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Facebook Is Not Only The World’s Largest Social Network, It Is Also The Fastest Growing

Call it the Facebook World Tour. Even though Facebook is now the largest social network in the world,—with 132 million unique visitors in June—it is also still the fastest growing.

(At least among the major social networks). According to figures compiled by comScore, Facebook’s visitor growth is up 153 percent on an annual basis. This compares to anemic 3 percent growth for MySpace. Other social networks showing strong global growth include Hi5 (100 percent) and Friendster (50 percent), despite each of those being less than half the size of Facebook. Orkut and Bebo fall in at 41 percent and 32 percent growth, respectively.

If you break down Facebook’s growth into regions, its presence in North America is still growing at a healthy 38 percent rate (with 49 million visitors a month). Europe (with 35 million visitors a month) is growing nearly ten times as fast. And growth in rest of the world is on an even faster tear (403 percent growth in the Middle East and Africa, 458 percent growth in Asia Pacific, 10,555 percent growth in Latin America), albeit from a smaller base.

Much of these huge growth numbers come from the fact that Facebook had hardly no presence in many of these regions until recently when it started its major push to translate the site to other languages. A year ago, it had only one million uniques a month in all of Latin America, three million in the Middle East and Africa, and four million in all of Asia Pacific. When you look at it that way, 10,555 percent growth isn’t as amazing as the raw numbers would suggest. And within these regions, it still has a lot of work to do.

The Optimization Process

SEO is a combination of distinct processes designed to improve search engine placement for your website, but what does that really mean when you break it down to performance and performance benchmarks?
SEO and the Process of Website Optimization, by SEO Design Solutions.
Do higher rankings always translate to higher sales conversion? The answer depends on how thorough your research was in determining the appropriate keywords and search behaviors of the target demographic best suited for your offering.

Developing your brand amidst the constant noise in the marketplace is a key factor for standing out from the crowd to distinguish your website. One common method for accomplishing this feat is to dominate a series of semantic phrases all derivatives of action words, keywords or modifiers, also known as qualifiers that a prospect might use to find your site in a search engine.

When you consider the impact of how much traffic a lucrative keyword can yield, the only real factors for consideration are (1) relevance (2) the competition for the keyword and (3) the time it takes to acquire it.

Assuming that you have performed due diligence and investigated 3-5 of the top ranking websites to create a base for your assumptions, if the keywords they use that comprise a large percentage of their traffic, then under the same premise, those same keywords can work for you and deliver relevant traffic to your pages.

Search engines have been around long enough to determine what quality is, short-cuts that may have worked in the past are now falling short of producing viable results.

This is primarily due to engineers making refinements and adjustments to search relevance and relevance score in the search algorithm (the systemic programs that monitors quality and assigns relevance to each query).

What this means is, optimization, in order to be effective, involves a grasp of multiple variables that must coincide with the conversion objective. In addition, such variables should mutually appease the search engine spiders and humans (who actually pay the bills) to elevate your online brand.

Based on that objective, you must measure the impact it has after implementation (do you receive more calls, leads from your contact forms, a higher RSS subscription rate for your RSS feed, etc.).

When considering organic optimization, it really boils down to targeting as much low hanging fruit as you can (less competitive keywords with traffic), so you can chip away systemically at the root phrases (one and two word keyword combinations) that typically yield higher search volume.

Once your site gets in the index (in the top 10 results) for one keyword or key phrase, then it becomes easier to move other related keywords into the picture to drive traffic to your website.

The typical process of optimization may resemble some of these facets:

1) Perform a sweep of the site to determine prominent ranking factors such as;

a) Does the website have sufficient content on the subject?

b) Is the content crawl-able and accessible from each page in the site through proper navigation?

c) Are the keywords present in the title tags and meta data or tags for a CMS system?

d) Are the internal links optimized or just saying “click here” if they are even using links at all?

e) How old is the site? Fresh out of the box? A few years old? Online for 5 years or more?

Want to know what’s RED HOT? Adobe Flex

I am not going to insult your intelligence and try to teach you how to use Adobe Flex because frankly, I am just learning. Over the past few months, every major project and initiative I’ve heard about has components built using Adobe Flex. With the emergence of Flash as a usable technology and ActionScript as a top notch coding language, Adobe Flex has quickly become the hottest new tool in uber trendy web development circles.

So what is it? And what does it do? Well, the according to Adobe: “Create engaging, cross-platform rich internet applications. Flex is a highly productive, free open source framework for building and maintaining expressive web applications that deploy consistently on all major browsers, desktops, and operating systems.”

For me, it’s takes all the possibilities of flash, seamlessly integrates it into about any application you want, allows the interactivity of AJAX, and does so with a very basic knowledge of ActionScript. The more ActionScript you know, the more amazing things you can do. If you’re used to coding in PHP or standard ASP, it’s a completely new and intuitive way to look at application development, yet not so far fetched that you’d never catch on. It almost reminds me of .NET when I first started looking into it, as I wondered where it had been all my life… Yet this is totally cross-browser and platform capable.

So you want to see it in action? Here’s the demo from Adobe that literally blew me away. I’ve created video sites on numerous occasions and have used RSS feeds extensively throughout these sites. I feel like I’ve written very similar scripts using PHP and ASP that took at least a week to create. With Flex, this demo had the base of what took me at least a few hours done in the first minute! Check out this demo! FLEX APP

LivePlace To Launch Photo-Realistic Virtual World Rendered In The Cloud

LivePlace.com has posted a video displaying a very impressive render of a 3D virtual world called City Space. At this point very little is known about LivePlace, other than that the WHOIS lists the domain’s owner as Brad Greenspan, one of the co-founders of MySpace. Note: It appears that in the 20 minutes since I spoke to Greenspan about this post, someone took LivePlace down. The video embed below still works.

