Why Teaching is Dying
How could anyone think this is a good idea or a way to produce “great” teachers?
Getting an Earful—of Classroom Management Training – Rules for Engagement – Education Week: “Teach For America is using one tool that works live and in the moment to advise teachers as they work with their students. Teachers are fitted with earbuds, while a mentor equipped with a walkie-talkie watches them in action, giving them cues and suggestions in real time.”
Shameful.
Ryan Adams at Abbey Road
Good for a chilly election night…
iPhone Passes Outlook in Email Usage
Email marketing is an essential part of what we call Discovery Marketing. Retention is the new acquisition, after all.
We love to use resources like MailChimp or ConstantContact to help our clients find the best relationships with their customers or users. Often, we get questions about HTML emails and pretty graphics as a part of those campaigns.
We like to caution people to remember the mobile component and how much customers are using devices such as iPhones, iPads and Android devices to perform tasks like checking on email during the day, during a sports event or in the evenings.
In many ways, the iPhone and competing devices have re-opened the possibilities for email that programs like Outlook slowly smothered.
And here’s some more positive news about email usage on the iPhone that bolster our point…
“Email marketing campaigns have been a classic marketing technique since the rise of the Internet. Traditionally, people would use their computer to open up an email client like Outlook or Hotmail and sift through the contents of their inbox. Now, more people are accessing and opening emails via mobile devices than ever before. In fact, a recent email experiment in which one billion “opens” of emails were examined shows that the iPhone accounts for most email opens, more so than Gmail, Hotmail, and Windows Live combined.
So, yes… use email marketing.
But keep in mind those of us that routinely use iPhones etc as our preliminary email processing machines for real effectiveness in your campaigns!
Using Math in Reality
Great piece…
The Unreasonable Ineffectiveness of Mathematics Education: “We should teach our students mathematics because they can use it to describe reality. They can use it to discover facts about the universe. Facts about their retirement funds, their living rooms, and the rate of fish food consumption in their fish tanks.
Mathematics is a tool to explore reality. We should teach our students to use it.”
Reminds me of what my 7th graders are up to in class right now.
Minnesota Bans Coursera
Dumb:
Minnesota bans Coursera: State takes bold stand against free education.: “As the Chronicle notes, with admirable restraint, ‘It’s unclear how the law could be enforced when the content is freely available on the Web.’ And keep in mind, Coursera isn’t offering degrees—just free classes. Nevertheless, the startup appears to be playing along, posting on its terms of service a special notice to Minnesota users. It reads, in part:”
Time to rethink this, Minnesota.
Rising Cost of Pay Per Click
We like to preach about discovery (social media + organic search engine optimization + paid search) because we realize that channels such as Facebook Ads or paid search are not as effective at getting people to your site and performing an action there alone as they are in a healthy combination.
This report in the NY Times today comes as no surprise to us…
This concern has become increasingly common as online advertising has become a standard channel for large companies. Attracting those additional advertisers has been great for Google, which reported a 42 percent increase in paid clicks, year over year, for the second quarter of 2012. But the heightened competition has driven up the prices for keywords and made it harder for small companies like Mr. Telford’s.
While about 96 percent of pay-per-click advertisers spend less than $10,000 a month, according to AdGooroo, a research firm that studies the pay-per-click market, big-budget advertisers spend hundreds of times more. In the first half of 2012, Amazon reportedly spent $54 million, and the University of Phoenix $37.9 million. “AdWords can bleed many a small business dry,” said Sharon Geltner, an analyst at the Small Business Development Center at Palm Beach State College in Boca Raton, Fla.
It’s no secret that paid search is highly effective if you know what you’re doing with setup, keyword selection and eventual optimization.
What we do (and what we really enjoy doing) is helping small businesses realize that tactics such as targeting demographics or locations or keyword buying with a specific goal in mind can help level the playing field of the competitive pages of a Google result.
Here’s the Future of Books
My daughters will read far more books than I have (and I’ve read quite a few) simply because they will grow up with the ability to read more books than I ever dreamed of having access to…
The Humble eBook Bundle: “Pay what you want. Support charity. Read.”
Here’s to the future.
Club of Honest Whigs
The name of my next band…
Benjamin Franklin – Wikipedia: “Whilst in London, Franklin became involved in radical politics. He was a member of the Club of Honest Whigs, alongside thinkers such as Richard Price, the minister of Newington Green Unitarian Church who ignited the Revolution Controversy.”
Geez I love Ben Franklin.
Impressions
We don’t pretend that we don’t need inspiration, too.
In fact, as we are grocery shopping or eating lunch or filling up our cars with gas, we are noticing and observing how businesses are telling their stories.
Today as we gathered for a team lunch, we noticed the diner had placed a paper 4 x 6 card on the table to sign up for their newsletter. Being the curators of ideas that we are, we picked it up and examined it and wondered if it was effective.
Five minutes later, we noticed the older couple at the table next to us had picked up the same 4 x 6 card. The following conversation resulted:
Woman: Did you see this?
Man: Aren’t we getting those emails all the time?
Woman: Not from here. You can get discounts.
Man: I think we probably are on too many email lists already,
Woman: But we eat here an awful lot.
In the digital world, these would be called impressions. We picked up the card and talked about it. This older couple picked up the card and talked about it.
The result is the diner is spreading their story.
See, we’re still talking about them!