WebProNews

Tag: Technorati

  • WordPress’ Share Of The World’s Top Blogs Increases

    The majority of the world’s top 100 blogs are using WordPress, according to a new report from Pingdom, and the content management system’s share of these blogs is on the rise.

    According to the firm, 52% of these blogs are using WordPress, up from 48% a year ago.

    To come up with the top blogs, Pingdom looked to Technorati, which is famous for its annual State of the Blogosphere report, which has transformed into the “Digital Influence Report“. It’s worth noting that Pingdom was only able to identify the platform in use by 94 out of 100 sites.

    WordPress

    As you can see, the next largest piece of the pie comes from custom systems, followed by Drupal, N/A, Gawker, BlogSmith, Movable Type, TypePad, Blogger, Ceros, Joomla, and Tumblr.

    Considering Tumblr’s rising popularity in recent months, it’s interesting to see it carry such a small percentage here (1 site).

    TypePad has increased from two sites to four sites, while Movable Type decreased from seven to four. Drupal dropped by one site. Google’s Blogger gained one site, reaching three.

    Here’s the list of blogs, and which platform each uses:

    Top 100 blogs and their blog platforms – complete list
    Technorati ranking Site Platform
    1 www.huffingtonpost.com Movable Type
    2 www.tmz.com Ceros
    3 mashable.com Custom
    4 www.techcrunch.com WordPress
    5 www.gothamist.com Movable Type
    6 www.mediaite.com WordPress
    7 www.theverge.com Custom
    8 www.gawker.com Gawker
    9 arstechnica.com WordPress
    10 www.buzzfeed.com Custom
    11 jezebel.com Gawker
    12 www.gizmodo.com Gawker
    13 bits.blogs.nytimes.com WordPress
    14 www.infowars.com WordPress
    15 laughingsquid.com WordPress
    16 theonion.com Custom
    17 www.theblaze.com WordPress
    18 hotair.com WordPress
    19 www.joystiq.com Blogsmith
    20 www.zerohedge.com Drupal
    21 www.scotusblog.com WordPress
    22 www.engadget.com Blogsmith
    23 googleblog.blogspot.com Blogger
    24 krugman.blogs.nytimes.com WordPress
    25 www.eurogamer.net N/A
    26 www.deadline.com WordPress
    27 politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com WordPress
    28 www.boingboing.net WordPress
    29 thenextweb.com WordPress
    30 www.deadspin.com Gawker
    31 9to5mac.com WordPress
    32 funnyordie.com N/A
    33 www.towleroad.com TypePad
    34 www.wired.com/wiredscience WordPress
    35 www.neatorama.com Custom
    36 www.neowin.net Custom
    37 www.businessinsider.com Custom
    38 www.macrumors.com WordPress
    39 www.slashgear.com WordPress
    40 thecaucus.blogs.nytimes.com WordPress
    41 americanthinker.com Movable Type
    42 www.redstate.com WordPress
    43 bleacherreport.com Custom
    44 mlbtraderumors.com TypePad
    45 www.sbnation.com Custom
    46 artsbeat.blogs.nytimes.com WordPress
    47 thisisnthappiness.com Tumblr
    48 marginalrevolution.com WordPress
    49 ycorpblog.com N/A
    50 blog.us.playstation.com WordPress
    51 blogs.reuters.com/felix-salmon/ WordPress
    52 www.extremetech.com WordPress
    53 www.dailykos.com N/A
    54 townhall.com Custom
    55 www.wired.com/threatlevel WordPress
    56 eurekalert.org Custom
    57 www.tor.com Joomla
    58 americablog.com WordPress
    59 sethgodin.typepad.com TypePad
    60 www.whitehouse.gov/blog Drupal
    61 www.autoblog.com Blogsmith
    62 thebiglead.com WordPress
    63 joemygod.blogspot.com Blogger
    64 www.refinery29.com N/A
    65 flavorwire.com WordPress
    66 www.lifehacker.com Gawker
    67 blog.twitter.com Drupal
    68 rightwingwatch.org Drupal
    69 www.tuaw.com BlogSmith
    70 thisiscolossal.com WordPress
    71 www.dlisted.com Drupal
    72 www.comicbookmovie.com Custom
    73 inquisitr.com WordPress
    74 economix.blogs.nytimes.com WordPress
    75 www.geekologie.com N/A
    76 www.geekosystem.com WordPress
    77 thelede.blogs.nytimes.com WordPress
    78 opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com WordPress
    79 directorblue.blogspot.com Blogger
    80 www.bleedingcool.com WordPress
    81 www.bostonherald.com/sports Drupal
    82 www.kottke.org Movable Type
    83 economistsviews.typepad.com TypePad
    84 blogs.the-american-interest.com/wrm/ WordPress
    85 consequenceofsound.net WordPress
    86 www.cinemablend.com Custom
    87 www.wired.com/dangerroom WordPress
    88 wattsupwiththat.com WordPress
    89 www.geek.com WordPress
    90 consumerist.com WordPress
    91 www.popsugar.com Drupal
    92 www.celebitchy.com WordPress
    93 trailblazersblog.dallasnews.com WordPress
    94 www.siliconera.com WordPress
    95 www.nakedcapitalism.com WordPress
    96 www.mediabistro.com/galleycat WordPress
    97 www.ubergizmo.com WordPress
    98 hip2save.com WordPress
    99 animalnewyork.com WordPress
    100 phandroid.com WordPress

