From the monthly archives:

February 2009

Are you scared about the economy yet? Yeah, well, so are lots of folks. The real question is what are you going to do about it? Bryan Eisenberg opens up with a smackdown, challenging businesses to build an optimization culture, one that takes no prisoners and works to get better every day. That’s how the strong, the smart, and the serious will survive this mess. What else can you do? Read on, Big Thinker. Read on.

Oh. And get some rest this weekend. It’s going to be a marathon and a sprint for most of the year. Make sure you’re ready for it.


Are you getting enough value out of your small business website? Want to make sure your business makes the most of the local, mobile, social web? thinks helps you understand how to grow your business via the web, every day. Get more than just news. Get understanding. Add thinks to your feed reader today. Or subscribe via email.

And while you’re at it, don’t forget to follow me on Twitter.

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Video as distribution channel

Marc Andreessen gives you a roadmap to Internet success

While Marc Andreessen is getting a lot of, well, ink about his “kill print” interview on Charlie Rose, lots of folks are missing the point. What Andreessen – as knowledgeable about this stuff as exists out there – does in this interview is lay out a road map for businesses looking to leverage the Internet to achieve success. Since he’s done this himself, twice – once as a founder of Netscape, the second as a founder of Opsware – and has strong ties to others doing it today – on the board of directors for eBay and Facebook, founded Ning, invested in Twitter and Digg – his map is better than most.

As for that map? It’s interwoven throughout his conversation with Rose. At about the 8:30 mark, Marc starts talking about Viacom suing Google for copyright infringement on YouTube, claiming it’s “…180 degrees the wrong strategy.” What Viacom ought to do, says Andreessen, is “…let all the videos go onto YouTube and then every time there’s a Viacom video on YouTube there should be a buy button.” In Andreessen’s view, YouTube is a distribution channel. In fact, he calls it the ultimate distribution channel for video content.

He’s right. So right that YouTube has done just that (see the picture above and its larger version).

Then, around 20 minutes in, Marc hits the money quote, “If you can get it to scale, you can build a business around it.” He suggests that things that don’t work, don’t scale, referring to Bill Joy’s “It works” feature (i.e., lots of technology products lack that “feature” and don’t work).

Finally, he talks about successful products that get the end-to-end value proposition right. For example, Amazon’s Kindle.
And the iPhone. Netbooks. Laptops. Games (especially online, multiplayer games).

So, the roadmap looks like this:

  1. Innovation happens
  2. Scale happens
  3. Business success happens

Now, why should small business owners care? Simple. If you’re looking at a potential distribution channel, or a potential marketing channel, but don’t know where you’re supposed to spend your time given the dizzying array of options available, look at Andreessen’s map first:

  • Does the channel offer any innovation? (Or successfully copy someone else’s, adding the “It Works” feature)?
  • Does it scale?

If these first two items exist, the likelihood of the third – business success – goes way up. Notice which ones Andreessen invests in? Facebook. Twitter. Digg. Do they pass these tests? Yep.

What else does? Mobile (particularly the iPhone and the Blackberry).

The point is you don’t have to chase each new thing that comes down the pike. Just look for the one’s that pass Andreessen’s test. Put your energies there. That’s a roadmap to success we all can follow.

Don’t have time to watch the whole interview? You can view some of the highlights here. But, do yourself a favor. Catch the whole thing


Are you getting enough value out of your small business website? Want to make sure your business makes the most of the local, mobile, social web? thinks helps you understand how to grow your business via the web, every day. Get more than just news. Get understanding. Add thinks to your feed reader today. Or subscribe via email.

And while you’re at it, don’t forget to follow me on Twitter.

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Are unique visitors a meaningful measure of your website’s traffic?

Counting unique visitors tipsBrian Clifton – author of the so-good you must go out and get a copy immediately Advanced Web Metrics with Google Analytics
(seriously, I made my whole team read it) – says counting unique visitors is meaningless. Despite his talents and reputation, I’m going to have to disagree with Brian here. Unique visitors can be tremendously useful to your business regardless of its inherent tracking issues Brian so rightly calls out. And I’ll explain why in just a moment.

