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10 ways to use MySpace as a promotional tool

October 16, 2006 at 3:08 am | In marketing | 6 Comments

For those who like lists, here it is in the raw. Read what follows for the full spiel.

1. Profile yourself
2. Don’t be a loner
3. Befriend random strangers
4. Browse for likely friends
5. Find your friends in groups
6. Google for friends
7. Speak up
8. Approve away
9. Gossip in public
10. Broadcast yourself
Bonus: Feeding forums for fun and profit

My first real knowledge of MySpace came during a 2006 SxSW Interactiveexternal link seminar, on the topic of spreading the word about your startup, when one of the panelists stated “you will get more traffic from MySpace than from anywhere else”. Wow, I thought, that’s a pretty strange thing to say - isn’t MySpace the place where teenagers go nuts with HTML and produce ad-hoc, mostly ugly, hard to read ego-feeding profile pages? Ok, so maybe I didn’t get what MySpace was all about, or how powerful it was. And what the heck, it was free, so I went ahead and created a default profile, linked it to AustinMash!, and left it alone to focus on other things. Needless to say, my basic profile page referred exactly zero people to this web site.

That was in March, when I was still pretty busy building out the site. Later on (sometime in April) I went back to MySpace and took the time to study how it worked and what could be done with it. I saw how users modify the basic, default profile page by inserting HTML and CSS Stylesheet code into form fields that are provided to allow you to write about your interests and hobbies. Most ’spacers get their code from third-party web sites, whose sole reason for existence is to provide such code so the ’spacer can modify their page without knowing any HTML or CSS. In fact, it seems one of the reasons a lot of profiles are so cumbersome is that novice ’spacers will insert more than one set of code from, perhaps, different suppliers, whose code will then collide to produce a mess of a page. Or, they might thinks it’s cute to choose the same color for their scroll bar and it’s background, which in effect makes the scroll bars invisible, which when attached to a super-wide and long page, makes the profile almost impossible to navigate. But whatever, this is the ’spacers page, and the only ones who would care would be their friends, supposedly.

Ah yes, friends, that’s what was missing from my profile. Now, you must understand that the word “friend” takes on a different meaning in MySpace. A MySpace friend is merely another profile with whom you have mutually agreed with to call each other friends. It matters not if you actually know the owner of the profile; it matters less if the profile is even of a person. Yes, there are profiles that have been set up to just convey an idea, and generally, if you request to be their friend, they will automatically agree (”approve” you in MySpeak). In this manner, these “concept profiles” can amass thousands, perhaps millions of friends, and you show off your affiliation to the concept by including it in your friends list.

For example, one of my friends is Beer. Beer is my friend. Beer is listed alongside my other friends, some of which are real people I actually know and hang out with in real life. I am also a friend of Austin, by the way.

Another thing about MySpace friends is that they are visible to anyone who views a profile. If you land on an interesting profile, you can see their list of friends, and by clicking on the friend’s picture, you go to that person’s profile. Very often they will have similarly interesting profiles and list of friends, which you can click on to explore more profiles, and so on and so on. This is why friend-jumping can be such a vast time-sink.

Having friends on your MySpace profile is important for several reasons. First of all, if you don’t have friends, you’re obviously not popular and therefore not very interesting. Second, a couple of important features are available only with friends: the bulletin and the comment. A bulletin is a message that is broadcast to all your friends at once, and a comment is a message that you leave with one particular friend. Comments are important because they appear on your friend’s profile, and they contain a link back to your profile. So, by leaving a comment for a friend, anyone who lands on the friend’s profile might click on your picture and by taken to your profile. If your friend receives a lot of comments, however, your comment will soon scroll off the page and your link will be gone, unless you comment again.

With this basic understanding of how MySpace works, you can start to appreciate how to use it to promote your goods or services.

1. Profile yourself
You start by creating a profile that augments what you are promoting. Include links to your web site, of course. Try to create an environment, convey an attitude that represents your business. However, you have to consider how you want to separate your personal life from your business life. Is your new profile going to be based on you, as an individual who happens to run a business, or are you trying to represent only your business as it’s own entity? MySpace is geared towards individuals, but that doesn’t stop thousands of businesses from setting up their own profiles. You may want to consider taking the personal route. The rest will flow more naturally and not seem so contrived that way. Making this decision now will help guide you in your future interactions with ’spacers.

My MySpace profile external link was set up to mimick this site. It uses the same color scheme, has links to this blog, and incorporates the Skyline graphic. Unfortunately, due to the constraints of what you can do in your profile (for example, you’re not allowed to cover up the banner ad at the top, and Javascript code is blocked) I could not make the Skyline clickable and functional, and it’s placement was a problem – I couldn’t place it at the right height on the page, and even if I could, it wouldn’t look right. In the end, I just made it a static image at the bottom of the page, but since the image file is from the same server AustinMash! runs on, the Skyline is guaranteed to show the same ads as are displayed on the site.
Besides these items, I included pictures and some facts about myself to humanize the page. Although my profile is heavily linked to my web site, I represent myself as a person - an Austinite who runs a web site for and about Austin, Texas.

