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5 Metrics to Measure Great Web Site Content

A couple of weeks ago I wrote a post about the dire direction in which online publishing is going – a race to collect eye-balls does not encourage the development of quality content. I am grateful to Dana Oshiro, Senior Media Analyst & Publishing Strategist at NetShelter Technology Media, for offering her thoughts on how you can measure the ‘quality’ of web site content.

Dana is the Senior Manager of Analysis and Publishing Strategy at NetShelter Technology Media – a technology publishing group with more than 4500 contributors and 200 independent sites including MacRumors, Phandroid and 9to5Mac. In her spare time she writes for The Next Web, Mashable, ReadWriteWeb and her personal site VillagerswithPitchforks.com. She is available on LinkedIn at http://linkedin.com/in/danaoshiro and sends updates with Twitter at @suzyperplexus.

Sniffing Out Quality: 5 Metrics for Great Content

Let’s be totally clear here. Quality content doesn’t automatically lead to audience engagement, eyeballs and revenue. This isn’t the Field of Dreams — if you build it, they will NOT come.

Quality sites receive high reach, engagement and revenue through deliberate content and distribution efforts. As NetShelter’s  Senior Manager of Analysis and Publishing Strategy, this is where I try to help.

LET AUDIENCES GUIDE YOU

Most professional site owners track social, mobile and web activity to surface patterns of success and continue to survive as a business. But revenue aside, this data also provides obvious insights into what audiences want.

Externally my company uses this data to aggregate existing stories into our inPowered stories ad units and internally, we use it to help our publishers understand their readership. Below are 5 ways publishers measure their sites.

5 SIGNALS OF QUALITY CONTENT:

1. REACH & TRACKBACKS: Two of the more traditional site metrics include unique visitors and inbound links. Both weigh heavily in search engines and while they’re great for tracking readers as “eyeballs” or impressions, they don’t speak to reader loyalty or relevance. Search audiences tend to be less engaged than social referrals or direct visitors.

2. SOCIAL REFERRALS: Social sites are tallied in search engines, but the power of social media is in friend-to-friend recommendations. Social proof improves content performance as it is pre-verified and recommended (or commented upon) by like-minded networks. Or at least that’s the idea. That being said, the number of social links in the public stream cannot be an all-encompassing mark of quality. Social streams have become tainted as aggregators, Twitterbots and those hoping to game social media platforms automate sharing.

3. TOPIC-BASED REFERRALS & EXPERTISE: Social media and links are often considered in relevance and targeting. Content producers should identify their topic-relevant advocates. For technology journalism, I’d take a referral from father of the World Wide Web Tim Berners Lee over Oprah any day. This is because when proven topic-based experts vouch for you, you’re far more likely to see the right audience visit your site. The right visitors have a higher chance of becoming engaged readers and sophisticated contributors.

4. SENTIMENT ANALYSIS: Sentiment analysis on comments, trackbacks and social shares show us how readers feel about our stories. Nevertheless, negative reactions to individual stories are less important than negative reactions to the publisher brand. Remember that loyal readers may dislike a story in comments, but that their reactions are also an indication that they’re still engaged in the content experience. Many writers maintain a healthy balance and produce controversial opinion editorial to provoke discussion.

5. FROM THE GUT: This sounds like a line from Stephen Colbert’s White House Correspondents’ Speech, but measuring your content “from the gut” is by no means invalid. Many publishers check their best performing articles and top referring search terms in order to avoid an online identity crisis. It’s a simple piece of advice, but quality content comes from those who savor their work, respect their audiences and gut check their contributions. What type of expertise are you trying to establish? Is it translating to your audience?”

Thanks Dana.

It is good to see people who are measuring things other than audience size but I would love to know how you take your five metrics and turn them into revenue. How do these softer measures evidence themselves in the business? Do writers write differently if they are measured on these metrics (if indeed they are). Do you have any comments on the value, for example, of readers found via social sharing activity as opposed to Google Search?

