Friday, March 29, 2013

Google: Keep sponsored content out of Google News

March 29, 2013 Subscribe | View as Web page.
THEDAILYBUZZ
A roundup of emedia news and views from around the web
In this Issue
Behind the business model of MailOnline
Google: Keep sponsored content out of Google News
It's costing you to serve videos
76% of U.S. iPhone app rev from in-app purchases
2 ways the new Flipboard could disrupt media
5 lessons search can teach display
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Job: Director of Product Marketing, Corporate Advertising
The Chronicle of Higher Education is seeking a Director of Product Marketing, Corporate Advertising to help The Chronicle of Higher Education provide best-in-class products and services to our expanding client base. Learn more and apply.
Behind the business model of MailOnline
Trying to remember what an ad-supported media outlet looks like? Here is an inside look at the numbers that allow MailOnline to remain a free news source. And the company's digital offerings are projected to exceed print revenue in just 2 years.
FULL ARTICLE
- The Media Briefing
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Audience Data Got You Down? Download our Ebook!
This eBook was designed to help eMedia professionals explore the hows and whys of audience development, database building, and utilization. The process takes effort, but it builds on investments you have already made in content development and audience outreach. Download your free copy.
Google: Keep sponsored content out of Google News
In the ongoing debate about sponsored content, Google has issued a statement warning news outlets that mixing sponsored with news content could result in exclusion from Google News. Here's more.
FULL ARTICLE
- Search Engine Land
It's costing you to serve videos
DIY is generally associated with cost savings—when you are painting rooms in your house. DIY video serving on your website, however, is reportedly bad business. Here's why leveraging 3PAS to serve video could be a better choice.
FULL ARTICLE
- MediaPost
76% of U.S. iPhone app rev from in-app purchases
Have you included in-app upgrades within your publication's iPhone app? U.S. in-app purchase revenue for iPhone apps has climbed from 53% in January 2012 to 76% in February, according to a report by Distimo. The majority of these apps were freemium, with "other features, virtual goods, extra levels, services, upgrades, and more are available for sale once the app is on the iPhone."
FULL ARTICLE
- TechCrunch
2 ways the new Flipboard could disrupt media
Flipboard is the latest tech company to make it possible for anyone to become a magazine publisher. With its upgrade in services, Flipboard is poised to become a disruptive force for media companies. Here's how: advertising and revenue sharing.
FULL ARTICLE
- paidContent
5 lessons search can teach display
Search ads are fairly slow-and-steady in terms of effectiveness compared to declining display performance. But publishers can take a page from search's book in order to ramp up the effectiveness of display advertising. Here are 5 tactics.
FULL ARTICLE
- MediaPost

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Making the Display Network PAY

Mel,


Most people have no idea how Google's Display Network works, or even exactly what it is. "Display" Google ads on all the other websites on the Internet. It's the advertiser side of "Google AdSense." 

Because of its mystery, it holds the secret to a lot of power. Even more so if you're in a "consumer" market. Because most advertisers don't understand it, to them it's just a nebulous cloud where clicks appear seemingly out of nowhere. 

If you're up to speed on the Display Network, you're 2 years ahead of everyone else. 

Here are the most important things you could possibly know about Content: 

1. You should separate Display campaigns from Search campaigns and manage them individually. 

2. You MUST track conversions, because people who click don't necessarily respond. 

3. There's a tab called "Networks" that shows you the clicks and conversions you get on a per-website basis. Sort this list and eliminate sites that don't convert. This will save you TONS of money. 

Get the whole story in Chapter 10 of the Ultimate Guide to Google AdWords!

Perry Marshall 

**NOTE: Do not reply to this email. Visit http://www.PerryMarshall.com/help with any questions or concerns.



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Perry S. Marshall & Assoc
159 N. Marion Street #295
Oak Park, Illinois 60301
United States
(312) 386-7459

You need the Wright Brothers' help, and I need yours.

Help me help you by answering 6 easy questions. Takes 60 seconds:

http://www.perrymarshall.com/training/feedback-on-split-testing/

Mel,

Year: 1903. 

Place: Houseboat on the Potomac River, U.S.A.

Just weeks before Wilbur and Orville Wright were to fly the world's first airplane at Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, Samuel Pierpont Langley, a well-funded engineer and inventor, was launching an airplane of his own - with the assistance of an entire staff.

