WordPress: It’s the Community That Counts

I’m an avid photographer. As such, I am regularly asked by photography neophytes for guidance on what they should buy or for more experienced photographers, to defend the benefits of the two major DSLR camera platforms on the market (Nikon and Canon) and whether there is a benefit to switching [I'm a Canon shooter in the interest of full disclosure]. There are reams of benefits to support each argument, vitriolic debate on both sides of the fence, and enough esoteric technical specs to pour over when reading reviews or trying to make sense of the pros or cons to make a person crazy. However, my main piece of advice is to “buy what your friends and family use.”

The reason for this advice is simple: at some point along the way you’re going to need some help or have to borrow a piece of equipment and if you’re the oddball nobody can assist. On the other hand, if you’re using what other people have, you’ve got a lot more resources to draw on.

The same applies with other tools. When people ask me about blogs and blogging, specifically, “Which blog platform do you recommend?” I always give the same advice: WordPress. Part of that is because I use WordPress myself (the AffinityClick blog is also driven by WordPress ) and find that for the price (free!!) it’s a powerful tool that has a rich, useful feature set. But more importantly, WordPress has a lot of users—over 20 million hosted through WordPress.com and probably as many instances in self-hosted sites—which creates rich, vibrant community of bloggers and developers who use, support, and enhance it.

WordPress is based on PHP scripting which, despite protestations from some developers, is relatively quick to learn and easy to cobble (perhaps hack) together. It also features an extensible Plugin architecture that streamlines the process of adding modules that add functionality. The result is that WordPress is easy to customize; consequently a large community has sprung up developing themes, plugins, and scripts to enable bloggers to tailor the appearance, features, and administration of their blog.

From the beginning AffinityClick has set out to be an better advertising solution that is designed for bloggers to make it simpler for bloggers to be part of an advertising network that works. We recognize that WordPress is a critical platform and we’ve always supported it. Now we’re taking it one step further by joining the WordPress developer community and adding our own WordPress plugin to the mix.

The new plugin makes is even easier to add AffinityClick widgets to your blog and also makes it possible for WordPress.com-hosted blogs to support our widgets (previously, javascript limitations in WordPress.com-hosted blogs prevent AffinityClick widgets from being displayed). Installation is a snap through the standard WordPress administration control panel: just download the plugin, enter your AffinityClick account information, and activate in-text ads or drag a widget into the WordPress widget sidebar…or both.

We’re happy to be part of the WordPress developer community and to help make it easier for WordPress bloggers to monetize their content. Download our plugin and see how easy it is. And as always, we’re here to help.

 

 

 

 

 

AffinityClick WordPress Plug-In

Started in 2003, WordPress has grown to become the world’s largest self-hosted blogging tool.  Used by millions of sites and seen by tens of millions of people every day, it was only a matter of time before we sunk our AffinityClick claws into this juggernaut.  WordPress has been the ‘bloggers’ main choice for many years and it makes perfect sense due to all the diversity, flexibility and custom plug-ins that it provides to all publishers.

We look at WordPress plug-ins as if an ‘app’ would look to a mobile smartphone.  It simply enhances the overall product and makes life easier for the user.

With our custom ad widgets being installed by hundreds of WordPress users, we knew that it was time for us to bring our AffinityClick plug-in to all these publishers.  We are proud to announce that you can now download our custom plug-in, and install it into your WordPress blog within seconds.  Installing the AffinityClick plug-in will allow publishers to control all their custom ad widgets and overall site maintenance in the WordPress user interface, and it also prevents them from having to install the code manually.  Once you have the plug-in installed you can control your AffinityClick UI and widget controls from within the WordPress back end as seen below.

Once you have built the custom widget and setup the filters in the AffinityClick screen, you can go to the ‘Widgets’ section within WordPress and deploy.  As seen below, it’s a matter of click and dragging the widget box over to the right side navigation and dropping it into place.  That’s all there is to it!

 

What is Ad Retargeting and Why Does it Matter?

