Welcome to our weekly round-up of all the latest news and research from around the world of search marketing and beyond. This week we begin with a bounty of up-to-date search marketing stats, then we end with some bizarre Google searches and a quiz
Today we embark on our fourth weekly #ClickZChat, where the good people of SEW and ClickZ take to Twitter to discuss with our expert friends and followers a particularly burning digital marketing related issue. For this week’s chat, we’ll be talking about Instagram and its rise in value for marketers, so please join us at 12pm EST (5pm UK) on Wednesday 20 April. As preparation for the discussion, I’ve pulled together as many stats relating to Instagram as I could possibly find, many of which should provide fuel for the conversation and maybe aid your own social media strategy
As we leave March behind and look forward to the comparatively warmer weather of April, let’s continue to stay indoors while looking at a laptop screen and revisit the most interesting online stats of the last four weeks because it’s probably going to rain today anyway. Grumpy weather humour! Let it not be in any doubt that the editor of this website is British
There have been plenty of issues with Google Analytics that have been discussed in various posts on the web, such as this post by CrazyEgg. But despite the various issues with Google Analytics, it’s a popular tool and that’s due to two things: Firstly, it’s free (until you go past around 10 million page views per […] Author information Adam Connell Adam is the Marketing Manager at UK Linkology
If there’s one thing that the social media sector has in spades, it’s statistics. We’ve all seen the videos, most, it seems, with a Fatboy Slim soundtrack, that list the mind-bending figures about the continued growth of social platforms and devices.
Jon Sobel of Technorati has published the latest State of the Blogosphere Report for 2010 including stats from 7,200 blogger respondents world-wide. Started in 2004 by Dave Sifry, this annual report has provided insight into the growth of the blogging community and helps answer questions like: who is blogging, why, what are they blogging about, how often and where are they blogging from
88 billion (OK, 87.8, we rounded up). That’s the number of search queries Google web properties are responsible for each month according to comScore
88 billion (OK, 87.8, we rounded up). That’s the number of search queries Google web properties are responsible for each month according to comScore