- Connect. Tredjepartstjänster som för ihop våra loggin uppgifter från flera sociala nätverk mm till en plats. När nu Twitter, Google, Yahoo och Facebook slåss om att vi ska logga in på andra sajter med deras loggin uppgifter för att möjliggöra delande av information så ger sig andra aktörer ut och sammanför de stora. Bringing Google, Facebook, Twitter Together: Third Party Login Grows Rapidly in 2010
- Hur Mint.com fick 1,5 miljoner besökare. Genom en väl genomtänkt strategi så kan en kombination av seo, ppc och sociala medier en mycket hög träffbild och utveckling av besökare. Kostnad? Tjaa...kan vi gissa att den är betydligt lägre än vad det skulle kostat att uppnå samma resultat via enbart PPC. How Mint.com Acquired 1.5M+ Users
- Den sociala användarstegen som är mycket användbar när man tittar till målgruppens beteende på sociala medier. Besvarar till viss del frågan "Hur" vi ska bemöta målgruppen på sociala medier. Behaviorgraphics Humanize the Social Web
torsdag, april 29, 2010
Bringing the web together
Augmented reality PSA in Amsterdam Rembrandtplein mirrors peoples behaviour
This giant TV-billboard in the Rembrandtplein is perfectly situated to be stared at whilst ones waits for the tram. I've often stood there and stared at TV-commercials contemplating what would be the ultimate idea to run in this space. And, here it is.
There's a problem in The Netherlands that public service employees face aggression and violence, and witnesses do nothing to help or stop the situation. This PSA holds a mirror up to the people on the street, showing them onscreen (as people do love to look at themselves), but with a little help of a scene previously filmed against bluescreen background, they find that they are now in a scene where paramedics face violence, and they play the part of the onlookers who don't intervene when the paramedics need help.
fredag, april 23, 2010
Facebook tar död på sökmotoroptimering
fredag, april 09, 2010
SEOmoz | Nudge: Lessons for SEO and Business
A special report on managing information: A different game | The Economist
Feb 25th 2010 | From The Economist print edition
IN 1879 James Ritty, a saloon-keeper in Dayton, Ohio, received a patent for a wooden contraption that he dubbed the “incorruptible cashier”. With a set of buttons and a loud bell, the device, sold by National Cash Register (NCR), was little more than a simple adding machine. Yet as an early form of managing information flows in American business the cash register had a huge impact. It not only reduced pilferage by alerting the shopkeeper when the till was opened; by recording every transaction, it also provided an instant overview of what was happening in the business.