Ads 468x60px

Shoemoney - Skills To Pay The Bills

Shoemoney - Skills To Pay The Bills

Link to ShoeMoney

New Twitter Profile looks like Facebook (and what it means to advertisers)

Posted: 01 May 2014 06:13 AM PDT

Post image for New Twitter Profile looks like Facebook (and what it means to advertisers)

If you have a twitter account you probably got this also…

Give your profile a makeover. - jeremy@shoemoney.com - ShoeMoney Capital Mail

Its a big change from the current layout… between the header and picture its virtually identical to Facebook’s.

But in the bigger picture of things the new layout opens up a lot of new advertising options. These are pretty much stolen from Facebook as well…

I have been told by some key folks on the Twitter advertising team that soon you will be able to advertise in the sidebar and have the ability to “boost” your posts as well with the same options as Facebook allowing you to reach friends of friends and get into their twitter feed that you normally would not.

This will be interesting to see how this plays out.   Especially when less than 20% of Twitter users actually use the web interface (as a whole).

The Top 20 Twitter Clients - HootSuite, TweetDeck and More

 

I am also guessing the demographics of people that use the web interface,  income wise,  is going to be lower (just a guess) vs those who use clients.

I am going to give it some tests for sure once it gets going.

Looking for an SEO service that won’t get you banned?

Google Trends Now Has Email Notifications - DailyBlogTips

Google Trends Now Has Email Notifications - DailyBlogTips


Google Trends Now Has Email Notifications

Posted: 30 Apr 2014 05:03 PM PDT

First of all if you are not using Google Trends, you should. It’s a terrific tool for researching keywords, niches and so on, with the benefit of having a very reliable data source (i.e., Google search).

According to a TechCrunch article now there’s one more reason to use the tool: email notifications. Here’s a quotation:

However, though Google Trends itself is a real-time data provider, letting you see what people are searching for at this very moment, the subscriptions feature is not always a real-time alerting service. Instead, when you go to create your first subscription for a topic you specify, after selecting the search term and country, you can then set your emails to arrive either "about once a week" or "about once a month." (The company notes that the "how often" designation is only a rough estimate, and will vary between topics and over time.)

In other words, that feature is designed more for keeping up on news you're interested in, by allowing you to more passively receive updates on a fairly regular schedule, but not necessarily getting the information the minute it arrives.

Pretty cool huh?

You basically can subscribe to receive updates about specific topics or keywords, about the update of top charts, to the hot searches and so on.

If nothing else I think you should create some subscriptions for the topics inside your niche to keep up with it.

Wanna learn how to make more money with your website? Check the Online Profits training program!