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Cheaper Keywords?

Are you paying too much for keywords? Maybe. According to one source prices are easing somewhat.

JANUARY 19, 2006

Are you paying too much for keywords? Maybe. According to one source prices are easing somewhat.

Eighteen months ago Fathom Online began tracking keyword prices in eight categories. The average of all the prices tracked is summarized in their Keyword Price Index (KPI).

In December 2005, Fathom reported that the average KPI dropped 2% in one month — down to $1.43 from $1.46 in November.

There was a great deal of fluctuation between categories. Telecom Wireless keyword prices climbed 15% to $1.09 after dropping 10% in November, and the Automotive sector showed a gain for the second month in a row, rising 10% to $1.52. Those increases were offset by drops in the prices paid for Finance Investment and Mortgage keywords. These fell 11% and 10% respectively.

Overall, prices fell by 19% between December 2004 and December 2005. In the former month the average price for all eight categories was $1.70, partially attributable to a $4.79 average keyword price in the Finance-Mortgage category. The December 2005 price for that category was $3.30, confirming reports of a gradual slow down in the housing market.

In Q4 2005, average keyword prices fell only 1%, with the KPI moving from $1.44 in September to $1.43 in December. This downward trend sharply contrasted the 2004 trend, when keyword prices rose 24% in the fourth quarter.

Regardless of the price of individual keywords, Fathom Online's Gregg Stewart told MediaPost that his agency sees continued growth in search volume, "The pie is still increasing pretty dramatically.".

After noting that more advertisers, especially in the business-to-business arena, are entering the space, Mr. Stewart concluded: "As the keyword and phrase inventory continues to expand, average prices stabilize, and we see both advertisers and consumers learning to refine their search keywords for more relevant results."


PODCASTING study

More than 6 million American adults have listened to podcasts
29% of those who own MP3 players enjoy Web broadcasts at their leisure

More than 22 million American adults own iPods or MP3 players and 29% of them have downloaded podcasts from the Web so that they could listen to audio files at a time of their choosing. That amounts to more than 6 million adults who have tried this new feature that allows internet “broadcasts” to be downloaded onto their portable listening device.

The term “podcasting” emerged in 2004, as people combined the words “iPod” and “broadcasting.” Podcast listeners typically download audio files from the Web onto a computer, transfer the files to a digital audio player (like an iPod), and listen at their leisure. Often, the audio files are posted online in a way that allows software on a person’s computer to detect and download new podcasts automatically (generally via RSS) for transfer to a portable player.

The new findings come from a national phone survey of adults by the Pew Internet & American Life Project conducted between February 21 and March 21, 2005. In all, 2,201 people were interviewed, including 208 owners of iPods or MP3 players. The margin of error on the full sample is plus or minus two points and on the MP3 player sample is plus or minus 7.5 points. Those under age 18 were not part of this survey.

iPod and MP3 Player ownership
Some 11% of American adults say they own an iPod or other type of MP3 player. That amounts to over 22 million people.

FULL REPORT FROM PEW INTERNET & AMERICANLIFE PROJECT

podOmatic Podcast Portal: Make it, get it, go!

podOmatic Podcast Portal: Make it, get it, go!

Welcome to podOmatic, the easiest place to Create, Find, and Send podcasts and videocasts.





Premiumbeat.com

Deux associés québécois lancent Premiumbeat.com, un service qui permet aux agences de marketing interactif de magasiner rapidement des compositions musicales libres de droit.

Le site conçu par Martin Laliberté de Scalpel Design offre des licences d'utilisation où l'utilisateur ne paie qu'une fois pour un usage illimité. Tous les fichiers musicaux sont disponibles directement sur le site pour un téléchargement instantané. Les musiciens qui contribuent au site proviennent tous à ce jour du Québec.

Premiumbeat.com n'est disponible qu'en anglais, une version française étant prévue au cours de l'année.

"Voilà huit ans que je travaille en multimédia. Je recherche toujours de la bonne musique pour mes projets. J'ai donc eu l'idée de créer un site Web qui répondrait à mes attentes, puis d'en faire profiter tous ceux qui travaillent dans le même domaine", dit François Arbour, cofondateur de Premiumbeat.com avec Gilles Arbour.

