Oct 31 2009
Archive for October, 2009
Oct 31 2009
Posts about SEO as of 31 October, 2009
Oct 31 2009
Steve Shapiro Interview, Digsby Founder Reveals His Entrepreneurial Secrets
Hi Everyone
Another exciting Young Entrepreneur interview, this time with Steve Shapiro (26), founder and CEO of Digsby.com
A few facts about Steve:
1) After an entrepreneurship class in his last year of college at RIT (Rochester Institute of Technology), Steve had a business plan sitting in his lap and the confidence that he could pull it off. And so after a round of seed funding, he started work on Digsby – which is a desktop application that helps people manage all of their IM, email, and social network accounts from easy-to-use interface.
2) Digsby.com has grown from less than 100,000 users to over 1,000,000 in just over a year. Digsby.com now have over a million users managing over 4 million IM, email, and social networking accounts. Digsby.com has received coverage in the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal and are frequently featured in blog posts in several top 100 blogs including Mashable, Techcrunch and CNET.
3) Most importantly Steve has been able to monetize an IM application without showing ads in the actual program like other major players (AIM, Yahoo, Live Messenger). Digsby.com have an innovative and unique opt-in research module that allows users to contribute their spare CPU cycles for research. This is similar to non-profit projects like Help Conquer Cancer, The Clean Energy Project or FightAIDS@Home. Along with non-profit projects, it does have commercial applications as well.
My Big Takeaway from this interview:
“The biggest lesson has been that things always take longer than you think they will and there will always be unforeseen road blocks”
Wow Steve — I can certainly relate to that one
Enjoy the interview – let me have your comments and feedback
To Our Success
Michael
Steve Shapiro Interview

1) Hi Steve, thank you so much for agreeing to this interview.
You are founder of Digsby.com- can you tell us a bit about how the company formed and what made you go into this niche?
Digsby started as a school project for an Entrepreneurship class I took while doing my MBA at RIT. The goal was to build a product which helps people save time by making it easier to manage your IM, email, and social network accounts. After the semester was over, I closed a seed round of financing with two angel investors and hired the team. The entire team is RIT grads and our office is in the campus incubator.
2) Digsby has grown from less than 100,000 users to over 1,000,000 in just over a year, could you give the readers a bit of insight into how you managed that?
The product is not naturally viral – you get no benefit from inviting your friends like you do when you get them to join Facebook or Skype. In our eyes, that makes the growth even more impressive. We now have over 1.5 million users manging more than 4 million accounts and exchanging over 25 million IMs every day. I think the reason for the growth is that Digsby provides these people with real utility. As a result, our users have been spreading the word just because they like the product. We’ll keep pushing to make it even better!
3) Can you share some of the biggest lessons you have learned personally and as a business as digsby.com has grown? If you were to start again, what might you do differently?
I don’t think we would do anything differently. It’s hard to say what effect even the smallest change has on an outcome and we are happy with the outcome thus far. The biggest lesson has been that things always take longer than you think they will and there will always be unforeseen road blocks.
4) What next for digsby.com? Where do you see the business in say 5 years time?
Next on our list is adding group chat and launching for Mac/Linux. We have over 400k people on our mailing list (http://www.digsby.com/signup/maclinux/?os=mac) awaiting the mac release. That’s a lot of potential users and potential evangelists we are leaving at the table.
As for 5 years from now, it is hard to say. We help people manage their online communication, whatever channel that may be. I bet 5 years ago no one could have predicted the rise of Twitter. Similarly, who knows what will happen with Google Wave. It may go nowhere or it may become our most requested protocol. We just need to keep our ear to the ground so we can understand the trends early and ride each wave (no pun intended) as it happens to simplify people’s lives.
5) Do you have any recommended strategies for getting customers who use your service once and come back and use your service again – other than of course good results?
Keep making the product better – that’s all there is to it. When you uninstall we ask you why and we read every response we get. It helps us focus our development efforts. I read tons of tweets of people saying that they tried Digsby, didn’t like it, and are now trying it again with much better results. We’ve come a long way since our launch last year in terms of functionality, usability, performance, and reliability.
6) How long did it take to develop Digsby.com’s technology?
It took two years to develop the initial alpha – 3.5 years to get it to where it is today.
7) Do you have any suggestions for coping with set-backs, negative experiences?
Don’t give up – the essay by Paul Graham entitled “How Not To Die” has always been inspirational and I couldn’t put it in better words.
8: Is there anyone that you look up to and model yourself on? (You can name more than one person)
There are lots of great entrepreneurs out there and I try to learn from all of their experiences. As for who I try to model myself on, I think Steve Jobs would be at the top of that list.
9) Do you have any favourite business related or web design related books that you can recommend to other entrepreneurs?
Crossing the Chasm was a great book about how to take technology products into the mass market.
10) What is the best advice you have ever been given?
You can accomplish anything you set your mind to (courtesy of immigrant parents)
11) As someone who has achieved success at a relatively young age, what advice would you give to a Young Entrepreneur starting their first business today?
Do it while you are young – before you have a mortgage, and house payments, and kids, and other things that prevent you from dedicating yourself fully to the success of your startup.
12) What do you like best about the Internet?
That it is endlessly evolving.
13) What do you like least about the Internet?
404, 500, 501, 502, and 503
14) Have you any plans (personal or business) that you can share with us about your future plans / goals / lifetime goals?
At some point it would be nice to end up living in the same city as my wife again. She is off in England doing her PhD right now
15) Digsby.com is based a lot on the boom of social networking – do you feel this is a niche that is going to continue to grow?
I don’t think it matters. I think the Internet will always be used as a communication tool. More importantly, no single medium will ever kill all the others. There are times when an email is the appropriate medium (long letter). There are times when Facebook is most appropriate (share photos). There are times when IM is most appropriate (synchronous conversation). As a result, people will always need to manage multiple accounts and if you can make that process easier then your product has value to the end user.
Checkout the Paul Graham Essay “How Not To Die” here
from Making Money Online With Young Entrepreneur Michael Dunlop
Oct 31 2009
ClickBank Expands to International Markets
The ClickBank affiliate network has announced that they’ve expanded the services offered to international markets.
While ClickBank serves more than 114 countries on 6 continents, they just recently initiated a phased approach of translating the order form and all customer related material into German, Spanish and French.
They completed that phase last year, and just completed phase two: translation of the entire ClickBank site into German, Spanish and French.
In addition to offering content in multiple languages, ClickBank accepts 13 international currencies, including the Euro, the British Pound, and the Swedish and Danish Kroner.
This post originally appeared on the Affiliate Marketing Blog by Shawn Collins
Read and comment on ClickBank Expands to International Markets
Disclosure policy for the Affiliate Marketing Blog.
Oct 31 2009
English wine gets a helping hand… from Space

