Google Analytics Alerts: the start of a complete view?

Google Analytics recently added a new feature, called Alerts. At first glance, it’s an elegant way to show someone when a KPI on their site has changed significantly from what’s expected. It’s baselining, applied to all KPIs — even the ones you’re not looking at.

Daily Alerts - Google Analytics

This is a great idea for folks who forget to check their analytics data, because now they can find out about significant events. It tricks you into being a better analyst. It encourages baselining, segmentation, and thinking about your business. But we think it’s the start of something bigger, once it incorporates the things Google and others know about your online presence.

Details, and some juicy UI mockup speculation, after the jump. [Read More]

How Twitter’s Retweet creates Pagerank for humans

We’re finishing a busy week in New York, with presentations at both Web2Expo and Interop New York. We had a great time running our first Communilytics Boot Camp, and O’Reilly’s bookstore sold out of our book.

The Communilytics stuff was really interesting; we proposed a new “long funnel” model that incorporates both community metrics (such as followers, amplification, and the like) and traditional analytics (conversion rate, checkout value, and so on.) It’s a holistic approach, and we’ll write it up here soon.

We also looked at message propagation in communities a bit. Here’s a clip from the session, which discusses how the combination of Twitter’s formalized Retweet and an understanding of relevance can create “pagerank for humans” in microblogging platforms that share Twitter’s asymmetric-follow pattern.

Completely independent of this, Alex Bowyer over on Bitcurrent wrote a thoughtful piece on how Twitter should have formalized Retweeting, and some of the issues with the current model.

Unfortunately, there’s some strangeness going on between Youtube and Keynote’s video export, so the last 30 seconds of this are clipped. Basically we make the point that this is how to monetize microblog analytics, either by selling sentiment propagation analysis, finding out who influential proponents and detractors are, or knowing where to display ads and to whom.

twitter suspends legitimate accounts, many related to oreilly; weeping ensues.

Hello, fellow TechCrunch/blog readers.  This site supports the O’Reilly book I co-authored with Alistair Croll called “Complete Web Monitoring“.  Feel free to subscribe to it (we’re low volume).  We talk about things like this (how to launch a site and monitor it properly).  You can find information about us here.

suspended on twitter!I saw a tweet this morning in TweetDeck which I found bewildering. A friend of mine, Lori, claimed that my account was suspended.

I loaded up my profile page and, sure enough, the owl of doom stared back at me.

I jumped through the regular hoops, advising supended@twitter.com and resisting the urge to email folks like John Adams at Twitter (by the time I email them, I know they’ll have floods of notifications already).

I did a little bit of snooping and happened upon Tim Oreilly’s profile.  Also suspended.  Then @w2e, @brady and @palhlkadot.  All of them, suspended.

So, it seems that Twitter has decided to wage war on those of us related to O’Reilly Media! Oh noes!

oreilly

In all seriousness, this appears to be an outage affecting quite a few accounts that are obviously legitimate.  I’m sure news about this will surface during the day.

Many of us have dealt with Twitter outages in the past – but it does give me a chance to reflect upon how bad it may look to others when they see the “Suspended” flag waving on my pile of sand.

Does it matter?  Thoughts?

Twitter New User Survival Guide

(image by Yiying Lu)

You’re new to Twitter.  Welcome.  Your first impression is probably just like mine was when I first joined:  “…… now what?”.

The answer: follow this guide.

[Read More]

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