From Basel about 17 km one way.
Via Weil am Rhein, Binzen and Wollbach, along the railway tracks to Kandern.
Easy ride.
Wow, Google Maps now offers a bicycle option in its Get Directions menu. Though not for the route below.
View Larger Map
From Basel about 17 km one way.
Via Weil am Rhein, Binzen and Wollbach, along the railway tracks to Kandern.
Easy ride.
Wow, Google Maps now offers a bicycle option in its Get Directions menu. Though not for the route below.
View Larger Map
I want to write a blog post on SEO. My primary motivation is to learn what the changes are and I learn best by writing my own notes.
Here we go. Some notes on SEO off the top of my head and unsorted:
Panda
Following the Panda release and other algrithmic changes by Google, the net is full of speculation – even to the extent that email newsletters may influence results – a fact that was refuted by Matt Cutts. (Shame on me – I retweeted the link before reading the comments. Note to myself: Read before you retweet. But somehow I fell for the arguments cos it sounds realistic.)
Google offers the following advice on developing high-quality content.
But…
After reading the comments I compared search results between Bing and Google. I guess it depends on the search terms but i don’t see Bing results being better than Google just yet.
SEO tools
I’ve got a list of Drupal SEO tools via Volacci and Netnode which I’ll post sometime soon.
And … Here on my WordPress blog I use Yoast’s SEO tool.
But to be honest I enjoy blogging and hiding in full public view. Chiperoni.ch is my knowledge base and my memory lane and my notepad and my diary.
Social SEO
Besides SEO, social media references are gaining importance. And definitely influence my click.
If somebody in my Twitter network recommends a link, it gets my attention. If over 400 people “like” Handmade 2.0’s article on Facebook, I am going to pay more attention.
Referring links
Backlinks from high ranking websites remain important.
I stumbled across this SeoMOZ presentation discussing the full bandwidth of inbound marketing:
This looks interesting
Source: Infamy
A Joomla 1.5 1.0 website that I take care of was hacked with an eval (gzinflate(base64_decode(
By chance I had read this article on why you shouldn’t google for free WordPress themes – with a list of sites that help with decrypting.
Scary.
The blogger behind Handmade2.0 has written an article about setting up a business and the various things you need to take care of (business licenses, taxes, copyright and license infringements, etc) for Feed-Magazin.
Well done!
I recently took part in a webinar on increasing website traffic.
Here are my notes:
10. Engage socially
Engage and participate in online conversations in a pertinent and relevant way
Keep track how people respond
Track how many people reach the site via FB and Twitter
Tweak your message
Repeat
Rule of thumb regarding social media content:
Original thoughts 30%
Reposting 25%
Conversation 25%
Marketing 20%
Twitter and Facebook are the must-dos for social media
9. Offer significant call-to-actions
e.g. button in a different color and size
8. Get more links
Use Competitive Link Finder by SEOmoz to find where competitors are getting backlinks
Find linking partners
7. Fix the links you’ve got already
i.e. ask websites that are pointing to your website to update their links if the links are broken or not up-to-date
6. Use multivariate testing – A/B testing
Change one thing at a time and watch the results, i.e.
Tools:
Google Website Optimizer
Visual Website Optimizer
5. Put the keyword on the page
Include the keywords in the
Don’t overdo it. Write web pages for humans not search engines
Meta tags (description, keywords) are ignored by Google – no longer checked.
4. The secret of awesome web headlines
Work on your headings.
Cross-reference to http://www.copyblogger.com/10-sure-fire-headline-formulas-that-work/
3. Don’t make me think
We don’t read pages, we scan them
We don’t make optimal choices, we satisfice
We don’t figure out how things work, we muddle through
Design for Power Skimmers
2. Know your Google Analytics
1. Begin with an SEO Audit
(this is where the presenter added a sales pitch for their own services)
Tools recommended:
http://www.marketsamurai.com/full-version.php 149 US$
Google Adwords Keyword Tool – Google has largest base of data
Crazy Egg 19$ per month
a fave from my collection of snapshots:
A comment on the outside of a construction fence at the Novartis campus in Basel
We’ll quit tomorrow
Where were you on 9/11? On a day like this, I can’t help but remembering where I was 9 years and 7 months ago.
I was in Lugano at work. All news web sites were down. I went in search of a TV together with my colleague Y. The TV in the pub downstairs wasn’t set to receive news. Later we found that the R and D engineers had hooked up a PC with a TV card to a projector. And many of us watched the news until late in the afternoon.
Following my timeline in Twitter this morning was great. The people I follow form a great world news channel.
Beautiful sunny Sunday.