Since the beginning of the advertising age, the basic premise of advertising has been the same: create an ad and put it where people who you think will buy your products will see it. As advertising evolved, the methods to do this became increasingly more sophisticated through demographic profiling and focus-group testing while the range of advertising medium grew to include, print, television, radio and other new means of dissemination. However, despite these advances in advertising medium and technique a fundamental problem still existed: once initial assumptions were made, content was created, and advertising buys were executed, an advertising campaign was a largely static, impersonal, one-way method of communicating to potential customers.

In the mid-90′s, as the Internet became a growing force in communication with the general population, advertising once again took a fresh toehold. Like print and television before them, initial forays into online advertising were clumsy, poorly targeted, and largely static. Early banner ads assaulted website viewers with irrelevant content that neglected their interests or preferences.

Fortunately, the web continued to evolve, and as one of the primary revenue generators, advertising was often on the vanguard. Today we enjoy an online experience that is vastly different that the one that existed even five years ago. Content is far more dynamic, and through profiling techniques, web pages can be automatically tailored to specific readers on the fly.

And of course, advertising is at the forefront again through retargeting. Retargeting, in its simplest form, refers to the practice of serving advertising based on previous user behaviour to create a more relevant user experience (and, ultimately, more effective return on advertising efforts). Through retargeting, advertisers can ‘learn’ user preferences in order to more effectively target advertising inventory to achieve both higher passive engagement (impressions) and higher active engagement (e.g. clicks or conversions).

For example, on an automotive news website, a user is presented with two ads for automobiles: a black sedan and a blue truck. The user clicks on neither. On the following page, the advertiser presents the user with a different range of ads: a white convertible and a red van. The user takes an action on the white convertible (for example, roll-over the ad to expand it). Based on the preference for the white convertible, on the following page the user is presented with two different ads for white convertibles: one domestic and one import. The user clicks on the ad for the foreign make and continues down this avenue. In this case, the end result (user clickthrough) would have likely not have occurred if ads were randomly selected. However, through analyzing user behaviour and retargeting ads as the user navigates, the advertiser is better able to gauge user interests and tailor advertising content to better suit the users preferences.

Through retargeting, the advertiser (and website) are able to provide more interesting, relevant advertising content which leads to the user taking the desired action. Retargeting allows both websites that host (and are paid by) advertising and advertisers to maximize the number of effective impressions and ultimately achieve higher click through and conversion action rates, leading to greater exposure and sales.

As an advertising platform, AffinityClick takes the concept of retargeting one step further. Our approach is to analyse publisher content and match content keywords to advertising for optimal placement of ads. We further refine this placement by using aggregate network behaviour data and [anonymous] user session data to retarget ads for even greater efficacy and user relevancy.

The results of retargeting: greater revenues for websites with advertising (especially if they are paid on a Cost-per-click basis). Advertisers enjoy greater return on investment for pay-per-click campaigns through more engaged clicks while minimizing poorly matched positioning which chews through impression budgets. And for users, it ensures that advertising content is more topical and interesting and less distracting to them for a more useful browsing experience.

 

 

 

Hollywood 2.0

Facebook, Twitter, Affinity Click, BloggingWhen you think of the entertainment and media industry, usually a few key buzzwords pop into your head; concerts, backstage passes, tour buses, Hollywood, movie theaters etc.. These buzzwords might have been a bit more relevant about 6-8 years ago, but with the introduction of the digital age of social media, blogging and mobile interactions the whole industry has transformed. Instead of being handed a flyer on the street advertising your favorite bands upcoming album, we are now provided with a Facebook Fan page and a new Twitter account that counts down the days to this new album. Even before trailers of the latest summer blockbuster movie come out, customers are already being bombarded with viral videos on YouTube and very interactive websites linked to some type of mobile app. Long gone are the days of collecting movie posters!

