Posts Tagged ‘Google’

Google+ WordPress Plugin To Display Your Profile Info

Sunday, July 31st, 2011

Google’s latest social networking platform Google+ is gaining popularity as we can see many services being launched based on it. Google+ has a unique concept of circles where you can add friends whom you wish to follow and if you are a blogger it would be a great idea to display your Google+ profile on your blog so that readers can follow you easily and add to their circles. GoogleCards is a new WordPress plugin which can display your Google+ profile on your blog sidebar.

All you need to do is to upload the plugin to WordPress plugin folder and activate it. The plugin works as a widget, so open the widgets section for your theme and add it to the desired location in your theme. You can change the title and need to specify the Google+ ID which can be got from your G+ profile.

Link: NirmalTV

An Introduction To Google+

Friday, July 29th, 2011

The tech media has spent the vast majority of the last week focused on Google’s newest product, an ambitious platform called Google+ that the company hopes will break through their dry spell in the social arena and make them competitive.

It’s early days — for many people it’s next to impossible to even get in — but things are looking positive. The app has been met by a largely positive reception and my stream shows no sign of slowing down as users keep posting after the novelty wears off.

Link: SitePoint

Case Study: How Google Sells Its Free Products

Thursday, February 24th, 2011

Modern commercials are a funny thing. Ad agencies are trying to figure out how to give their commercials viral appeal while balancing that against providing company or product information.

The Old Spice guy campaign is more or less universally lauded as an example of how to reboot a company’s image and turn a commercial idea into a viral phenomenon. However, the videos, and the campaign’s subsequent expansion onto Twitter, focused on entertainment and branding: We knew what kind of brand Old Spice wanted to be and we laughed at (most of) Isaiah Mustafa’s quips and sound bites. Old Spice prioritized those elements instead of explaining how its products work or even what they smell like.

That worked for Old Spice, because most people can intuit how deodorant works; the company wasn’t reinventing the wheel, it was reinventing its brand. Old Spice didn’t need to provide detailed product information to make its campaign successful. Other companies, like Google, don’t have the same luxury.

Google’s products are often less obvious to an everyday audience. Google Goggles? Do you wear them? Are they on your phone? Is that some Mountain View euphemism? Google has the task of both explaining its new tech and providing a viral kick with its ads — that’s not easy.

Despite the odds, the technology giant has done a great job with its latest round of marketing campaigns by applying some basic principles in some very creative ways. Read on for a look at what Google did right and what it could do better.

Link: Mashable

Google Advertising Cookie Opt-out

Tuesday, February 22nd, 2011

Anyone may opt out of the DoubleClick cookie (for AdSense partner sites, DoubleClick ad serving, and certain Google services using the DoubleClick cookie) at any time by clicking the button above. Google also offers a number of options to permanently save your opt-out settings in your browser. In addition, Google allows third party advertisers to serve ads on the Google Display Network. Using a tool created by the Network Advertising Initiative, you can opt out of several third party ad servers’ and networks’ cookies simultaneously.

Link: Google