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Twitter Weekly Updates for 2012-07-08

  • Simple. RT @jnoble100 How simple should it be? Insanely simple. Please don’t complicate it. | Snowballs in winter http://t.co/wTOf9cPJ #
  • Obituary, Capt Charles Upham – the only person to win VC & Bar in WW2. http://t.co/w400A7jS #
  • Comically big Infographic to say, "Get to the point. Use text." http://t.co/7jiDhvaO Rules for effective mobile email. #
  • #JFDI RT @bosconference Lightning talk deadline 29th July. Win a pass to this year's #BoS2012 http://t.co/wWLG5Nlc #
  • Business of Software food update! Food, drink & Hell's Kitchen at #BoS2012 http://t.co/wY2cyD5C #
  • Because posting jpegs of your debit card on twitter is a really good idea… via @lheron https://t.co/VYop1AOo #Darwin #
  • Danny MacAskill on C4 now. Don't know what he is talking about but watch… Physical genius. #
  • Ooo.. He will be showing some outtakes from *that* video then. Fair play. #
  • We are more prepared for the Olympics than any nation. Ever. Athletes, please win 'n' stuff. #
  • Smart Samwers trim their portfolio as they realise SV companies can be really shit too – http://t.co/QkNzTeIU #
  • RT @The_BLN Still hiring event coordinator & marketing manager. Hurry! Seen some great candidates… http://t.co/RHAayoYF #
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  • Today's news: Yay for physicists. Boo for politicians & bankers. #
  • True! RT @Scobleizer Thank you to @ProfBrianCox for explaining what's going on at CERN to us normal humans (he is best at this translation). #
  • 🙂 RT @davegentle Watching the historic #higgs seminar, was all fairly clear until about after 'Good morning' #
  • Happy 4th July. Some #BoS2012 things you might have missed in June. http://t.co/G7zAeKuw + win Dan Pink's book, Drive #
  • .@martinvars AdBlock is brilliant & free – though you can donate to the author here. http://t.co/Nfgmu29M Worthy cause! #
  • Excited to be there. RT @springboardnews Less than 1 hour. Springboard London Investor Day 2012, good luck guys! #sb2012 #
  • He has! RT @ispygolfpro No way, Andy Murray has an old man sat in his tennis bag http://t.co/NL3JaYjI #

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Twitter Weekly Updates for 2012-07-01

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Twitter Weekly Updates for 2012-06-24

  • Congratulations Index on new €350m early stage tech fund – http://t.co/T5vlRUFD Class act #VC #Europe #
  • Apple Stores set all display laptops at exact angle every day. Here's why… http://t.co/q4iXfWfi Insanely Simple. #
  • Where ads meets big data, Stifel Nicolas Media Internet Conf. Becoming blasé about peta & zetta – in real time. #bigdata #
  • Over 30% of email is opened on mobile devices today according to CEO AddThis. Massive implications for ad copy writing. #
  • Listening to public company CEOs not answer questions about their business. An art form. Good sport but not informative. #
  • Lunch panel, 'Mobile Social Awesomeness'. Stifel Nicolas might just like this stuff. http://t.co/xqYMLFsb #
  • Coke partnered with fans to build Coke Facebook Page organically. Thinks would require investment today – more noise. #
  • Coke – building big Twitter fan base harder/more expensive than Facebook. FB geared to building likes. #
  • Coke – new Twitter platform launching tomorrow designed to make it easier for advertisers to spend money & measure ROI. #
  • Mobile = 30% of opened marketing emails. What does this mean for marketing? http://t.co/2a36Oz4j #
  • Nice view from bedroom of Hotel Kelleher. Now to new fave US city – Boston. Anyone about? http://t.co/u64c448b #
  • Man brings own pussy to strip club. Is this a language thing?! http://t.co/ryLGfBdz #
  • Starting to realise New York Post is a bit 'Daily Mail'. Fearless, balanced, inciteful. Nah. http://t.co/SqRvsUH4 #
  • Trains less stress than planes. Rails, not air, hold them off ground. New England coast pretty on beautiful summer day. #
  • And TED *used* to be so upmarket. What happened @TEDChris? http://t.co/2P3w1GvO #
  • Guess what?! "The product Jonny Ive would make with complete hardware & UI design control at Apple" http://t.co/PnzLIe47 #
  • Thanks for hosting in Boston this afternoon Matrix Partners. Not getting much work done… http://t.co/x617CmYh #
  • At InterContinental BOS – can't find bed. Call reception. Discovered door, huge bedroom + extra giant bathroom. WIN #
  • RT @TheDaveCollins AdWords victims – learn how to win back control in 1 hour! Webinar starts in just over 2.5 hours. http://t.co/bStz5Sdi #
  • Why the hurry to launch an MVP? From our Brazilian correspondent. http://t.co/nYuiLvxo #BoS2012 cc @ericries #
  • Too right. @bosconference Want you to know we're taking the food VERY seriously this year at Business of Software. http://t.co/Q1PJFdew #
  • It's baseball & I'm not American but the Colonial pitch invasion was fun. http://t.co/Fg7vFY1d #
  • Germany celebrates Greek exit. 'Soccer' makes front Page of Wall Street Journal. http://t.co/gAFKeYRv #
  • Racing skiffs at the site of the Boston Tea Party. #notHenley http://t.co/aDnrm3Yv #
  • Pro tip: your staying in a hotel too long when you walk in the elevator, reach round & hit your floor without looking. #
  • Pro tip 2: your staying in a hotel too long when you call a lift an, 'elevator'. It is of course a 'lift'. #homesick #
  • Dear England please win in normal time so I don't miss my flight. "Daddy's Coming Home" #
  • All the talk in this Boston bar is about Rooney's hair transplant. Not true fans. #euro2012 #
  • If Italy win, will John Terry put on an Italian kit? #Euro2012 #

