Archive for November, 2008

November 2008 WordPress Blog Traffic Stats

November 30, 2008

This blog: Search Marketing Communications generated its third highest month in terms of traffic during November 2008 with 9,179 views.

Previously, this WordPress blog’s highest trafficked month was September 2008 with 22,897 views.

Roughly 40% as many views occurred during November 2008 as compared with September 2008, however combined traffic totals from September, October and November 2008 have generated 43,740 views – or slightly over 45% of all blog traffic received since inception.

By the end of November 2008, cohn.wordpress.com had been viewed 95,839 times since its launch in September 2006.

In its first month of existence this blog had 1,593 total views.

November 2008 traffic was approximately 6 times greater than September 2006 traffic.

Few people subscribe to this blog, thus the vast majority (an estimated 99% or greater) found this blog through some type of search query, which is why this blog is titled:

“Search Marketing Communications”

Search Traffic November 2008

Search Traffic November 2008

Third Largest Month Blog Search Traffic: 9,179 Views

November 2008 Total Blog Traffic

November 2008 Total Blog Traffic

Total Search Traffic November 2008

October 2008: 12.6 Billion US Searches, Up 7%

November 29, 2008

comScore has released its October 2008 analysis of the US search marketplace.

Americans conducted 12.6 Billion searches during October 2008 – up 7% over September.

Comscore October 2008 Search Volume

Comscore October 2008 Search Volume

Google continued to dominate the search marketplace fielding nearly 8 billion searches or roughly 2/3 of all US searches.

Combined, Google sites including YouTube fielded 10.8 Billion searches.

iGoogle RSS Feed Ads

November 28, 2008

Over the last week, I began using the inline view feature in iGoogle to scan RSS articles without having to click through to the source site.

I prefer gathering, viewing and reading web site content through iGoogle over Google Reader because I can see hundreds of articles at a time and decide which ones I want to read.

iGoogle RSS

iGoogle RSS

By clicking the inline viewing feature within the feed box, I can read the entire article within my browser without leaving my aggregated feeds page.

Recently I noticed my Wall Street Journal Media and Marketing feeds have been accompanied by display ads from Google Analytics.

iGoogle RSS Ads

iGoogle RSS Ads

Pushing display ads through iGoogle feeds is innovative.

However after having clicked through to the Wall Street Journal site to see the display ad, I wasn’t able to find it.

Few if any of my other RSS feeds are getting their site’s display ads pushed through my iGoogle feed.

I wonder why?

Happy Thanksgiving 2008

November 27, 2008

“A grateful heart is close to the riches of the universe.”

Norman Rockwell's "Freedom From Want"

Thanksgiving 2008: Norman Rockwell

To visitors from the United States: Happy Thanksgiving.

2008: Black Friday vs. Cyber Monday

November 26, 2008

Google Insights for Search compares overall and regional search interest between the holiday retail shopping terms Black Friday and Cyber Monday.

Black Friday is the day after Thanksgiving and refers to the first day of Christmas shopping at traditional brick and mortar stores, whereas Cyber Monday occurs exclusively online the Monday after Thanksgiving and kicks off the increase in internet holiday shopping.

Google Insights for Search can contrast searcher interest in two up to five terms from within different time periods.

The graph below show search interest in Black Friday 2007 vs. Cyber Monday 2007.

Clearly search interest was much greater for Black Friday during 2007 than Cyber Monday.

Black Friday 2007 vs. Cyber Monday 2007

Black Friday 2007 vs. Cyber Monday 2007

Although we haven’t reached the 2008 year end yet, it looks like Black Friday will again receive considerably more search interest in 2008 than Cyber Monday.

Black Friday vs. Cyber Monday

Black Friday vs. Cyber Monday

With Black Friday rapidly approaching, searchers are mostly searching for Black Friday Ads, Black Friday Sales, Black Friday Deals and both Walmart’s and Target’s Black Friday sales.

Regional search interest in Black Friday appears greater from within the central United States than from states on either the East or West coasts.

Black Friday Regional Interest

Black Friday Regional Interest

With consumers not quite as familiar with the term Cyber Monday as Black Friday, searchers confuse the two terms and search for “Black Monday” more than they search for Cyber Monday.