2. Don’t be a loner
Once your profile is ready, you then go about adding friends to it. You can start with your real-world friends by searching for their profiles by their e-mail address. You can find your friends one at a time from the “Search” link near the top of your home page, or if you use Yahoo, GMail, Hotmail, or AOL address books, you can find them all at once from the “Invite” link (click on one of the “Import From…” links).

You can also search for concept profiles using keywords, if that makes sense for what you’re trying to do.

3. Befriend random strangers

Asking people you don’t know to be your friend is a form of promotion in itself. When a ‘spacer receives a friend request from you they see your picture, which is linked to your profile. The prospective friend will then very likely visit your profile to see if you are worth adding to his friends list. That right there increases your profile views. Of course, like most promotional efforts, focusing in on a relevant target audience is half the battle. With 119 million profiles on MySpace and climbing, random friend requests will not be as effective in promotional terms as a targeted approach.

Here are a few tactics to find the right “friends” for you.

4. Browse for likely friends

Use the Browse feature. MySpace allows you to search for profiles based on many criteria (hint: use the “advanced” browsing tab). You can search by gender, age range, geographic location, interests, and many other factors. You can sort the results by last login time, which puts the more active users first, and moves the abandoned profiles to the end of the list.

Browsing for AustinMash! friends is fairly easy, as I can specify "located within 5 miles of zip code 78701". There are a few 'spacers in Austin: looking just for the ones between ages 30 and 35 within 5 miles of downtown yields 3000 profiles, which seems to be the maximum returned in any query. Who knows what the actual number of this "small" sample realy is?

5. Find your friends in groups

There are also thousands of “groups” in MySpace, which can also be searched for by using keywords. Groups are sections of the site where group members can discuss topics of interest to the group in a forum. In my experience, the forums I’ve seen are not heavily used, with rather shallow discussion threads. It is likely some groups are more active than others, although this is not important at this point. What is important is that each group has a list of members, and presumably each member is interested in the topic of the group. So, by finding groups related to your product, you will find ’spacers who might react favorably to a friend request from you.

A major drawback to this method is that there is currently no way to sort a group’s member list by any criteria. If a group has thousands of members, finding the most promising targets is, at best, very time consuming. But, the ’spacerSphere (the cloud of third party services dedicated to servicing ’spacers) is growing all the time, and there already or soon may be companies offering data mining services for this purpose.

I belong to a few Austin-related groups, such as Austin!, Austin Music Exchange, Austin Party Boats, Progressive Austin, and Austinites. As a member, my profile is listed in the membership rolls, creating another avenue for Austinites to find my site.

6. Google for friends

Another way to find appropriate ’spacers is to google for them. In Google’s search box, type in “MySpace” and your relevant keyword(s). The results will include profile pages with your keywords, plus blog postings that mention them. Oops, did I forget to mention the MySpace blogging feature? Yes, ’spacers can maintain their own blogs within the MySpace system. These are rather limited blogs, however, in that they do not provide RSS feeds, categories, or archiving functions. They are isolated and not a part of the Blogosphere as we know it, but this is not important at this point. What is important is that ’spacers will write about what interests them, and you can find those posts through Google. This results in a highly targeted set of users you will very likely approve you as a friend.

I found some of my profile friends after posting my ROT Rally blog entry. I found 'spacers that had written about the rally, and I added to their blog comments to let them know where they could find another perspective on the event (and more pictures, of course). I also still receive friend requests from people who were there or are otherwise interested in bikes.

7. Speak up

By the way, once you land on a ’spacers blog post that is in line with your thing, feel free to leave a comment for the post. This not only makes the ’spacer’s blog more interesting to others, it will leave a permanent link to your profile (and perhaps to your web site) from that post, which will accessible to everyone else who reads it in the future.

My Google Analytics stats show people are landing on my blog directly from the blog.myspace.com domain, which means they are clicking on the links I left in comments on other ’spacers blogs

8. Approve away

By and by, over time you will receive friend requests yourself. Some of these might well be from a real-world long-lost friend, who noticed your profile in one of their friend’s list of friends. Some of these will be from bands or other entities looking to promote themselves. And, some of these will be spam, or from profiles set up solely to lure people to porn sites or other malicious sites. Yes, like the internet at large, MySpace has its share of miscreants.

