People don’t get RSS

At least not the way they understand email. That’s why a service like Rmail (which was bought last month by NBC Universal) will be important, particularly until the browsers that incorporate RSS become ubiquitous.

Instead of requiring an RSS aggregator, this site lets people get feeds delivered straight to their email inboxes.

I tested this in my Blogger blog, because for some reason WordPress.com doesn’t let you paste in JavaScript routines. If you check out my sidebar in Blogger, it’s a really nice interface.

I like WordPress a lot, and I’ll bet that if I purchased the CSS customization I could get Rmail to work, but one of the ideas behind this blog is that everything you see here is free…just to emphasize how free and easy it is to use these new media and social media tools.

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Blogs DO Get Higher Search Rankings

One reason people give for companies starting a blog is SEO (search engine optimization). They say BLOG stands for Better Listings On Google. I have a personal example that leads me to see that’s right.

Last November I did a post on John Kotter’s 8 Steps to Successful Change, reviewing his book, “Our Iceberg is Melting.” As I occasionally review my blog stats at wordpress.com, I’ve seen that consistently show up among my higher-ranking posts. As I looked further, I saw that “John Kotter 8 steps” and variants appear as search terms used to reach my blog.

I thought maybe it was through Technorati, so I tried a Google search with the term John Kotter 8 steps, and was surpised to find:
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My surpise was that my post showed up on the first page of search results, and that it was above the Wikipedia entry on John Kotter.

I previously did a post about how for almost any proper noun you enter in Google, Wikipedia will be among the first 10 results. The traffic on my blog isn’t huge, and I don’t have tons of incoming links. So that’s why it seemed odd that my little ol’ blog post would rank higher than Wikipedia, Amazon.com and Barnes & Noble.com.

Blogs really do get Google juice.

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American Idol it’s not…

…but a Mayo Clinic physician, Janet Vittone, M.D., has been named one of five finalists in an ABCNewsNow.com/Prevention magazine contest called “Picture of Health” for women over age 40 who have overcome an illness or otherwise inspired members of their community to make healthy choices. See the ABCNewsNow interview here.

Voting is on-line, and as of this moment there have been a total of 1,978 votes cast, which is probably about 8 seconds worth of voting in American Idol.

Dr. Vittone had previously been featured on Mayo Clinic’s web site. The Rochester Post-Bulletin also did a story today on the contest and her participation.
This contest demonstrates several trends shaping media:

User-generated content, as each contestant uploaded a one-minute video during the first two months of 2007. Reportedly several hundred women entered or were entered by their loved ones. All of that content was free to ABC and to Prevention, and they used it to sell advertising.

Audience involvement, with people voting for their favorites. This is a little different from other contests like American Idol, because in essence you have five women who have either beaten a disease or engaged a community in health behaviors. There’s no Sanjaya in the bunch. Which saintly woman do you choose?

Partnerships for cross-promotion. Prevention and ABCNewsNow.com are building traffic and interest for each other, and with the announcement of finalists on Good Morning America, they got a nice additional cross-promotion.

Lots of web video that wouldn’t make air. When you go to the contest site you have options to see at least three videos of each contestant (each of which has a SlimFast ad). The whole Good Morning America introduction segment was about three minutes. But because you don’t need to appeal to a mass audience on the web, you can provide more in-depth video for those who are interested. (I would suggest, though, that ABC might want to reconsider whether playing the same ad before each video is a good idea. I would watch more of them if I didn’t have to see the “Hippy Hippy Shake” ad for a full 30 seconds each time. I likely would be more favorably disposed toward the advertiser, too, if every one-minute video wasn’t preceded by a 30-second ad.)

It will be interesting to follow this and see how many people are participating.

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Star Tribulation

The Star Tribune of the Twin Cities today announced its second round of layoffs this year (the first was in March).

Bowing to the pressures of declining circulation and falling revenue, the Star Tribune Monday announced a sweeping program of buyouts across the company that will send 145 employees out the door, either through buyouts or, if enough people don’t volunteer, layoffs.
The cuts represent 7 percent of the company’s 2,100 positions and include 50 positions out of 383 people in the newsroom and editorial departments.

Publisher Par Ridder delivered the news in a company-wide meeting in which he laid out the increasingly bleak fortunes for daily metro newspapers. The company’s annual advertising and circulation revenue has fallen by $64 million over the last three years. Classified advertising was down 23 percent in the first quarter over last year. If current trends continue, Ridder said, the paper would begin to lose money in a year to 18 months.

The full article goes into considerable detail on the financial problems facing the paper, which was sold late last year for less than half of what McClatchy had paid for it.

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Video in a whole new (Silver)Light

TechCrunch has a really interesting review of Microsoft’s new multimedia presentation and services software, Silverlight. I installed Silverlight on my Mac with no problem, and the demos show that this is going to be able to do a lot of neat things. For one thing, it might challenge the ubiquity of Flash. The video quality in the Fantastic Four movie trailer is stunning.

It tells me Web 2.0 might be moving to 2.2 or so, and that standards for web video may be moving up.

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