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Wednesday, May 17, 2023

Put SEO in the picture


screenshot of Imagify report

One aspect of putting SEO in the picture is thinking about the impact your pictures have on your site core vitals.

All content marketers know that it takes more than text to catch the eye. But those who are also aware of site loading issues realize that pictures can slow down a site.


Slow page loadings harm your core web vitals and your SEO.

So what should you do: give up the pictures or give up the better speed?

The answer is neither. You can have the best of both worlds -- attractively illustrated posts and good loading times when you optimize your pictures for web view.

In the past, I had to do this manually for each image, playing around a bit to find the size that would look good but does slow things down. I don't have to do that now.

I just discovered a great SaaS solution. Imagify optimizes your images for you in a snap. 

It enables you to fix all the ones you have on a page without having to upload them one by one. At the free level, you get up 200 images a month, though you have to be sure to download them within 24 hours.

I put it to the test with my site. As the screenshot here shows, it details how much memory space you can save for each compression.

For some of the pictures, the amount of memory gained was rather small, so I opted to skip those and only converted the ones for which the difference was more substantial. Imagify shows the amount of saved for all the compressed versions I selected in place of the original pictures.


While it's easy to use for any site, it's even easier if you use WordPress. You can use the Imagify plugin to automatically optimize the images and ensure that that they are not the cause of slow loading times on your site. Learn more about that by watching the video below.




Another aspect of SEO in the picture


Another way in which to consider SEO in the picture is labeling your pictures in a way that makes Google identify it with your topic and keywords. In addition to the SEO benefit, you would be  achieving ADA compliance(see Guidance on Web Accessibility and the ADA) in rendering your  pictures accessible to those who have to have content read to them because they can't view it themselves. 

The SEO boost of the labeling can sometimes manifest itself in surprising ways. I notice dthis wehn taking a closer look at Google Search Console on my Edison blog to prepare What Edison Can Teach Us About SEO. Some of the search queries were bringing up the caption I had on the picture that illustrates the blog as some people make a point of including Wikipedia in their query. 

So here's the general rule for thinking about SEO for pictures: you want to minimize the file size but maximize your label.

Related: 

Monday, May 15, 2023

What to expect from a content marketing strategy

 

                                   Content marketing strategy  photo by Kindel Media on Pexels.com

What makes content marketing distinct from other forms of marketing is that its primary goal is to engage your target audience’s interest rather than lead immediately to a call-to-action to buy. The content can take many forms, ranging from single pictures with captions on social media posts to extended articles, eBooks, and videos.

Part of planning an effective strategy is selecting the medium that is most likely to capture your audience’s attention. For a B2B that means showing awareness of business pain points and insights into what's happening in the industry now. For B2C, you want to connect with the consumers in your target market repeatedly by offering them helpful tips or engaging stories.

For example, a kitchenware seller may send out recipes or blogs that offer advice on healthy substitutions to make guilt-free desserts. It can also use video content effectively to demonstrate techniques in cooking or offer a downloadable app that converts cooking measurements from ounces to grams or milliliters.

​What all the approaches described above have in common is that they position the brand as a credible source of information within its own defined niche. Over time that leads to a deepened relationship with your audience.

Typically, you can expect 6-9 months of consistent content marketing posting to see an uplift in B2B sales. That's because B2B sales typically involve longer cycles, more approvals, and a lot more money than B2C.
 (One exception was a B2B blog I ghostwrote that brought in sales qualified lead the very next day).

As businesses don't tend to very receptive to cold calls and emails from businesses they have not heard of, the support of content marketing and demand gen leads to greater success in outbound sales efforts.


What makes content marketing effective

 

Hairstylist spraying hair. Photo credit: Rene Asmussen on Pexels.com

 The hairstylist and the photographer


​Once upon a time (in the year 2005 ) I created a print magazine and managed both its content and ads. I brought the two together in what everyone today calls content marketing.  encouraged advertisers to write articles to give readers more context than an ad alone provided.