If the request is of either of the first two categories, go ahead and approve them. If you are not sure, don’t worry. Just visiting a profile of the third category is generally safe in itself - MySpace has gone to great lengths to ensure malicious code cannot be placed in profile pages, and seems to promptly remove obscene profiles. If you do land on one of those, it’s still fairly easy to tell this is not someone you want to add as a friend, and you can block all future friend requests from them if you need to. Actually, I have seen a diminished number of these types of requests lately. I guess the bad guys decided it was not worth the effort, maybe because most ’spacers were savvy enough to ignore them.

This brings us to the issue of the fine line between promotion and spam. You know about spamming - don’t do it. It will backfire on you, or at best waste your time. Problem is - what is spam? You will have to use your own best judgment on that, although you are not the final authority: the recipient is. In general, if you are providing real value and content to an audience that is likely to appreciate it, you are probably not spamming. Just try to err on the ham side of the line, not the spam side.

I "promoted" my ROT rally blog post to all the Austin related 'spacer groups I could find. Most of them removed my submission fairly quickly. Ok, so maybe not everyone who's a part of the Austin community is into rockin' and rollin' with biker babes and more. Duly noted, and I will try to be more selective in my group posts from now on. The last thing I want is to be blocked from any groups I may have appropriate content for in the future.

9. Gossip in public
As you gather friends, leave comments on their profiles. Comments can be nothing more than “thanks for the add” (meaning, thanks for adding me to your list of friends) or “have a great day”. Sometimes friends do this just to say hi, but because newer comments move the older ones off a profile, a lot of people seem to do this so their profile link remains on their friend’s page. Some of these profiles are getting hundreds of views a day, so staying connected increases your own visibility. And if your comment is interesting (you can include a picture, if the friend allows it), you can increase the chances some of those visitors will click through to you.

Also, leaving comments on your friend’s profiles makes it more likely they will leave comments on yours, which makes your profile more interesting.

This is something I need to work on more. I have left a few comments on my real-life friends profiles, and some have commented back, but I am not making enough of a time investment in this yet. I also had to remove a few comments from my profile, mostly because they were a response to my comment or an e-mail or something, and they didn't make any sense just sitting there out of context. The upshot is the comment section on my profile is pretty weak right now.

10. Broadcast yourself
The bulletin feature allows you to send the same message to all your friends at the same time. Think about this a second - this message goes to ALL your friends: real-life, ’spacers, concepts, bands, and anything else you may have in your friend list. This is one reason you should decide early on how you intend to use MySpace, and what kind of profile you want to maintain. Will you send personal bulletins - “great news - my sister’s no-good boyfriend finally moved out and took his ratty friends with him”, or will it be business - “overstock sale, special MySpace promotion next 24 hours only”? So, while bulletins can be a great way to stay connected, some up-front planning might be in order if you are concerned about maintaining a certain image. That said, if your strategy is to humanize your business, by all means tell everyone all about your bunions!

Bonus: Feeding forums for fun and profit
I’ve mentioned the group forums, where members can talk about topics of interest to the group. These are moderated by the group leader, and are either public or private, depending on the leader’s intent. But with millions of groups (the “other” category alone has over 1.5 million groups), participation activity in any particular group can be spotty, and your submissions there are not likely to receive wide viewership.

A better bet is the global MySpace Forum, which is much more active and has heavy participation. There are 22 main forum categories broken out into 80 sub categories, currently totaling over 1 million topics containing 12 million posts, and as of right now, the most recent post in each of the 22 categories is no more than 20 minutes old. That’s some lively discussion going on there folks.

With the exception of a couple of MySpace-specific areas, including one devoted to helping you customize your profile, the categories and topics are those you might find in any general purpose online forum, which is to say, it runs the gamut of possible interests. Surely one or more of them will be appropriate for postings in your field.

The MySpace forum works like most, with someone introducing a topic by asking a question, and people responding as they see fit. One difference from other forums, though, is that the high level of participation means the topic turnover rate is also high, and your responses may not have the longetivity you would expect in less popular forums. Keeping yourself visible on these forums would require an ongoing, dedicated effort.

So, is MySpace a good way to promote your business? Depends on the business and on you. The forum, the bulletins, the commenting system, and the groups are just tools you can use to spread the word about your endeavors. Like most tools, these can make you more efficient if you let the tool do the work, as opposed to trying to force it (like, by spamming). And also like most areas of life, you get out of it what you put into it. Once you’ve decided MySpace contains the people you’d like to reach in your promotions, you still need to invest the time necessary to be an active participant in the community if you expect to be noticed. Being online, social networks are no longer limited by geography, and while the opportunity for individual self-expression is unprecedented, they nevertheless continue to be ruled by the same human dynamics that have existed for centuries. Some things never change.

At the top of Google Search Results!

October 4, 2006 at 1:04 am | In thoughts, marketing | No Comments yet...

Wow, this blew me away!

Today, I went to Google’s blog search external link tool, typed in “ROT Rally”, and there, at the very top, first on the list, was my blog entry!