Langley thought if you put a big enough engine on the thing, it would fly. He focused all his effort on that one project: creating an engine powerful enough for the plane to go airborne. On October 7th, 1903, Langley tested his model for the very first time.

The plane crashed immediately after leaving the launch pad.

Two months later, just eight days before the Wright Brothers' successful flight, Langley made a second attempt.

This time the tail and rear wing collapsed completely.

Wilbur and Orville Wright had a completely different approach: build a glider that would glide from a hilltop with no engine at all. They focused their energy on balance and steering. Power was almost an afterthought. Only after the glider worked by itself would they try to put an engine on it.

After three years of tedious experimentation the glider was working well, so they commissioned bicycle shop machinist Charlie Taylor to build them an engine. It was the smallest engine he could design - a twelve-horsepower unit that weighed 180 pounds.

And on December 17, 1903 at Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, Wilbur and Orville Wright made history.

Samuel Pierpont Langley died in 1906, a broken and disappointed man.

Langley focused on "Traffic" -- the engine.

The Wright Brothers focused on "Conversion" -- the plane, its wings, its aerodynamics.

People who focus on conversion fly.

People who focus only on traffic, die.

Traffic is the motor. Your website is the glider.

A motor without a good set of wings does you no good. When you put an engine on a glider, you have a plane. When you feed traffic to a website that can "fly," you have a business.

I've had X-Ray vision into hundreds of businesses over the years and I can tell you that the ones that consistently beat their competition are focused on improving conversions.

My team has been working on a new type of training system to help you increase your conversions faster than ever before.

Help me help you: I've put together a quick 1-minute survey about landing pages and website conversion. Can you reply to a few questions?

This will help us dial in on exactly what you want and need.

http://www.perrymarshall.com/training/feedback-on-split-testing/

Thank you much. I care about your answers.

Perry Marshall

***NOTE: Please do not reply directly to this email, instead go to http://support.perrymarshall.com

 

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Perry S. Marshall & Assoc
159 N. Marion Street #295
Oak Park, Illinois 60301
United States
(312) 386-7459

Thursday, March 28, 2013

How an iPad edition can blend print and web experiences

March 28, 2013 Subscribe | View as Web page.
THEDAILYBUZZ
A roundup of emedia news and views from around the web
In this Issue
The Telegraph's sub model evolution, the key to success with metered models
How an iPad edition can blend print and web experiences
Hashtags considered #harmful
How to develop a multilingual content marketing strategy
The Big Roundtable: Startup seeks a home for every feature story
CSS architectures: New best practices
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Job: Director of Product Marketing, Corporate Advertising
The Chronicle of Higher Education is seeking a Director of Product Marketing, Corporate Advertising to help The Chronicle of Higher Education provide best-in-class products and services to our expanding client base. Learn more and apply.
The Telegraph's sub model evolution, the key to success with metered models
The Telegraph has entered the next phase of its subscription model: metered access. The move perhaps demonstrates that a subscription strategy does not mean either doing it or not. Rather, a successful model could hinge on easing audiences into the process. Here's the argument.
FULL ARTICLE
- The Media Briefing
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Audience Data Got You Down? Download our Ebook!
This eBook was designed to help eMedia professionals explore the hows and whys of audience development, database building, and utilization. The process takes effort, but it builds on investments you have already made in content development and audience outreach. Download your free copy.
How an iPad edition can blend print and web experiences
The newly designed iPad edition bridges "lean back" and "lean forward" experiences by infusing weekly magazine content with a daily news feed of curated stories. The goal: give readers a reason to come back to the app between issues.
FULL ARTICLE
- eMedia Vitals
Hashtags considered #harmful
It looks like the bloom is off hashtags' rose. The use of hashtags to call attention to certain keywords reportedly does not accomplish this goal. Further, they are ugly. Here is an argument for omitting these shifty little characters from the Twittersphere.
FULL ARTICLE
- Niemen Journalism Lab
How to develop a multilingual content marketing strategy
Branching out into foreign markets can be daunting when a language barrier is in the mix. But some markets are worth the extra effort. Here are 4 tactics for a successful multilingual content marketing campaign.
FULL ARTICLE
- ClickZ
The Big Roundtable: Startup seeks a home for every feature story
Publishers and editors, don't be so hasty in rejecting your writers' brilliant story ideas. A Columbia journalism professor and company is seeking to save those rejected feature stories from obscurity with a new startup, The Big Roundtable. The startup vets these discarded stories with "a back-channel of around 50 'readers' who have been testing out its model in beta form." And in the end, if readers find a story compelling, it will be put up for sale online and writers will be paid $1 for each copy sold.
FULL ARTICLE
- Capital
CSS architectures: New best practices
Developers know that the evolution of front-end coding is a steady march as new ideas become accepted and internalized. Here are 13 of the latest strategies for CSS architectures.
FULL ARTICLE
- SitePoint

