Musical Online Marketing – Coverage of the Digital Revolution, Tudor-esque
In: Online Marketing
7 Aug 2009I’ve recently updated the theme for the site so bear with me while we go through a few teething troubles to get everything moved over to this new layout ok. It’s looking a little cramped at the moment but hopefully should improve soon once I’ve had some tinker time.

I’ve got quite a lot of really good articles queued up, almost ready to publish in the coming week and needed a layout with wider space for article text and screenshots so will be going with this one for the time being.
Shame really as I really did like the last theme but it just didn’t have the space needed and I don’t have the to modifly themes that much!
Articles coming soon! If you have any suggestions for analysis or websites you would like me to take a look at and blog about, let me know!
In: Web Analytics
20 Jul 2009Just a quick note to say a big ‘Thanks!’ to the guys over at Receptional Internet Marketing. They’ve given me free access to a Yahoo! Web Analytics Account, and I’ve added codes for this site to run tracking on. It’s one of the few (getting smaller by the month!) web analytics tools which I’ve not spent time working in over the past 4 years, so it’s a great opportunity to increase my scope of analytics tools and have a play around with a new toy! Part of me hopes it will be as awesome as Vistorville
I’ve added some initial data, once I’ve got a few weeks to play around with (and another couple of sites) I’ll publish a review of the system with all my thoughts and findings
In: Mobile
16 Jul 2009I can’t help but see a similarity between these two face-offs. The iPhone and Windows offering fully commercial OS’s, locked down systems in which (generally) software has to have full access to install, with limited control of the system by the user. Registration keys, product activation, DRM, and on and on.
Android & Linux offer free solutions, open ended, open source, allowing unlimited dabbling and customisation to those who are interested. Allowing anyone in the world to play, edit, create and modify. An open system in which anyone can lend their knowledge. One system on a mobile device, one on a desktop/laptop.
The question is, is there a clear winner? Is there a right or a wrong way to implement a software system? Will two of these solutions be doomed to failure in 30 years time and two succeed for world domination of their market?
I think it can be categorised much clearer – open vs. closed software systems. In these cases, the software is the OS of the device. Socialism vs. Capitalism?
Windows as we know already has a massive head start over Linux, but that’s not to say Linux isn’t making some good headway. There is still a long way to go, but I can’t help but think that on an unlimited timeline, the open source, free solution will always win. Why should we continue to put up with one company’s buggy, delayed, and lacking solution, when a solution that hundreds of companies and individuals can all work on will always perform much better.
The fight between the iPhone and Android is going to be a little closer. With much closer release dates, there isn’t the sweeping dominance of one solution over the other – Android uptake is beginning to increase and as more and more handsets become available it’s likely to be massive – why limit yourself to one locked OS and one handset when you can have the choice of 15 android handsets and be able to customise it as you please?
It seems to me these locked systems are doomed to failure. As well as having to turn out a considerable profit in order to be sustained (luckily Microsoft have has massive dominance for this), they need to sell themselves as something better, when in fact the systems are much more restrictive, if (at present) a little more ‘gimmicky cool’.
Open ended systems in which anyone can tinker and optimise, take on and invest in, on an unlimited timeline will always result in a better solution – a system everyone can have the opportunity to contribute to for free, as opposed to a few hundred or thousand individuals within a company which needs to pay it’s employees.
In: Online Marketing
15 Jul 2009Just to mirror what you might have spotted across some other sites online, Google have recently launched a new professional certification to go alongside their Advertising, Analytics, and Optimiser qualifications.
The ‘Google Conversion Professional‘ qualification is by far the hardest to attain out of all of those released so far, and cannot be achieved by an individual – this is a company level certification.

In order to qualify for this, you must have at a minimum:
And on and on. There are a couple of other requirements (case studies, 1 new case study per quarter, training attendance) but these are the key certifications needed.
There are a few companies who have got this already, it’s not an easy achievement and I can imagine it will take quite a dedicated effort to get all these covered off AND the case study production and requirements. It reminds we of working toward a new piece of epic gear in World of Warcraft for some reason, having the list of everything to complete and then slowly working toward it over a month or two.
I think it’s hard to say how valuable this will be, from what I can tell currently, the only people that really know about it are the companies trying to achieve it – not the clients who are looking for conversion services, so I’m not sure how much business benefit it would bring. I have seen these accreditations used to good effect during trade show for example, where qualified vendors stand out from the crowd. I’m just not sure how valuable they are for day to day business, when you factor in the massive business cost involved in achieving and maintaining all of these requirements.
In: Music
29 Jun 2009One feature I’ve been running on my Facebook page for the past couple of weeks is my ‘Track of the Week’ feature. Every weekend, after scouring the underground and overground for new music to drop, I’ve been posting a link feature to the most stand out track I’ve found.
I’m going to mirror that content on this site and post the track information and link here also. It’s a good running feature because it keeps me motivated to get new music (knowing I’ve got to post something new up) and keeps me checking the new music releases.
The latest Track of the Week is below – (June 28th) – Let me know what you think!

You might have heard this, it’s been featured on Radio 1 a bit over the past couple of weeks – very nice song. Nice collective mix of some hard riffs with a nice oriental instrumental breakdown in the middle. Bit limited on the listen time, I’ve not found a decent version to listen to online (I bought it from Juno last week) but you can get a feel for it from the Juno listen link. Hopefully should be appearing on YouTube soon.
I’ll be attending another event shortly – IMRG’s Usability Workshop taking place on the 8th July. It’s taking place in London, so I’ll be coming down to the big smoke again in a couple of weeks. ![]()

It will be covering off “methods required to build-in good usability practice when considering site enhancements, changes and new technologies.” Hopefully it should provide some new and interesting insights, I’m always welcome to hear new usability practices and methods, especially regarding the implementation of technology developments – an area that can easily be overshadowed by th excitement of building in new site features.
If you also plan to attend let me know, it’s only a half day event, so I’ll also have the afternoon free if anyone wants to meet up in or around London.
While checking this site’s current page rankings – (with it being a relatively new domain with little content, it hasn’t been getting great rankings except for Bing) I noticed something quite odd. My place of work ranks up in position number 4 for a bing search on my name. However, the odd thing being, that my name cannot be found anywhere on this site whatsoever. Not in the page content, the page tags, nothing. It’s ranked it purely though relational page content, mentions across other sites including links, and a number of other factors.

I found it a little odd that a search engine is ranking a position 4 page for a term that doesn’t appear anywhere within the site whatsoever – a more intelligent search engine indexing process? The revolution of how search engines rank for content? A clear example of the differences between a traditional search engine and the new ‘decision engine’ model.
It also appears that I can act as a popular wood burning stove – always nice to know
Tudor House covers two of the main areas where my interests lie (Music & Marketing) as well some personal insight from time to time.
My posts on here, as well as on Facebook & Twitter are my own and don't reflect those of my employer or anyone else!
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