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Archive for December, 2006

The Blog Post As A Christmas Card

Thursday, December 21st, 2006

What was going to be a newsletter is now a hastily composed blog post. I have precious few hours before we travel home to spend a few days with family and way too many hors d’oeuvre. Yay!!


(Merry Christmas…by Flickr user Tio)

And so, I wish thee all a very Merry Christmas (that’s what celebrate in my family) and I will see you all again very soon.

Sidebar:: As a bonus link, I was looking through my sister’s copy of Vanity Fair, and I noticed an interesting ad for Target, which spanned several top 1/3 pages, featuring sheet music for Tony Bennett’s “I’ll be home for Christmas,” remixed by Moby. I thought that was pretty cool, then I went to download it at the link they gave: www.target.com/tonybennettremix. What was really neat was that you can download it as a GarageBand file (Macs only, snobs!) and remix it yourself.

David Blaine hanging in a box to promote Target = 1.0
Tony Bennett + Moby + UGC (User Generated Content) = 2.0

Again, enjoy your holidays everyone, and get wound up to honor those resolutions come January one!
Love,

Jordan and Alex

Roland Tanglao Nails It

Thursday, December 21st, 2006

Roland is in the middle of an interesting SEO/content management debate, and I have to say I agree with him:

Yes, a static website is much better than no website. But with modern blogging software like WordPress and content management systems like Drupal, Joomla, Plone it’s easy to setup static pages as well as blogs and you then get all the advantages of blogs (ease of editing, RSS which leads to higher search engine rank) and traditional static websites. This means you have a system where anybody can update the content without needing a webmaster or FTP which means the site is more likely to be up to date unlike most static websites.


(self portrait by Roland)

He continues..

Technical people and web designers who recommend to clients to use static pages with FTP, Front Page, Dreamweaver, etc. are doing their clients a disservice! It’s 2006 not 1999!

Better to use WordPress (even though I work for a Drupal company I’ll continue to plug WordPress for blogs and simple static sites; use Drupal if you want a comprehensive web presence including a true community site) and just use its static web pages features and make the blog part invisible) than to use some custom or hand coded static site.

I couldn’t agree more. Perhaps it would be too blatantly self-promotional to remind everyone that if you need a site built with Wordpress…

Happy Birthday to Tell Ten Friends

Wednesday, December 20th, 2006

The blog turns 1-year-old this week, the company celebrates that same milestone this Spring.

As an early birthday and Christmas present, Rob has been making tweaks to the site again, to the back end as reported earlier and most noticeably, to the banner.

I love it. It’s Vancouver, it’s fun and it features a great photo by Rob himself, of False Creek and BC Place. The stadium which, sans inflatable roof, will be home of the opening and closing ceremonies of the Olympics in 2010. Great job, mate!

:: You know what else would be a great birthday present? Leave a comment behind, and maybe even let us all know when you started reading.

Doing My Part for the Z listers

Tuesday, December 19th, 2006

First, the existing Z-list, as reported by Mack Collier:
BrandSizzle
bizsolutionsplus
Customers Rock!
Being Peter Kim
Pow! Right Between The Eyes! Andy Nulman’s Blog About Surprise
Billions With Zero Knowledge
Working at Home on the Internet
MapleLeaf 2.0
darrenbarefoot.com
Two Hat Marketing

The Emerging Brand
The Branding Blog
CrapHammer
Drew’s Marketing Minute
Golden Practices
Viaspire
Tell Ten Friends
Flooring the Consumer
Kinetic Ideas
Unconventional Thinking
Buzzoodle
NewsPaperGrl
The Copywriting Maven
Hee-Haw Marketing
Scott Burkett’s Pothole on the Infobahn
Multi-Cult Classics
Logic + Emotion
Branding & Marketing
Popcorn n Roses
On Influence & Automation
Bullshitobserver
Servant of Chaos
converstations
eSoup
Presentation Zen
Dmitry Linkov
aialone
John Wagner
Nick Rice
CKs Blog
Design Sojourn
Frozen Puck
The Sartorialist
Small Surfaces
Africa Unchained
Perspective
gDiapers
Marketing Nirvana
Bob Sutton
¡Hola! Oi! Hi!
Shut Up and Drink the Kool-Aid!
Women, Art, Life: Weaving It All Together
Community Guy
Social Media on the fly

And now, my additions:

Jeremy Latham’s Blog
SMogger Social Media Blog
Masey.com

I Have Been a Very Bad Blogger

Tuesday, December 19th, 2006

For starters, I haven’t been posting much. This is most disappointing to me, because I vowed I would be consistent. Much worse though is the fact that I haven’t added the rest of my podcasting series, and now we’re close enough to the holidays that it seems I might break that promise too.

