Author: Joe Friedlein

Joe Friedlein
  • 2011 – the year mobile finally “turned a corner”

    Mobile has been dubbed as ‘the next big thing’ for what seems like forever now. 2011 was the year that people finally started to take mobile seriously.

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  • 60 Seconds With…

    Jason Hall, from Westbury Garden Rooms, talks through the rationale behind the recent brand change and his experience of migrating a website. From 301 to site migration success…

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  • Facebook ticker now serving up ads

    Facebook has announced that the ticker will now also display sponsored stories

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  • Breaking news on Twitter

    The growth of social media is resulting in more news stories being broken via sites such as Twitter and Facebook – how is this affecting official news channels?

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  • We welcome Graham Ruddick on board

    Browser Media appoints Graham Ruddick as a non executive director. Who is Graham and what will he bring to the agency?

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  • Tut Tut Orange – who manages your PPC ads?

    When PPC advertising goes wrong… Not that dramatic, but a good example of a missed opportunity in paid search.

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  • Google+ for business – worth the wait?

    After much anticipation, Google+ business pages launched this week – so what’s all the fuss about?

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  • Google rolls out ads at the bottom of SERPS

    After months of testing, Google has officially rolled out ads at the bottom of it’s SERPs

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  • Google restricts Maps API usage

    Earlier this year Google announced it was going to apply costs and limitations to the Maps API – that time has come

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  • The Guardian rolls out @GuardianTagBot (it’s not SIRI)

    The Guardian has rolled out @GuardianTagBot – a Twitter account that users can ‘tweet’ to find out latest news about any given subject

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  • Twitter has the X Factor

    A new partnership between Twitter and the X Factor USA allows users to vote via a tweet – a shift for the good?

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  • Google unleashes best example yet of double standards?

    Google attracts a lot of hatred with announcement that searches will be encrypted if logged in. What is the real reason behind this move if it only applies to organic search?

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