  • Bloggers Taking To Google+, Still Promoting Mostly With Twitter

    Technorati CEO Shani Higgins took to the BlogWorld stage to unveil the findings of the annual “State of the Blogosphere” survey. Technorati has been doing the report for six years, and this year’s survey is a product of over 4,000 bloggers.

    One interesting find from the survey has to do with how Bloggers are embracing Google+. And the quick takeaway looks good for the burgeoning social network. But as far as how bloggers promote their content and how they drive traffic to their site, the old guard still hold sway over the blogosphere.

    According to the data, 66% of professional bloggers use Google+. When you take into account all blogger, 59% use the social network. 45% of those professional blogger use Google+ primarily to promote their blogs. That number falls to 27% when you talk about all bloggers.

    27% of pros have a personal Google+ account and a separate account just for their blog. 10% when it comes to all bloggers.

    “A lot of them are just getting their feet wet with what Google+ has to offer,” says Shani Higgins.

    That’s good news for a social network that’s still in its early days. Most bloggers said that they still primarily use Twitter to promote their blogs. The average blogger has 847 followers on Twitter, and the average pro has almost 1700.

    When it comes to driving traffic to their blogs from a social media perspective, Facebook still wins out overall. It’s followed (in order) by Twitter, LinkedIn, YouTube, StumbleUpon, Google+, Tumbr, and finally Flickr.

    Google+ is obviously a new tool that bloggers are embracing, but from what we see here, it clearly hasn’t reached its full potential when it comes to usefulness to bloggers.

    Here are some other interesting statistics about the makeup of today’s blogging world:

    • 61% are hobbyists – the rest are professionals
    • 59% are male, down from 64% last year
    • It’s a young crowd, with 2/3 between the ages of 18 and 44
    • 79% have a college degree
    • 1/3 have an income of over 75K a year, 1/4 over 100K
    • half of the blogosphere has been blogging for four years or more
    • 1/3 of bloggers work in mainstream media and blog separately

    As a blogger, what social media outlets do you find the most beneficial? Do you like to use Google+ to promote your blog? Let us know in the comments.

    For 5 years, WebProNews has partnered with BlogWorld and New Media Expo, the world’s first and largest new media conference, in an effort to broadcast how new media can grow your business, brand, and audience. Stay tuned to WebProNews for much more exclusive coverage.

  • The Relationship Between Bloggers and Brands

    During the State of the Blogosphere presentation at the 2011 BlogWorld Expo, Technorati CEO Shani Higgins discussed the sometimes tenuous relationship between professional bloggers and the brands they sometimes write about. While a great deal of bloggers do write about various brands in one aspect or another — product reviews, sponsored posts — the relationship between the two entities is not always a peaches and cream scenario.

    In fact, if the stats Higgins quoted are anything to go by, there’s still a noticeable amount of disdain and/or ignorance concerning blogs from the perspective of these brands.

    As indicated, a large portion of bloggers discuss brands in their work. According to Higgins’ numbers, the amount is around the 2/3rds mark, meaning quite a few write and discuss brands in their posts. Furthermore, 1/3 of bloggers surveyed post product reviews, and another 1/3rd post about everyday experiences at stores and their commitment to customer care. Of course, a critical post about a store’s poor customer service can be very damaging to a brand’s reputation, so perhaps that explains the rift between the two entities.

