Tag Archive | "works"

Google Mail Introduces New Feature : Desktop Notifier

Tags: , , ,

Google Mail Introduces New Feature : Desktop Notifier

Posted on 27 January 2011 by Adviction

Google Notifier

Now this is nice. If you’re a heavy Gmail user you’ve probably installed some kind of desktop notification system — be it a browser extension, a separate Gmail app like Mailplane and/or Growl. But now, hot on the heels of launching a dynamic unread count in browser tabs, Gmail is launching something that doesn’t require any downloads: built-in desktop notifications.

A small banner on Gmail just prompted me to enable the feature, which works for both inbound chat and email messages (you can opt to receive notifications for all new emails, or just ‘Important’ ones as deemed by your Priority Inbox). Google is probably rolling this out gradually (there’s no blog post yet), but I’m seeing it in both of my accounts.

The ‘Help’ page for the feature is blank (despite the fact that the banner links to it) so details are still pretty scant. This is presumably using HTML5 browser notifications, and is apparently only working in Chrome — I tried testing it in Safari and received this message:

In practice it seems to work fairly well, though I think I’ll be sticking with Growl for now. I’m noticing that the notifications don’t have a minimum time that they’ll apear on screen — if a friend of mine sends multiple IMs in succession, the newest will immediately pop up over the older ones. Even worse, it looks like there’s no timeout for the notification — a friend just IMed me, and her notification has been hanging out in the corner of my screen for a full minute now.

Related Blogs

    Recent Posts

    Post to Twitter

    View Comments

    The Mystery of Likes and Un-Likes on Facebook

    Tags: , , ,

    The Mystery of Likes and Un-Likes on Facebook

    Posted on 20 January 2011 by Adviction

    The race is on for Facebook likes. Every brand, small business and individual around the world is looking for them. But what happens after you get those elusive likes?

    Nobody thinks about what happens to the likes that they already have. Do people who like your page automatically see your content? How many people are un-liking your page? Are people hiding your content or are they just ignoring you? Getting likes on Facebook is as easy as paying a few cents per like (and you can be sure at that price they are not worth much) but the real challenge is keeping them and making sure you engage with the people who like your page through lasting content. So here is how Facebook determines just what you see each time you log-in.

    You Decide

    One of the most obvious ways that Facebook determines what appears on your wall is by giving you the choice. On any individual post you can click on the right little x to reveal a drop down which gives you 4 options: 1. Hiding that individual post 2. Hiding all posts from that person or page 3. Un-liking the page and 4. Marking as Spam. Start posting too often or posting content that people don’t like and you are only ever one click away from being removed for good.

    Edgerank

    While you have probably never heard of this, you may have heard of Pagerank from Google that ranks web pages. This is the very same principle.

    Edgerank takes in a number of factors to determine what you see in your news feed, here is a more detailed explanation…

    Affinity is a measure of the level of interaction you have with that profile. If a user visits your page or comments on your posts, you will have a higher affinity score. The same thing happens if you visit another person’s profile or send them messages often. This is why as you stop interacting with certain people, they seem to disappear. They are still there, but their affinity score is too low to be much of a factor in helping them to achieve enough EdgeRank for your newsfeed.

    Weight is a measure of the type of interactions that your posts and status updates are generating. We should consider ourselves lucky that Facebook even let us in on the basic factors of EdgeRank, but they won’t go into much detail on how the Weight factor is determined. My thinking is that creation > tagging > commenting > liking. That is creating a post (such as on a person’s or Page’s Wall) likely increases the Weight of that particular post. If you are tagged in a post (such as a photo, video, or status update), or if you tag someone else, the Weight factor of the post will increase. Comments also contribute weight, and likes contribute a little. I base my theory on how the Weight factor works on the level of effort it takes for each interaction.

