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December 18th, 2009UncategorizedPublishing Kigali WireView more documents from Graham Holliday.Graham Holliday who blogs from Rwanda has published this excellent presentation about he disseminates information using free tools and a patchy, expensive Internet connection.
As they say necessity is the mother of invention and Graham has found some simple, but effective ways of getting the word out. Definitely worth a read through and something the more broadband rich among us can learn from.
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Tags: blog, Business, Design, Rwanda, Web search engine, Website -
December 2nd, 2009UncategorizedThis is a short post for the forthcoming Cow Digital digest, which Louise Doherty and myself put together every week. Sign up for it here!
According to Google, the fastest growing search terms for 2009 so far have been Michael Jackson, Facebook and Tuenti, the latter being a leading Spanish social network. Meanwhile the top three searches for Microsoft’s search engine ‘Bing’, are likewise Michael Jackson and Facebook, with Swine Flu in third place.
Perhaps of more interest is Google’s list of fast falling searches. Barack Obama, Amy Winehouse and Heath Ledger all figure.

So, perhaps worryingly for the brands in question do video sharing site Daily Motion, social network Bebo and Nintendo’s game console, the wii.
Tags: barack obama, Bebo, Cow digital, Cow Digital digest, Dirk Singer, facebook, google, Louise Doherty, Michael Jackson, Microsoft, Nintendo, Web search engine -
November 28th, 2009UncategorizedSearch engines make you smarter, so say researchers from Penn State University (via Science Daily). Well…kind of. But they don’t make you stupid as Nicholas Carr claimed in his seminal Atlantic Magazine article last year.
Researchers looked at search habits of 72 participants engaging in 426 tasks. Rather than search being used to find out new stuff, search engines were “primarily used for fact checking users’ own internal knowledge.” According to the academics, that means that search is actually part of our own internal learning process.
Hence the fears about students for example getting lazy and just using Google rather than their brains to find out answers might be incorrect. Instead, Google, Bing et al support “higher level information needs”, i.e to increase the chances that we get the right answer and to put detail on things we already know.
That makes sense if you look at how search habits are evolving, in particular lengthening. Last week Hitwise’s Asia-Pacific analyst Alan Long put out a post on lengthening search terms. Something that Hitwise says is an international trend – one and two word searches have gone down over the past three years and 3+ word searches have gone up.
People already have a fair idea of what they are after when they go to search, hence more specific searches. As a result, search is as much to validate and build on existing knowledge as to find new one.
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- Microsoft’s Bing okayed to power Yahoo!7 Search (mumbrella.com.au)
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- Twitter Doesn’t Pass Along Google-juice (siliconangle.net)
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February 12th, 2009UncategorizedThe other day I posted about what marketing agencies see as a measure of viral video success. Unbelievably over a quarter peg the success rate at a million views or more, which to me seems like a case of taking the big number and plucking it out of thin air.
Why? Because getting up to 50k is an achievement given the thousands of brand films that languish on YouTube with several hundred views.
As new research from TubeMogul shows, even though video sharing sites host the actual films, less than half (45%) of us now discover content by browsing through these sites. Which could be why ‘featured’ clips on YouTube used to get 500,000 views, but now often don’t reach 100,000.
Where does the other 55% come from?
Search engines: 11.18%,
Social networks: 3.66%,
Social bookmarking sites: 3.19%,
Video search engines: 0.63%,
Email/IM: 0.05%“Everything else (almost all blogs, from the thousands we scanned): 80.88% of all referred traffic.”
In other words, forget about seeding your video on specialist video search engines, or hoping people will forward it on by email. Blogs and online media are the key to success. Or, according to TubeMogul:
”These results likely come as bad news to the myriad sites that are set up with online video discovery in mind, such as video search engines, which source a relatively modest 0.63% of all referred video views.
”To those trying to unlock a formula for making a video go viral, perhaps this gives some clues: reach out to bloggers and optimize a video’s meta-data to ensure it ranks highly on intra-video site plugs.”
Image – Kimba
Tags: Search, Social bookmarking, Social network, TubeMogul, Video clip, Viral video, Web search engine, YouTube -