We are in no way complaining about how the entertainment industry has embraced the digital age, but instead are more surprised by how smoothly this transition has gone. This is a complete victory for the ‘fan’, who is now able to follow his/her favorite actor/actress on Twitter and get constant updates with their Facebook page. The ability to read your favorite artists personal blog is something fans could only dream of just a few years ago. This has ultimately allowed Hollywood to create a more personal atmosphere for it’s target audience, and keep them informed through all realms of social media.

Here at Affinity Click, we are working with a large number of music oriented and magazine inspired websites. We like to consider them to be under the umbrella of the ‘Entertainment Industry’, and working with them has allowed us to step back and take note of Hollywood’s transition into social media. In our opinion, this is just the beginning of Hollywood2.0!!

All That Twitters Is Gold

There is a rumour on the street that Twitter is once again in acquisition talks. This is no surprise. In many ways it is the belle of the social media ball and all the big Silicon Valley princes want a dance and shot at her hand in marriage. More specifically, two princes are vying for Twitter’s attention: Facebook and Google.

This time around, Twitter’s valuation has ballooned to 11-digits: $10 Billion. Having doubled in value in under a month and pushing it into the range of stratospheric multiples (220 times earnings…time to buy tulips?) that’s a lot of zeros on a golf cheque. Whether or not that is a reasonable price is an entirely separate discussion for another time.

But this article isn’t about the price Twitter can command, nor is it about Facebook, other than to say that I personally hope that Zuckerberg and company are not successful as a suitor. Facebook is a walled garden with a somewhat dubious track record for doing the right thing. Not to mention the prospect of Farmville on Twitter makes me cringe.

The reason I’m rooting for Google is because, to me, the real value in Twitter is in the constant inflow of up-to-the minute data generated by its users. This data is valuable not only from a commercial perspective (read ‘advertising’) but also in a more meaningful social context.

Curation is a big thing right now. Personally I think the term does a huge disservice to those who actually curate things for a living. It’s a tough job and deciding what’s important and saved and what get’s discarded or devalued; it is more difficult while you’re inside the fishbowl. The fact is that in the digital world storing data (e.g. Tweets) isn’t as big a problem as finding and accessing the data you need when you need it. Twitter produces a torrent of data, some 90 million tweets per day (as of November 2010) and growing exponentially. While arguably many of these tweets have the shelf-life of toast, some are very significant (as witnessed by recent events on Egypt) and en masse, form an intricate tapestry of collective context.

Unfortunately, Twitter’s current infrastructure is fragile at best and can barely manage its data as it happens, let alone anything it has archived. The Fail Whale, Twitter’s unofficial mascot held aloft by his bird friends and displayed when the site encounters technical troubles and overloads, collects more frequent flyer points than George Clooney’s character in Up in the Air. Searching for anything older than a few days is an exercise in futility: Twitter’s “Older Messages temporarily unavailable” warning in reply to searches has proven itself as temporary as Cambrian granite.

Google, on the other hand, knows how to collect, store, manage, and search data. Very, very well. Google also has a massive amount of computing resources (estimates peg GOOG’s server inventory in the 500,000 range) and knows how to operate a service with a high degree of robustness—when was the last time Google was down? Google is also desperate to gain a toehold in the social web (Orkut doesn’t count…unless you’re in Brazil) and seems to have had a dry spell on the acquisition front as of late (most famously, Groupon’s spurning of its $6 Billion purchase offer). If Google weds Twitter, they gain an invaluable amount of real-time data that also meshes very nicely with their lucrative AdSense/AdWords model from the union (I should add, AffinityClick *also* offers CPC ads! Twitter, call us!) But it’s not a one-sided deal: Twitter gains access to Google’s deep computing resources, talent pool, and operational expertise, and, of course, a nice payday for all at a valuation which seems very…generous.

But to me, the sum is greater than the parts. I want all that raw, unfiltered information that pours out of millions of Twitter users to be organized, catalogued, and preserved through Google’s massive data index so I can pluck the needles out of Twitter’s haystack. Fewer Fail Whales would be nice too.