Thursday, April 02, 2009

USA Geography

If this isn't one cool implementation and tour de force of seo and marketing prowess, I don't know what is. It's from a Geographic US & World Search Function.


Alabama,
Alaska,Arizona,Arkansas,California,ColoradoConnecticutDelawareDistrict of ColumbiaFloridaGeorgiaHawaiiIdahoIllinoisIndianaIowaKansas

KentuckyLouisianaMaineMarylandMassachusettsMichiganMinnesotaMississippiMissouriMontanaNebraskaNevadaNew HampshireNew JerseyNew MexicoNew YorkNorth Carolina

North DakotaOhioOklahomaOregonPennsylvaniaRhode IslandSouth CarolinaSouth DakotastateTennesseeTexasUtahVermontVirginiaWashingtonWest VirginiaWisconsin
» United States Military
Armed Forces Americas (AA)
Armed Forces Europe (AE)
Armed Forces Pacific (AP)
» United States Overseas
American Samoa
Guam
Northern Mariana Islands
Palau
Puerto Rico
Virgin Islands
» Other Countries
Canada
Australia
United Kingdom
New Zealand
Other Countries


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Dental Games

Yes, we have created a new genre. Games with Teeth!!!!

I'm not kidding. A few people in my office worked on a project when I wasn't paying attention and now we have a page of dental games. Go figure.

Does anybody have any ideas on how to market such a thing?

Actually, i just checked google and found:
Results 1 - 10 of about 11,200,000 for dental games. (0.21 seconds)

Monday, March 30, 2009

Heat Maps - Google is not the be-all and end-all

Google analytics has a nifty feature that it'll tell you what links people are clicking on. But, it's not the be-all and end-all. It falls short in that it:
- groups all the links that go to the same page from a page. So you have no idea if they clicked on the "more info" link at the top or bottom
- it only tracks clicks onto links. Not confused clicks onto things that look like links.

Does anyone track such things? Apparently they do;
Crazy Egg & Click Density.


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Tuesday, March 24, 2009

School pages into the search engines - ?

According to webmaster tools, the SpellingCity page on First Presbyterian Church School is not listed. I'll do a google search to see whether this school can be found on SpellingCity.com: First Presbyterian Church School site:SpellingCity.com. The answer is that while some other school pages are found which have links to that page, First P's home page is not yet in the Google index.

Why isn't First Presbyterian Church School's home page on SpellingCity.com in the index?

This is weird in that:
  1. There are at least two schools that I found that link to this home page which have links to them from their schools (Tinsley Elementary School & Greenville Elementary School). Of course, the links at the bottom of these pages in which the local schools link to each other should ideally have well-less than 100 links on the page. Unfortunately, these pages seem to have about 260 other schools listed which could account for the links not being counted.
  2. There are two blog posts from twenty days ago which have direct links to this First Presbyterian Church School. School pages not appearing and School home pages.
  3. I have been hoping that this page would appear in the index and mostly, my dreams do come true.

Any ideas? Since we have 125K school homepages that we're hoping will begin to get listed, this is a question of some importance. I could imagine that Google is reluctant to include these pages since they are short on content and links. Still, over 5K of these schools have links directly from the schools to them so it's hard to imagine why they don't get listed. Maybe, too many of these links are images?


http://learnseowithme.wordpress.com/2009/03/04/school-home-pages/

Monday, March 23, 2009

Public School Review

http://www.publicschoolreview.com is a partner site of Boarding School Review, the leading online resource for evaluating private secondary boarding schools, and Private School Review, a unique resource for researching private day schools across the USA. They have pages competing for each school in the country and try to make money through partners in a variety of ways:

Their find a classmate link goes directly to classmates.com.
They have google adsense on the website.
Mostly, the partner sites are not filled in: http://www.publicschoolreview.com/site-partners.php they are "under construction". Maybe the site has a good business model but needs a goosing.

