Recovering From Google Slap Aug 2009?

If you are a serious internet marketer, you will be aware that something happened a few days ago – another Google Slap. Google’s policies are pretty static, so it is not that Google has added some new terms and conditions for Adword campaign marketers, adsense publishers or affiliate marketers. Rather, they jsust do a bit of housekeeping now and then to clean up the spammy sites and campaigns that offer little in terms of real value to the Google public.

None of my sites were affected as I offer genuine content. However, I like to know what’s going down so after running around the Net a bit, I put together a plan of recovery for those who have received a none too gentle reminder of what Google expects.

Find out more about how to recover from Google Slap Aug 2009

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Should Publishers Support DRM-free Ebooks?

It seems authors and publishers are often at opposite ends of the tug of war between DRM ebooks and Open [DRM-free] Ebooks.
One such author struggled with his publisher over several months to have his books published DRM free. His reasons were typical of the two major hurdles faccing many other ebook authors:

Cost - this is largely a legacy issue through years of rather irrational pricing in the print publishing industry. Books seem to be largely priced on type of cover [hard or soft] and the number of page, and only then by the value of the content [if at all]. This same logic is being applied to ebooks – seen by many as having less intrinsic value than printed books. What nonsense – just because we have been doing it wrong for years, why should we continue now. Look at it this way. If we hire a professional or consultant to do some work for us, we evaluate their fees based on their knowledge and expertise, and the value we will derive from that. We don’t just evaluate them as one person per hour. Yet this is exactly how most people value books. All books are NOT equal. For example, the knowledge contained in a book like ‘The Logical Organization’. It’s a soft cover, 365 page book that retails at $USD79.95, but the content equates to hundreds of hours of consulting time and tens of thousands of dollars. Whether it is received as a print book or ebook is a personal preference of the reader. Myself, I am busy and travel a lot – I wouldn’t want to be lugging around TLO in my brief case. It wouldn’t fit anyway. But I can readily access it on my PDA or Kindle – and since it is a reference style book I can access it whenever I need to, wherever I am.

DRM - when you encrypt an e-book, DVD or computer game, you are immediately creating a relationship with your customer based on distrust. You don’t trust them. In reality – you don’t trust the low copyright laws of China or the fraudsters in Russia and Korea. Again, the logic is flawed. The normal customer is not going to rip off your ebook any more than lending a print book to a few friends. Copyright pirates and ebook theives will find a way to downloaded pirated copies anyway – they are much smarter at it than publishers, authors and readers combined. So the only people you are irritating are your so-called trusted paying public.

I hate DRM books – I can’t use them as I want, take notes out of them easily to reference quickly. Often, I can’t access it through more than one computer – yet I use 3 networked laptops at home, an ebook reader, PDA, PC and laptop at work. And I have to make sure I publish the password everywhere I go otherwise I forget it and can’t get back in!!! DRM-locked e-books will generally work with only one device, or one particular piece of software. No wonder print books are still preferred!!

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The Best Book Marketing Campaigns Ever

In my last post I told you how how the experts get to Number one on Amazon. Now I am going to tell you exactly how it is done.

If you have already published a book and want to re-energize your sales, or if you have a book in progress – then this blog is especially important to you. The biggest secret book authors find out AFTER they have published their book is that the marketing is up to – who? YOU!!!

There are is only ONE WAY to ensure your book sales are the best they can possibly be – follow a proven method already used by #1 best selling authors. The two best options I can recommend are:

1. Peggy McColls Best Seller Campaign – starting a new course soon – costs around $USD 3000. Details at yourownbestseller.com
2. The Best Seller Secret – by two top selling authors Dan Strauss and Mel McIntyre – costs $37

Now, if you are someone who is disciplined enough to follow instructions and you already have a good knowledge of online marketing – then following a step by step guide is ideal for you. If you just know you need someone to help you every step, then investing in a mentoring program with Peggy is undoubtedly a wise investment.