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The future of publishing is not good for readers who want ‘quality content’

At the Stifel Nicolaus Wiesel Partners Internet and Media Conference in sunny New York. Some things that people said that made me think, Part 2.

Next Generation Publishing and Advertising

Listening to a very high-powered, high-quality panel discussion about next generation publishing, one thing really struck me. While the future of publishing is obviously digital, this isn’t necessarily good for readers.

I don’t disagree with anything that the panelists are saying – the discussion is about traffic, ‘engagement’, working with platforms including Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn – the usual stuff. These people are super smart and highly focused. What I find a little bit depressing is the utter focus on advertising as the driver of the business model.

These were the leaders of significant digital publishing businesses:

  • Tyler Goldman, CEO, Buzz Media
  • Deanna Brown, CEO, Federated Media Publishing
  • Peyman Nilforoush, CEO, NetShelter Technology Media
  • Greg Strakosch, CEO, TechTarget
  • Ben Elowitz, CEO, WetPaint

Together their businesses have well over 200,000,000 unique visitors a month and by any measure, engagement is significant Federated Media for example has over 1,600,000,000 (1.6 Billion) page views per month. It was a pleasure listening to them debate the issues they face. I learned a huge amount but it also left me feeling down on the future of publishing from the perspective of the consumer.

All of these businesses are almost completely dependent on advertising. Of course, they can profile their users better as they engage and they get to know them better and this will drive up the price of the advertising that they pay but the primary driver for each business is basically volume of traffic.

I asked the panel what they were doing, if anything, to explore other business models – subscription, ecommerce etc – that might encourage the generation of higher quality content that they could make higher margins from. It sounds like the traffic driven advertising model is just going to get stronger and stronger and this will of course incentivise the production of ‘quality content‘ where ‘quality content‘ is measured in terms of the number of people that view, engage with, and link to the content.

Apart from some comments about looking at using some of the data that they are generating, there didn’t seem to be a great deal of perceived value in other business models.

One panelist, paraphrased, summed up the general feeling quite nicely:

“We think any publishing business should consider multiple revenue models but the advertising opportunity is so huge, we would be silly to focus on anything else.”

For now at least, the prevailing digital publishing orthodoxy seems to be that ‘quality content leads to engagement and eyeballs = revenue. As anyone that has ever accidentally stumbled on the Daily Mail Website can attest, traffic and advertising revenue do not incentive the production of quality content.

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Mobile: 30% of opened marketing emails. What does this mean for marketing?

Short answer – bad news for crap marketing departments.

At the Stifel Nicolaus Wiesel Partners Internet and Media Conference in sunny New York. Listening to public company CEOs NOT answer questions they don’t want to answer is entertaining in itself (though not particularly enlightening) but there are some interesting points coming out about the move to mobile in a few of the sessions.

Some things that people said that made me think, Part 1.

AddThis CEO, Ramsey McGrory mentioned in the first session – Capturing User Intent: Where Advertising Meets Big Data.