The other nugget of information found in the video is that the game is running on OTOY, the 3D engine that renders graphics in the cloud. The technology allows relatively weak computers (or even mobile phones) to display incredibly detailed graphics comparable to those seen in Hollywood movies.

The video shows a massive virtual city filled with towering skyscrapers, parks, user-customized apartments and houses, public meeting places, subways, and everything else you might expect in a metropolitan area, all beautifully rendered by the OTOY engine. The game also features impressive real time lighting, reflection, and weather effects that rival those seen in detailed 3D games (and even some movies).

At this point it appears that gameplay will be focused on human avatars, who can own their own living spaces and offices, buy and sell goods at a virtual mall, and interact with each other in public places.

While there are a number of online games that offer impressive graphics (though none of this caliber), the real potential behind LivePlace and the OTOY engine is the cloud-based rendering engine, which allows games on almost any computer to play without needing a powerful graphics card. OTOY has been developed to work in any browser without a plugin, which makes the barrier for entry into this virtual world much lower than Second Life. Of course, we have no idea when City Space will actually launch, so it’s far to early to hail it as the second coming of social online worlds.

Let’s Talk Business…

As talked about before, there is a wide range of business benefits that can be obtained by implementing a CMS. It gives you mind boggling features in the form of increased security, improved site navigation and flexibility and a greater consistency and capacity for growth. Not only these, but it also supports decentralized authoring, and reduces the chances of duplication of information and site maintenance costs at the same time.

However the market is inundated with a large number of such Content Management Systems. Choosing one of them gets easy, abiding by the guidelines below: -

  • You should never invest in any software that is functionally rigid and lacks growth potential or efficient systems.
  • You should always take into consideration special features of your website too that goes beyond just articles only.
  • Always try to keep the management system simple by choosing a CMS with a good interface.
  • Last but most importantly, do a “test run”, before implementation of the system.

There is a huge range of such systems on different platforms (as PHP, Java, and Perl to name a few) and using numerous supported databases. AquaCMS, CMSimple, Joomla!, TangoCMS, Zena (all Open Source), AlterFiction, Jadu, Powerfront CMS, Vignette (all Proprietary) together do not constitute the tip of the iceberg of such software. Dragonfly CMS is a popular name these days too.

Joomla! is perhaps one of the most popular CMS, used for everything, from simple websites to complex corporate applications. Joomla is designed in such a way that it is easy to install, even if you are a non-programmer, need not worry as it is quite user friendly and plenty of support available too. It also has an active community of more than 150,000 friendly users and developers in their forum who are always ready to help newbies. Anybody with basic word processing skills can easily learn to manage a Joomla site. Via a simple, browser-based interface you will be able to easily add new press releases or news items, manage staff pages, job listings, product images, and create an unlimited amount of sections or content pages on your site. Developers can also create sophisticated add-ons to customize it accordingly by the powerful application framework that Joomla offers. So, if your requirement goes beyond what the basic package of Joomla offers, go ahead and try to create your add-ons.

Finding the Right SEO Company for the Best SEO Services

Search engine optimization otherwise known as SEO, is comprised of multiple disciplines. Each has its roots in improving a websites performance by streamlining facets ranging from site and information architecture, content, internal / external links, the programming platform / code selection, site analytics and the hosting environment.
Choosing the Right SEO Company for the Best SEO Services, by SEO Design Solutions.
Each facet holds a holistic piece of the puzzle for a finely-tuned web presence and for competitive search engine placement, each must be refined to be functionally lean and efficient and calibrated to serve the whole.

Regardless of which criteria is the target for refinement, one common thread exists (the goal of optimal performance). However, although theory and application are like two sides of a coin, when it comes down to the “hands on” part of SEO, not all SEO companies are not created equal.

Just because a firm wears the moniker of SEO does not instill proficiency across a broad range required skills. In fact, it is important to know which skills a firm excels in to determine the benefits of their own strengths and weaknesses when considering the type and scope of your campaign.

It is important to know what an SEO company specializes in, some SEO companies specialize in pay per click marketing, others in creating optimized database driven websites, other firms may specialize in SEO web design or content creation and link building services. If you requested services from any of them for the wrong specialty, then ultimately your sites performance would suffer.

To simplify, this can be classified as on page SEO (anything pertaining to the content development, pages, titles, tags, internal links to connect the site i.e. navigation) or off page SEO (link building from other sites, custom program development to move information in and out of a database, optimizing server performance, creation of .htaccess or robots.txt files and dozens of other IT related functions).

The extent of their knowledge in a field should be part of the due diligence process, so make sure you get plenty of examples prior to making your decision about selecting the best firm to fit your needs.

This is not a criticism to any firm, but just as each has a distinct specialty (competitive placement, conversion optimization, analytics and tracking, etc.) so to are the needs of each client unique. A mom and pop shop based in a local region will not require the same amount of optimization as a national company vying for thousands of competitive keywords with a massive content management system or shopping cart.

Catching the Micro-Blogging Itch, Corporate-Style


The leading edge of online corporate outreach once was the executive blog. Carefully crafted messages on a range of topics, closely vetted by PR firms, were posted every few weeks, calculated to appear spontaneous and thoughtful. Not surprisingly, many companies learned that customers didn’t find those missives authentic, and they moved toward more dialogue-based tools. Now, with the advent of micro-blogging services like Twitter and Plurk, that leading edge has become more like a pinpoint.

Take BarackObama, the campaign’s micro-blog on Twitter, for example. It has nearly 55,000 followers — a big number by micro-blog standards, but still not a huge distribution list by conventional media standards. “What [companies] don’t see is the network effect,” said Silva. Popular micro-blogs, he asserted, have an enormous ability to influence the larger popular culture.