More importantly, ignoring data simply because it’s “imperfect” is a huge mistake in business. I’m surprised to hear Brian suggest otherwise. You can use unique visitors to improve your business decisions. But it’s even more important you use this as an example of how to gain meaning from imperfect data and apply that knowledge to improve your decisions. And your business.

First, we have to start with some assumptions:

  1. Any measure that reduces your uncertainty is better than no measure at all – This comes from Douglas Hubbard’s spectacular “How To Measure Anything: Finding the Value of ‘Intangibles’ in Business.” Hubbard argues – successfully – that measures exist to help you make decisions. Throwing out imperfect data that can help you make better decisions is pointless. Always. If the data doesn’t help you make decisions, than Brian’s right – you should ignore it. But your measure of unique visitors can usually help you make better decisions.
  2. Unique visitor measures cannot be greater than visits. But visits can be higher than unique visitors – This is key. At most, your unique visitor metric will be the same as your visits metric. More often, it will be less. Tracking the relationship between these two provides a wealth of meaning to most businesses.

Mathematically stated, visits always must be equal to or greater than unique visitors. If every unique visitor cleared cookies every time they visited your site, or used a different browser, or a different computer, your ratio of visits to unique visitors would always be 1:1. But that’s not the case, is it? If you can’t grow visitors without also growing visits and you can grow visits without growing uniques, you have the basis of a measurement – and an opportunity to gain an edge on your competitors.

Let’s look at a real-world example. This site averages about 1.2 visits/visitor. Now let’s assume I have a 15% increase in monthly visits. If the visits/visitor metric holds steady at 1.2, then it’s likely I’ve seen a true increase in unique visitors. But if even as few as 10% of those new visits were redundant (i.e., the same visitor used multiple browsers, multiple computers, etc.), my visits per visitor metric would fall. Admittedly, not by much at first – just over a 1% decline. But it would fall. And if the trend continued, I’d have a sense something was going on. By contrast, if visits continued to climb at a faster rate than uniques, then clearly I’m getting more visits per visitor, which could indicate customers taking longer to decide, an improvement in “sticky” content, or any number of things, depending on my business.

Why does this matter? If your business relies on lead generation, such as asking visitors to fill out a form requesting a quote, you can’t expect every visit to result in a lead. For many businesses, you would only expect a customer to submit a form one time. Measuring visits gives an unrealistic picture of your business opportunity, while unique visitors – despite its flaws – can be a better measure because it reduces the uncertainty associated with your traffic.

The flaw in Brian’s reasoning reminds me of a great story in Hubbard’s book, in which he asked a group of executives how they would find out how many fish were in a recently re-stocked lake. After some thought, one well-meaning exec suggested draining the lake. Which is fine, if you want to find out how many dead fish you have. Instead, the best answer is to sample the population, tag some fish, then sample again. The percentage of tagged fish in your second sample should be about the same as the percentage in the lake overall and lead you to a solid – if imperfect – answer.

In this case, unique visitors is a bit like Hubbard’s tagged fish. They may not give you a perfect answer. But, if they help reduce the uncertainty around your business decisions, they just might be the right answer. Don’t throw them away like dead fish. Leave that for your competitors.


Are you getting enough value out of your small business website? Want to make sure your business makes the most of the local, mobile, social web? thinks helps you understand how to grow your business via the web, every day. Get more than just news. Get understanding. Add thinks to your feed reader today. Or subscribe via email.

And while you’re at it, don’t forget to follow me on Twitter.

Image credit: Mike Johnston via Flickr using Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic. Mike Johnston’s images available here.

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Why Latitude matters for your business

February 17, 2009 Local

One final point about Google Latitude and why it matters to your small business.

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Drive more sales – online and offline – with a compelling pitch

February 9, 2009 Marketing

Can you pitch your brand in one sentence? Here’s why you should.

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Attitudes ’bout Latitude

February 6, 2009 Mobile

The web is buzzing about Google’s Latitude. Here’s what folks are saying.

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