Comments by www.jackhumphrey.com/fridaytrafficreport
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Reply | Original | Permalink | TweetExcellent write up! There’s a lot more here than the typical Google SEO 15 second elevator pitch. Many of the more important factors often get left out of quick SEO discussions or tips.
Reply | Original | Permalink | TweetVery cool man. Thanks for the obvious hard work on this!
Reply | Original | Permalink | TweetGreat post Dan. You should have gotten a lot more links and comments on this one. Maybe your “crowd” is too cool to publicly appreciate it.
Reply | Original | Permalink | TweetGreat post Terry. The need to regroup and simplify never seems to go away. There’s nothing like doing spring cleaning on a regular basis!
Reply | Original | Permalink | TweetThanks man! I was clueless to this one.
Reply | Original | Permalink | TweetI’m expecting big things from you this year sir!
Jack Humphreys last blog post..Social Marketing Tips on FTR Radio
Reply | Original | Permalink | TweetYes - this was a brilliant post idea. I’m about a year late, but http://twitter.com/bendtheweb anyway!
Jack Humphrey’s last blog post..Invisibility - Desired Offline, Bane of Existence Online
Reply | Original | Permalink | TweetThe worst thing a blogger could have is money to advertise with. If a blogger were to ask me what kind of advertising they should do with some money they’ve come into, I’d tell them 100% of the time to spend it on rent, groceries, investments or school.
Being good at using paid marketing takes a lot of experience, trial and error. It also makes most people insufferably lazy. “Let the paid advertising drive all the traffic, I’m going to the mall!”
It leads inexperienced business people (bloggers) to believe that their traffic problems can be solved with money alone. And they never can.
Free, organic traffic is always better than paid traffic. Both for the blogger’s discipline and bank account.
Reply | Original | Permalink | TweetWhy does it have to be all or nothing? It only takes a bit of time to blog even if they do it every day. Much better than simply playing video games for hours per day.
I love how everyone who is into blogging immediately thinks “Uh oh, kid blogger! He’s going to be as irresponsible as me and never exercise or go outside again!”
There is a way to have balance in life. Writing a blog is no different than the myriad other choices we have for how we spend our time. And I bet writing a blog would be healthier than a good portion of the other choices kids have available to them!
Reply | Original | Permalink | TweetJudging by the talking points both sides have decided on, through focus groups and the nature of our sound bite culture, it seems they think the public is just too dumb to handle discussions of science, technology and innovation.
While I agree with you that this SHOULD be a top issue and not a bullet point in a pamphlet, I have seen enough of “the public” to know that the politicians might just be right on the money with their assessment of what the lowest common denominator in our country can handle a lengthy discussion about.
I saw a woman this week on CNN, when asked if she knew who John McCain picked as his running mate, answer Barack Obama.
I’ve seen a ton of other such people representing what the politicians refer to as “hard working Americans” handle similar types of questions with some of the most outrageous answers you can imagine.
So, SHOULD we be talking about innovation and keeping America in the forefront? Absolutely. Can the average American handle anything beyond a debate over creationism vs. science? Sadly, I think not.
Apparently, the politicians and focus groups think the same way.
Reply | Original | Permalink | TweetChris,
1. Found you on BackType.com
2. I should have written this post
3. I have nothing to add to it because you nailed it
4. I have no criticism because you left out the B.S. term of the century: “Content is King” and I thank you for that.Actually I do have one criticism: I don’t believe Scoble is human. Will have to submit that one to FactCheck.org to be sure. :)
Reply | Original | Permalink | Tweet“Chocolate Rain! I move away from the toilet to breathe in.”
Reply | Original | Permalink | TweetSince I’m not interested in taking focus away from my feed content for a few pennies per click, I hope this doesn’t lead to them neglecting FeedBurner.
They are also known for focusing the most on anything they can put more ads in. Losing any performance or functionality in FeedBurner would be disastrous.
Jack Humphrey’s last blog post..Webside Chat with Andy Beal, MarketingPilgrim.com
Reply | Original | Permalink | TweetThe danger here is the people trying to do the "protecting" don't understand the internet - at all. They don't know that there are ways around getting to the content and that once they open pandora's box on this the internet will be under attack until all you can get to is Google, but none of the search results.
Reply | Original | Permalink | Tweetlol @ the "wiggle" comment. I'd kill to have a VC guy get behind some of our stuff. It's wiggling all over the damn place!
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