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August 30th, 2009 by Wadds

Peter Preston says cartoons don’t work online – oh yes they do

Image representing Hugh MacLeod as depicted in...
Image byDavid Sifry

via CrunchBase

Cartoonists are surplus to requirement in the online media according to Peter Preston writing in The Observer today.

In print images are used as prompts to draw a reader in according to Preston and pages are laid out around the visual content.

“News photographers already know that, alas. If you’re laying out a page or series of pages in print, you need great pictures to make the reader pause and dig in, photographs that catch human suffering or joy in memorable frames.”

In the online world its SEO-driven headlines and tightly cropped images that count. And so says Preston, there is no longer a role for a cartoonist online.

“Photographs have to fit with a story (and Google ads) on a pretty tight page. So they’re run small or as mugshots.”

I think Preston’s made the wrong call. In the online world cartoons are social objects circulated via world of mouth with the means of driving traffic back to a web asset. If anything there is more opportunity than ever for creative visual content.

Hugh MacLeod spotted this opportunity more than five years ago.

Update 1 Sept 2009: Further evidence of the potential of cartoons to drive traffic to a news site comes from Paul Bradshaw, Course Director of the MA Online Journalism at Birmingham City University’s (UK) School of Media. Last October Paul conducted an experiment to investigate the traffic potency of cartoons. His thesis was that news organisations should be making more use of them online. In one week the 5 Stages of a Blogger’s Life cartoon posted on his Online Journalist Blog received more than 40,000 hits, making it the most popular single post ever.

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August 19th, 2009 by Wadds

Google Insight predicts likely success of online campaigns

Image representing Google as depicted in Crunc...
Image via CrunchBase

Google released an update yesterday to its Insight tool that provides information on historical search trends. It now includes now includes predictions for future search volumes.

Google Insight was already a powerful tool for campaign planning. The addition of predictive data makes its possible to model search volumes around keyword scenarios.

Now you can predict how successful an SEO campaign is likely to before its launched.

It also provides interesting insights into market dynamics. Andy Smith got there first. He’s punched a series of keyword strings through the new Google tool.

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May 9th, 2009 by Wadds

PR Week Volvo story spotlights threat to PR industry

AB Volvo
Image via Wikipedia

There was further evidence (if any were needed) this week of the ongoing marketing agency battle to claim ownership of digital marketing, with the announcement in PR Week this week that Volvo has hired media agency MindShare to handle search engine optimisation (SEO), digital PR and social media strategy.

It’s a warning shot as Immediate Future’s Katy Howell identifies in the PR Week story. I’m not going to revisit the debate – search for the hashtag #prdebate if you’re interested. Instead I’m working hard at Speed to develop our offer and stake out the PR industry’s claim for its share of the market.

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