Who would have thought I’d somehow get top billing at Google? Yeah, it’s a narrow search, but I’ll take it !!


Top ‘O the heap !

Summer Lull, summer reading

September 23, 2006 at 11:01 am | In thoughts, marketing | No Comments yet...

Summer has sailed past us. Perhaps for some, Summer was loud, proud, and full of crowd, chock-full of happenings and adventures, crammed with incidence and accomplishments as it splashed and danced across the calendar. Perhaps for others, Summer was more discrete and subdued, with the same-ol’ stuff day in and day out, silently slipping from day to week to month, each looking suspiciously like the last, blending together into a tranquil surface of sameness. Or maybe it wasn’t so simple, and for most of us Summer wore multiple hats as it engaged us, fully filling some aspects of our lives while at the same time letting languish others, as it kept its sails unfurled and filled by the inexorable winds of time.

Yes, I think my Summer had schizophrenic traits, as I was exhaustively busy on several fronts, while others, such as this web site, were left to cool their heels. Days and weeks went by all full of activity, yet no progress was made on AustinMash! It’s not what was planned, it is what happened. And in case it matters, said activity was not of the leisure kind. No, this Summer did not find me out for day-long rides in the hill country, nor lounging on a boat, nor skipping town for exotic locales. Not a single group ride since ROT Rally in early June, not one day at the lake, not one sleepless night banging on the keyboard in all of Summer – how did that happen?

Probably the biggest time-sucking activity was moving to a new house. Wait - the moving part certainly took much longer than I would have thought - but there is an implied mountain of time in that statement, which was spent on a few related activities such as actually finding the house to move into. We were already living in a house we liked, which had a number of appealing features (think 3 car garage and super large yard adjacent to a greenbelt) which was purchased at a very reasonable price. This made our house hunt more difficult, as anything we found had to be measured against our current situation, and our features-for-the-price benchmark was pretty tough to beat. When we did find something that moved us to present an offer, we were typically late by a day or two – already gone! The best houses go on and off the market at lightning speed. Very frustrating. This is how several months of weekends were taken up by nothing but house hunting, followed by weeks of moving, fixing up the old house to sell, and settling into our new place. Yep, between the move and other stuff going on, it was once again proven that today’s most precious commodity is time – demand for it grows unimpeded, and new supply is sharply constrained :)

Normally my life outside AustinMash! is not a subject for this blog, but I include a portion of it here as an illustration of how personal life can interfere with business life, despite your best intentions. As it happens, AustinMash! is not my primary means of financial support. If it was, I would naturally not have the luxury of leaving it alone while other concerns capture my attention.

It has been interesting to see, however, that even with no active promotion on my part, AustinMash! continues to enjoy a steady flow of traffic. This is no doubt due to my previous efforts at SEO and some promotional initiatives with lasting effect, such as participating in forums and other blogs. The bulk of my visitors arrive from a search engine – mostly Google and Yahoo, in that order, and the top search terms used to find my site relate to the ROT Rally and Biker Babes – go figure. After that, the posts related to my experiences with flash-based video and WordPress issues seem to get attention. Oh, I even get visitors from people looking for Gary Hoover info.

Speaking of finding stuff, I’ve discovered a couple of very interesting marketing and promotion related blogs. The first is written by Guy Kawasaki, the original evangelist for Apple. He writes about what he knows, and he seems to know quite a bit about in-the-trenches marketing, software companies in general, and startups in particular. He is also relatively new to blogging, and is not shy about sharing his discoveries with the rest of us. Plus, his writing is just cool. Check out, just for starters, The 120 Day Wonder: How to Evangelize a Blog external link and The Art of Distribution external link.

Another blog I just discovered (through Guy’s RSS feed, actually) is Pronet Advertising external link which also has a wealth of practical advice. For example, in the How to get on the digg homepage external link post, I learned there is a new way to code the digg button on my blog, that allows readers to digg an already submitted story directly from the post, and which I will be implementing shortly.

Hmm, there are enhancements to the digg process that I was unaware of. Boy, you take your eye off the game for a moment, and all of a sudden the rules are changed (what - no celebrating with props external link anymore?) and it’s a whole new thing out there. Ok, that’s an exaggeration, but the point remains valid - the blogoshere is still young and evolving, and it pays to keep up.

Wanna be Impressed? Check out Google Analytics!

July 3, 2006 at 1:58 am | In thoughts, tech, marketing | No Comments yet...

AustinMash! has been live for about 4 months now. From the beginning I included code in each page of the site that recorded every time the page was loaded into a browser, along with the user’s IP address and the current date. This was primarily set up to support the live site stats on the PixelList page, which shows in real time how many unique visitors visited the site today, this week, this month, and the total since launch (over 2400 people now – whoop!). It also shows the same stats for ad clicks. I also created a small desktop utility so I can watch the numbers climb (way fun!) and I have a private report page set up that shows the raw data in an easy-to-scan format.