My sincerest of apologies to those of you who were waiting for more episodes before Christmas, especially those who made a point of saying so in the comments. In the New Year, I will atone for all of my sins, I assure you. Still, Time magazine has voted me Person of the Year.

Lastly, I owe a big thanks to Mack Collier, his “Z-list” has brought me a huge burst in traffic and links, and I haven’t had the time to reciprocate to all of the linkers. This one I will rectify much sooner. Thanks to all of you who are reposting my link over and over again, I am entirely grateful. I haven’t checked yet, but you might have moved me up the Technorati ladder quite a few notches. In blog land, that’s like hard currency.

And, did anyone else notice that the entire Wordpress dashboard UI changed overnight? I’m still getting used to it.

Update: ‘Twas Rob who changed my dashboard; adding a plugin as a surprise, as he mentions in the comments.

What’s Cool on the Web This Week

Thursday, December 14th, 2006

I’m rather embarrassed to admit that I missed the sign-up deadline for Casecamp, Crayonville (held in Second Life) tonight. Sounds like I missed out.

Anyway, without that coolest of the cool ‘unconference’ to attend in that 3D world I’m gradually warming up to, I started digging into the episodes of “Crayoncast,” the podcast by staff of Crayon, “a new marketing company.” And I like it. The staff each give a quick minute on their favorite topic of the week. Some of it is actually useful too, such as the tip to check out JPG Magazine, the first “user-generated” print magazine, for photographers.

JPG

What are you waiting for cool kids, submit your shots now. You could win and get published, and with that receive $100 and a free subscription. The future of publishing is now.

What to Get Me for Christmas

Thursday, December 14th, 2006

You’re probably all just dying to know, and although I’m tempted to publish a whole list here, this is actually just to announce a cool new feature from Flickr:

Give the Gift of Flickr. As many of you know, I’m a huge fan of the service, but I am still on a free account. And even though, as Factory Joe (aka Chris Messina) reports, those free accounts are going from 20MB to 100MB per month in uploads, I still feel as if I owe it to the Flickr community to contribute more than just my occasional photo or two.

flickr gift

So if you’re stumped, and you want to get me something that I will cherish for many years to come, this is the idea you’ve been looking for. If my new Pro account isn’t under the tree this year, I resolve to purchase this for myself in the New Year. Just like I resolve to finally start training for the Vancouver Marathon. Seriously.

SEO 2.0 or Social Media Optimization

Tuesday, December 12th, 2006

As the web changes, so do the guidelines, rules and strategies for Search Engine Optimization (SEO). This past week, I had a meeting with a client was incredibly keen on the idea of using social media as a way of optimizing his main site (more on that after the site’s official launch date, I assure you) and his overall web presence.

It’s no secret that this is a tactic that I employ to promote Tell Ten Friends. As much as I am a member of various online communities for the sake of the community itself, I also recognize the value of those incoming links, and the “web cred” it gives me to be so well connected online. The truth is, my business is a big part of who I am, and so it stands to reason that I promote it and link to it throughout my various online haunts.

With the onset of “Web 2.0,” a new list of guidelines apply in addition to the usual SEO tips of old. In fact, as tagging and self-publishing become more prevalent among users, the “old ways” of SEO will become less and less relevant. In the meantime, new technologies and codes already require a shift in your current SEO game plan. See this article by Jason Barnes of Jay and Silent Rob for a better explanation of this. And thanks to Jay for being the spark that ignited this entry.

I’ve often remarked how my blog content is infinitely more popular than my “static” content, and that should come as no surprise, with a number of faithful subscribers and a smattering of incoming links each week from other bloggers across the web. But I still maintain a higher number of new visitors each week, and enough referrals from things like my MySpace page to make it worth keeping the damn thing live. As you probably already know, as your traffic numbers grow, so does page rank, and the effect is not unlike a snowball rolling downhill. Actually, I suppose it’s more accurate to say that it is like pushing a snowball on flat land, because it requires constant effort, and the rewards are gradual. By constant effort, I mean publishing fresh content that can be consumed by interested visitors and indexed by search engines Google, as well as keeping your various other online profile info up to date.