    That being said, that doesn’t stop various brands from approaching the bloggers, asking them to either review or discuss a consumable item of interest. Upon review, it certainly appears as if brands view bloggers as a necessary evil, although, the same is not always true of the people writing the posts. According to Higgins’ information, in 2010, 33 percent of bloggers boycotted brands, but in 2011, that number has been reduced to 25 percent. That, however, doesn’t stop the brands from approaching bloggers, as many bloggers are cited as being approached by various brands numerous times a week.

    Adding additional fuel to the “necessary evil” fire is the fact that over 60 percent of bloggers discussed in Higgins’ presentation have complained about not being treated professionally by the very brands they write about. Of course, if your blog publishes a “_____ Company Sucks” post, it’s doubtful the brand being criticized in such a manner would be very genial in their discourse, although, one could argue these brands should perhaps address the problem being written about instead of reacting negatively.

    Furthermore, only 15 percent of the bloggers discussed report favorable interactions with various brands, whereas 34 percent say these experiences unfavorable.

    So what does all this mean? Should bloggers ignore brands altogether and focus on creating other quality content? Not necessarily. Being an authority in the field you are targeting means knowing about and discussing those entities who have influence within the same field. If your posts ruffles some feathers, then you’re probably doing it right — unless, of course, you are writing about falsehoods and/or are making up lies about the brand being criticized.

    For 5 years, WebProNews has partnered with BlogWorld and New Media Expo, the world’s first and largest new media conference, in an effort to broadcast how new media can grow your business, brand, and audience. Stay tuned to WebProNews for much more exclusive coverage.

  • Technorati Changes Its Direction with New CEO & CTO

    Technorati has undergone many changes over the past few years. The company began as a blog search engine but has transitioned into a social media ad network. While the blog search engine is still part of the company, the ad network side plays a much larger role.

    Do you prefer Technorati as a blog search engine or as an ad network? Let us know.

    More recently, the company announced that it was making internal management changes. Richard Jalichandra, who has led Technorati for 3 and a half years, is now the executive chairman. Taking his place as CEO is Shani Higgins, the former SVP and GM of the company’s media unit.

    “From the Richard Jalichandra perspective, the moving to an executive chairman role really allows him to focus on what he loves to do… which is the M&A component and being sort of the outward voice for the company,” Higgins told WebProNews.

    On her new role, she said, “It’s a natural succession for me to sort of move into more of an exterior [role] as well as continuing to maintain the interior role I’ve been playing.”

    Technorati also brought on Abderrezak Kamel as its new CTO, which Higgins called a “critical addition to our team.” She added that he would be very instrumental in moving the company forward.

    According to her, these changes would help bring more value to publishers, advertisers, and the audiences in between them. She said, “Being a network to support and represent them in the marketplace is a huge value that we felt that we could deliver upon and have over the past 3 and a half years.”

    In recent years, Technorati has received criticism for its transition and has even been called dead by some. However, it doubled its revenue and became profitable last year.

    Moving forward, Higgins said Technorati would work to produce products that offer more ROI and engagement for publishers, advertisers, and their audiences. These products hope to start conversations and allow for easy participation. She pointed out that Technorati doesn’t want to become just a destination website, but, instead, it wants to provide value to users both on and off its site.

    “You’ll see us look more at ways in which we can utilize the website, but I think the business is how we’ve evolved… the value we can bring to this market, not just our website,” she said.

    Do you think these recent changes will be effective for Technorati?

  • Google Algorithm Update Casualties Speak

    Google Algorithm Update Casualties Speak

    Last week, Google launched a major update to its algorithm, which was positioned as one that would go after content farms. While some sites that are often attached to that label were in fact hurt by the update, some other sites that aren’t generally considered content farms became casualties as well. 

    Was your site impacted by Google’s algorithm update? For better or worse? Let us know

    Now, it’s important to note that Google did not come out and use the phrase “content farm” when it announced the update, but the company used language similar to what it has used in the past when talking about content farms. In a nutshell, the algorithm was supposed to be aimed at reducing rankings for lower quality content. Those who found their rankings impacted negatively are not thrilled with having their content deemed as such, and some of the sites that were apparently devalued, do raise some eyebrows. 

