Dec 9

Email marketing in this decade encompasses much more than just sending emails to people who have contacted you for more information. In this day and age it encompasses email newsletters, surveys, blogs, autoresponders and RSS feeds.

Therefore there is a perfect piece of software for you to use to accomplish all of these tasks. This software is called iContact. It allows businesses, non-profit organizations, and associations to easily create, publish, and track email newsletters, surveys, blogs, autoresponders, and RSS feeds. You can find information about iContact at http://www.icontact.com.

According to the programmers and founders of iContact email marketing should be really easy. Therefore they have built and designed iContact from the ground up to give you all the features you need. At the same time they claim that it is easy enough for anyone to use. To find out more about the features that this software offers visit: http://www.icontact.com/features/

Do you want to associate with an industry leader and include extra value to your marketing mix? If this is the case iContact has the partner program that can assist you with your customer relationship development. They can also provide your clients with an email marketing advantage and offer a recurring revenue share. For more information go to
http://www.icontact.com/partnerships/.

Dec 6

This is the full list of all available translations, together with the contributor and a support page if possible.

Important: Due to frequent updates and features translations can be out-of-date very fast. Please contact the translator about updates.

  • Chinese Simplified (originally by Liang, later updated by Leo).
    Latest Update by Felixqu.
  • Chinese Traditional by Neil
  • Hebrew by Hannit
  • Bulgarian by Iliyan Darganov
  • Turkish by Baris Unver
  • Norwegian BokmÃ¥l by Einar
  • Ukrainian by Lyncis
  • Italian by Lucacicca
  • Danish by Martin
  • French by arnWald
  • Spanish by The-RockeR
  • Polish by Kuba zyski Dirska
  • German by Steini
  • Hungarian by Cenzi
  • Russian by Yellow Blog
  • Japanese by Yoichi
Dec 3

“Back to Basicsâ€Show Opener - Neal Guye

Castblaster goes public -Download it here

Odeo invitation

iTunes 4.9 released..

along with new iPod updater!

New mashups from Goodblimey.com

Mashup - Micheal Jackson vs Human League - I Want You Back Human

Video killed the podcasting star?

Lynnette’s new podcast promo….well almost…

Soccer meeting

Neal gets a podcast!

Mashup - Dirty Vegas vs. Bee Gees vs. Zamfir - The Lonely Days Go By

Want to swap promos?

Triple H’s … Hazy, Hot and Humid

Damn C.B.’er!

Fireworks at the Plainfield Country Club

Independance Day with the inlaws?

Central A/C installation

Contact info

Mashup Tupac vs Snoop Dog vs Frankie Valli - Oh What A Night for Gangstas

Dec 1

It’s the morning after SMX, and here are some impressions I had from the show;

  1. It was well attended and had a strong exhibitor presence. My guess is that it was a strong commercial success,
  2. The content was well structured and there were a lot of quality speakers. It seemed to me that there was a solid stable of the people who have been speaking at these events for many years, as well as a strong injection of newer speakers. It was a good mix.
  3. I focused on the blended search track on day 1, partly because I was on the images and blended search panel. A lot of goof content was presented during the day. Blended search is truly just beginning to roll out, and you can expect a lot of changes in it over the next few years.
  4. The keynote by Louis Monier on Wednesday was simply brilliant. He did a great job talking about the past, present, and future of search. I have to admit though, I am a sucker for any presentation by someone that has been with search from its very early days, and who focuses on providing insight into how the behavior of people affects the development and implementation of search engines.
  5. The SEO and Social Media session on Wednesday was really great. New speaker, Barbara Boser, did a great job breaking down to a fine level of detail the steps to becoming a social media guru. Michael Gray did a nice job highlighting how to use Twitter as a marketing tool. Rand Fishkin and Neil Patel both did their usual excellent jobs with their presentations.
  6. The most intriguing thing about the Search Engineers Q&A panel was that Danny prefaced the whole session by setting a ground rule that he did not want any questions about paid links in the session. He did note that there would be a panel on Thursday where that was more apporpriate.
  7. On Thursday, I finally met Jim Sterne who moderated the web analytics roundtable. Nice job by Gary Angel to provide an initial overview presentation. Then for the Q&A part of the session, Gary was joined by Wes Funk, Brett Crosby, and Richard Zwicky. High quality panel.
  8. Thursday was a great day as well. During the first link building panel on Thursday, Danny did allow paid link questions, but kept a tight reign on how heated the discussion got.

Speaking of paid links, personally one of the arguments I hear over and over again is that Google (and the other search engines) ought to find another algorithm for ranking result relevance. I can tell you one thing about that” Don’t hold your breath.

The search engines would love to have another way to do this. The link analysis algorithm saved the notion of search engines, and is still the most robust ranking signal available on the Internet. Yes, there is a problem with people manipulating it, but even with that, the most relevant results come from link analysis.

Link building will remain you most important priority in marketing a web site for the forseeable future.

Lastly, thanks to everyone that stoppped by and said hi to me. I really appreciated it. Also, my apologies to those of you who asked to meet me there, that I was not able to find. Hopefully, you will be at SES New York 2008, and we can meet there.

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