Posted by Marshall Sponder on April 26, 2009 | Link It
URL Link
HTML Link
BBCode Link
Trackback
Now that I’m writing regularly for Entrepreneur.com I’ll probably need to make a page here at Webmetricsguru detailing all the articles I publish here – but to start, I was published twice this week and have two more articles I’m working on right now.
On Wednesday my article on Learn to Measure Your Web Presence – It’s one thing to generate online buzz, It’s another to know how to use it was published and on Friday a blog post on Making Connections in New York City detailed how vibrant and great New York can be for a Startup.
Read both when you have a chance and I’ll be happy to answer any feedback here at Webmetricsguru.com.
Please join us on May 14th for “Data Stories,” an evening of analytics and actionable insight hosted by Google and DoubleClick. Here is our tentative schedule:
6:30 – 7:00 Arrivals and mingling*
7:00 – 7:30 Opening remarks and overview of Google and DoubleClick recent developments/Q&A
7:30 – 8:30 Main topic: Data stories (more details coming soon)
8:30 – Closing remarks, networking
* Beer, wine and light appetizers will be provided, courtesy of our hosts, Google and DoubleClick
There’s little detail, yet, about what’s going to happen at Google on May 14th (see above), but I can say it’s going to be interesting, perhaps a first, ever, event (historical?).
The first part – Google and DoubleClick will give the audience an update on recent developments as well as a preview on what they’re working on (and welcome feedback).
For the main attraction, “the Data Story,” we have a brand advertiser that will go in front of the a panel group to open up data and work with the audience to tell a story. We’ve closing in on few potential “subjects” (who’ll have to provide us access to their analytics) and are very close to announcing who that’s going to be.
We’re planning an interactive session whereby we review a brand advertiser’s data landscape (analytics, email, search, etc.) and see what kind of story and actionable insight we can derive from the data picture.
It all came about 3 months ago, when I spoke to Sara Holoubek about about doing something new; we were both attending Clickable‘s first Interesting Cafe and I had just stepped down from the WAA Board and was looking for a new challenge – having felt a new approach to Web Analytics based on transparency (which I touched on in my recent article in Entrepreneur.com titled Learn to Measure Your Web Presence ) was needed – and we are at a point where we can look at data directly, and get meaning out of it and the audience can help.
In this concept, however we end up executing it – we don’t want to know too much beforehand – we want to look at the data, itself, and figure out what it means – what the larger patterns are.
To me, we could even end up as “Extreme Makeover Web Intelligence” where we not only come up with the “meaning” – but get involved in creating and reconstructing, in some cases, a subjects business (and go in and film it – too). That’s a bit farther than we’re prepared to go on May 14th – but I think, it’s fair to say that if we don’t do it (at some point) someone else will.
And do a lot of good plus make a lot of money on the concept and execution of it.
Posted by Marshall Sponder on April 24, 2009 | Link It
URL Link
HTML Link
BBCode Link
Trackback
An interesting prediction – by 2014 Social Media spend to grow by 600% over what it was in 2008 – according to a post by Andy Beal in Markeing Pilgrim – thought I’m not sure about the numbers, to be honest – I don’t entirely believe them and I think Forrester would like all that growth to happen – not sure what will actually happen: