Category Archives: Internet

Free Boaty

This is one of the funniest stories I’ve come across in a while. Brilliant stuff. Very British.

The online campaign to name this Royal Research vessel continues with James Hand’s suggestion of ‘Boaty McBoatface’ way out in front to name the  £200 million ship.

Hand found the list of possible names “really, really funny”.

“Clifford the Big Red Boat was my favourite. So I thought I’d throw one into the ring to see what happens. It got a few likes and I thought nothing of it,” Hand told the BBC.

It’s caused quite the internet storm, crashing the research council’s website and trending worldwide on Twitter and other social media with the hashtag #BoatyMcBoatface.

Personally I love Boaty, though Clifford the Big Red Boat is also a cracker.

I’ve added a few touches to the boat in this image. Pixar would be proud to have this boat on their screens.

What do you think? What should the boffins at the Natural Environment Research Council name their ship?

More: https://au.news.yahoo.com/a/31163879/man-responsible-for-boaty-mcboatface-sensation-stands-by-his-ship-naming-efforts/

social media mistakes

Some Common Social Media Mistakes

Despite many claims there are only a few real social media ninjas out there. While many businesses and individuals are doing it pretty well, there’s always room for improvement. However, there are some basic errors that too may accounts still make. Don’t get caught out making these obvious errors in your social media management.

Poor profile
We’ve all visited a page or profile and not been really sure if it’s the place we’re looking for or relevant at all to our needs. Make it obvious what you’re about and if you’re a business provide relevant contact information and a summary of exactly what you do or the products you are offering. If you don’t it could be costing you dollars.
Make sure you fill out your profile information in full and provide information people want about you. Don’t leave them in the dark and create a bad first impression. They will go elsewhere quick smart.

Buying followers
Avoid the temptation to buy followers. While it may sound tempting to buy a thousand new fans for ten bucks the reality is that they are largely fake accounts and won’t engage with your content.
Authentic engaging content is the holy grail and this will bring real fans who want to follow you for a reason. It’s the old tale of the hare and the tortoise as far as building a real following is concerned.

Not monitoring conversations
There’s no point building up a broad following if you’re not going to listen and take notice of what people are saying about you. You can gain valuable insight and feedback about your business from what people are saying about you – warts and all.
If you’re not paying attention you will miss out. If you’re attentive and prepared to interact you will be seen as authentic, caring and open for business.
There are many free and paid tools out there that can help you monitor and track conversations and sentiment. Meltwater, Hootsuite and Sprout Social are some of the better ones. Otherwise, just look and listen each and every day.

Call to action (CTA)
If you are wanting a visitor to do something; buy, refer, ask something, then you need to entice them to do just that and provide the way to do it.
Make sure you provide the link and let the person know what they’re being lead to – ‘Click here to to take control of your financial future now.’
Having no CTA just leaves them hanging and ultimately frustrated and unfulfilled. You’ve done the hard work in getting them there; don’t forget to close the deal.

Poor scheduling
You want to make sure that your audience is seeing your content. You need to understand them and their online habits amongst other key demographic information. Give your posts the best possible chance of being seen. Don’t post when your audience is less likely to be there.
It can be a bit hit and miss sometimes, but you can build up an understanding of the best times to post. Monitor your engagement and reach by day of the week and time and start looking for any patterns. Most good social media tools will feature a scheduling function to help schedule pre-prepared content to post at times you desire.

Instant articles

Facebook Launches Instant Articles For Publishers

In what has been described as good news for Web publishers and readers Facebook has introduced a new feature to its platform that allows publishers to publish their content direct to Facebook.

Facebook says… Along with a faster experience, Instant Articles introduces a suite of interactive features that allow publishers to bring their stories to life in new ways. Zoom in and explore high-resolution photos by tilting your phone. Watch auto-play videos come alive as you scroll through stories. Explore interactive maps, listen to audio captions, and even like and comment on individual parts of an article in-line.

“Fundamentally, this is a tool that enables publishers to provide a better experience for their readers on Facebook,” said Facebook Chief Product Officer Chris Cox. “Instant Articles lets them deliver fast, interactive articles while maintaining control of their content and business models.”

Many would agree that articles sourced from many news sites take too long to load on Facebook’s mobile platform in particular – about 8 seconds on average, which is an eternity. Many of us source our daily news updates and add to our required reading lists directly from sites like Facebook and Twitter.

Some worry about Facebook’s growing power over how journalism is distributed and seen. In making concessions, Facebook has allowed clicks and shares on Facebook to count towards the publisher’s site traffic despite Instant Articles keeping readers within Facebook. Facebook is also letting publishers keep 100 percent of the revenue when they sell ads themselves on Instant Articles and giving them data on their readers. If they can’t sell the ad space themselves then they will get 70% of the revenue if Facebook sells it instead – still an attractive proposition for many.

Twitter in particular will be concerned with these developments as Facebook continues to dwarf it in terms of users; 1.4 billion compared to over 300 million for Twitter. Twitter’s real-time nature has made it a trusted source of breaking news and interaction.

Facebook is working with nine launch partners for Instant Articles: The New York Times, National Geographic, BuzzFeed, NBC, The Atlantic, The Guardian, BBC News, Spiegel and Bild.

One major question being asked by media executives is whether Facebook can help publishers generate revenue from their mobile audiences more successfully than they can themselves?

I wouldn’t be betting against Facebook.

4-Video-a

Is Your Website Mobile Friendly? It Better Be!

Is your website mobile-friendly and able to be ranked highly with the new Google changes?

If not then you could be missing out on valuable traffic as a result of changes brought in by Google’s algorithm tweaks which favour websites optimised for smaller screen devices from April 21st 2015.

Users are now doing more searches on mobile devices and Google is responding by favouring those sites that are optimised for mobile devices as opposed to desktop browsers. It’s expected that mobile searches will very soon outnumber those from traditional PCs.

Non mobile-friendly websites will have text that is too small, and links that are not friendly to a finger tap.

If your website is not mobile-friendly it will begin to be ranked further down in search results. Some website publishing platforms like WordPress offer responsive sites that adjust automatically to the size of the screen.

Also Google is betting that better-looking and functioning sites on mobile will lead to more sales and higher ad prices. Google did telegraph the changes in the changes to its algorithm in February, but not all web developers have responded.

mobile friendly“As more people use mobile devices to access the internet, our algorithms have to adapt to these usage patterns,” Google wrote in their blog post in February announcing the change.

If you look for your website listing in a Google search on your smart device it should say ‘mobile-friendly’ under the URL. If it doesn’t you should talk to your website developer –pronto!

According to market research firm Portent, 40% of leading websites failed the Google mobile-friendly test.

You can also test your website URL here.  This page was tested mobile-friendly …

Google Mobile