Special Bonus

To help you get on your way, Electrosmart has secured a special one month only price for The Best Seller Secret of just $27.00. Now there is absolutely no excuse to not be able to afford the best marketing guidance there is!

To find out more about The Best Seller Secret

To claim your Special Price – Click Here or Pay Using Paypal
NOTE: You must use this special offer link to immediately download your Best Seller Secret marketing guide for this super low price.

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Amazon Spam Cam

It’s legal, its permitted by Amazon and the best book marketers in the world do it – what is it? It’s the Amazon Book Marketing Spam Campaign.

Here’s how it works.

Amazons book ranking system is based upon sales. As soon as your book makes a sale you can expect it to jump from a no ranking to about 230,000. Make another sale that week and you jump to around 100,000. Three sales in a week will get you to around 30,000 – starting to get the picture?

Imagine if you facilitated sales of 200 books in a single day – you can expect a very, very good rank [top 20 or so], and if you make them within a single hour [the period during which Amazon recalculates its ranks for the top books], then it is not difficult to get to the top 100 – and even better, in certain categories you can expect to get to No. 1 bestseller!!. Even if your book never sells another copy.

Black Marketing – perhaps! Smart marketing – definitely.

However, from that point on, the publisher and author can claim to be a #1 Amazon Best Seller. This definitely makes an impression with the media and with publishers – even though they know the game. Media is not always about the truth, but about the perception of the truth, and the media are being totally honest in reporting your amazing feat.

Have I done it – No. Should I have – Yes. Will I in the future – Maybe!

You will have to be your own judge and jury on this one.

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Read Out Loud Everything You Write

I came across a very good tip today I wanted to share with you – “read what you’ve written out loud every day”. This is a great self editing tool – there is no better way to find out how well the words flow, than by speaking them. If you are considering converting your written manuscript into an audio book, then this is also a first good first cut technique.
This tip was just one of the 10 Commandments for finishing a manuscript compiled by self-publishing author and BookSurge Publishing Consultant, Richard Ridley. Read the other 9 here

Thanks Richard – I love this tip!!

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Squidoo Ousts Junk Lenses

In a welcome move to clear the Internet of junk web pages, Squidoo is taking bold steps to rid its website of lenses that fail to meet certain quality standards.

To maintain the quality of their service and discourage IM spammers, Squidoo is introducing new quality standards aimed particularly at six key areas:

  1. IM Spammers creating hundred of lenses all pointing to the same domain
  2. X-rated lenses with Adult content
  3. Lenses focused on any spam hitting Squidoo or junk topics, with cited examples including movie downloads, Hoodia Gordoni, Acai berry reviews, LoseBellyFat!, Pharmaceuticals, Forex reports etc
  4. Overly sales promoted lenses
  5. Over zealous link building – with the maximum outbound links to a single domain to be restrictured to 9
  6. Lenses showing clear plagarism

The new standards are expected to be in play by end of July 2009,

For more details on the new Squidoo Policy
4 Things You Can Do Now to Tidy Up Your Squidoo Lens

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Posted in Content, Copyright, Digital Media, Internet Marketing | Tagged | 1 Comment

New Wave of Real Time IP Collaboration

Google has come down from the cloud and is now skimming the waves in a new, higher level of collaboration for publishing online.

Announced yesterday, the Wave service will allow multiple users to chat and work together in real time within a window Google is calling a ‘wave’. Wave facilitates real time exchange of documents, photos, videos, maps and IM. The speed is supposedly down to the character level, but as yet, there is no VoIP facility.

On the document side, concurrent text editing, even on image lables, will incorporate a rather nifty playback feature to show how the image and content has evolved.

Wave is merely the next line of IP communication. Find more about Wave in this

The company demonstrated the service at the Google I/O conference in San Francisco on Thursday, to several thousand developers attending the conference. It is asking developers to give feedback on the service and to participate by creating further applications on Wave’s open platform.

The code will be open source, and developers intending to build on the platform are being given access to APIs, according to a post on the official Google blog.