Today’s activities:
I went to church, the fitness center, and sat in the park and drank a latte macchiato in the beautiful spring sun.
And I took some snapshots.
20th March was my grandmother’s birthday. I always wanted to write her story: the little that I know from my mother and what my imagination has filled in. Maybe one day I will.
I really like the current series of preachings at Crossroads church. We are studying Deuteronomy. If you are curious, there is a audio podcast on the church website. I can recommend last week’s and today’s.
Attached to the news and Twitter:
I guess you are doing the same as I am: checking the status at Fukushima nuclear power plant. And the news from Libya. Egypt. Tunisia. Bahrain. I am reminded of Billy Joel’s song “We didn’t start the fire”.
One recurring buzzword that has entered the business world is “crowdsourcing” – it is used as a silver bullet in all sorts of contexts. Here are some notes and thoughts:
Wikipedia has a good definition and describes how the term emerged.
Famous examples are:
Facebook’s use of the community to translate its interface.
or Twitter
and Google that use the power of the community to translate their web apps. For example the Chichewa interface was translated by Malawian and Zambian volunteers:
See Clement Nyirenda’s blog entry calling for volunteers and his subsequent post celebrating the launch.
Another very famous crowdsourcing platform is Amazon’s Mechanical Turk, which provides some remuneration for so-called human intelligence tasks.
Reasons why a crowdsourced project may fail:
Prerequisites are:
What about B2B projects? How can B2B companies use crowdsourcing?
Tartan Marketing (not Scottish despite the branding) describes 2 scenarios:
Here is a further list of less well-known crowdsourcing platforms.
Just started a Twitter storm with the extraordinary mllea following my tweet yesterday evening to investigate all PhDs with the same scrutiny and dedication that Mr. zu Guttenberg has been subjected to:
I don’t support zu Guttenberg and I think what he did is simply wrong. But there is another aspect in this story that is being wholly ignored: the role of the German uni system and the blatant incompetence of many, many professors and researchers to communicate “wissenschaftliches Arbeiten”.
My MBA law professor said:
“A pancake can never be so thin, that it doesn´t have 2 sides to it”
So before you condemn, please consider the other side. An underfunded, outdated university setup with many faculty members that have little to no didactic training/skills and low motivation.
Coming from Malawi where education and the teaching profession is highly regarded, I was shocked.
And compared to my recent MBA experience at a US state university, there is a world of difference.
Coincidently another friend commented on my tweet saying: if you check them, the Bundestag will be empty.
In the end I managed to get thru my German university because there are dedicated, thoughtful professors that care. And I would always hire somebody with a Magister in Humanities from a German university because I know they are self-starters with excellent research skills that don’t give up easily. It is a good learning experience.
Tunisia, Egypt, Bahrain, Libya, Iran…
I read a quote to the effect that the technology invented 10 years ago, will change society profoundly in the next 10 years.
I wonder about the progress that could be achieved if a developing country would provide free and open access to the Internet and computers for its entire population over a long period of time.
Meanwhile Germany is discussing the PhD thesis paper of the Minister of Defence and the missing references. In my humble opinion, the university professors are to blame as well. Why accept a thesis paper or dissertation if it doesn’t cite sources correctly? I am missing this aspect in all of the discussions. If this is your area of research, you’ll be familiar with the various sources and recognize copycats. Right?
And I stumbled across this article on information overload.
It rained today. The first time in weeks. I can’t remember if it rained in January.
The air was so fresh and clean this evening. Beautiful.
Alles wird gut.
Good news for bloggers! That is – for bloggers that write their own posts rather than copying blog posts and entire blogs.
Matt Cutts writes about upcoming changes that will benefit original content:
http://www.mattcutts.com/blog/algorithm-change-launched/
Via a retweet by Handmade2.0
I pay 45 CHF (approx 45 US$) for a haircut in Basel, Switzerland. Nothing special. Just washing and a haircut.
I paid 1650 Malawi Kwacha (approx 10 US$) for a haircut in Blantyre, Malawi.
I paid the equivalent of 4 US$ for a haircut in Shanghai, PRC.
Just saying.
Another way to read Chiperoni.ch:
Google Reader Play
How do I find my best photo of 2010 on Flickr?
Not easy.
I need an app for that.
I (still) don’t edit my photos according to composition or technical aspects.
I have been uploading snapshots at regular intervals.
Despite a busy schedule.
Still following my motto:
Document your life.
Some spontaneous selections:
I like this quote:
“Do what you can, with what you have, where you are.”
Attributed to Theodore Roosevelt but sounds like it could have originated in my childhood somewhere.