Premiumbeat.com

BBC - The Feed Factory - Home

BBC - The Feed Factory - Home

Welcome to the Feed Factory

This site – the Feed Factory – is an introduction to the RSS feeds that are available from bbc.co.uk. You can use the Feed Finder on the left of this page to find some of our recommended feeds from across the bbc.co.uk site. When you are browsing around bbc.co.uk, if there's a feed available, you will see the RSS logo (below) somewhere on the page.
You can click this logo to get hold of the feed.

e-Pub : les meilleures campagnes de l'année 2005

e-Pub : les meilleures campagnes de l'année 2005

10 campagnes qui ont marqué 2005 : IBM, Sony PSP, Brahma, Dyson, Transatlantys, Opel Zafira, Warner Bros, Vauxhall, Sprite et Peugeot. (23/12/2005)



Vodcast from BMW

Vodcast from BMW

Vodcasting.

A Vodcast is the delivery of on-demand video content. Vodcasting is similar to Podcasting except instead of audio on demand its video content on demand.

Vodcasts can be viewed on your computer using standard software such as Windows MediaPlayer and Apple Quicktime.

You can also save the video to your portable video player device such as the Sony Playstation Portable (PSP) or the Apple iPod.

Due to the amount of data that needs to be transmitted for Vodcasting we recommend you use a broadband Internet connection.


ipod







Steve Jobs keynote live from Macworld 2006 - Engadget

PHOTOCASTING!!!!
Steve Jobs keynote live from Macworld 2006 - Engadget

iPod and iTunes

Jobs said that Apple sold 14 million iPods this holiday season, compared to 4.5 million for the 2004 holiday season — that averaged to more than 100 sold every minute. The total number of iPods Apple has sold since the music play was first introduced in 2001 — 42 million.

Apple has sold 850 million songs through its iTunes Music Store. Jobs said that 3 million songs are being sold per day, worldwide — a run rate of more than 1 billion songs per year. TV show sales have been going well since they were introduced this past fall: Eight million have been sold and downloaded from iTunes since the video service went online in mid-October.

Apple’s new $49 iPod remote control sports an integrated FM tuner, making it possible for iPod users to listen to FM radio stations while they use their iPods. The station frequency is displayed on the iPod’s screen. It’s compatible with current models. It’s on sale today.

ABC Sports and ESPN content is now available through iTunes — last week’s Rose Bowl was the top-selling sports program on iTunes, said Jobs.

Jobs also used his time on the keynote stage to discuss Apple’s recent integration with Chrysler vehicles — as was recently announced, most of the new 2006 model year vehicles from Chrysler, Jeep and Dodge feature built-in iPod connectivity as an option. Forty percent of cars sold in the United States have iPod integration as an option, according to Jobs.


Blair and Cameron take the battle for voters' hearts and minds to iPods

Advertising, Marketing, Media and PR News - Brand Republic

LONDON - Politicians are abandoning the hustings and taking to podcasts to get their messages across, with Prime Minister Tony Blair and new Tory leader David Cameron each delivering their offerings this week. Tony Blair's podcast is being hosted by The Sun , which trumpets that it is the first ever podcast by a British Prime Minister, and ranks with the first radio broadcast by Stanley Baldwin in 1924, and the first television broadcast by Neville Chamberlain in 1938. Taking the form of an interview with Sun political editor George Pascoe-Watson, Blair talks for five minutes on his new "respect" policies, which aim to restore considerate behaviour to the streets of Britain and punish trouble families. But Blair has been beaten to the record of being the first British party leader to put out a podcast, with the Daily Telegraph launching a seven-minute interview with Cameron yesterday.

Personalized Trends: a little summary of the spirit of your searches

Personalized Trends: a little summary of the spirit of your searches

The summary includes your most frequent searches and the Web sites and pages that you have visited the most. You can also see the graph of your monthly, daily and hourly activity (see image) that also shows the most popular searches in each of the strips, for example, what you search for on Mondays. There even is a section with suggestions from searches that other users with your same tastes made in Google.

It's like a little Zeitgeist (the spirit of the times) that gives us the gist of the evolution of our use of Google and its searches, and that we can stop or erase whenever we don't want our 'personal' searchs to be registered. With this new functionality, Google shows us its potential as far as personalized services are concerned by adapting them to our searching profile.

As it is said in the official blog of the company, this project was created by Yu Chen, an engineer for Google who developed a script because he was interested in the evolution of the statistics of his searches.

Google Press Center: Zeitgeist

Google Press Center: Zeitgeist

A look back at 2005 wouldn't be complete without some lists. Here are three from us to you, representing some of the most popular searches this year on Google.
Google.com - Top Gainers of 2005
1. Myspace
2. Ares
3. Baidu
4. wikipedia
5. orkut
6. iTunes
7. Sky News
8. World of Warcraft
9. Green Day
10. Leonardo da Vinci
Google News - Top Searches in 2005
1. Janet Jackson
2. Hurricane Katrina
3. tsunami
4. xbox 360
5. Brad Pitt
6. Michael Jackson
7. American Idol
8. Britney Spears
9. Angelina Jolie
10. Harry Potter
Froogle - Top Searches in 2005
1. ipod
2. digital camera
3. mp3 player
4. ipod mini
5. psp
6. laptop
7. xbox
8. ipod shuffle
9. computer desk
10. ipod nano

Improve your English Vocabulary on a daily basis.