Although this setup worked great for its intended purpose, it left a lot of unanswered questions related to what users were doing on the site. For example, I started to see, in the report page, a large number of page views from the same person. I mean, page views in the 60-90s in the same day, and again the next day, and the next. Since there are only about 40 pages in the whole site, this was pretty weird. I can appreciate someone being so mesmerized by my site they keep re-reading everything, but come-on, over 200 page views in 3 days? I had to go dig into the server log files to see that this user was not going through all the content at all, all requests were the same, for the blog home page! The logs also showed all the requests were being referred to from BlogSlides external link. Aha! I had recently added my blog to their index of blogs, and their unique feature is that they automatically cycle through a series of blogs in the same browser window, hence the name BlogSlides. Sure enough, the logs showed this visitor loaded the main blog page at regular intervals all day long. Ok, so this minor mystery turned out to be someone who left his BlogSlides window running, and by doing so created a bunch of bogus requests for all the blogs in his slide show, not just mine, providing another example of the unintended consequences of someone trying something new. Anyway, I found my answer through tedious scanning of my log files, not through my automated visitor counters. This would have been a lot easier with dedicated Web Site Analysis software.

So, I knew my hit and click counters were not good at providing the kind of deep analysis you can get from web analytics software, they were never intended to be, and creating such a system was never a reason for AustinMash!’s existence. All along, I’ve thought that if detailed visitor stats ever became important to me, I would have to shell out several hundred dollars for a decent and robust solution, something like WebTrends external link.

Then, a little while ago, an interesting e-mail appeared in my inbox – it was an invitation from Google to try out their new Analytics solution, which was, of course, free! Apparently I had asked for an invitation some time ago, probably when I set up my AdSense advertising account, and then forgot all about it. So, here was Google, one of the most impressive software developers of today (Google Maps, Google Finance, Google Spreadsheet, need I go on?) inviting me to try their latest creation. Guess how long it took me to add their tracking code to my pages? Not very, I’ll tell you that right now.

The hardest part in adding their code (about 4 lines of JavaScript) was in deciding where it should go. In my case, since I have made the commitment to have the Skyline appear on all publicly accessible pages, it made sense to put the Google code next to the code that generates the Skyline Ads area map. Although Google says it may take a day, within a few hours of uploading the new code to the site my personal Analytics page was showing visitor data, and a few minutes after that, I was once again impressed with Google’s software and user experience prowess.



Screenshot 1 - Default View

Now that the tracking code has been active on the site for a few weeks, there is enough data to take a good look at most of the features Google Analytics offers. Screenshot 1 shows the default view when you load the application, the “Executive Overview” Dashboard view. This screenshot shows the overall page layout for the reports within Google Analytics, with collapsible report links on the left, a date picking calendar below that, and the reports on the right, with help text below them.



Screenshot 2
Three Dashboard Views

Screenshot 2 shows the three pre-configured dashboard “views”, which seem meant to be specific to the role of the person using Analytics. Ok, maybe I’m getting ahead of myself here. I should mention that Analytics supports the ability to monitor multiple web sites (you set up “Website Profiles” to define them), and that a user with administrator privileges can set up additional users who can access specific profiles only, or all profiles. You can set up more than one profile for the same web site, each with its own set of available reports, which is how you restrict users to seeing only the reports they should be seeing. There is a lot of behind-the-scenes power in Analytics, with features to help small to mid-sized businesses make the most of their online efforts.



Fully expanded Nav bar,
showing all available reports

 

Now, I am not going to sit here and bore you with a frame-by-frame description of every feature of Google Analytics. I took a lot of screenshots which pretty much speak for themselves, so look them over and you’ll get a sense of the kinds of data this program gives you access to. However, I will mention a few things that are not apparent in these static pics.

 

 



Visitor Location Map - Austin has the biggest marker!

First: Browser Compatibility. My own experience is that you pretty much need to be using IE for Google Analytics to work properly. The pages will load in Opera, but all charts are empty, no data gets loaded into them. Firefox support is better (as you can see in Screenshot 1) but other pages do not work, such as the site overlay reports. I switched to IE for the rest of the screenshots.



Site overlay - Each link has metrics data
(very small bars for my site, small data sample size still)

Second: Visitor Counts. Google Analytics gathers visitor information by running JavaScript in the user’s browser when they load a page (client-side method). Although this allows for capturing a wealth of data (such as length of visit, connection speed, and screen resolution) that would not otherwise be available, this collection method inherently leads to lower visitor counts than a server-side method, such as my own hit and click counters. This is because JavaScript must be running in the user’s browser! There are two sets of visitors that are not counted in Google Analytics: automated spiders, or robots, that don’t use a browser at all, and users who switch off JavaScript while they surf.