    Take, for example, Cult of Mac. This is a tech blog that covers Apple news. It is often linked to by other sources, and frequently appears on Techmeme as a source. A lot of Apple enthusiasts visit the site on a regular basis for updates. Leander Kahney, the site’s editor and publisher, wrote a scathing post about Google’s update, proclaiming, “We’ve become a civilian casualty in the war against content farms…Why us? We have no idea. The changes Google has made to its system are secret. What makes it worse is that Google’s tinkering seems to have actually improved Demand Media’s page rank, while killing ours…We’re a blog, so we aggregate news stories like everyone else. But our posts are 100% original and we do a ton of original reporting…”

    “We can go toe-to-toe with any other tech news site out there,” he wrote. “We break a ton of stuff. Go take a look at MacRumors, which is very good at giving credit, and see how often we’re cited as the source of stories…Yes, we report other’s stories, just like Engadget, MacRumors, AppleInsider, Wired, Daring Fireball and everyone else. That’s the news business on the Web. It’s a flow, a conversation…The question is whether we add value — figure out what it means, if a rumor is credible, what the historical context is. We do that and we do it well. Plus we give clear credit where credit is due (unlike the original content stealers like Engadget and Mashable. Try to figure out what stories they ripped off from us).”  Note: those accusations appear to have been removed from the post. 

    Even PRNewswire, the press release distribution service was devalued by Google’s update. Kahney also defended that site, after a commenter on his post mentioned it. He said, “…and for your information, PR newswire isn’t a content farm either. It published press releases for thousands of companies. Crappy spam websites pull releases from its RSS feeds and republish it as pretend content — which may be why it was down ranked by Google.”

    Technorati got hit too. This site was once considered a darling among bloggers, and now apparently it’s been reduced to a low quality site clogging up the search results, based on Google’s doings. CEO Richard Jalichandra doesn’t appear to have acknowledged this:

    So Google changed its algo’s last week to redirect traffic away from content farms…….where did all the diverted traffic go?!less than a minute ago via Twitter for iPhone

    Other sites more often associated with the content farm label, though they’ll pretty much all do everything they can to distance themselves from it, were also hit by the update – sites like Associated Content (run by Yahoo), Suite101, HubPages, Mahalo, EzineArticles, and others. Reports have indicated that Demand Media’s eHow – the site most often associated with the label, was actually helped by the update.

    The notion that eHow was helped has been questioned. Erik Sherman at CBS looks at Compete data, and writes, “What seems to be a jump may be a normal increase, which raises the question of whether it would have been larger without the algorithm changes.” 

    However, if you do some searching in Google, you’ll probably notice that there is still a great deal of eHow content ranking well – and still under questionable circumstances (see “level 4 brain cancer” example discussed previously). 

    Still, Demand Media as a whole was not immune from the update. At least three of their sites were negatively impacted: Trails.com, Livestrong.com, and AnswerBag.com. After the update was announced,  Larry Fitzgibbon, Demand Media’s EVP of Media and Operations, said: “As might be expected, a content library as diverse as ours saw some content go up and some go down in Google search results. This is consistent with what Google discussed on their blog post. It’s impossible to speculate how these or any changes made by Google impact any online business in the long term – but at this point in time, we haven’t seen a material net impact on our Content & Media business.”

    Pia Chatterjee of HubPages tells us, “On our end we think that its really too soon to tell, as after any large update, all the traffic undergoes pretty serious upheaval. All these numbers will be very different in about 7/10 days. What is worrying is that the update did not seem to do what it was supposed to, which was penalize poor content. The fact that e-how has remained untouched is proof of that!”

    “Our CEO, Paul Edmondson says:  We are confident that over time the proven quality of our writers’ content will be attractive to users. We have faith in Google’s ability to tune results post major updates and are optimistic that the cream will rise back to the top in the coming weeks, which has been our experience with past updates.”

    EzineArticles CEO Chris Knight wrote a blog post about how his site was affected, and what he is doing to try and get back up in the rankings.  "While we adamantly disagree with anyone who places the ‘Content Farm’ label on EzineArticles.com, we were not immune to this algorithm change," he wrote. "Traffic was down 11.5% on Thursday and over 35% on Friday. In our life-to-date, this is the single most significant reduction in market trust we’ve experienced from Google." 

