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Tag: bitly

  • Moz Partners With Bitly For Click Tracking And Link Data

    Bitly announced today that it will provide click tracking technology and inbound link data to Moz to help users better understand who is linking to websites and how relevant those links are.

    The data will use number and frequency of clicks to determine relevancy.

    Moz had been using Twitter link data to rank relevance, but Bitly’s will utilize Twitter as well as Facebook, Google+, blogs, and other sources.

    “The Bitly click dataset is hands down the broadest and most authoritative available to anyone looking for information on how their content and brand is performing across the web,’ said Moz co-founder and former CEO Rand Fishkin. “Marketers armed with these insights are able to build campaigns that are designed to optimize attention through content.”

    “Previously we were using just Twitter data to understand the relevance of shared content,” he added. “While that’s a great start, our clients are looking for a holistic view. Bitly’s click data gives us a much more comprehensive and accurate picture by looking at the entire web and drilling into actual clicks, which is more valuable than simply looking at how frequently content is shared.”

    Bitly CEO Mark Josephson said, “Bitly owns a unique view of how links are shared across the internet. Insights gleaned from our differentiated data set can help all marketers make better decisions. We’re excited to put this into action with Moz so their clients can better understand how content and links are shared across the Web.”

    According to the company, marketers can identify recently created URLs and links within seconds, and highlight the most clicked content for effective campaign management.

    Image via Moz

  • Bitly Makes Saving and Shortening Links Easier

    Bitly wants you to know they’ve been listening to your comments and concerns. Yesterday, they announced they will be making some changes and that it will now be quicker to save and shorten links. In fact, it takes place in one click.

    Here’s how they describe the upgrade on their blog site:

    “Now, when you paste a link into the ‘Paste a link here…’ box at the top of the page, it will be instantly saved when you paste it (no second click needed)— and the shortlink will be right there ready for you to copy. You can still edit the privacy, notes, or bundles, and of course share it.”

    ok

    Here they explain how to use their browser tools:

    “For our browser tools (the bitmarklet and Chrome extension), the process is a little different. A common complaint prior to the new bitly was that 1-click saves via our browser tools created too many accidental shortlinks. Now you have the opportunity to confirm your save after your initial click.”

    “If you need even more speed though, turn on 1-click saving in the browser tools by opening the dialog’s settings panel and checking the box. Bitmarks added via 1-click will be saved with your default privacy setting.”

    ok2

    Here’s a list of some other refinements and upgrades:

    * Copy and customize buttons on the newly expanded stats page

    * Chrome extension will now automatically add highlighted text to the notes field.

    * iPhone app 1.01 — fixes crashes when running on iPad, expands support for creating a new account without Facebook or Twitter.

    * Bulk actions got easier with the new dropdown button.

    * Gazillions of small bug fixes and UI tweaks.

    They remind us to keep the feedback coming:

    “Living things – from earthworms to pufferfish to people – all want to grow and strive to be more than they are. Products need to evolve and grow too, and bitly is no exception. Our goal is to make collecting, finding, and sharing content better for all of our members.”

  • Bitly Redesign Angers Users

    URL-shortening platform Bitly launched a redesign yesterday, sporting all sorts of new features. Bitly users can now:

    – Easily save, share and discover links — they’re called bitmarks, like bookmarks.
    – Instantly search your saved bitmarks.
    – Curate groups of bitmarks into bundles and collaborate on bundles with friends.
    – Make any bitmark or bundle private or public.
    – See what friends are sharing across multiple social networks, all in one place.
    – Save and share links from anywhere with our new bitmarklet, Chrome extension and iPhone app.

    Sounds like great news, and an appropriate allocation of some of the $20 million Bitly received in its latest round of funding. Still, some users are quite displeased. And displeased people take to Twitter:

    “Historically, no product has ever benefitted from becoming more complex to use” http://t.co/uGyxwvNR — re: Bitly changes
    29 minutes ago via HootSuite · powered by @socialditto
     Reply  · Retweet  · Favorite

    bit.ly flooded with howls of complaint after incomprehensible and catastrophic redesign. http://t.co/lePP5rVY #bit.ly
    19 hours ago via SocialOomph · powered by @socialditto
     Reply  · Retweet  · Favorite

    Hey, @bitly – terribly sorry, but after relaunch the main feature – shorten a link – is basically hidden.
    4 hours ago via web · powered by @socialditto
     Reply  · Retweet  · Favorite

    So bitly got a redesign. And it takes me 3 more steps to shorten a link that used to only take 1 –__–
    32 minutes ago via TweetDeck · powered by @socialditto
     Reply  · Retweet  · Favorite

    It would appear that some bitly users aren’t so keen on the new ‘bitmarking’ feature. Bitly CEO Peter Stern told TechCrunch that the bad reaction was expected – “It’s the response from the vocal minority who are quick to complain about any change. We put a great deal of thought and effort into making the change as minimal as we could, but we recognize that people don’t like change.”

    bitly

    Bitly points out that most of the ‘new’ features always existed, but were just more difficult to see on the site. People tend to loathe any sort of abrupt change regarding the internet. I about moved to Singapore when Facebook somehow made me switch to a timeline.