A number of English vineyards have signed up to make use of a satellite imaging service to boost harvests.
The satellite measures a vineyard’s reflectivity in a number of colours in the visible and infrared.
The Oenoview system, first launched in France last year, analyses the images to determine vine leaf density, soil water content and grape bunch sizes.
The English Wine Producers trade group said that wines made using the system could be available as early as 2011.
Oenoview was developed by the Institut Cooperatif du Vin in France along with Infoterra, a subsidiary of aerospace firm EADS Astrium.
The system relies on the fact that reflectivity at different wavelengths can give information both about the vines’ foliage and the soil in which they are growing.

The quantity of foliage is linked to the quality of the grapes because it is an indirect measure of the amounts of sugars and tannins contained in them.
There is an ideal time to harvest each bunch, but not all bunches are ready at the same time.
The satellite data cuts the vineyards into two-metre-square "pixels", corresponding to about four vines each, and the software assigns each pixel a colour-coded "leaf area index".
"If there is an even distribution of blue or red images in a field, the leaf area index suggests that the grapes can be harvested altogether," said Oenoview programme manager Henri Douche.
"But if the map shows defined red and blue areas, it helps the owner to care for and harvest sections of the fields to produce top quality wine."
Julia Trustram Eve from English Wine Producers said: "Innovation is at the heart of the English wine industry and vineyard owners are keen to use technology that complements their wine-making skills.
"Developing a pilot programme to use space technology is a smart and exciting next step."</p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Oct 31 2009
SEO Directory Structures and Navigation
When designing or re-designing a website the websites navigational structure should be given some thought as it can have and help improve longtail keyword search and aid you SEO campaign.
The websites directory structure should be as simple as possible, and the directories should not appear to be nested in multiple levels of other directories, Google prioritises and crawls pages based on folder levels, so pages nested in multiple levels of directories can be difficult to find, get crawled and indexed.
Keeping pages on the root directory is the best solution, as it is seen as being more important, then a web page nested in a folder or sub-folder.
However this is not always possible, especially with some ecommerce websites, where products are organised in categories and brands and sub-categories and sub-brands. For these situations, there are two different types of directory structures available to use:
1) Flat directory structure – ideal for smaller website, giving equal weight to all internal pages, the problem here is when the site eventually grows not all pages are equal and the file structure needs to reflect this.
2) Vertical directory structure – ideal for larger websites, giving more weight to top level category pages, the problem here is the lowest level pages are too far away to users and search engines to find.
No matter what directory structure you adopt the crawlers will eventually find internal pages if linked to correctly and often, however you are not helping the crawler achieve its objective of crawling and indexing all the website pages.
The ideal solution is to change the websites navigation, so that all low level pages are reachable within 2 clicks from the homepage, thus having a healthy combination of both the flat and vertical directory structure.
SEO Advisor
Vipul
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