    To try and get back into Google’s good graces, EzineArticles is doing things like reducing the number of article submissions accepted by over 10% – rejecting articles that "are not unique enough". It will no longer accept article submissions through a WordPress Plugin. They’re reducing the number of ads per page. They’re raising the minimum article word count to 400. They’re "raising the bar" on keyword density limits. They’re removing articles considered "thin and spammy", and will put greater focus on rejection of advertorial articles. Submitted articles are required to be exclusive to the submitter (but won’t be required to be unique to EzineArticles).  

    Knight also considered adding a Nofollow attribute to links in the article, as “icing in the cake to further prove to Matt Cutts and Google” that they’re not trying to “game Google” or let their authors do so. Interestingly enough, Knight decided to hold off on adding Nofollow after complaints from authors. 

    The first author to complain, in fact, even said, “Not sure what Pollyanna planet you’re from but let me assure you, EzineArticles does not exist ‘to provide information that is beneficial to the readers.’ EzineArticles is a business, not a government organization or charity. EzineArticles was created to make its owner(s) money. There’s nothing wrong with that, but don’t fool yourself into thinking they’re a bunch of do-gooders. By the same token, the majority of us who publish on EzineArticles don’t do so to benefit readers. We too are running businesses, and EzineArticles helps our own websites get traffic and ultimately sales." 

    Yeah, I think Google frowns upon that whole “we’re not writing to benefit readers” thing. 

    Another element of this whole algorithm update is that so far, it is only active in the U.S. Once Google expands it into other countries, the sites that have seen their traffic drop off so far may be in for an even bigger shock. 

    By the way, there are a lot more sites impacted than those discussed in this article.

    In an interview with On the Media, Google’s Matt Cutts was asked: “You have so much market share; you are so much the only game in town at this point that you can enforce these things unilaterally, without hearing or due process, putting the whole online world more or less at your mercy. Is there any process by which the people who are affected by algorithm changes and updates can make a case for themselves?”

    Cutts responded: 

    We have a webmaster forum where you can show up and ask questions, and Google employees keep an eye on that forum. And, in fact, if you’ve been hit with a, what we call a “manual action,” there’s something called a “reconsideration request,” which essentially is an appeal that says, ah, I’m sorry that I was hiding text or doing keyword stuffing and I’ve corrected the problem, could you review this?

    And over time, we’ve, I think, done more communication than any other search engine in terms of sending messages to people whose site has been hacked or who have issues and then trying to be open so that if people want to give us feedback, we listen to that.”

    Cutts later said, “Any change will have some losses, but hopefully a lot more wins than losses.”

    It does seem that Google may be willing to ackwowledge some errors in judgement on the matter, if this exchange between Cutts and Kahney is any indication:

    @lkahney the appropriate people at the Googleplex have heard that report, I’m sure. Feel free to snag me at SXSW if you see me though.less than a minute ago via web

    @mattcutts awesome. let’s hope someone saw it and fixes it. i’m counting on you guys. tx for message. made my dayless than a minute ago via TweetDeck

    I wonder how many more people will be trying to snag Cutts at SXSW. 

    Update: Since this article was written, Cult of Mac has seen its Google rankings return to normal. More on this here.

    Were there more wins than losses with this update? How’s the search quality looking to you? Tell us what you think

    Read more of our ongoing Panda coverage:

    Google Algorithm Update Fallout, eHow Response
    Google Panda Update Winners, Losers, and Future Considerations
    EzineArticles Hit By Google Panda Update Again
    Google Panda Update Hits Demand Media’s eHow This Time
    Google Panda Update Benefits Google Properties
    Ranking in Google Now That Panda Has Gone Global
    Google Panda Update Winners: Video, News, Blogs, and Porn
    Google Panda Update Victim Xomba Loses AdSense Ads Too
    Google Panda Update Officially Goes Global (In English)
    Google Panda Update Launched in More Countries
    Google Panda Update – Made for Big Brands?
    Google Does Guest Post for Panda Victim HubPages
    Examiner’s Approach to Content Quality Post Panda Update
    MerchantCircle Goes From Panda Victim to Blekko Curator
    More here.