  • Bitly Launches Redesign

    Bitly Launches Redesign

    It was recently reported that URL shortening platform bitly has just raised $20 million in a round of funding, roughly double it garnered last time around. Bitly had been the default URL shortener on Twitter since 2009, replacing TinyURL, until Twitter introduced its own shortener called t.co in 2010. With the new funding, it was said that users should expect to see a host of new functionality.

    Now bitly has launched a redesign, described on its blog. Users can now:

    – Easily save, share and discover links — they’re called bitmarks, like bookmarks.
    – Instantly search your saved bitmarks.
    – Curate groups of bitmarks into bundles and collaborate on bundles with friends.
    – Make any bitmark or bundle private or public.
    – See what friends are sharing across multiple social networks, all in one place.
    – Save and share links from anywhere with our new bitmarklet, Chrome extension and iPhone app.

    The new ‘bitmarks’ are bitly’s version of internent bookmarks, which can be organized into bundles for sharing on Facebook, Twitter and email, or kept private. The screenshot below describes how bitly bitmarks and bundles are shared:

    Users can log into bitly via Facebook or Twitter, which makes the sharing of bitmarks very easy:

    bitly

    Entire bundles can also be shared, and likewise set to private. Bitly has also incorporated real-time search into its platform.

    bitly search

    Bitly has also announced its first app for iPhone, along with an extension for Google Chrome. It would appear that the aforementioned funding round will be going a long way.

  • Study Claims 61% of URL Shorteners Are Dead

    A study by new URL shortener yi.tl claims that out of the 1002 different URL shorteners created in the past decade, 614 of them no longer exist. The company cites spam as the main reason for sites closing, though I’m sure that Google, Twitter, and Facebook using their own URL shorteners had plenty to do with the end of the shortener boom as well.

    “Although URL shorteners have become an intrinsic part of our daily lives on the web, the sector is in a total mess.” said Anthony Vader, creator of yi.tl. “Very little money or ability is required to set up a basic URL shortener, which is why there are so many start-ups. However, most offer a very primitive service which is vulnerable to spammers and is often hosted on a shared server. Hosting providers don’t like their servers being used for spam and have forced many URL shorteners to close down.”

    The nature of URL shortening makes them ideal for spammers and malware spreaders. Because shortened links often don’t show a link’s real URL, spammers can use a shady URL shortener to trick people into clicking links they would never otherwise click.

    Vader also laments the fact that all of these failed services now have non-working links sitting around the internet. “The result is that millions of links across the web are now permanently broken. All the information about where those links pointed to has disappeared,” said Vader. It’s hard to be too broken up about that fact. Most shortened links are meant for content shared over social networks, which are transitory by nature anyway.

    yi.tl has provided a list of active URL shorteners and dead ones, including silly ones such as DwarfURL.com, ICanHaz.com, and Puke.it.

  • Bitly Raises $20 Million

    URL shortening platform bitly has just raised $20 million in a round of funding, roughly double it garnered last time around. Bitly had been the default URL shortener on Twitter since 2009, replacing TinyURL, until Twitter introduced its own shortener called t.co in 2010.

    Investor Joshua Stylman mentioned to the Verge, “The link shortening has always been a bit of a Trojan Horse. Bitly is really an analytics tool for tracking content across the open, distributed web, and doing it at a massive, real-time scale.” The analytics functionality is what the company has been able to bank on, and recently moved into a larger office from the Chelsea-based innovation lab Betaworks. Bitly’s enterprise dashboard allows users to better tack brand reputation, social proofing data, and can help predict what sort of content might go viral – and data is gathered in real-time, before Google can index the item in its page rank.

    According to the company, “bitly shortens 80 million URLs every day, give or take a few – Now, with our new search technology, we’re crawling and classifying every URL we shorten to create an index of the most ‘viral’ content on the web – content that’s broadly distributed, frequently-clicked, and trending at a high velocity.” With the the relevance of social media advertising rapidly growing, bitly can expect to see growth as well, and with the new funding, users should expect to see a host of new functionality.