Visitor Source Pie,
with two slices highlighted

Whether the exclusion of spiders from your Analytics data is a good thing or not depends on your need for that information, and whether you can get it some other way. Of course it’s there in your server log files, but going through them is pretty tedious. In my case, those visits show up in my hit counter data report, and I can trace a particular visit or set of visits to a specific search engine, or I can deduce I’ve been visited by a badbot based on the origin, network used, or pattern of requests. Knowing that I get regular visits from Google, Yahoo, Bloglines, Pluck, IceRocket, and other legitimate search and aggregation sites lets me know my latest content is available for others to find.




An example of a powerful
cross-segment report. Here,
we see the breakdown of
screen resolutions for Firefox users.

You may be wondering how many people really go around the internet with their JavaScript turned off. I didn’t think there were too many of them, but early on I started getting complaints that the blog page layout was all messed up for some folk. It took a little while and exchanges with several complainants for me to realize the problem was they had JavaScript turned off, and since I was using JS code to position the sidebar to the right side of the page, of course it looked terrible for them. I’ve since modified my templates so they don’t rely on JavaScript to position the sidebar, but this experience demonstrated there are a fair percentage of visitors who will not be counted by a client-side data capture method. This is not that big a deal for me, because I am not using Google Analytics for total traffic counts, and I am assuming this exclusion will not skew the report percentages too much. Also, since it’s impossible to buy pixels without JavaScript running, these visitors wouldn’t be in any of the e-commerce related reports anyway.



Visitor Location Pie
with pulled out slice

Finally: Impressions and Opinions. The default date range is the past 7 days when you first load Google Analytics. This range is easy to change via the calendars to the lower left. You can quickly select a standard week, month, or day; a column of days (for example, all Tuesdays in the month); or you can specify an ad-hoc, custom range via the “Enter Range” icon. When you click that icon, two calendars expand into being next to it, where you merely click the start date in one calendar, and the end date in the second one. When you click “Apply Range”, the two new calendars collapse away. Any time you change the date range, the currently displayed report or dashboard is automatically redrawn for the new date(s). From that point on, all reports will use the newly selected date range, unless you change it again. This immediate and “sticky” response to your changes is intuitive and makes it easy to get the report you want. The tool does its job quickly and efficiently, so you can too.



Date Range calendars expand
and collapse on the page - nice

Notice I said the date range calendars “expand into being” and “collapse away”. They do not merely pop into existence all at once, or even more ghastly, open in a new browser window. No, they very pleasantly expand from and collapse into nothingness on the page, a very nice touch. As a web developer, I can appreciate the extra work that goes into implementing such niceties, and although it is arguably just eye candy, little touches like this go a long way towards enhancing the user experience. Likewise, all charts draw themselves over a very short time interval (line graphs trace a path across the grid, and bar graph columns grow from their base to their final length), another nice touch. Ok, pie charts do pop into being all at once, but you can pull out a slice of the pie by clicking on an item in the legend.



Some of the search queries
that led someone to AustinMash!

A couple of gripes: The dashboard and certain reports lack one-click drilldown capability, and the login process could be better integrated with other Google services. When you first load Google Analytics, for example, you may see you have 25% of your visitors being referred to your site by “other”. It should be possible, right there, to click on that pie slice and see the data for “other”. As it is, you have to go to the detailed report (Marketing Optimization/Visitor Segment Performance/Referring Source), and set the display list size to something greater than the default 10 lines. A drilldown click from the dashboard would have been much nicer. Also, Google does not have a single login and authentication mechanism for its various services. Maybe this is by design, but it seems inconsistent with the company’s otherwise user-centric implementations. Perhaps it is a consequence of trying too much, too fast, as various divisions race to provide new applications on their own. One would hope Google will make the effort to tie everything together, from a user account perspective, at some point in the future.



Most visited content, with bounce and exit data

On a happier note, a technically interesting aspect of the reports is the seamless way flash animations are integrated into the page. All the pie, line, and bar charts, plus the geo maps, are Macromedia Flash mini-applets, while the textual data, navigation, and help text are just that, regular HTML text on the page. The calendars are HTML as well, yet all the pieces are interact with each other and are integrated into a well-honed, solidly built web app machine. I like that. Actually, as far as I can tell, this entire application, with all the reports and various date and range picking controls, are really all on the same HTML page. All that happens when you click on a report is that different chart mini-apps get loaded and fed the proper data in the report area of the page, without the whole page refreshing in the browser. Very slick, and in my opinion, the way all web apps should work from now on. Yes, I know Google Maps and Google Finance, as well as numerous other “Web 2.0″ sites (like Flickr) use the same approach. Google just seems to have mastered the art and they are not shy about showing it off. Kudos!