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GlobalScholar.com

Global Scholar.com might be a good vehicle for my plans. They are:


  1. Well-financed. They have Milken money and involvement (Mike and Lowell) through Knowledge Universe plus Ignition VC and some well-heeled xMicrosoft guys.
  2. They're trying to get educational traffic but not succeeding.
  3. They're competing with a page for each school in the US and not succeeding. I looked at their rankings and they're failing to hit the first page in every spot check that I look at. They are the 32K most trafficked site in the US with 43K visitors last month which makes them nobody. In contrast, my site is at the 3K rank, rising every month (except the summer) and got 600K visitors last month. Greatschools.net, the leader for these things, is 459th and had an even 3 million visitors last month. I figure that I can match them in October 2009.

BUT:
- they are at the far end of the country
- they have the appearance of a company that is difficult to do business with.

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Sunday, March 15, 2009

School rankings 2

I thought I'd peek at the rankings for BCC high school. I'll just note what's different from Somerset.

Wikipedia
GreatSchools.net ranks very high.
realestate.yahoo.com
highschoolsports.net
education.com 11th
alumniclass.com 14th
ibo.org
greatreunions.com
classreport.org 18th
stores.colorworkspromotions.com 25th
publicschoolreview.com - 28th - a partner site of Boarding School Review, the leading online resource for evaluating private secondary boarding schools, and Private School Review,

psk12.com/rating/USindexphp/STATE_FL.html - not ranking but using some clever feeds...

School Rankings

I'm taking a look at who ranks for a lot of schools and why. I just entered a random school (Somerset Elementary School) on Google and found, listing only the big players, who was in the top 30:

I should then figure out the business model and approach of each of these to see if one wants to partner, take investments, buy ads, or can be imitated. Note, I should do this for a few elementary schools to find out the major players. Then check to see if it's dramatically different for high schools or private schools.

GreatSchools.net - 5th
schooltree.org - 7th
localschooldirectory.com - 8th
localschooldirectory.com - 9th
classmates.com - 11th
findlocalweather.com - 12
muninetguide.com - 13th
trulia.com 14th
merchantcircle.com - 15th
city-data.com - 16th
publicschoolreview.com - 17th
education.com - 18th
zillow.com - 19th
globalscholar.com - 20th
mysummercamps.com 21
citysearch.com 22
alumniclass.com 23
classmates.com 25
neighborhoodlink.com 26
greatschools.net 27 (again)
nationalrelocation.com 28
amweather.net 29th


www.greatschools.net - Their content is a complex mashup of:
- public database of schools including public domain test scores, etc
- info pulled on the local real estate market which is provided by Sperlings Best Places.
- They partner with donorschoose.org to raise money for the schools.
- They have oodles of articles.

The business model is advertising. The ads are handled by double-click ad and are solicited on the website. Current advertisers: MSN, K12, cafemom, sylvan, and FishHawkRanch.

Advertise on GreatSchools.net and get your message in front of our large audience of active, educated and affluent parents. GreatSchools can target your campaign by state or grade level; we offer all traditional ad units as well as newsletter sponsorships. Advertisers include Crayola, Century 21, Disney, Johnson & Johnson, K-12, Kaplan, Nissan, Quaker, SCORE! Educational Centers, Staples, Target, Zip Realty and many more. There are some plain google ads on specific pages.
GreatSchools is a 501(c)(3) not-for-profit organization with a very professional management team and board of directors. It seems to be SF-based. Bill Jackson is the Founder, President and CEO. GreatSchools, an independent nonprofit initiative that empowers parents to support their children's educational success, has been awarded $20 million to use Internet and social media technologies to empower needy parents with the insights they need to prepare their kids for college and beyond. The funding was from: the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the Robertson Foundation and the Walton Family Foundation.
1. Can I see the financials for a 501C3. I'm very curious as to how much they bring in through advertising.

Thursday, March 12, 2009

free tools for seo update

Here are three sites that allow you to estimate other sites' traffic:  CompeteAlexa, and Quantcast. I'd say Alexa is the most skewed since it's based on easily manipulated toolbar installations.

There are also tools for looking at incoming links:   Yahoo Site Explorer,  Linkscape, and .... HELP _ I"ve lost the others....

Tuesday, March 03, 2009

School pages not appearing

On SpellingCity.com, there are a lot of school pages. Say 100,000.
But most of them are not active. But many are and they have links from the schools. Yet they are not showing up in webmaster tools as page with incoming and outgoing links.
I think they should.