  • Bitly’s Take On Social Search

    Bitly’s Take On Social Search

    Social search is an interesting animal, mostly because there are so many different approaches. There’s realtime search, like we’ve seen from Google+ and Topsy in the last week. There’s Google’s social search, which simply sprinkles social results throughout its web search results. There’s the Wajam/Greplin approach, where you give the services access to your account so you can search through your social networks for relevant results.

    Popular URL shortening service bitly has announced its version of social search, and it’s more about searching through popular content.

    “bitly shortens 80 million URLs every day, give or take a few,” the company says. “Now, with our new search technology, we’re crawling and classifying every URL we shorten to create an index of the most ‘viral’ content on the web — content that’s broadly distributed, frequently-clicked, and trending at a high velocity.”

    Bitly shares an example of a search for “onstar” comparing it to a Google search.

    Onstar on bitly

    Bitly points out that there’s been some controversy surrounding OnStar tracking its customers, and that the top results here show news stories about the company and a blog post from a person talking about it, and that a Google search returns the company’s official site and its Wikipedia page – “results based on Google’s pagerank algorithm, which prioritizes the pages which are linked to by the most authoritative sites on the web.”

    To be fair, when I searched Google for “onstar” the first two results are as bitly says, but the next one was an Engadget article about tracking. There are also several other first page results on the tracking topic, and the company’s Facebook and Twitter accounts, which in all honesty may be among the results a person wants if they just search for the “onstar” query.

    “This is the challenge of the realtime search space — many of the pages are so new, so fresh, that they don’t have any pagerank,” says bitly. “A personal blog post isn’t authoritative in the way that the New York Times or Wired magazine is authoritative, but stories don’t find their way into Wired unless people like Jonathan Zdiarski [used in bitly’s example] speak out. Increasingly, they do, and often they reach a broad audience on social media before more conventionally-authoritative newsgatherers amplify their messages. ”

    There’s certainly a case for realtime search. No question. I thought Google did a fairly good job of it when they had it, but then they lost the Twitter firehose, and the feature went away. Sooner or later, Google is expected to bring it back, with data from Google+ and other sources. Google did launch realtime search in Google+ this week. Perhaps that is coming closer to fruition.

    Rather than using a pagerank-type signal, bitly displays stories that it predicts will get the most attention over the next 24 hours. Then it uses its own analytics to refine the predictions in realtime. “Our search technology is based on the the most valuable measure of engagement: the click,” bitly says.

    Bitly has even built a reputation monitoring service around this technology, with an alert system. It’s designed to warn you about “swings in volume and sentiment related to specific keywords” in realtime, as opposed to just showing you what’s already been said about you or your brand. There’s also a dashboard (pictured at the top of the article) where you can view keywords you’re tracking. This feature rolls out to beta testers and bitly Enterprise users over the next couple weeks.

  • Twitterfeed Acquired by Bitly

    Bitly, once Twitter’s favorite URL shortening service before Twitter decided to go with its own service, announced that it has acquired Twitterfeed.

    Twitterfeed allows bloggers to “feed their blogs to Twitter,” Facebook and other services. Two weeks ago, Twitterfeed announced a feature that lets users publish updates directly to LinkedIn. Earlier this year, it added geo-tagging in feeds and improvements to Facebook posts.

    bitly Acquires Twitterfeed – welcome to the family, @twfeed! http://bit.ly/nCRIVv 1 minute ago via TweetDeck · powered by @socialditto

    “For years now, we’ve worked closely with our friends at Twitterfeed to enhance their social media publishing tools with branded short links and realtime data,” Bitly writes on its blog. “Today, we are excited to announce that we have acquired Twitterfeed, and to welcome both Twitterfeed and its users to the bitly family.”

    “The publishing workflow provided by Twitterfeed constitutes a core part of the bitly ecosystem,” the company adds. “Along with other products (such as SocialFlow and dlvr.it) that use bitly to share content and track engagement, Twitterfeed is both creating and consuming gobs of bitly data every day. Twitterfeed had over a million active users last month, and we look forward to empowering them with even more actionable insight from bitly data. We also look forward to bringing the enhanced sharing functionality of Twitterfeed directly to bitly.com, making it easier than ever to collect, organize, shorten and share links.”

    Bitly says it’s already “hard at work” with the Twitterfeed team, thinking about ways to use the two companies’ services together.

    Terms of the deal have not been disclosed.

    This week, Twitter itself acquired list-making service Bagcheck.