As with Black Friday, the majority of searches related to Cyber Monday are related Cyber Monday Ads, Deals and Sales.

Unlike Black Friday, search interest in Cyber Monday presently only comes from a handful of states – the states on average with the largest populations.

Cyber Monday Regional Interest

Cyber Monday Regional Interest

Because consumers aren’t clear which is the correct term – Black Monday or Cyber Monday – Internet Retailers who incorporate both Black and Cyber into their holiday online ads may see more traffic and thus sales than retailers who do not.

Google Launches Analytics Help Forum

November 25, 2008

The Official Google Analytics Blog announced today they have established a Google Analytics help forum.

Google Analytics Help

Google Analytics Help

Google Analytics users can ask questions and get answers from both Google employees and other Analytics users.

With the launch of this new Analytics Help Forum, the old Analytics Help Group has been closed to new questions but will still be available for informational searches.

The new help forum will have a “Best Answers” feature (as voted by the community) so the best responses gain the most visibility.

Another feature includes a “Related Questions” list which appears as forum participants enter their questions.

Analytics Help also provides a list of top searches for discovering answers to common Google Analytics questions.

Google Analytics Help Forum

Google Analytics Help Forum

Providing this type of searchable knowledge base to Google Analytics users should help both Google and their Analytics user base.

Cyber Monday and the 2008 Holiday Shopping Season: 44.2% Plan To Shop Online

November 24, 2008

Shoppers hit the pavement en masse the day after Thanksgiving ( Black Friday ) but they click their computers en masse the Monday (Cyber Monday: December 1, 2008) after Thanksgiving when they return back to work.

Cyber Monday is considered the day when holiday shopping season clicks into high gear.

The Yahoo Search Marketing Blog has distilled several consumer related factors every retailer should take into consideration during their preparation for this holiday season.

1). “According to the National Retail Federation’s 2008 Holiday Consumer Intentions and Actions Survey, conducted by BIGresearch, 40% of shoppers say that sales or promotions are the most important factors when determining where to shop for holiday gifts.

2). As the average consumer plans to spend $832.36 this holiday season and 44.2% of those consumers plan to buy items online.

3). As of mid-November, 72% of consumers have completed less than 10% of their shopping, while only 2.2% of shoppers are already finished.

Retailers who have also positioned their best offers online by Cyber Monday increase their odds for reaching and selling to the 44.2% of shoppers who plan to buy items this holiday season.

Why Aren’t Google Blog Search Categories Available via RSS?

November 21, 2008

Google recently made some changes in how it displayed blog search results.

Google Blog Search Beta now offers 12 categories of blog types to choose from.

The blog categories are: Top Stories, Politics, US, World, Business, Technology, Video Games, Science, Entertainment, Movies, Television and Sports.

Google Blog Search Technology

Google Blog Search Technology

By drilling down into blog categories further, searchers can now find specific topic coverage by different blogs from within each category.

A topic and its position within the Google Blog Search page results along with the featured blog source are indiscriminately selected according to Google.

From the Google Blog Search Beta site: “The selection and placement of stories on this page were determined automatically by a computer program.”

As luck would have it, yesterday I noticed a large number of referrals coming from Google Blog Search which prompted my visiting their site.

I was surprised to find this blog – “Search Marketing Communications” listed atop the list of Google Technology Blogs sources.

My blog remained atop their list along with the topic for a short while before then being displaced by an ongoing stream of technology related stories and other blogs.

Google Blog Search Beta

Google Blog Search BetaGoogle Blog Search Coverage

Upon clicking on the “all 37 blogs” link, I then found my blog still displayed in the “More Coverage” list of all the blogs Google had scanned that had recently written about the same subject.

Google Blog Search Beta’s grouping blogs by subject and then offering them via blog search results should give both bloggers and Google greater reach.

Google Blog Search More Coverage

Google Blog Search More Coverage

To extend both bloggers and Google Blog Search reach further why doesn’t Google offer RSS feeds of their Blog Search categories via iGoogle and Google Reader?

Google Blog Search RSS

Google Blog Search RSS

If Google did offer Google Blog Search Beta categories via RSS, I would subscribe to several categories.

Surely others would too.