Google Enables Google+ Circles Within GMail, Further Proof Google+ Will Win

Gmail now includes Google+ Circles
GMail now includes Google+ Circles

As I said earlier this week, Google+ continues to keep techies like myself on the edge of our seats, as they introduce new features that incorporate Google+ Circles into its other Google properties. While I don’t think Google is going to win the social network battle (mind you, I’m not talking about the war) tomorrow, they will win it eventually. While this isn’t the post where I’ll get into this more broadly, I wanted to take a moment of your time to show you how Google+ Circles being wrapped into GMail (which happened before Google+ integrated with Google search results), supports my perspective on the subject.

I’ve discussed the virtues of GMail’s integration with Google Contacts, as well as Google Contact’s integration with Google Voice and Google Docs. As you may realize, Google Contacts (which has received minimal attention from the Google developers recently with the “new look,” not much marketing, and some minor updates) works as an important appendage of many Google services you use. Wherever you might want to use your contacts list, Google has made it pretty simple. Well, now think of Google+ and Google Contacts as meshing into a dynamic duo for accessing the people in your life and contextualizing them so that you can communicate more easily with them.

Think about it. On a one-to-one communication basis, Google Contacts does a pretty good job. You have each contact and you have groups of contacts, which you can add one contact to several groups. If you’d like to send an email to one or multiple people, you can add their names one by one; for groups, just type in the group’s name. These groups even make their way over to Google Voice so that the rules defined for call-handling apply to your groups in Google Contacts. (I don’t know why you couldn’t do the same with GMail filters based on group criteria, but that’s neither here nor there.)

Now, let’s take this to a little more complex arena: let’s say you’d like to communicate with everyone you know in your book club and you’d like to allow the conversation to be a bit more interactive and lively with photo and video sharing; right now, for many types of video content that’s just not possible in GMail. So, you hop on over to Google+ and you plug in your Circle called “Book Club.” It’ll notify you that X number of your members (let’s say, three) aren’t on Google+ yet (or, should I say, for long) and are notified of your message via email. So, off goes your message and you can now watch the conversation take place in real-time without having to keep logging into GMail to see the responses, because Google+ (no matter where you are in any Google product) will show you the new message at the top of your Web browser screen. Your conversation is still private and contextualized among your book club. Not only that, but now when you’re in GMail, that same Circle can be used as a list to email altogether as groups once did. And, as I’m sure you’ll see soon, you’ll be able to see GMail/Google Talk chat, email messages and Google+ posts in one stream within GMail so that you can track communications with the same people or Circles of people more seamlessly. Google+ continues to overlap your services in ways that make it almost foolish not to be on the network, if only to manage your contacts and the contexts in which you know them.

And, with that Google+ will win. We all want an easier way to manage our small businesses without having to do more work and Google+ is paving the path there. I’ll be writing more about this over the next few weeks, and I’m curious: which Google+ integration would you most like to see?

DC Launches New Internet Infrastructure. Will it Help Anyone?

D.C. Becomes The First 100-Gigabit City
Erwin Morales: vonkinder (on flickr) via wamu.org

As you might very easily presume about me, I’m a strong proponent of advancing broadband and wireless Web access in the United States. So, when I learned that the DC government (using federal stimulus funding) launched their new high-speed, 100 Gb/s fiber-optic network, DC Community Access Network (DC-CAN), I was pretty excited. What’s 100 Gb/s? Let’s say you were sitting at your computer, hooked up to router that could actually pipe 100 Gb/s to your computer without frying the hard drive, and you were going to download a full-length feature film to your computer to view. It would download so quickly, your processor would need to catch up with the data speed and it’d download in about the blink of an eye (literally, ergo about 400 milliseconds). With that kind of power now lit up in our Nation’s Capital, we’ll have greater broadband access for luring tech companies, will establish a stronger connection to our municipal government services for its taxpayers, and residents (including many work-at-home Small Business owners) and businesses will have better access and competition in the Internet services market. Enter the problem: this won’t actually do any of that.

