Feb 24

Posted by randfish

The Public Media Conference in Boston proved to be one of the most unique audiences I've ever spoken to. Rather than webmasters and business owners, the crowd consisted primarily of reporters, station executives and public media contributors. These folks share the interests and goals of traffic, branding, influence and connection, despite the difference in focus (profit vs. relevance & funding opportunities). In addition to sharing some words on Design, traffic building and blogging, I also learned quite a bit from sitting in some sessions.

  • The first session I attended discussed election coverage and how several media organization have had success using non-traditional formats to make election coverage relevant and valuable to their audiences.
  • I heard from a former political┬?consultant to Gerald Ford about a movement called Unity '08 that seeks to draft a bi-partisan President/Vice-President combination for the White House in 2008. It's certainly a noble effort, and one that will be interesting to follow - the speaker himself, Doug Bailey, certainly had an exceptionally insightful view of politics and media, a rare quality.
  • Possibly the most interesting session I saw was on "Gaming the News" - creating online games that would entice audiences and invite viral sharing - sounds a lot like linkbait :) There's a few examples that are worth mentioning - Games from the Gotham Gazette, the Airport Security game from Persuasive, Minnesota Public Radio's Fantasy Legislature - a great concept, well executed.

Sadly, I didn't get to see more as I had to run to catch a plane shortly after my session. I did, however, make the acquaintance (and, I hope, made a friend) of Henry Copeland from Blogads.com. Henry's a very smart guy - someone who "gets" the web and is impressively self-effacing about his network's strengths and weaknesses, which makes him a very easy to like fellow. If I can get some of his time, I might ask him a few relevant questions for the blog in the near future.

BTW - Many thanks to Kevin Dando of PBS for the invitation to speak; I hope that my participation was valuable.

Technorati Tags

public media, npr, pbs, blogads, unity 08, doug bailey, henry copeland

Original source here...
Feb 24

Today I noticed on a trackback link from Pronet Advertising that Digg has decided to un-ban a number of domain names. Neil Patel's name is listed as the author of the blog post and he lists Online Marketing Blog at the top. I appreciate the heads up.

I suspect there are people wondering what the owners of the sites that are not on Digg have to say about this.

Here's my reply: Sigh.

We weren't relying on traffic before toprankblog.com was banned and certainly haven't missed it since. In fact, our visitors, RSS subscribers and page views are up by 30%.

What I do appreciate about being "unbanned" is that if someone submits a story from our site to Digg, they will no longer get the "This domain name has been banned from submissions" type of message.

More importantly than re-including sites, I hope Digg implements policies similar to search engines as far as identifying and dealing with spam along with re-inclusion. I understand as well as anyone that mistakes can be made on both sides. But without a better process, Digg will alienate itself from growing its user base.

Labels: digg

Original source here...