coming up in April. My friend C.C. is part of a team and you can donate through this link: http://www.helpingthecause.com
While I’m on the topic I’d also like to mention the fine work being done at The MATCH Charter Public High School here in Boston. And until finding worthy causes becomes a full time job, I’m back to work…
Video Inflection Point
This morning I read Chris Baggott was asking whether video is deserving of the attention it’s getting. I think the short answer is no. I’ve always been impressed with Gartner’s Hype Cycle which is a nice model for explaining some of this (and predicted the bursting of the bubble, speaking of hype).
I was trying to find an image of Gartner’s and came across this post from Mike Slinn. I’ve never heard from him but this post completely kicks ass. In fact, stop reading this garbage I’m writing and go read that. Make sure you understand it and email me if you have any questions.
Ok, so if you bothered to come back (thank you),now we are on the same page and you can see that both Second Life and online video are starting to cross the inflection point on the hype curve. At podcamp Toronto there were some folks saying the SL emperor has no clothes (my absurd copywriting, but I think they would agree with the intent). And I and many others have joked about online video becoming one big “laugh at guys getting kicked in the balls” film festival.
I’m most fascinated with, and trying to come up with a theory about the viral spread of video – it’s something like viral intensity. Video does spread like wildfire, faster than blogs, which are faster than podcasts, but the impact seems to be just as fleeting (and, ergo, ROI). Look at the stories like the producers of lonelygirl, getting millions of hits but not generating anything for them as far as business (at least that’s the word on the web, I haven’t actually heard that from them so that could be BS).
More to think about, but I’m going to go back to laughing at guys getting kicked in the balls.
About that TPS Report…
One of the laws of thermodynamics can be summed up as: Entropy Builds.
I realized that today while doing my “short monthly update” that gets forwarded up the org chart. What started as a paragraph now involves about 3 spreadsheets pulling data from 4 sources and takes at least an hour to do. The worst part is that I see no effective way around this and have to give up and call it the price of organizational growth. Every other month there’s another stat worth tracking and that’s another straw to hoist up on to the camel.
I have no conclusion about this.
Sorry but today I’m catching up, more tonight. Too keep yourself entertained check out the Free Hugs campaign that I saw this weekend (I know, old news but new to me, and perhaps to you). Chris Brogan had a Free Hugs shirt on at Podcamp and Mitch Joel had the clip in his presentation. Check out the story of Juan Mann