These are my links for May 9th through May 16th:

  • How to create compelling content that ranks well in search engines – A great 29 page e-book by Copyblogger author Brian Clark on how to make great web writing copy that also pushes all the SEO buttons. Some very useful tips, as a long pre-amble to promote his Scribe software which I admit has my interest: you enter your copy and the software gives you tips on how to improve it better for your chosen keywords.
  • The Internet Conference: Powerpoint Presentations – Susan Hallam organised the Internet Conference last week in Nottingham, an impressive collection of speakers and presentations from major e-marketing, e-commerce and SEO experts. Here's are some presentations from the day.
  • Matrix: How Facebook’s ‘Community Pages’ and Privacy Changes Impact Brands – Jeremiah Owyang's review of how Facebook's latest raft of changes are affecting brands: mostly as a negative effect. Facebook strategy is to aggregate the web, including wikipedia style aggregation, which negatively affects brands as well as personal privacy. In other news, web people vote overwhelmingly to say they prefer Facebook's 'fan' to 'like' status – which seems to have had the affect already of diluting loyalty to a Facebook Page. http://polldaddy.com/poll/3183296/ Overall, Facebook's endless tweaking and twisting seems to be having a negative affect on it's community. It's international gathering of staff to discuss privacy issues this week may signal a sea-change in their steam-roller approach to aggregating and connect all user data.
  • Is Your Social Media Strategy Just Digital Flyering? – Good article by Andrew Girvan on lessons from theatre producers on the digital equivalent of flyering – Twitter broadcasting. Some good tips on doing it better: running special promotions, targetting groups of interest, and of course making your Twitter presence be conversational.
  • From Realities to Values: A Strategy Framework for Digital Natives – No great answers here but a useful framework for understanding how to define and consider the needs of 'digital natives' (or the under 28s as this article defines them) when planning a digital strategy including content creation, engagement and advocacy.
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These are my links for December 28th through December 30th:

  • It’s the end of TV as we know it – The Register's tech-focused view of broadcasters Project Canvas – which should demo at Easter and sell in summer (unless Sky/Murdoch succeed in fighting it and the BBC's involvement), this could herald the mainstreaming of IPTV (internet on-demand television delivered by web to computer or TV sets) which also leads to the end of broadcast TV (I think this will be a slow rather than immediate decline over several decades).
  • Is the Tipping Point Toast? – Got sent this link by author Guy Kawasaki who believes 'nobodies are the new somebodies'. This is nearly a year old but a must-read article: it rebuffs Malcolm Gladwell's 'The Tipping Point' theory that marketeers need to target the influential, however, scientific research as shown that crowds are as easily influenced by each other as the supposedly influential, with connection between peers and friends more significant than the 'celeb Twitterers' etc. Important (if not depressing) lessons for social media marketeers.
  • Social Media for Audience Development & Community Building – Very good article by video journalist Documentally giving examples of approaches and technologies for how a theatre production could use social media, and how it can be used as a means of communicating and collaborating with audiences.
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