    Decay is probably the most obvious to most people. Decay is a factor that effectively lowers the EdgeRank of an Edge as time passes. This is why your “Top News” tab appears to not be in any chronological order. If the Affinity and Weight factors of a post are significant enough, it may take a lot of time (relatively) for the Decay factor to drop it down in EdgeRank. This is why you can see posts at the top of your newsfeed that are two days old, and one that is a half-hour old below it, then 2 hours, then 30 seconds, etc.

    You can read a little more about edge rank here on Quora.

    This is massively important. Marketers tend to look at their total likes on a page and say “my content will hit 100,000 people when I publish Facebook status” but just because they have 100,000 Facebook likes that not the case. If the individual Facebook user has not been engaging with their content then the chances are that it might not even appear on their newsfeeds. Don’t engage for a longer period of time and the like is worth even less.

    Un-Likes

    When you first kick off your page it’s all about getting likes but as it grows it’s probably just as important to start looking at un-likes. Have you posted something that people didn’t like that forced them to un-like your page. Maybe they just signed up expecting something different or you are veering off topic. Maybe there is a more serious problem with your content or you suffer from competition junkies coming along and liking the page just to win competitions before un-liking the page as soon as the competition is over? As your page grows, monitor your un-likes as much as you do your new likes as they may be the fastest way of increasing your net likes.

    Related Blogs

      Recent Posts

      Post to Twitter

      View Comments

      How to Get Google Adwords & 10/10 Quality Score

      Tags: , , ,

      How to Get Google Adwords & 10/10 Quality Score

      Posted on 03 January 2011 by Adviction

      Recently We have been doing a lot of Google Ad-Words work as we do PPC management. we’ve been trying out some new stuff to get higher quality scores and have noticed that since the new Adwords interface came into use, they have seem to be a bit tougher on Quality Score (QS). Usually 7/10 was adequate, but those 7/10’s in some cases have dropped down to 4/10. In retaliation, We set out to try and figure out a reusable technique which would allow 10/10 Quality Score, and we think we found something that works. It will seem pretty obvious to you, but its amazing how easy is to over look the basic steps involved – and how many people are not doing this.

      Why is Quality Score Important?


      Quality Score is what Google uses to determine if they should show their PPC results, in what order, and what cost the bids are. Basically the lower the score, the higher the bid, the lower the placement, the less frequently they will show your advert. This means that it’s no good to them, and you end up paying over the odds. Your cost per acquisition will be higher.

      Ok Ok, Shut up, how do We get 10/10

      OK now this is very simple, but it works. Follow these steps.

      1. Create your campaign, research your keywords etc, build your site.
      2. Ensure you have a privacy policy, copyright statement, terms & conditions.
      3. Choose your keyword you want to get to 10/10.
      4. Group that keyword in adgroup with maybe 5-10 other very similar keywords (extremely similar).
      5. Create a landing page called site.com/main-keyword.html
      6. On that landing page, include your keyword in the <title></title>, H1 Tags, and 3-5 times in the main copy of the site. As well as any alt tags on images (use full descriptions, not keyword spamming).
      7. Put keyword into meta description & meta keywords, mixed in with other relevant keywords.
      8. Create an Ad on your adgroup (plus several more), which include that keyword in your main title, and the 2 lines of copy they give you.
      9. Make the ad display URL as site.com/keyword
      10. Link it to your new landing page.
      11. Done, rinse and repeat for all your other keywords.

      Yes this is time consuming, but it’s worth it for:

      • Higher click through rate  (= better QS and lower bids)
      • Higher Conversions (= everything is now targeted)
      • Lower Bids (= your quality score should be 10/10 – you save money)

      If you don’t get 10/10, which on a couple of occasions We didn’t, you can either create a new adgroup, move the keywords which didn’t to there, then do the same process again. OR edit your landing page to increase the frequency that keyword is mentioned.

      Your QS can fluctuate from the first time you set it up, so it’s worth waiting at least 24-48 hrs before making changes. We had some go from instant 10/10, to 7/10, and back to 10/10 and haven’t moved since.

      Recent Posts

      Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...

      Post to Twitter

      View Comments

      Advertise Here
      Advertise Here

      Like Box