Once you read the fine print of what Washington, DC Mayor Vincent Gray and his administration say, you find that the network will only be given access to the municipal government right now. How is that supposed to spur economic development and attract new and growing businesses (especially tech companies) to the Metropolitan Washington area? And, with even the network available to the municipal government only, the agencies really haven’t been planning all that well to use the network yet (at least not publicly and without the polity’s inclusion). With the slow to nonexistent use of DC-CAN by municipal agencies, the services needing access on the W3 by taxpayers (businesses and residents, alike) continues to be limited on both sides. Ultimately, programs like this should benefit the People; and we know that it’s the “last mile” that really needs solving (which I personally believe should be using Mobile to fix) and this DC government project doesn’t quite address the challenge at its core. From the various news outlets that reported on it, it sounds like the “digital divide” isn’t budging anywhere for the better, since it relaxes some of the regulations and infrastructure hurdles for the telecommunications industry but you can bet that residential and commercial denizens won’t see any reduction in pricing or availability any time soon. I won’t even get into my main complaint about the problems of degradation of fiber-optic networks like DC-CAN, since the main problems (of limited government access and implementation, no economic development plan in place, and no greater competition in the market to benefit Small Business) makes this project in serious need of re-assessment in my opinion.

What do you think the DC government should do with DC CAN to improve the digital divide and help Small Business owners? What programs are available in your city, county or state, and how can they be improved?

