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March 30th, 2010 by Wadds

Communicate magazine Digital Impact Awards announced

I’m delighted to have been named as a judge of the Communicate magazine Digital Impact Awards. I join an esteemed crew of digital experts, communications practitioners and academics.

The award scheme announced today, aims to recognise excellence in digital stakeholder communications.

“[The awards] are a platform to discuss digital communications and online reputation and brand management.”

Any organisation can enter the Digital Impact Awards, as long as the strategy or execution was developed, launched or carried out between January 2009 and March 2010.”

“We welcome entries from in-house corporate professionals, digital agencies, business strategists, design firms, advertising agencies, non-profit organisations, and government agencies.”

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May 12th, 2009 by Wadds

Google launches fight back against Twitter in reputation search and monitoring

googleGoogle has launched a stack of new search features that make up the ground that it’s lost to Twitter as a real time reputation monitoring tool.

Google search and the email alert service Google Alerts enable keywords to be tracked and content to be served from the web once it has been spidered by Google. But it’s very hit and miss: there is no sentiment and its ability to order web pages by publication time and date is limited.

Compare that with Twitter search and the growing slew of reputation monitoring tools that make use of the Twitter KPI such as Twilert and Twendz.

But the fight back has begun via an unremarkable ‘Show options tab’ on the Google search results page. Google has added a timeline feature that enables search results to be ordered by date meaning that you can search results from a finite time period.

You can also look at related Google searches and web sites around a search term using a feature bizarrely named the Wonder Wheel.

There’s more promised. Google has announced that it is set to support microformats meaning that punters can rate web sites when it appears in a search result and hunt down content by sentiment.

Drew Benvie and Paul Bradshaw have both posted on this story.

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