Time to test: First Presbyterian Church School as of March 3, 2009 now has a link to it's home page. There are no teachers listed so presumably it's only one link in. Is this enough for it to show up in webmaster tools.

Spirit will look for this. And just to be sure, I'll build a similiar link from another blog.

john

Saturday, February 21, 2009

The blogging course - should it be something else?

My little company runs a blogging course which is very popular with those who take it. The problem is, not enough people do take it. I can think of two ways to broaden the course's appeal.

1. Get more serious about educating people who want to blog for a purpose such as supporting a business, a non-profit, a cause, or to make money. The blogging course was conceived of us a writing course. The idea is that creative writing courses for adults have traditionally been very popular and now it's time for creative writing to take a new form. No longer poetry or short stories or novels are the hot creative force. It's now blogging. That's where we started. But, it appears that another approach would be to do more for these more purposeful, less creative, type bloggers. We could expose them to blogs of these sorts for starter such as:

- business blogs:

- non-profit blogs: One blog, Making Waves,

- blogs for a cause:

- journalistic blogs http://www.pbs.org/engage/

- blogging for profit:



2. Shift the course from being a how-to-blog to being an introduction to web 2.0 in which each week, we get people started and involved in:

a. A blog - which they keep through the course as a way of keeping notes

b. A forum

c. Facebook

d. Twitter

e. Wikis - wikipedia & a more modest one

f. Youtube

g. Linkedin, Flikr, Myspace, Friendster, Livejournal

h. Technorati, stumble upon, diggit,

Now that would be a very cool eight week course!

3rd Variation on the course - Include much more on concepts of how blogs integrated with twitter, facebook, and blog communities.

4th - Focus on wordpress and it's amazing capabilities to create a variety of websites with no programming.



Of course, we could accomplish most of both of these by slightly changing the course focus and curriculum and positioning. For instance, blogs seem to work well when supported by a facebook and twitter accounts

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Blogging and Making Money

While this course is about writing a blog and gathering an audience, many people have questions and aspirations relating to their blog and money. To be blunt, many fantasize about earning a living from their blog. Is such a thing possible? Well, if you believe, then anything is possible.

OK, now trying to be helpful, here are some points to take on board at this point in the course. We'll circle back to financial possibilities, how to understand them, and how to pursue them later in the course.

1. Traditionally, 7 out of 10 new business ventures fail or are abandoned within the first two years. If you think of your blog as yet another business venture, the odds are 30% that in two years, you could still be at it. Hopefully in the black and harvesting cash flow.

2. There are success stories of people who got very rich through blogging. It's about as likely as you'll turn out to be the next J.D. Rowling (third richest woman in the world, author of Harry Potter). But it does happen and some people do strike it big. (examples: John Chow or Ree Drummond)

3. You won't make any money with your blog unless you have an audience. It's a good strategy to first find something interesting to say, then to win an audience, then to try to figure out how to monetize it.

4. Many bloggers with some talent and dedication, do make some money from their blogs. It can be $25 per month or $25 per day and sometimes much more. Your results will vary. Sometimes it's just enough for "shoe money" (BTW, there's a famous and profitable blog by that name), sometimes it's enough for you to quit your day job. Sometimes, it can be combined with your day job.

5. When you pick your blog topic, if making money is eventually on your mind, you might what to consider the potential financial implications as you pick your focus. I'm deviating slightly from point 3 here by suggesting that you think ahead about financial implications, even as you pick your topic and personna.

The rest of this article will help you consider how to factor this in.

Do you have an existing business which could benefit from increased exposure across the net? If so, supporting and expanding the existing business is a good way to monetize your time spent blogging. Many small businesses and charities have started blogs which integrate stories about their professional work with whatever aspects of their private life that they want to share. And they've effectively won new supporters and deepened their relationships with others. (eg Making Waves, One blog)

Let me share a discussion I had with a hypothetical friend of mine name Mike. Mike wanted to start a blog. He was a poet by nature, a paralegal by day, and he has a messy personal life caused in part by what he calls his "poetic" nature which could not be constrained by social norms such as honesty, living monogomously, and oh yes, living within his means. His initial desire was to write about poetry, something that he lived for and had great insights into. He was thinking: "Metaphysical Poetry & Lyrical Reflections." But, as we discussed it, it turns out that Mike was thinking that this would be a profitable effort and we concluded that pure poetry might be pure poverty. There's just not that many people reading poetry or advertising to people interested in poetry.