Twitter Weekly Updates for 2011-12-12

  • Check out all the #GoogletoGreat webinars at http://t.co/1uW6VeC3 of products how-to's for #
  • We're still accepting applicants for our Spring 2012 Internship! Fwd 2 interested: http://t.co/fwmrZadU #jobs #
  • Take this time to update privacy settings! // @mashable: Facebook Begins Official Timeline Rollout http://t.co/asnxc8yr #
  • If your has international customers, take note: Yahoo! Mail – 22 New Languages… http://t.co/eiiOzzdy #
  • Worried about what people see on your Facebook profile? Check this out: http://t.co/8DmBZfBb #
  • Glad to finally make it to chat after a few weeks away! (Followers, I'll be live-tweeting for an hour. FYI) #smallbizchat #
  • RT @SmallBizLady: Q2: WITH ALL OF THE RESOURCES AVAILABLE, WHY IS FAILURE FOR NEW BUSINESSES STILL AS HIGH AS 75% OR SO? #smallbizchat #
  • & a plan! RT @JaySmallBiz: A2: To be successful in business requires a basic skill set in marketing, finances and management. #smallbizchat #
  • A2a: Not having a biz plan directly correlates to success or failure. Great tool: http://t.co/FG80NwbJ #smallbizchat #
  • A2b: And SBDCs help u develop them complimentary! Find your local SBDC and get a business plan on paper. #smallbizchat #
  • RT @SmallBizLady: Q3 DO YOU THINK IT IS SAFER TO START A BUSINESS WITH A PARTNER SO YOU CAN SHARE RESPONSIBILITY? #smallbizchat #
  • A3: It just requires the proper planning (and ONE person should have final say) so starting or ending partnership is fluid. #smallbizchat #
  • Live right now – Interview with New York Times business blogger Jay Goltz @jaysmallbiz http://t.co/vHfpYauU via@SmallBizLady #smallbizchat #
  • RT @SmallBizLady: Q4: WHAT ARE COMMON MISTAKES YOU HAVE SEEN THAT HAVE RUINED WHAT MIGHT HAVE BEEN A SUCCESSFUL BUSINESS? #smallbizchat #
  • A4: Businesses without business models or a sales process. I can't tell you how many businesses I see that lack one or both. #smallbizchat #
  • @stevenkmoyer Welcome to the chat! I'm sure you'll enjoy the conversation and @smallbizlady and @taigoodwin will treat u well! #smallbizchat #
  • @RareBeautiful @jaysmallbiz Yes, hindsight always seems to 20/20, doesn't it? Lol #smallbizchat #
  • RT @SmallBizLady: Q6: DO YOU HAVE ANY TIPS ON HIRING? #smallbizchat #
  • A6: Use a tool like http://t.co/Yd3mqwL3 to get an idea about who this person is on and off the click. Due diligence is key. #smallbizchat #
  • I disagree; trust is key & due diligence is appropriate. RT @JaySmallBiz: A6b: … Think “guilty until proven innocent”. #smallbizchat #
  • @JaySmallBiz This is the United States…ur innocent until proven o/w; doesn't mean you take everyone's word for it. 😉 #smallbizchat #
  • RT @SmallBizLady: Q7: WHAT IS THE HARDEST PART ABOUT BUILDING A STAFF? #smallbizchat #
  • A7: Harmonizing collaboration among the staff to be productive. We've incorporated many social tools internally for this. #smallbizchat #
  • A7: You'd be surprised at how many problems solve themselves through better communication among your staff. #smallbizchat #
  • +1 RT @GetBizSociable: A7: making 1 + 1 = 3. People should make each other better, not worse. #smallbizchat #
  • RT @MYBINCGLOBAL: @w3consulting Communication is key, great point! // Thanks! #smallbizchat #
  • RT @SmallBizLady: Q8: WHAT IS THE BEST WAY A NEW COMPANY CAN MARKET THEMSELVES? #smallbizchat #
  • A8: I recommend frequently to start with Social Listening: go to Google, Twitter (advanced search) and Facebook and… #smallbizchat #
  • A8b: type in the keyword phrases your potential audience would use to find your product/service. What are they saying? #smallbizchat #
  • A8c: From here you can ask them questions, see if there's an audience to coalesce, and engage them. #smallbizchat #
  • +1 RT @JaySmallBiz: A9: Keeping existing customers should be the first order of business. #smallbizchat #
  • @yourjobmyoffice Not to worry; check out @SmallBizLady 's wrap-up tomorrow! #smallbizchat #
  • RT @SmallBizLady: …Q & A w @JaySmallBiz comes out on Thurs on @Smallbizlady’s blog: http://t.co/VZVddcBa cc @yourjobmyoffice #smallbizchat #
  • RT @SmallBizLady: Q11: YOU ALWAYS HEAR THE MANTRA “NEVER, NEVER, NEVER QUIT”. DO YOU THINK THAT IS TRUE? #smallbizchat #
  • A11: When it comes to persevering with marketing, yes. When it comes to transitioning a failing business, maybe not. #smallbizchat #
  • A11: I think that adage also makes sense when talking about yourself…don't give up on you, ever! #smallbizchat #
  • RT @SmallBizLady: Q12: HOW DO YOU KEEP BALANCE AS AN ENTREPRENEUR? #smallbizchat #
  • A12: Stop the delusion that everything needs to happen "right now." If you don't need to call 911, it can be prioritized. #smallbizchat #
  • A12: Learn to wear different "hats" at different times. Monday may be for marketing. Tuesday: billing. Wednesday: HR. And on.. #smallbizchat #
  • RT @SmallBizLady: Roll call, who’s on @Smallbizchat tonight? Give me your best 140-character commercial. #smallbizchat #
  • @w3consulting helps small businesses plan strategically and implement successfully for the Web, Social Web, Mobile and beyond. #smallbizchat #
  • Thanks @smallbizlady and @taigoodwin for another great chat! (Okay, followers, live-tweeting ends now!) #smallbizchat #
  • RT @SmallBizLady: Join us next week for Joel Libava @FranchiseKing How to become a franchise owner. #smallbizchat #
  • Ask us all ur Social Media, Web and Mobile marketing questions for Small Business, and get answers! – http://t.co/9Ab01xFn #smallbizchat #
  • Why Human Resources Software Start-Ups Are On Cloud 9 – @WSJ http://t.co/nINrJbPj #humanresources #HR #
  • In case you didn't know, it's @CSEdWeek so check http://t.co/0B5dHiTf & learn why computer science education is SO important! #
  • @indiana_sbdc Tks 4 follow back! If we can help ur clients, let us know! They can ask all Web/Social marketing Qs: goo.gl/JhHqc #

Google Continues to Add New Features from Google+ to Search — Circles Appearing

Google adds Circles feature to Google Search results!
Google adds Circles feature to Google Search results!

