BusinessWeek had a great article last week about the process Yahoo recently used to re-design its Web site. In my years consulting with corporations about re-design efforts, it is interesting to see the dynamics involved with design choices. Unfortunately, many of these efforts are about gut feelings, ego, or turf battles; every department or branch seems to want a link/icon/banner/button on the home page to gain exposure or generate traffic. Re-design efforts can often result in poor visual output and even poorer results.
The article chronicles Yahoo’s pragmatic, customer-centric process in which ego was checked at the door and actual cutomer data drove the endeavor.
Posts Tagged ‘Yahoo’
Yahoo’s Recent Re-design
Tuesday, October 10th, 2006Walking through the Blogosphere
Tuesday, May 23rd, 2006Having trouble keeping up with my RSS feed-reading lately, but coming across some really great posts…
- Liz Dunn from Technorati makes a good point about why you should read both mainstream news and the blogosphere.
- Rob talks about the first mover versus copiers
- Josh tells us about all things RSS at Yahoo!
Crash of the Online Economy?
Wednesday, January 18th, 2006This month’s Wired Magazine has a pretty interesting article about click fraud and the potential for it to ’swallow the Internet.’ As most of you know, ‘click fraud’ refers to the practice of falsely clicking on pay-per-click ads in an effort to cost a company money or remove its ads on the basis of artificial or contrived non-performance. Here’s an example of how it works:
Let’s say I go into business selling neck ties on the Internet. I set up a Web site to facilitate the ecommerce and then place some pay-per-click ads with Google to attract visitors. If I happen to notice a competitor’s ad showing up in the list with mine, I could simply click on their ads multiple times to drain their onilne ad budget with Google. Ethical? No. But it is happening all too often with Google ad buyers and sellers alike.
The article lays out a number of derivative schemes being employed by scammers and vaguely describes some of the counter-measures being employed by Google and Yahoo. In the end, I feel that this will be a perpetual cat-and-mouse game between both sides. The article seems to suggest that a lack of improved enforcement could threaten the lifeblood of the Internet economy and cause a crash. Below is a diagram that appeared in the article that does a good job of describing how it works.

Measuring Readership
Thursday, November 3rd, 2005I had an interesting question today about how one measures the subscriber base of a blog. RSS is key, which I posted a bit about several weeks ago. Once it’s enabled within a blog, a few indicators can help you get your arms around the numbers.
I happen to use Bloglines, which gives me the number of Bloglines users that happen to be subscribers to our blog. We also have an account over at Feedburner which gives us circulation figures on how many users (Bloglines, Yahoo, Google, etc.) are requesting our RSS feed on a regular basis. This number is an interesting one to watch grow as we post more and more.
By the way, if you’re interested in subscribing to our blog, our link can be found here.