Read more about Wave in the news.zdnet article

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The Great Publishing Divide Still Strong

In a recent post, Seth Godin made a brief comment about ‘When the Writer Becomes the Publisher’

His belief is that we have yet to reach the solution where someone can “collate, amplify and leverage the work of writers and turn it into cash”.

Sadly, I have to agree with him in part, but not in total.

I started out in digital publishing. I focused on building high value content sites that now generate a regular, and growing stream of revenue from advertising and affiliate products. These are not designed as product sales sites – the overriding aim was to disseminate good quality information, without bias to a particular product.

Then I advanced into other forms of publishing knowledge. Having over 20 years of consulting experience, and some expertise in highly sought after niches I decided to expand, backwards, into print publishing.

At first, this was merely to support an upcoming speaking series in a few advanced technologies that I believe will transform the way businesses work, and the role IT has to play in innovation and competitiveness.

Once I started, my publishing took on a life of its own, as other experts started approaching me to collaborate on books with them. So that would be fine, until we hit the distribution pipe.

Distributors are naturally keen to be efficient and economical in their dealings, and in line with the strategies I teach in SELL MORE, they have defined their ‘ideal customer’ and restrict their activities to only dealing with such. Hence, I had to expand my sphere of authors to ensure that I met the minimum number of author requirements to enable me to tap into profitable distribution networks.

In my digital publishing, I have more than a few different authors who contribute largely to the online content around their respective areas of expertise. But this does not count with print publishing. Hence it is quite clear that there is a great divide between the two.

Publishers that don’t have a US bank account cannot publish to Kindle. Yet, try to get a US bank account and it is not quite as easy as one expects it should be.

And the list keeps piling. The print publishing industry, whilst claiming on one hand to be embracing digital publishing options as the future of the industry are still clinging possessively to defining all their current relationships in terms of pure print publishing. Unless the print industry build operational and contractual bridges to meld a smooth continuum between the various publishing media, it is going to remain a messy business making progress into digital.

So whilst the technology and market are certainly in place for digital publishing, attempting to create a backward connection into the print format is more than ‘troublesome’.

No matter, I have more than my requirement of authors and book titles in the pipeline, and will keep my focus pointing squarely on the future.

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Streaming Video Still Heating Up

Online video is still growing stronger, according to the latest Nielsen Online’s latest VideoCensus teport. After a fall in February 2009, March viewership recovered with total video streams in March** up almost 40% from a year ago:

  • Total video streams increasing almost 9% to 9.7 billion.
  • Time per viewer rose 12.6% to 191 minutes.
  • Unique viewers inched up 2% to 130 million.

As to who was the top player in shared video viewing, the top 3 were:

  1. YouTube accounted for nearly 5.5 billion streams
  2. Hulu, with 348.5 million, increasing around 10% in March and adding approx. 600,000 unique viewers for a total of 9.5 million.
  3. Yahoo, with 231.8 million.
  4. Fox Interactive Media with 207.5 million streams
  5. Nickelodeon Kids and Family Network

**According to Neilson, the March surge is linked to the NCAA Men’s Basketball tournament with CBS unique visitors to its March Madness on Demand video service increasing 60% over the past year to 7.5 million, with total video and audio up 75% to 8.6 million hours.

CBSSports.com generated 38.2 million streams last month and 3.3 million unique video viewers [up >1,200% and ~300%, respectively], from February.

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Nice Deal If You Can Get It

Ever wondered what sort of payments authors get for signing up book deals? Well – one way to find out is to ask the author or publisher. Not that they will tell you the numbers, but you may get an indication as to how ‘nice’ the deal was.

According to Publishers Lunch Newsletter – the range of ‘niceness’ goes something like this:

“nice deal” – $1 – $49,000
“very nice deal” – $50,000 – $99,000
“good deal” – $100,000 – $250,000
“significant deal” – $251,000 – $499,000
“major deal” – $500,000 and up.

Publishing is a big industry, but if you really want to keep up with what’s going down in the publishing industry – sign up for PublishersLunchDaily.com newsletter. It’s a good read.
[No affiliation to Electrosmart]

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