You can compare data from
two time ranges, to measure the
effects of a marketing push, for example

But wait, there’s more! Not only does Google dress to impress, it is also a well behaved, soft-spoken host, which only serves to enhance its popularity in the increasingly crowded internet party scene. After exploring the available reports, it becomes apparent why Google spent the resources to buy the company that developed the core technology, and to enhance and distribute this remarkable tool for free. It’s all there in the “Content Optimization” and “E-Commerce Analysis” sections. As a Google Analytics user, you have the ability to track the effectiveness of various AdWords campaigns, and to analyze the effectiveness of your site in converting visitors into revenue-generating sales. You can define “goals” (such as showing a customer the payment receipt, successful transaction page) and “funnels”, which are paths a visitor would take through your site to reach a “goal”. Then, the reports help you understand how and why visitor landings translate into income. This helps you make more money, some of which you will then spend in more AdWords advertising (with a greater knowledge of what works and what doesn’t), which of course is good for Google.



Another cross-segment report
Where are my Google visitors
coming from?

It seems clear Analytics is one way Google hopes to address its primary weakness, which, as numerous analysts have pointed out, is that despite all the cool technology it produces, Google has very little ability to “lock in” users. In one sense, Google is like the genius kid who enters a hyper-competitive graduate program way too young. Because his peers, such as Microsoft and Yahoo, and Amazon and eBay to a lesser extent, are entrenched and have a built-in ability to keep its users coming back, Google has to be that much better at everything it does so that people will prefer to hang out with it instead of the older kids. So far it has been able to do this, but at the cost of running full speed everywhere it goes, trying to be Mr. popular in all circles to make sure its parties are always well attended. Wouldn’t it be nice to be able to relax a little and not worry about everyone running out the door when the cool new frat house throws its first party? Or worry that folks will get tired of the music and beer and just drift back home to Yahoo and MSN? You bet it would, and if Google’s customers come to rely on Analytics to manage their business, there is much less chance they will eventually migrate away from AdWords or any other revenue-producing service that may be offered – such as the new Google Checkout service.



Some reports help you visualize
how visitors navigate through your site

So, even though Analytics can be considered strategically important to Google, and the AdWords integration is what makes it so, the user experience was not compromised to put these features front and center. Much to Google’s credit, the default views and reports were chosen based on what the users would find most useful, not on what would further the company’s goals. The genius kid doesn’t go around shouting how great it is, it merely does what it does very well, confident that it will pay off in the long run.

I believe that it will – how many Web 1.0 startups when nowhere because they neglected to put the user first (RealNetworks, for one, comes to mind)? Google absolutely needs tools like Analytics to become ingrained in its customer’s business processes, but it seems to understand that providing super-easy, hyper-helpful user experiences is the way to go about it. Despite the muscle under the outfit, Google’s charm and graciousness exudes a confident and understated vibe. This is my kind of party!



Most of my Texas visitors
are from Austin!

Some notes on the data in the screenshots: These of course are actual reports generated from real data about AustinMash!. The spike in traffic on June 15th was due to my blog posting on the recent ROT Biker Rally here in Austin. Since Google Analytics has just started gathering data, most of the visitors are “new” to it and not “returning”. You will note there were some visitors referred to my site from MySpace, I will be talking about my experimentation with that site in a future posting.

Finally, I am gratified that the bulk of my visitors are from Austin. While it’s great to see people in Russia or Saudi Arabia are checking out AustinMash! (and because the data gathering is client-side, I can be fairly sure these are real people and not robots), it has always been my intention to make this site primarily for Austinites. I am very pleased to see my promotional efforts are on-target, that I am doing the right things as far as reaching my intended audience. Very cool indeed.



Most reports include the ability to further graph a metric over time. Here, we see the time distribution of the 23 visitors using Dialup access during this report period.


The browsers people use, and their operating systems. The purple up-arrow icons create new floating graphs with Data-Over-Time, To-Date Lifetime, or Cross-Segment reports. Very powerful stuff.

ROT Rally Rocks and Roars - Biker Babes and More!

June 15, 2006 at 12:57 am | In austin | 8 Comments

They were everywhere. If you were in town, you saw them, there was no way not to. They were everywhere. On the highways, in the parking lots, in the city streets, in your neighborhood! There they were, a few over here, and some more over there. Were they lost? Where did they all come from, and where are they going? Look, there’s another pack of bikes, riding together. Where are they going? You know the answer: everywhere!



They were everywhere!