  • About 30% of opened outbound email is now being read on a mobile device.
This clarified in my mind something I have been thinking about for a long time and it has a huge implication for anyone involved in email marketing. If you are sending email to people…
  • Your email subject heading has to be compelling within about 50 characters. That is all most devices will show of a subject header.
  • The first 120 characters of your email better be compelling enough to make someone open it.
If the subject and first few words (and note this is 50 CHARACTERS and 120 CHARACTERS, NOT WORDS), don’t grab someone and make them open your email, you have lost them.
Simple. I sat with a few others at the break and discussed this and as an experiment, we looked at some of our inbound emails and discussed how we decided whether they got read, let alone whether someone would take action. There seems to be a fairly common technique that everyone uses to read and prioritise email.
Let’s say someone is looking at a fairly typical block of 50 inbound emails:
  1. Grab the gold. Flick through incoming email to see if there are any really important/really nice/really urgent stuff. Generally, this is prioritised because it is from people you know well. Deal with it immediately or mark for action later. Consensus guess was that this is about 5-10% of inbound email.
  2. Delete the crap. In my small sample, (5 people), everyone deleted the crap after ‘grabbing the gold’. Crap is defined here as anything that isn’t immediately interesting – the daily newsletters that you subscribe to that you don’t want to unsubscribe to but you are not going to read today, blatant spam, stuff you have been CCed into, the trails of emails going backward and forward between two people you introduced who are now CCing you into every email they write as they try to arrange a meeting… Consensus guess was that this is about 80-90% of inbound email.
  3. Filter the rest. This generally gets people down to 5/10 emails that they need to think about. They better have a really good reason to open them – especially as they are also competing for the reader’s time with the emails from step one that actually need their attention. The general consensus here by the way, was that if you open one of these emails and you then have to wait as your reception is not great and the email is filled with images, it is deleted.
I think this changes the way that marketing people need to think about outbound marketing quite radically. In an attention starved-world, you need to make the point you want to make rapidly and without fluff. The challenge for most marketing people is to make sure that the offering they have is both immediately relevant to the recipient and the recipient can understand why the offering is immediately relevant in fractions of a second.
Hopefully, this means we should see less direct email using expressions like, ‘Once in a lifetime opportunity’, ‘Register for limited time, limited availability, free webinar’, ‘Have you ever wondered why…’ (All taken from my inbox this morning. No idea what someone wanted to know what I had ever wondered why about – I deleted the email). Direct email that doesn’t respect my time by getting to the point without hyperbole is just not going to get read.
I’m going to try to put this knowledge into practice with everything that we do from now on. I think it shows we respect people’s time and I hope it will mean we get better response rates for us.
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Twitter Weekly Updates for 2012-06-17

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‘Evolving business models in Media & Adtech’ Discussion Dinner

‘Evolving business models in Media & Adtech’ Discussion Dinner

In this, the 7th BLN ‘Digital Media’ discussion dinner, we will bring together some of the most dynamic, succesful, media, software and technology companies to discuss the opportunities and challenges that lie ahead. As the digital media industry evolves and increases in complexity and competition, we want to ask: “What business models can best capitalise on this opportunity?”

BLN dinners are a great opportunity to meet and share problems with peers (under Chatham House Rule) in a relaxed, informal and fun atmosphere, allowing you to spend time thinking about working on, not in, your business.

The event is invitation only, for a small (20 or so) group of senior executives from some of the key players in the digital media industry, to share ideas and experiences, and spend time thinking about working on, not in, their business. The BLN uses these dinners (discussion under Chatham House Rule) to help us build relevant, meaningful, actionable conferences and forums in fast moving industries.

Participants in the series have included founders/CEOs/senior executives from companies including: Telegraph Media, Facebook, Index Ventures, Admob, Mind Candy, ITV, DMGT, Google, LoveFilm, Pearson, Tweetdeck, Fidelity Ventures, MTV, Channel 4, DFJ Esprit, Datasift, Conde Nast and Shazam.

  • You can see feedback from previous attendees here.

Outcomes for attendees have included:

  • Business Relationships – partners/customers/suppliers
  • Market intelligence from other leaders in their field
  • Opportunities to profile raise at leading industry events, publications and blogs
  • Personal opportunities for advisory boards, NEDs

We are delighted to have the support of UBS Wealth Management and Taylor Wessing for this dinner.

UBS Wealth Management logo BLN

Please note we CANNOT guarantee a place to everyone that is interested in attending – we try to curate the audience for our discussion dinners to ensure the maximum value for all participants. We do our best to accommodate relevant individuals. Our priority is always to ensure that our guests are relevant to the specific discussion/sector focus.

Please register here and enter your registration code in the ‘Enter Promotional Code’ box (until you do so you will see a message saying no tickets available) to confirm your place.

Please contact us if you would like to attend to request a code.

 

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Sometimes, to get what you want in a fight, you should join the other side

I love this lesson in reverse psychology (HT Russell Buckley).

‘Taxes, Taxes, Taxes’. Nobody likes paying taxes so the Tea Party movement thought they had the vote in the bag in Troy, Michigan when there was a vote on whether to raise local taxes to keep the library open.

Turning a ‘Save the Library’ campaign into a book burning party is one neat idea and levers social networking in a really clever way. Chapeau doffed.

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