Again, none of this comes as a surprise to fellow bloggers, online content experts or SEO specialists. But then, regular readers here know that I dedicate a great deal of time shedding light on all things web for regular users, the masses, who are just beginning to realize that there is a “new web” out there for them to discover.

Presumably, these changes in the way we use the web are what spurred Linda to create a blog dedicated to the subject of “Social Media Optimization.” Still a very new blogger, Linda works marketing, specializing in SEO, and is now turned on to the idea that online community involvement is about more than just search results.

Now, I love the time that I spend networking online, sharing ideas, content and “crowdsourcing” great ideas among the virtual collective. It gives me a rush when my user-generated-content generates discussion and incoming links among readers and friends online. But my point is, there are bottom-line benefits too, regardless of what the cynics have to say:

-My blog has generated almost a dozen warm leads since I launched the company earlier this year, of which three have become clients.
-Two more have come directly from MySpace. (Real leads too, not MLM and ‘get rich quick’ schemes)
-Via Flickr and various blogs by Vancouverites, I have “met” scores of online contacts, who I feel like I know when I meet them in the real world.
-Last week, I bumped into someone I recognized in Second Life, where we agreed to meet for coffee (in the real world, that is) in the New Year.

What does it all mean?

From a personal standpoint, I think it means we’re moving toward a time when companies (especially small-to-medium enterprises) will be evaluated by potential customers for a new list of criteria that will include their level of involvement in online communities, or at the very least, their level accessibility to those customers. From a more scientific standpoint, in terms of SEO, it means that if you have a static site with no opportunity for the community to stay in touch, or worse, no reason for them to return, you’ll soon be trumped by smaller companies with better, more dynamic online presence.

Like it has since its inception, the web lets you connect with a much larger audience. The new web takes this one step further. It allows even more connectedness, a better two-way exchange between publisher and user, and democratizes those definitions, too; now, any user can be their own publisher, building their own community, in a matter of minutes.

Bottom line: Small business people, join and contribute to your favourite online communities. Big business, consider building a relevant, useful online community for your customers and evangelists. It’s not right for everyone, but if you value the idea of community and want to be closer connected to your customer base and their feedback, it just might be right for you.

(As an example how my brain works, read this over again, and see how it goes from an article about SEO to the importance of being involved in online communities. ADD, anyone?)

100 Posts in Wordpress

Sunday, December 10th, 2006

This is my 100th post since the switch to Wordpress. Add the 81 from Blogger, and we’re not far off from 200. Also, stay tuned for the celebration of the most important milestone of them all, Tell Ten Friends’ first birthday. (hint: it happens before we ring in 2007)

100

Thanks very much for reading. I’m having a blast, and your comments, links, feedback and encouragement are just icing on the cake.

5 Things You Didn’t Know About Me

Sunday, December 10th, 2006

Tag! I’m it.

Ben Yoskovitz shared his five things that the blogging community doesn’t know about him, and has chosen me as one of five people to continue to spread the meme. So here goes:

1. I can read Korean (phonetically, at least), even though I have no idea what I’m saying out loud most of the time. Try it for yourself; it only takes about three hours or so to learn.

2. I have a healthy dose of Acadian (Merci, Grandpa Arsenault) mixed in with my Irish and English heritage, mais mon francais n’est pas bon.

3. After college, I spent an entire calendar year as a bike courier in Victoria. Having my bike stolen from outside my friend Erik’s pizza shop was the beginning of the end of that memorable time for me, and was the wake up call I needed to start growing up.

4. My first name is actually Patrick, inherited from my father and his father before him and his father before him. And all of us first born sons, all with middle names starting with “J.” If you’re keeping track, that would make me Patrick Jordan Behan, and Patrick J. Behan IV.

5. Although I did play rep hockey up until Bantam, due to a late-blooming ability to skate well enough and a complete lack of “hands,” I had a much more successful career as a referee (even appearing in the stripes as a linesman for a game of Junior “A”) than I ever did as a player. Ask anyone who ever played hockey with me, and you won’t get much of a dispute on this point.

So there you are, five things that you didn’t know about me before that I am comfortable sharing with the ‘internets.’

Now, I want to find out five things about:

Jeremy Latham
Nathaniel Steven Henry Brown
James Sherrett
Linda Bustos (a hip noob)
Kris Krug