The annual Republic of Texas Biker Rally external link descended upon Austin again this year on the first weekend in June. The numbers are huge: an estimated 40,000 bikers external link came to Austin, and spent over $36M (collectively, not each). Let’s do some math: this means each biker spent, on average, $900 during the 4 day event. Some of them stayed at cheap hotels, others with friends in town (no money spent on lodging), yet others booked rooms at the better hotels downtown. Some bikers camped at the rally grounds and cooked their meals, but most of them probably ate at local restaurants (that’s what, 9-10 meals Thurs-Sun?). Many probably did some shopping, both of the touristy kind, and of the biker kind, buying chrome and leather for themselves and their steeds (and their bikes). Every last one of them bought some gas while they were here, and virtually all of them drank some beer, that much can be assumed. So, $900 each? Sure, sounds about right, with $3-4/beer and $2.75/gal gas. Keeping man and machine fed and happy probably accounted for half of that total. It’s no wonder the city of Austin suggested to the rally organizers external link that they expand the Friday night party downtown, that they broadcast biker-friendly messages on the traffic alert signs along the highways, and that they provided security and road closures for the Parade. It’s no wonder the hotels go out of their way to cater to this unique clientele - I mean, do they block off entire floors of their parking garages for the musicians during SXSW, or provide them with buckets of water and wash rags to clean up with when they return from the festivities? (although, maybe that’s not a bad idea).

You know the numbers are huge when you drive around town and see hotel and restaurant parking lots virtually filled with chrome and paint and rubber, row after row after row of handle bars and front tires all in a line, all attached to a unique machine, the pride and joy of someone inside.



Carlos and Charlies hosted a few riders

There are those who ride, and those who wish. Some may wish more than others, all the way from “next year, yeah, that’ll be me, too” to “damn bikers making all that noise and tying up traffic and riding here and there and going who knows where and doing who knows what - damn bikers - look at them, doing what they want, having fun and enjoying life - damn bikers” Whatever, dude.



Enough bikes to go around

Let’s do some more math: if we assume 75% of the 40,000 bikers are riding two-up, with only 25% riding solo, that’s about 25,000 bikes. If they all got together at the same time (good luck arranging that!) and rode in standard 2-line formation, with each bike 8 ft long, and with a 10 ft gap between bikes (kinda close, but ok for slow speed, around town riding), you would see a continuous stream of bikes 42 miles long, which is about the distance from Georgetown to Buda! (of course, if they were riding on I-35, the gap between them would be closer to 20 ft, or 66 miles total). Hey, get this: a loop around Austin, that starts in Round Rock, goes down Mopac all the way to 290, cuts over to I-35, and back up to Round Rock is about 43 miles. So, theoretically, we could have all gotten together and formed one continuous unbroken ring of bikes around Austin, riding round and round. That would be pretty wild, huh?

I’ve been on some rides with friends where we might get 20 bikes together, and we generally move as one long, continuous vehicle as we navigate around town and out into the hill country. Riding like that is great fun, as I enjoy the juxtaposition of engaging in an inherently individual activity (there’s not much conversation going on at 60+ mph) in a group setting. Of course, we interact non-verbally along the ride, moving as one entity up and around the hills outside Austin, and then we’re back to being just people at the numerous stops along the way. It may be an odd dynamic, but it’s very satisfying when you’re enjoying life outdoors with people you like.



The finish-line crowd

This year I once again joined the Friday night bike parade from the Expo center to the downtown party. Talk about a continuous vehicle! This is no theory, it is a fact that there was an unbroken line of bikes from East Austin to Congress Ave. This is the ride of rides. The police blocked off all the intersections, so we got a smooth, uninterrupted flow into the heart of Austin. The route took us through neighborhoods where residents line the streets to watch the riders and hear the bikes (unspoken rule: when a kid waves, rev the engine!), down MLK to 11th street, and over I-35 down to Congress. We got a great view of the Capitol as we rode in, and if it was fun riding past the people in the neighborhoods, it was unbelievable downtown! It was like we were finishing the Tour de France, with jam-packed people on both sides and us riding between them, everyone waving and cheering. Wow - and we weren’t even tired from our ride, like Lance must have been! This is unofficially the longest bike parade in the world, and since the Guinness World Record people are reviewing the count as we speak, it may soon be official. Who would have thought that I’d have something in common with the Tour record holder? Woo-hoo!

So Friday night was a blast, seeing 6th Street, Congress Ave, and several more blocks in the area packed with people and bikes and music. Saturday was all about the riding, yet we kept it local and elected to be by the lake.



Yes, damn bikers are taking over…!

This year I didn’t attend the actual rally on the Expo grounds, I’ve done that a few years in a row already. Maybe I’ll go back next year just to be amazed how much bigger it is. It’s cool to peruse the vendor booths, they come up with the wildest stuff for your bike or for your body.

By Sunday everyone is pooped out and packing up, so it’s a slow day of recovery, both for the rally-goers and for the town. As the weekend draws to a close, normalcy makes an attempt to retake Austin. The blitti-ta-blatta of the stragglers and locals keeps it at bay, however - that is to say, keeps Austin weird, for a little while longer at least…

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