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Archive for the ‘marketing’ Category

Thursday at Noon is the best time post and be noticed (PST)

May 2nd, 2008

It’s happened to me a few times; I stay up late working on a great post and finish at 1am EST.  In a rush of excitement I decide to submit it to reddit or del.icio.us and goto bed fully expecting to see it on the front page of their sites the next morning.  Of course this rarely happens… so being a programmer I figured I should do some analysis on the best time to post.My approach was simple:  Look at the times of day and days of the week that have the most popular posts.  To define popularity I used AideRSS’s Postrank ™. 

 PostRank™ is a scoring system that we have developed to rank each article on relevance and reaction.   PostRank ranges from 1-10. 

 Using the aiderss feed api, I fetched the last 10,000 posts on delicious, digg, reddit, and mixx…Threw it into R and plotted out the number of posts by weekday and posts by hour of day with PostRank > 6  

*NOTE* Hours are displayed in GMT

Best time of day and week to post

It’s pretty clear that Tues – Friday between 10am – 2pm PST are the “hot times” for popular blog posts.

Now, I didn’t filter out non-english posts and this doesn’t account for the time it took for the posts to get to the front page of these sites,  but I do think it’s clear posting late at night or on the weekends + monday is a bad idea.   Your post will most likley go unnoticed.

jake analysis, blogging, marketing

Marketing Strategy

November 8th, 2007

The internet is a deceiving place. A 17 year old with an idea and some hard work can become a millionaire overnight… right?

I used to think so, but the older I get and the more I see this is extremely rare. Especially now that everyone and their mother has a blog or a site.

To really succeed in this internet business you need the following:

1. Connections – You need to network well or know someone with influence… (VC’s often provide this)

2. An Idea – A great idea is awesome but a well executed mediocre idea works too

3. Persistence – Success rarely happens overnight (boy do I know this…)

4. Marketing Strategy – You can have the greatest site but if you don’t stand out to people and have a clear powerful message you are going to have trouble. More than this you need to go attract the right audience, as much as it appears to happen to everyone else, users will not just come to you.

#1 and #4 are what we need help on.

I can write code and Rich can make it look great but beyond that I feel like we are in need of some help.

I bought some books. will be looking some consulting firms.

Any other ideas?

jake business, marketing, startup

Business 2.0

June 20th, 2007

Starting a web company is hard work. You need to have an idea, a blog, then code it, test it, make it look pretty, incorporate, host the app, get a lawyer, launch, market it, support it, and maybe even hire some people.

Before the days of the internet this took many people, now a days sites can be launched by one or two people with very little capital. This is the boat third rail is in. Currently, we are in the middle of our latest and most promising project. This is what we do best but just around the corner comes the “hard part” for people like us. Business crap *yuck*.

I just joined the Web 2.0 (Entrepreneurs) group on facebook and noticed people were talking about this process from a business perspective. “I’m a business guy with no tech skills, what do i do?”

I guess our position isn’t so bad after all since we can get pretty far or even all the way without help. If we didn’t know howto code we’d be screwed. I’m tempted to try and find someone to help out with the business side of things but it would have to be the right person…

anyway back to work…

jake TR Site, business, marketing, startup

Building traffic on a new site

June 3rd, 2007

Getting your site noticed and building a strong user base is by far the hardest part of launching a new site. It takes a lot of hard work to come up with a great idea, design it, build it, test it, and launch it but if you can’t get the word out people wont use it. A lot of people think “If you build it they will come” because their idea is so good all how could it not be a success. That my friends is called hubris. This is the reason great sites like del.icio.us or digg will go after venture money even after they’ve been around for a while. It’s not about the money, they normally wont get any funding until they have a close to finished product, it’s about connections and relationships and legitimacy the investment brings. When you get funded the firm has thoroughly vetted you and puts it’s resources, connections and knowledge at your disposal. I know it’s unfair right! I thought the internet was a level playing field!

But I digress :) we had none of that when we launched junkdepot three months ago. No one knows us, we dont’t have many connections, in fact we only had a couple hundred dollars to spend on marketing, but we manage to drum up thousands of visits and hundreds of users. It was a lot of work for everyone and we learned a lot from the process. So here is our list of ways to get traffic to your new site:

1. Keep the site simple. You only have 1 chance to grab a users attention make sure you front page is concise and calls a user to action.

2. Use web 2.0 community to its fullest. This is by far the most effective way to get traffic for free. Use tools like del.icio.us, digg, reddit, and netscape to gain exposure, if your site is half decent it might be picked by a couple of big blogs. Submit yourself directly to blogs you think would be interested in writing about you. Also post on forums specifically the techcrunch forums.

3. Use API’s from other sites. We chose to integrate a number of useful web api’s into junkdepot, like rapleaf, by doing this we were fortunate to be linked on the rapleaf partner page. Which drives a lot of hits to us. Also, we play nice with sites like google base, edgeio and vast which sends us a ton of users every day. Not to mention you can list youself on directories like the programmable web.

4. You must have content. You can have the greatest site in the world but if you don’t have content users won’t see the value in your site. Since our site is for selling junk we were able to post all the junk we had lying around. We also added listings from other sites when we didn’t have anything to show.

5. Use stumbleupon ads! This is probably the best kept secret on the web right now, but I’ll tell you anyway… Stumble upon lets sites pay for stumbles! Not only is it cheap (5 cents per stumble) you can specify the target interests and demographic you are looking for. This worked way better than our google adword s campain which cost us over 30 cents per hit. It also shows you how many users hit thumbs up or down on your site! This is really a great thing, and I hope they keep is fixed at 5 cents per stumble even though eBay recently bought them.

6. Start a site blog. We started the junkdepot blog to promote new features and interesting items. It takes work to keep it fresh but as users subscribe to it they are reminded to use your site!

7. Build smaller but useful sites to get residual hits… We were so happy with Rule 1, we decided to try an experiment. What would happen if we came up with a easy to implement site that web savvy users would think was cool and sponsor it by junkdepot, with a link in the footer. Well that’s exactly what mostat.us is. Mobile access to google analytics from your phone is something we wanted after we launched junkdepot. We built it in a weekend and promoted it in the same manner as jundepot. Guess what, it worked. we even got featured on mobilecrunch.com!

Hope you found this useful. If you have other stories or strategies let us know!

-Jake

jake lessons, marketing, startup