In the beginning, there was The Flying Spaghetti Monster.
I just listened to an interesting recording* of Janice Fraser, Adaptive Path's CEO, speak at Stanford on entrepreneurship.
Listen to her speech. It's worth sticking around for the Q&A.
*I know, I'm supposed to call it a podcast. That word is so trendy. And when you're not downloading it to an iPod, what makes it a podcast? Nothing, nothing I tell you!
Just found shakeskin.com. I guess it all hasn't been done before.
Enter a keyword, and this interesting SEO tool will give you some things like: alternate keword phrases, estimated search volume on the keywords, links to Overture's top bidders for the suggested phrases, etc...
For instance, Overture's top bid for "meditation cd" is 91cents, but make it plural and it's 71cents. (And the cheaper one has about 50% higher estimated search traffic!)
Found at seobook.com - an SEO blog.
P.S. You might ask, why would I use meditation as an example? Because I recently helped KARUNAMedia put their meditation dvd on the web. Let me know what you think...
Guy Kawasaki, former chief evangelist for Apple, is witty, engaging and inspirational both on paper and in person. So, when he came to speak about "The Art of Evangelism", I couldn't pass up the opportunity to hear him and his 10 (okay, 11) rules of thumb for evangelizing your product, service or cause.Via Functioning Form, a blog about interface design. The rules are worth a read, even if you are like me... I get annoyed at some Apple lovers' evangelism. But still, if you are going to make a product, wouldn't it be nice to have customers adore it?