Just Vocabulary's Podcast
Increase your vocabulary one podcast at a time.

Offre d'emploi : Spécialiste en référencement (Montréal)

Offre d'emploi chez Cesart

Spécialiste en référencement (Montréal)

Sommaire du poste :

Le titulaire du poste sera en charge des campagnes de positionnement payant. De plus, il sera impliqué dans des projets d’indexation technique et d’analyse de sites associés aux campagnes de positionnement payant.

Responsabilités :

  • Analyser les besoins des prospects et clients;
  • Fournir les éléments nécessaires pour fixer les objectifs de la campagne;
  • Assurer un contact permanent avec les clients et partenaires;
  • Sélectionner les bons réseaux de recherche;
  • Monter les campagnes;
  • Optimiser quotidiennement les campagnes;
  • Mesurer les résultats et s’assurer que ceux-ci sont conformes aux objectifs;
  • Fournir des rapports de résultats et d’analyses aux clients;
  • Proposer des solutions en fonction de l’évolution du marché et des nouvelles opportunités.

Exigences :

  • Baccalauréat en marketing;
  • 3 ans d’expérience en marketing interactif;
  • Expertise en référencement;
  • Connaissance pointue des outils de recherche sur Internet;
  • Bonne connaissance du marché européen;
  • Méthodique, et bien organisé;
  • Curiosité intellectuelle;
  • Esprit analytique;
  • Excellentes habiletés en communication orale et écrite;
  • Excellentes aptitudes en rédaction;
  • Bilinguisme – français et anglais tant à l’oral qu’à l’écrit;
  • Intérêt prononcé pour le Web et son évolution.




Appliquer sur ce poste.

Amazon's Truly Amazing Christmas List

Amazon's Truly Amazing Christmas List

Amazon.com has now been selling goods online for an impressive eleven holiday seasons, but it has never had a season like the one that is just ending. 2005 is one for the record books.

Amazon.com set a new single-day sales record this holiday season. On December 12th more than 3.6 million items were ordered on the giant online retail site. That is 41 items per second.

All systems were definitely go.

"To our customers around the world — thank you," said an ebullient Amazon.com CEO, Jeff Bezos. "We are grateful to [you] for shopping with us this holiday season and we wish everyone a happy new year."

Around the world is right. Amazon.com shipped to over 200 countries this holiday season, and on the peak day of the season shipped over 2.7 million units, with over 99% of orders arriving in time to meet holiday deadlines worldwide.

According to Amazon.com's self-dubbed Holiday Delight-O-Meter, over 108 million items were ordered.

And what was in Amazon's bag of goodies? The most expensive item purchased was a $94,000 pair of diamond earrings. More down to earth, the company sold enough running shoes to outfit nearly every participant in this year's Boston Marathon.

The season's hot selling items ranged from Mario Party 7 for Gamecube and the Game Boy Advance SP in Pearl Blue to CDs by Enya, Diana Krall and Bruce Springsteen and the Black and Decker SS925 Storm Station All-in-one Rechargeable Power Source/Radio/Light.

Top software titles included QuickBooks Pro 2006 Financial Software for Small Business, TurboTax Total Tax Solution Deluxe 2005 with State and Adobe Photoshop Elements 4.0. Top sellers in the beauty area were philosophy candy cane shower and bubble bath, philosophy holiday rescue hot cocoa & marshmallow gift set and the Caswell-Massey 10 Product Sampler.

In DVDs, Star Wars, Episode III - Revenge of the Sith, March of the Penguins and Madagascar headed the list.

If you think shoppers were merely drawn to the Internet by low prices, then you probably did not do much shopping online this holiday season. Once most customers paid for wrapping, customized cards and special shipping, savings was the last thing on their minds.

In fact, a new study from the MIT Sloan School of Management found that the Web's ability to easily locate products, especially niche items, easily trumped price as a reason for shopping online.

"People do save money by going online, but when we compared lower prices to greater choice, we found that the value to consumers of having the extra choice was 10 times greater than the value for price alone," says the study's lead researcher, MIT Sloan School of Management professor Erik Brynjolfsson. "Consumers tend to be less price-sensitive if they are able to find a special niche product."

