Thursday 30 January 2014

SEO and the Importance of Time

My friend is setting up her business and asked me to help her setting up a website, and email last week. She also purchased an online listing ad earlier this week. She called me a day later puzzled why she is not ranking on Google search.

SEO is an incredibly long-term process’ which is why professionals within the field may find this anecdote amusing. For those starting up, let me give you one clue (and gosh there are loads): time.

Especially if you planning to use online listings as lead generation. Whatever you sell, advertise it today. The longer your presence the better the ranking. Than immediately after concentrate on content, fast load times, relevance, and the list goes on… but time is of the essence.

Facebook Turns Ten

It's a big month for Mark Zuckerberg. Not only does Facebook turn ten but it does so very profitably.

In its early years, before Facebook was monetised, there was a lot of scepticism around how will he make money. A few initiatives went pear shaped, such as revealing too much or unplanned information about members, but eventually they figured out an advertising model that worked on desktop. Than smartphones took off, and an alarming number of people migrated to use apps and mobile sites to access their accounts. Market scepticism returned, but Mark Zuckerberg persisted, and this week Facebook 'reported profits of $523m and a 63% increase in revenue for the fourth quarter, beating expectations' (BBC). And 'he did it while saving shareholders money and hugging the planet' (NY Times).

Put aside the controversy around the founding of Facebook, the privacy debates, the trial and error of the last few years, and you have to give it to the lad. He is as ambitious as ever, reflected in a recent speech at the Open Compute Project. He wants to change the way tech companies do business, and as the organisations' name suggest (where he spoke about this), do so via open sourcing. Employing hundreds, thousands, or even hundreds of thousands people to build and better systems is surely unbeatable.

He wants to connect the world and everything in it, creating something that has been previously described as the 'internet of things'. Ambitious? Yes. Can he do it? I'd say admirably he is on the right track. And yet, Facebook's mission 'to give people the power to share and make the world more open and connected' arouse some cynicism in me about the ultimate motivation of a company whose business case and in fact their survival rests on exploiting its users' data.

Sunday 26 January 2014

Happy Australia Day!

26th of January can only mean one thing over here: Happy Australia Day!


Good luck to everyone playing Two-up today, a traditionally Aussie gambling game (in case you want to brush on the rules, check them out here).

Friday 24 January 2014

The man with GoodNews - Nicholas Bate

Only good.

Daily.

Read it here: GoodNews101: the third fourteen - Nicholas Bate:

Davos is on again - Davos 2014

"A sleepy ski resort is an unlikely backdrop for the biggest business meeting in the world. Yet here in Davos, Switzerland, 2,500 business leaders and policy makers meet once a year to discuss the big problems." (source: BBC News - Davos 2014: Reshaping the world?)



And of big problems there are many. Growing inequality, poverty, unemployment, global warming, or rather climate chaos, just to name a few.



If you are interested like me, follow @davos on Twitter to keep up to date with the events as they unfold.

https://twitter.com/search?q=davos&src=typd

Amazon's Anticipatory Shipping - The genius at the forefront of using Big Data

It's exactly a month today, that a patent called 'Method and System for Anticipatory Packaging Shipping' was granted to Amazon.

It's a fascinating concept, even though after running through the details of the patent, I came to realise that the title may be a bit misleading. I found that it is more about sending the goods on their way before the purchase occurred, rather than dropping items on people's doorstep prior to payment. Although that can happen by erroneous algorithms, too. And should a pregnant mother get inappropriate adult toys during the initial runs, it is of course likely to make cynical media headlines.

But if they can get it right, it has the potential to dramatically increase efficiency and speed. 'Speculative shipping, of packages may enable more sophisticated and timely management of inventory items, for example by allowing packages to begin flowing towards potential customers in advance of actual orders.' (source)

And we have come to expect nothing less from Amazon, the genius at the forefront of using Big Data.


Monday 6 January 2014

The best (new) year yet

It’s the first day at work after the festive season and my mouth curls up in a half smile as I think of my unwilling preparations last night. Lunchbox, laptop, notebook, handbag. Everything in slow motion as if that somehow would have delayed the inevitable. That continued into Monday morning.

Then I got out of the door and started on the road. By mid journey I was feeling noticeably less sorry for myself.

And now I’m at work, and by mid-morning I peacefully let the holidays fade into a distant memory, and without any self-pity my typing gathers speed, my focus sharpens, and I ready my mind for a new year. The best yet. Welcome to 2014.