Can you believe it’s Friday yet again?
I don’t know about the rest of you, but each week seems to zip on by just a little faster than the one that preceded it. Hey spring, where are you?
The good news is it’s time for another edition of Feedblitz: Rewind the Week, our weekly blog and news roundup from the far reaching corners of the web, bringing you some of the tops stories and commentary from the worlds of marketing and technology.
As always, if we missed a post or story that you think shouldn’t be missed, let us know in the comments below.
Crazy, Sexy, Cool: Attributes of the Most Clickable Ads
You can always count on Mitch Joel to pen a provocative post, and this post, examining the attributes of the web’s most clickable ads, does not disappoint.
Ads are everywhere and consumers are feeling pretty overwhelmed with the onslaught of messages. The advertising that’s most effective? Advertising that entertains.
Social Media’s “Law” of Short Messages
It’s always fascinating to watch the flurry of social media activity surrounding big, national news. Weather events, the Super Bowl, or just the start of baseball season — we react and we post. A new study from MIT’s Senseable City Lab shows that the average length of social posts (namely, Twitter) are getting shorter as volume around these events goes up.
The Senseable City Lab is responsible for conducting some very large, complex data projects, looking at activity patterns among connected networks of people.
Did We Just Invent a New Form of Blogging?
Jay Baer of Convince and Convert takes a close look at a new trend in blogging: the BlogShare – a blog post embedded into a SlideShare presentation and packaged as a linear narrative.
I’m not sure what to think about this just yet. As social media and content becomes increasingly visual in nature, it’s interesting to see a trend that, on the surface, is a step backwards.
How to Deal with an Unnatural Links Penalty on a Budget
It’s every website owner’s worst nightmare — being penalized by Google for bad links. Whether you’ve been hit with a manual action or suffering a fall in rankings from a recent algorithm update, fixing your content and site can be a lot of work, and potentially expensive. Patrick Hathaway wrote a great post on Search Engine Journal full of tips and tools to diagnose and remove spammy links, poor site content, and other SEO sins.
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