Clicks2Customers Blog

Archive for the 'Web 2.0' Category

To blog or not to blog, that is the question

Posted by Sally.f on Apr 17 2008 | Online Social Networking, SEO, Web 2.0

From an SEO standpoint, the importance of having a blog on your website is paramount. Having a well written, industry-related blog will not only contribute to earning your site a higher Google ranking, but it will also dramatically increase traffic and maybe earn your site one or two extra inbound links.

Blogs are also an excellent way to keep informed about what’s happening in your industry. Starting the day by checking the industry related blogs like Inside Adwords and TechCrunch have began part of many people’s daily routine.

In fact, the pressure to turn out a daily blog has become so great that companies have begun adding blogging onto the job specifications of their SEO strategists. Some companies have even gone to such lengths as hiring bloggers specifically for the task of writing blogs for the company websites.

The quest for rankings causes its own set of problems as the Internet becomes saturated with copycat blog posts. The danger occurs when bloggers copy other blogs and post it as their own. If you find an interesting industry blog at your favourite blog site the chances are that you will find at least three other blog posts that have copied the original blog verbatim and published it under another name. The pressure to blog can sometimes lead some to these black hat tactics.

Micro-blogging, which has always thought to be a useful social networking tool, has emerged to be a source of marketing potential as well.

Micro-blogging websites like Twitter, Jaiku and Facebook are excellent applications to get your ideas and news out fast. These websites can be used as tools to make industry connections as well as to pass information to these connections quickly and en mass. With micro-blogging, you can keep track with what your connections are doing and vice versa.

It is no wonder that Google purchased Jaiku in October last year.

2 comments for now

53 CSS-Techniques You Couldn’t Live Without

Posted by Lee on Nov 25 2007 | SEO, User Interface Design, Web 2.0

Thanks to Vinny for this one, I just had to post it almost as is - a great repository of CSS goodies, not to mention the rest the site has to offer:

CSS is important. And it is being used more and more often. Cascading Style Sheets offer many advantages you don’t have in table-layouts - and first of all a strict separation between layout, or design of the page, and the information, presented on the page. Thus the design of pages can be easily changed, just replacing a css-file with another one. Isn’t it great? Well, actualy, it is.

Over the last few years web-developers have written many articles about CSS and developed many useful techniques, which can save you a lot of time - of course, if you are able to find them in time. Below you’ll find a list of techniques we , as web-architects, really couldn’t live without. They are essential and they indeed make our life easier. Let’s take a look at 53 CSS-based techniques you should always have ready to hand if you develop web-sites. - http://www.smashingmagazine.com

http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2007/01/19/53-css-techniques-you-couldnt-live-without/

2 comments for now

Mirror, Mirror on the wall, who is the fairest search engine of them all?

Posted by Kevin on Nov 12 2007 | Industry News, Web 2.0

No one imagined back in 1998 how a tiny start-up would turn out to be a global leader in the search industry in less than a decade! Yahoo must still be feeling like fools for agreeing to put Google’s search box on its home page, giving their users a taste of what was to come. A move that would prove to have cataclysmic consequences for a once successful leader in its field. In a classic failure of foresight, they turned down an offer to buy Page & Brin’s search technology for a paltry $1.6m. And where was Microsoft?

But is Google’s search technology still that much better than any other search engine? Is it not perhaps a case of Google’s brand being so dominant & well known that users are automatically turning to it to conduct their searches? In fact, Google is so widely used that the Oxford English Dictionary has added it as a verb (“Google it” To use the Google search engine to find information on the Internet. To search for information about (a person or thing) using the Google search engine).

While Google draws 60% of searches worldwide with its closest competitor (Yahoo) at 14% the percentage of users who return to the top 3 sites places Google’s lead in a different perspective: Although Google enjoys a 79% rate of return, Yahoo  & Microsoft are not far behind at 69% & 65% respectively (Nielsen/NetRatings). Added to this, a recent University of Michigan study showed that Yahoo has surpassed Google in terms of customer satisfaction! (Google doesn’t seem too concerned about this!)

While Google enjoys 82% of search queries in Germany, both the French & German governments are planning to inject a combined $387 million into search engine research. In China, the biggest emerging online market, Google receives only 17% of queries & in Japan it trails behind Yahoo. The Japanese government is also funding local search efforts to the tune of $125 million.

The question is: “Will Google be able to sustain its position as a market leader & be the fairest search engine of all?”

Social networking, through sites like MySpace & FaceBook, has become enormously popular. In fact social networking has become more popular than online porn! (Wives & girlfriends all across the world are sleeping easier at night…) Google has been quick enough to slap down $900 million for the right to provide search & serve ads on MySpace. They clearly take note of the projected ad spend of $2 billion on social networking sites in 2010. In addition they are determined to fight Facebook by unveiling an open-standard for developers to create applications that will work on a number of social networking sites. This move will give Google access to over 100 million additional users!

And it doesn’t end there: Google is entering the world of wireless technology. Clearly their intention is to entrench their position even further in both search & online advertising. Google will be providing the software that will be installed on handsets under the open source licensing model. A move that does not sit well with companies like Microsoft, Palm or Symbian that have invested vast amounts of money in developing operating software for mobile phones.

While many market leaders have had their bubble burst, the likes of Novell, Lotus & AOL come to mind, my money is on Google. I believe they will find a way of managing to stay at the forefront of their business (& that of many others’) even if it means gobbling up smaller companies that may pose a risk, for a few pieces of silver.

no comments for now