In one issue, I had articles from both a hairstylist-- who got it exactly right -- and a photographer - who got it totally wrong. What she did was offer tips that they could apply to their own hair. He, instead, opted to write about himself and his approach to photography with no takeaways of use to his readers. 

What was the result of the two approaches? The photographer admitted many people told him they saw his article, but they didn't contact him for his services. In contrast, the hairstylist reported that the article brought her more customers than any advertising had ever done. 

The moral of the story

The photographer failed to offer value to the audience  because he was solely focused on self-promotion.  The hairstylist, on the other hand, instinctively understood what content would appeal to her audience and was rewarded for giving it to them.  The key to successful content marketing is not to make it all about you but all about offering useful information for your audience that makes them trust you.  


Related


Thursday, May 4, 2023

AI's early attempts at screenwriting

OpenAI's ChatGPT has made everyone aware of the potential of generative AI. Well, some of us knew about this tech before it became trendy. As a writer reporting on AI, I wrote about one of the early attempts to use it for a film script. The results were not exactly typical entertainment.

"I'd Like to Thank the Algorithm that Made this Film Possible" was published on 7/11/2016 on All Analytics where it garnered 63 comments. I saved a PDF of the text that you can read here.

The film, "Sunspring" is still up on YouTube here:


In 2017, the film producers came put out "It's No Game," starring David Hasselhoff. It's not mentioned in the original blog that predated it. You can see the sequel here:


Generative AI has improved substantially since 2016. But is it ready to write a film that will keep people's interest as well as those written by human counterparts?

We already have a commercial made by AI that is rather strange -- some would say scary -- but sill very effective at driving human attention. I have nou doubt we'll be seeing more films in future.

Monday, May 1, 2023

Pride and Hide and Sleuth, Oh My!


What do you call a group of lions, tigers, and bears? Pride, hide, and sleuth. But if the tigers are running together instead of hiding in the shadows, you would say streak instead of hide. On the other hand, if you want to convey their intention to jump their prey, you'd say ambush


The English language contains some colorful terms of venery, the words that signify collective noun for specific groups of animals. Some animals even have several terms to denote different conditions of the group formation, as is the case not just for tigers but for others in the list below:

Ambush - a group of tigers lying in wait for their prey (also streak and hide) 

Army - group of frogs or ants referencing the way they move (also colony for both and knot for frogs) 

Arrangement - a group of elephant seals (also herd and pack)

Array - a group of hedgehogs 

Badling - a group of ducks (also paddling, plump, raft)

Bale - a group of turtles

Band - a group of gorillas (also shrewdness and troop) or hares (also down, drove, flick, herd,  husk or huske, leap, and trip)  

Bank -  a group of Komodo Dragons also swans when gathered on the ground (see bevy)

Barren - a group of four mules 

Bask - a group of crocodiles 

Ballet - a group of swans when swimming (also bevy, drift, eyrar; the group can also be called a flock, game herd, lamentation, swonder, squadron, team, or whiting; flight when flying and wedge when flying in a V formation) 

Battery - a group of barracudas

Bellowing - a group of bullfinches

Bevy - a group of deer  (also herd, bunch, parcel or rangale)  or swans when swimming (also ballet, drift, eyrar, flock game, herd, lamentation, sownder, squadron, team, and whiting; flight for swans in flight and wedge when flying in V formation)   



Bivouac - a group of butterflies at rest (also kaleidoscope, rabble, flutter)

Bloat - a group of hippopotami (also pod or thunder)  

Brace - a group of birds (also flock, flight, volary), also a pair of hares (for general group of hare: band, down, drove, flick, herd, husk or huske, leap, and trips) 

Bunch - a group of deer (also bevy, herd, parcel rangale) 

Business or Busyness- a group of ferrets (also cast,  pack, feynes,  fesnyng) 

Cackle - a group of hyena (also pack)

Cast - a group of crabs (also consortium) or ferrets (also business, busyness pack, fesynes, fesyny pack) or hawks (also leash for merlins)

Cete - a group of badgers (also clan and colony)