Anyone who frantically drove from store to store this holiday season looking for that "special" gift knows how frustrating and time-consuming shopping can be. Looking online takes a fraction of the time, and because virtual shelf space is far less expensive than brick-and-mortar stocking of low-selling items, more e-tailers carry niche items.

As a result, for many online retailers, their customer service mantra is quickly becoming, "Convenience, convenience, convenience."

Matt Cutts: Gadgets, Google, and SEO » SEO advice: url canonicalization

Matt Cutts: Gadgets, Google, and SEO » SEO advice: url canonicalization

Before I start collecting feedback on the Bigdaddy data center, I want to talk a little bit about canonicalization, www vs. non-www, redirects, duplicate urls, 302 “hijacking,” etc. so that we’re all on the same page.

Q: What is a canonical url? Do you have to use such a weird word, anyway?
A: Sorry that it’s a strange word; that’s what we call it around Google. Canonicalization is the process of picking the best url when there are several choices, and it usually refers to home pages. For example, most people would consider these the same urls:

  • www.example.com
  • www.example.com/
  • example.com
  • example.com/
  • www.example.com/index.html
  • example.com/home.asp

But technically all of these urls are different. A web server could return completely different content for all the urls above. When Google “canonicalizes” a url, we try to pick the url that seems like the best representative from that set.

Q: So how do I make sure that Google picks the url that I want?
A: One thing that helps is to pick the url that you want and use that url consistently across your entire site. For example, don’t make half of your links go to http://example.com/ and the other half go to http://www.example.com/ . Instead, pick the url you prefer and always use that format for your internal links.

Q: Is there anything else I can do?
A: Yes. Suppose you want your default url to be http://www.example.com/ . You can make your webserver so that if someone requests http://example.com, it does a 301 (permanent) redirect to http://www.example.com. That helps Google know which url you prefer to be canonical. Adding a 301 redirect can be an especially good idea if your site changes often (e.g. dynamic content, a blog, etc.).

Q: If I want to get rid of domain.com but keep www.domain.com, should I use the url removal tool to remove domain.com?
A: No, definitely don’t do this. If you remove one of the www vs. non-www hostnames, it can end up removing your whole domain for six months. Definitely don’t do this. If you did use the url removal tool to remove your entire domain when you actually only wanted to remove the www or non-www version of your domain, do a reinclusion request and mention that you removed your entire domain by accident using the url removal tool and that you’d like it reincluded.

Q: I noticed that you don’t do a 301 redirect on your site from the non-www to the www version, Matt. Why not? Are you stupid in the head?
A: Actually, it’s on purpose. I noticed that several months ago but decided not to change it on my end or ask anyone at Google to fix it. I may add a 301 eventually, but for now it’s a helpful test case.

Q: So when you say www vs. non-www, you’re talking about a type of canonicalization. Are there other ways that urls get canonicalized?
A: Yes, there can be a lot, but most people never notice (or need to notice) them. Search engines can do things like keeping or removing trailing slashes, trying to convert urls with upper case to lower case, or removing session IDs from bulletin board or other software (many bulletin board software packages will work fine if you omit the session ID).

Q: Let’s talk about the inurl: operator. Why does everyone think that if inurl:mydomain.com shows results that aren’t from mydomain.com, it must be hijacked?
A: Many months ago, if you saw someresult.com/search2.php?url=mydomain.com, that would sometimes have content from mydomain. That could happen when the someresult.com url was a 302 redirect to mydomain.com and we decided to show a result from someresult.com. Since then, we’ve changed our heuristics to make showing the source url for 302 redirects much more rare. We are moving to a framework for handling redirects in which we will almost always show the destination url. Yahoo handles 302 redirects by usually showing the destination url, and we are in the middle of transitioning to a similar set of heuristics. Note that Yahoo reserves the right to have exceptions on redirect handling, and Google does too. Based on our analysis, we will show the source url for a 302 redirect less than half a percent of the time (basically, when we have strong reason to think the source url is correct).

Q: Okay, how about supplemental results. Do supplemental results cause a penalty in Google?
A: Nope.

Q: I have some pages in the supplemental results that are old now. What should I do?
A: I wouldn’t spend much effort on them. If the pages have moved, I would make sure that there’s a 301 redirect to the new location of pages. If the pages are truly gone, I’d make sure that you serve a 404 on those pages. After that, I wouldn’t put any more effort in. When Google eventually recrawls those pages, it will pick up the changes, but because it can take longer for us to crawl supplemental results, you might not see that update for a while.

Hot Handsets

Hot Handsets

Motorola RAZR and Sanyo SCP-8200 users are big on mobile content, according to a new survey from M:Metrics.