We also considered him writing about his personal life but it presented a number of problems and no particular financial hook.

After some reflections on the likely financial implications, he shifted towards: "This poet's unfolding tale of Love, Lyrics, and Looming Foreclosure." This allowed him to both indulge his poetic vision with lyrical reflections on his dilemma while also airing his ongoing lessons on how mortgage companies react when you stop making payments, how a "short-sale" works and whether 'tis better to default on your credit card bill or mortgage. He soon had a readership and some lively informative discussions by people with similar problems, many of whom appreciated his poetry: "Whether 'tis nobler to...etc". Then one day, he posted an "advertise here" button and a rate sheet (traffic count and advertising rates) and several credit lawyers responded.

The other part of the discussion with hypothetical Mike was whether he should bring his messy personal relationships into it but, given how truly messy it was, we all agreed that he should be less public, even in an anonymous form, which his irresponsible ongoing escapades.

Yes, Mike is not real, but it's food for thought to provide you with some thoughts on direction.

You'll hear more form us later in the course about how advertising works on blogs. You'll hear about PPC, CPM affiliates, widgets, Adsense, and rate sheets.


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Wednesday, February 11, 2009

This page is not in the webmaster tools as having links

It's weird. Google does not count the internal or external links to this page. I'm pretty sure that it has external links but to be extra sure, I'm placing one right here.

It's a link to a Grade by Grade Curriculum Overview .

Now this page has a link from our site map and a link from each of about 30 pages on our site which deal with scope and sequence. The page has been up for about three months. Yet Google webmaster tools do NOT show any internal or external links to this page.

Why? Is it too short of content? That's my guess. But my previous research on why pages languish in the supplementary index do not support that.


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Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Ad Sizes for spellingcity

I'm working on redesigning SpellingCity's internal pages. We are going to do some internal promotion. So each school, teacher, and spelling list page will have internal ads explaining features and games. I'd like to build the spots in standard formats in case I ever want to place other types of messages. For instance, why not Time4Writing promotional efforts.



So, I'm revisiting ad sizes:

Current hot sizes for CPM Vendors:

728 x 90 - leaderboard
160 x 60 - wide skyscraper
300 x 250 - preferred

I had thought the banner (468 x 60) was the standard but it's apparently a has-been.


So far, our model page has:

300 x 250 - check
two 300 x 60ish ? What do I do with them?



Also, while I'm at it, I thought that I would make a random test of whether google will count a spellingcity school page as having an external link. Did I mention that I have friends who went to an elementary school in Alabama called VESTAVIA HILLS ELEMENTARY CENTRAL SCHOOL ?

Wednesday, February 04, 2009

Do tracking codes screw up Google's link tracking?

I'm in a process (apparently never ending) to improve our SEO techniques. This time, I'm working with an external consultant, a guru if you will, having him in for a few hours every week or so. We use him entirely for advise and instruction and staff training, not for implementation. So his upscale rates (btw, he has been worth every penny of it) do not affect our low-end financials. (We offer a low cost online educational service and live on thin margins).

Joe Laretro is his name. He's great.

When I first engaged him, I said that he might learn a few things from us. He's a nice guy so he gave no external sign of what I'm sure he felt inside. "How could a self-taught marketing guy teach anything to to a guy with a bright mind, years of experience, insider contacts, and regular attendence at all the big industry get-togethers?"

Well, one reason is that I'm a total skeptic and I never really believe much that I can't prove myself (ie in terms of seo stuff).

So Yoda (Ie Joe) told me the other day that all the tracking links that we were putting on our links from other sites where preventing the google juice from flowing. Well, I can't prove that google doesn't discount links with tracking codes. It would make some sense since a tracking code more or less proves that the link is not a pure third party link situation and highly suggests a commercial relationship.

But I can prove that these links get counted by showing that in my webmaster tools, the incoming links are properly grouped by page irrespective of whether they were burdened or not by tracking links.

Joe seemed to think that this was cool.