Charm - a group of hummingbirds or finch (also quiver)

Clan - a group of badgers (also cete and colony)

Clattering - a group of jackdaws (also flock)

Clowder - a group of cats (also clutter, pounce and glaring)

Clutter - a group of cats (also clowder, pounce and glaring) 

Coalition - a group of cheetahs

Colony - a group of badgers (also cete and clan), bats, birds (also brace, flight, flock, volary)  rabbits, beavers (also lodge), ants or frogs referencing the way they live in large group

Company- a group of parrots (also pandemonium) 

Confusion  - a group of guineafowl or wildebeests

Congregation - a group of alligators 

Congress - a group of lemur (also conspiracy, plot)

Consortium - a group of crabs (also cast)

Conspiracy - a group of lemur (also congress, plot) and ravens (also  flock,  rave, treachery,  unkindness, and murder --due to the ravens being mistaken for crows)

Convocation - a group of eagles 

Court - a group of kangaroos 

Crash - a group of rhinoceroses (also herd and stubbornness) 

Crowd - a group of porpoises (also gam, herd, pod, school, shoal, turmoil)

Dazzle - a group of zebras (also zeal and herd)

Den - a group of snakes 

Descent - a group of woodpeckers

Dray - a group of squirrels (also scurry) 

Drove - group of cattle or any animals driven or moving in a body also a group of hares (see band)

Escargatoire - a group of snails (also rout, walk)

Fesnyng or fesynes - a group of ferrets (also cast, business, busyness, pack) 

Flamboyance - a group of flamingos (also regiment) 

Flight - a group of birds (also brace, colony, flock, volary, and wedge for swans) 

Flock – a group of birds (also brace, colony,  flight, volary); the word is also applied to small, hooved animals like sheep and goats 

Flutter- a group of butterflies (also bivouac, rabble, kaleidoscope)

Gaggle - a flock of geese

Gam - a group of  whales  or porpoises (also crowd, herd, pod, school, shoal, and  turmoil, which is specific to porpoises)

Gang - a group of elk, buffalo, or turkey (also rafter, posse) 

Harras - a group of horses (also team, stud, rag, string)

Herd – a group of herbivore animals, including elephants (also memory), deer, antelope, and buffalo (also  gang and obstinacy), rhinoceroses (also crash and stubbornness), birds like swans, and sea mammals like porpoises

Hide - a group of tigers hiding in the shadows (also ambush and streak)

Horde - a group of crows (also mob, muster, murder parcel) 

Husk and huske - a group of hares (als0 bando down, drove, flick, herd,  leap, trip and brace for two and leash for three)

Implausibility - a group of gnu

Intrigue - a group of kittens (also kindle and litter)

Kaleidoscope - a group of butterflies (also flutter, bivouac, rabble)

Kennel - group of domestic dogs* 

Kettle - a group of vultures circling in the air, perched in trees or on the ground they're called a venue.

Kindle -  a group of kittens (also intrigue and litter) or hares (also band, down, flick, herd,  husk or huske, leap, and trip)  

Knob - a group of waterfowl

Knot - a group of toads or frogs (also army or colony for frogs)

Labor - a group of moles 

Leap - a group of leopards (also prowl) 

Leash - a group of three hares (also see band and brace)

Litter - a group of mammals born in numbers larger than pairs, including kittens, puppies, rodents, etc. (There are some more specific groups for types like intrigue or kindle for kittens.)

Lodge - a group of beavers (also colony)

Lounge - a group of lizards

Memory - a group of elephants (also herd)

Mess - a group of iguanas

Mob – a group of kangaroos (also troop and court) or crows (also horde, murder muster, parcel)

Muddle - a group of guinea pigs 

Murder - a group of magpies or crows (also horde, mob, muster, or parcel), also applied to ravens who have been mistaken for crows (more precise terms for crows include: conspiracy, flock,  rave,  treachery, and unkindness)

Murmuration - a group of starlings

Mustering  - a group of storks (flight and phalanx terms applied to when they're in flight), crows (also horde, mob, murder or parcel) or peafowl (also ostentation and pride)