Advertise in the Daily Buzz
If you are interested in advertising in The Daily Buzz, please contact Prescott Shibles at (917) 740-0026.
You are receiving the Daily Buzz as a valuable member of the eMedia Vitals community. Please feel free to contact us at any time with feedback and comments.

Click here to unsubscribe.

Our mailing address is:
Vital Business Media
122 West 27th Street
New York, NY 10001

Copyright (C) 2013 Vital Business Media All rights reserved.

Wednesday, March 27, 2013

Native advertising: A fine line between 'innovative' and 'insidious'

March 27, 2013 Subscribe | View as Web page.
THEDAILYBUZZ
A roundup of emedia news and views from around the web
In this Issue
The Dish: Trying to make paywalls work
Native advertising: A fine line between 'innovative' and 'insidious'
Embedly's new products for developers
New tool measures how many people are actually 'reading it later'
Personal information is not enough for Facebook
10 iPad apps web designers should love
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Job: Director of Product Marketing, Corporate Advertising
The Chronicle of Higher Education is seeking a Director of Product Marketing, Corporate Advertising to help The Chronicle of Higher Education provide best-in-class products and services to our expanding client base. Learn more and apply.
The Dish: Trying to make paywalls work
Andrew Sullivan's attempts to make The Dish's paywall strategy viable is a living experiment that we get to watch in order to see just what audience's want when it comes to paying for content. The latest development appears to be that readers want to pay monthly, rather than annually.
FULL ARTICLE
- VentureBeat
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Audience Data Got You Down? Download our Ebook!
This eBook was designed to help eMedia professionals explore the hows and whys of audience development, database building, and utilization. The process takes effort, but it builds on investments you have already made in content development and audience outreach. Download your free copy.
Native advertising: A fine line between 'innovative' and 'insidious'
Two camps are forming around native advertising. One believes the practice is misleading and unethical. The other believes native advertising is an innovative way to "add value" to the advertiser-audience relationship. Publishers will need to figure out the right programs and policies to avoid the former and influence the latter.
FULL ARTICLE
- eMedia Vitals
Embedly's new products for developers
Publishers need their developers to create and maintain an increasing number of products in order to keep up with digital demand, making time a precious commodity. That's why tools that can deliver time saving capabilities to developers, like Embedly's new offerings, are valuable. Here's more about "Display" and "Extract".
FULL ARTICLE
- TechCrunch
New tool measures how many people are actually 'reading it later'
Content saving tools make sense for publishers conscious of their audiences' busy schedules, but do readers really go back and consume all the content that they save? Pocket for Publishers is a free tool that wants to answer that question and illuminate the content consumption patterns of audiences. Here's more.
FULL ARTICLE
- paidContent
Personal information is not enough for Facebook
Do you wish your publication gleaned more personal data about its audience in order to more successfully deliver advertising? Surprisingly, the plethora of personal information that Facebook users divulge about themselves on the platform is not enough to make the social media giant an advertising no-brainer. When it comes to effectively delivering targeted advertising, Facebook has turned to several behavioral data collection agencies for information about its own users.
FULL ARTICLE
- The New York Times
10 iPad apps web designers should love
Believe it or not, web designers have to leave their desktops from time to time. But, that doesn't mean that they can't keep working on the go. As long as they have their iPads with them, there are at least 10 apps that can help web designers remain productive.
FULL ARTICLE
- Best Design Tutorials

Advertise in the Daily Buzz
If you are interested in advertising in The Daily Buzz, please contact Prescott Shibles at (917) 740-0026.
You are receiving the Daily Buzz as a valuable member of the eMedia Vitals community. Please feel free to contact us at any time with feedback and comments.

Click here to unsubscribe.

Our mailing address is:
Vital Business Media
122 West 27th Street
New York, NY 10001

Copyright (C) 2013 Vital Business Media All rights reserved.