Why are the owners of these phones so keen on mobile applications and downloading mobile content? In a November study, M:Metrics' chief product architect and senior analyst Seamus McAteer posits some reasons: "The Sanyo SCP-8200 has the highest conversion rate in the industry thanks to Sprint's clean implementation of browser-based services, and the RAZR's large, bright LCD promotes use of browser-based services and game downloading. Furthermore, given the cache of the RAZR as a stylish handset, RAZR owners are more likely to accentuate the statement they make with their handset with the latest tones."

But it seems logical as well that those who are willing to shell out extra money for fancy mobile phones have the means and the interest in using those phones for advanced wireless features from ringtone downloads to obtaining news through mobile Internet connections.

The Motorola RAZR is not the only phone from the company to see extensive mobile content access from its users. The four most popular phone among mobile data users are all made by Motorola, according the M:Metrics. The Motorola RAZR has the second highest rate of conversion to use of mobile data services. It is beaten only by Sanyo's SCP-8200; 50% of the users of this phone convert to using data as well as voice functions on their phone.

Motorola has a commanding place in the US mobile phone market in general. Data from NPD Group indicate that with a 30% share of sales in the third quarter of 2005, Motorola accounted for twice as many sales as LG or Nokia. Although the Nokia 6010 was the second best selling handset in the US during Q3 2005, just 15.4% of its users accessed mobile content. As M:Metrics notes, this phone is marketed to prepaid and lower-spending consumers, groups that make much less of mobile Internet content.

Text messaging remains the most popular mobile data activity by far. Although ringtones and mobile gaming get a lot of attention from providers and the press, more users simply use their phones to get news or information through a wireless browser than either of those activities (in fact, only 3.1% of users downloaded games according to M:Metrics, compared to 10.2% who sought news).

For more information on how mobile phone users are accessing the advanced capabilities of their phones, read eMarketer's Mobile Entertainment: The Rise of the Very Small Screen report.

Online Retail Lessons from The Holiday Season

Online Retail Lessons from The Holiday Season

Early figures on the number of online shoppers and the level of sales this holiday season are coming in. They are looking positive but there are a few implications that should not be overlooked.

The early online shopping numbers for the 2005 holiday season are unquestionably good. According to figures just released by comScore Networks, sales from November 1st to December 21st totalled $17.5 billion, a 24% increase over the same period last year.

The "Holiday eSpending Report," from Nielsen//NetRatings, Goldman Sachs and Harris Interactive reported similar figures, finding that from October 29th to December 25th holiday spending reached $25 billion, a 25% increase over last year's numbers.

In addition, the report found that 54% of online shoppers had finished buying by December 16th. Conversely, by December 16th 10% had not even begun to shop.

Apparel was the number one category with $4.7 billion in sales. Hardware and computer peripherals and consumer electronics each accounted for $3.7 billion in sales. Books and toys/video games made the top five product categories, accounting for $2.2 billion and $1.4 billion in sales respectively.

The report also found that the majority of holiday shoppers were satisfied with their shopping experiences. Overall 70% said felt "very" or "somewhat satisfied." Only 5% said they were either "very dissatisfied" or "somewhat dissatisfied."

These finding do not, however, jibe with a study from ForeSee Results. That firm's "Holiday Shopping Satisfaction Benchmark" study found that the week of December 12th through 18th saw a fall in customer satisfaction of 0.6 percentage points to a satisfaction score of 77.8%. Not a horrendous drop, but a trend in the wrong direction.

Two other attitude measures dipped during the same period. Customer propensity to return to a retailer's site fell 0.8% and the likelihood for an online shopper to recommend an e-commerce site fell 0.6%.

"We saw a similar dip in overall satisfaction, search and ordering process last year, so this isn't a surprise," said Larry Freed, CEO of ForeSee Results. "As we approach the holiday shipping deadline, pressured online shoppers are having a tougher time of finding the products they want and ordering the merchandise in time."

By contrast, this Fall there has been a slow, but steady increase in overall customer satisfaction with online retail sites.

When it comes to making the online shopping experience better, e-tailers have to be aware of shoppers don't like about online shopping.

A new survey from Hostway discovered that consumers' major peeves about retail websites were pop-up advertising (34.9%), registration log-on pages (16.7%), software installation (15.7%) and slow-loading pages (9.1%).

More than 70% of consumers in the survey reported that they were unlikely to purchase from, or even return to, a website after encountering these annoyances. Since only 25% would bother to report they were upset by the tactics, online retailers are often unaware of the fact that they are losing business.

Or, as Ecommerce Times wrote: "[These] results might be bad news for businesses that rely on these tactics to encourage, track or engage their current and potential customers."

For more helpful information on this subject, read eMarketer's Targeting Online Customers report.