Obstinacy - a group of buffalo (also gang)

Ostentation - a group of peafowl AKA peacocks (also mustering and pride)

Pace - a group of asses

Pack –  a group of mules used for transporting goods, hyenas (also cackle, clan), elephant seals (also arrangement and herd),  ferrets (also business, busyiness, fesnyg fesynes), coyotes, wolves, or dogs (also kennel for dogs) 

Paddling - a group of ducks (also badling, plump, raft)

Pandemonium - a group of parrots (also company) 

Parcel - a small group of deer (also see bevy, bunch herd, rangale) or or crows (also horde, mob, muster) 

 Parliament - a group of owls 

 Passel - a group of of opossums 

 Phalanx - a group of storks 

 Plump-  a group of ducks (also badling, paddling, raft)

 Plot - a group of lemur (also conspiracy, congress)

 Pod - a group of porpoises (also gam, crowd, herd,  school, shoal, turmoilwhales, dolphins, seals, or hippopotami (also boat or thunder) 

 Posse - a group of turkeys (also rafter, gang) and fireflies (also sparkle)

 Pounce - a group of cats (also clowder) 

 Prickle - a group of porcupines

 Pride - a group of lions, cheetahs, or peafowl AKA peacocks (also muster ingand   ostentation) 

 Prowl - a group of leopards (also leap) 

 Quiver - a group of finch (also charm) cobras (related: den)

 Rabble - a group of butterflies (also kaleidoscope, bivouac, flutter)

 Raft - a group of otters or ducks (also badling, paddling, plumb)

 Rafter - a group of turkeys (also posse, gang) 

 Rag - a group of horses (also team, harras, stud, string) 

 Rave-  a group of ravens (also conspiracy, flock, treachery,  unkindness, and   murder --due to the ravens being mistaken for crows)

 Rake - a group of three mules   

 Rangale - the rank and file, a term which also applies to the members of a group   of deer in contradistinction to the Alpha leaders of the group 

 Regiment - a group of flamingos (also flamboyance)

 Richness - a group of martens 

 Romp - a group of otters 

 Scurry - a group of squirrels 

 Sedge, Sege, or Siege - a group of heron

 Shadow - a group of jaguars 

 Shoal or school  – a group of fish and some sea mammals like purpoises 

 Shrewdness - a group of apes, gorillas (also band and troop)

 Skulk - a group of foxes (also earth to describe a mother fox with her kits)

 Sleuth - a group of bears Smack - a group of jellyfish (also brood)

Span - two mules 

Sparkle - a group of fireflies (also posse) 

 Streak - a group of tigers running together (also ambush,     hide)

 String - a group of horses (also team, harras, stud, rag) 

 Stubbornness - a group of rhinoceroses (also crash and herd) 

 Surfeit - a group of skunks 

 Swarm - a group of insects 

 Team - a group of horses  (also harras, stud, rag, string) 

 Thunder - a group of hippopotami (also bloat, pod) 

 Tower - a group of giraffes 

 Treachery - a group of ravens (also conspiracy, flock,  rave,   unkindness  and  murder --due to the ravens being mistaken for crows)

 Troop - a group of kangaroos or apes (also band,  shrewdness)  

 Troupe – a group of monkeys 

 Turmoil- a group of porpoises (also gam, crowd, herd, pod, school, shoa )

 Unkindness - a group of ravens (also conspiracy, flock,  rave,  treachery, and     murder --due to the ravens being mistaken for crows)

 Venue - a group of vultures in a perched state; in flight they're called a kettle.

  Volary - a group of birds (also also brace, colony, flock, flight) 

  Wisdom - a group of wombats

  Zeal - a group of zebras (also dazzle and herd)


 

How many of these did you already know? Which ones were new to you?  Any favorites among the group?

*f you want to use a collective noun for a specific breed of domestic dog, see this list: ARF! Kennel Club Accepted Collective Nouns From the ARF! Newsletter, Fall 1995 



Tuesday, April 25, 2023

An A/B Test of Generative AI

Yet another brand that uses this slogan is featured on Amazon






I put the same query to Bing, ChatGPT, and Google Bard. This was the prompt: "Let's Build the Future Together": How many businesses use this slogan?


Want to guess which one gave the best answer?

❌ For Bing, I made sure to be in the chat mode and got even more disappointing results than I got from its search mode. This is the New Bing's response to my query:
"I’m sorry but I couldn’t find any information on how many businesses use the slogan “Let’s Build the Future Together”. However, I can tell you that a company slogan is a word or phrase used to represent a business as a whole or its products and services. Slogans typically follow a company or brand’s name in marketing materials such as business cards and advertisements."


❌#OpenAI's ChatGPT response came faster, but it wasn't any better than Bing's. This is what it said:
"I'm sorry, but as an AI language model, I do not have access to information on the exact number of businesses that use the slogan "Let's Build the Future Together." However, this slogan is a common one that has been used by many different businesses and organizations over the years. It is a popular marketing phrase that is often used to convey a sense of partnership and collaboration with customers or other stakeholders, as well as a focus on innovation and growth."


✔ Google's Bard was the clear winner out of the three. It admitted it didn't have full information and it went off on the tangent of why businesses use that slogan, but it did at least name some that use it:

The United Nations
The World Bank
The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
The Coca-Cola Company
The Ford Motor Company

It added that it was used by Barack Obama's 2008 presidential campaign.

While I don't claim to be an "AI Prompt Engineer," I do know that you sometimes need to try the prompt again to get more thorough responses, so I regenerated the response on Google Bard. It offered a slightly different contextual background and repeated the UN and Coca-Cola but it also had 3 additional names of brands to add to the list: Amvets, LEGO, and Siemens.

It also plugs Google, noting that "a quick Google search reveals that there are hundreds, if not thousands, of businesses that use this slogan."

A third run on Bard yields 2 names already mentioned plus 3 new ones:
The American Society of Mechanical Engineers
The National Association of Home Builders
The World Economic Forum





So you get the picture. It can take multiple rounds to build up a list that is not going to be comprehensive but at least gives you some idea off the range of organizations that apply the same slogan.

I'd recommend that all brands do searches on the slogans they're considering. While it may make sense for toys and those in the building trade to adopt it despite its wide adoption by other organizations, a new startup will likely not get much traction from something this abstract.


Related:



Monday, March 27, 2023

Coke' Misappropriates Vermeer With AI

A 3D billboard at Guarulhos International Airport in Sao Paulo is showcases  Coca-Cola's "Masterpiece" campaign by animating Vermeer's  "Girl with a Pearl Earring" as a girl whose life purpose it is to put bottles of Coke into a pipe that leads to the vending machine for the soft drink. 




This is not "real magic TM" as the Coke video declares. It is a travesty of art that reduces a masterpiece to a Disney-style short film. 

I can just picture the thought process behind this with a discussion of the creative team that went like this:

Rich: We need something everyone recognizes as a masterpiece!

Josh: But it has to not be under copyright!

Rich: Right! 

Dave: How about Mona Lisa?

Rich Maybe, but can we find something else?

Dave: Vermeer!

Rich: What?

Dave:  ChatGPT says one of his paintings is really famous because there was a movie about it.

Josh: Oh, yeah, "Girl With a Pearl Earring." So long as that's not under copyright, it should be good. 

Rich: Yeah, any woman in a famous piece of art acting as a waitress to get you to buy Coke should work.  

High fives all around.


And so you have it. The enigmatic subject of Vermeer's masterpiece is reduced to Disney-heroine-as-serving girl to allow Coke to appropriate high culture to sell you brown-colored carbonated water filled with ingredients that are detrimental to your health.

I'm fine with a brand promoting itself and with showing off 3D effects and other high tech. But it should have gone the route of creating its own character for this rather than stealing art that is not copyright protected.


Related: 

MAJOR MARKETING MISSTEPS FROM ADIDAS, M&M'S AND COKE