Google continues to show that it’s banking on the success of Google+ by adding new features to Google Search, AdWords and throughout their other products/services. Google has the +1 buttons throughout their search engine results pages as well as their ad network (overlaying the +1 button on the ads themselves), and you can add the +1 button on your own Web properties. I just noticed this morning that now you can see, for articles or pages that you’ve recommended (by pressing the +1 button, you “recommend” that site to everyone in your Google+ network), you can also see the Circles in which that person resides in your Google+ account. This does three things for you and Google. First, it is bold (as you can see from the image, that green is pronounced) and lots of visitors who may have signed up for Google+ but are not using the network regularly are now going to notice the integration better. Next, for those of us who actually are using the Google+ network regularly, we now have even greater understanding of the context of what we’re browsing on the W3 since we know what we’ve seen before, who’s connected to that matter and why we’re connected to them. Brilliant! Finally, Google is gaining tons of new data by seeing how people interact with recommended content, and in turn, so will you (I imagine in the form of analytics data currently and in the future through Google Analytics and more).

Twitter Weekly Updates for 2011-12-05

  • “@MarkMorris29: Additional thanks to CBP and Anna Urman @beyourboss for connecting me to @rsidneysmith. Thanks for the great insight!” #
  • I just signed up for the O'Reilly Webcast: 10 things every web developer, designer (and manager) s… http://t.co/LzGwhwnV via @oreillymedia #
  • What was your best #SocialMedia experience in 2011? I'd like to do a blog post re #SocMed biz experiences? Let me know! Thx! #
  • RE: @w3consulting RT @jowyang: Bit off more than you can chew?  Groupon makes baker swallow profits in over-selling a… http://t.co/DmOBaNXO #

Twitter Weekly Updates for 2011-12-01

Get Your Business Online with Google

Virginia Get Your Business OnlineRecently, Google® (with very short notice) announced that it would be doing this Virginia, Get  Your Business Online two-day Small Business educational, free conference. The basic premise of the event program was, according to Google’s literature, to provide small businesses with “an easy, free, and fast way to get your business online.” They provided a website courtesy of Intuit® (including a domain and hosting for one year), a free Google Places listing for your local business, and additional free resources and information on their website. These programs are a series of worldwide events being hosted by Google in partnership with several other businesses and economic development organizations. I wanted to point out the good parts of the program still accessible online (even if you missed the live events), some of the items to avoid, and some highlights from the program materials.

What’s Online

THE GUIDE
Google provided a fantastic guide  [PDF] (if that link doesn’t work, I’ve uploaded it here [Google Docs PDF] for safekeeping if VGYBO goes offline for some reason) with some valuable resources and information for the enterprising Small Business entrepreneur looking to get online. It’s a worthwhile investment to read and digest the materials. If you have any questions, please feel free to reach out and Ray will be happy to help answer questions.

THE SITE
The website itself offers free and affordable resources, most importantly the partner-organizations (such as the small business development centers, economic development authorities, tourism and convention bureaus, chambers of commerce, and membership organizations that support Small Business). If you’re a Small Business in one of the states already or soon to be in Google’s Get Your Business Online events, I’d give a healthy review of the sites that partner for the events because they probably have free or low-cost solutions for you to enhance your marketing and operations.

ADWORDS CREDIT
They give you 75$ worth of AdWords credit. ‘nough said? Learn more about google.com/ads/learn and google.com/adwords/onlineclassroom to become a savvy eAdvertiser on the world’s most popular advertising platform.

Avoid

1) The free domain and website through Intuit. Based on my anecdotal experience and that of my clients, I’ve seen too many horror stories of people getting duped into staying with a sub-par service of large conglomerates that are not in the Web design and hosting service primarily. They’re capturing your business because they have the brand awareness to tack on a less-than-stellar service by making it sound easier than it really is. If you’re going to launch a Starter Website, go with Google Sites and pay ±10$ to control your own domain name.

2) AdWords Express. It’s expensive. It’s generic. And, AdWords allows targeted, affordable and effective advertising online.

Tips

1) Share your story.

2) Make sure to claim your Google Places listing and add Offers (coupons/value-adds) immediately! –  google.com/placesforbusiness

3) Head over to Google Webmaster Central and learn about how the tool will help you manage your website better for greater SEO and less technical headaches. – google.com/webmasters

4) Add the +1 button to your website as soon as possible and get familiar with Google+ (annotations show to Gmail chat buddies, Google contacts, Google+ circles, Google Reader followers, and more to come). – add Google +1 button code

So, that’s how to get your business online with Google! We hope you go ahead and check out some of the resources and please let us know in the comments what you find is the most helpful (or not) about the program.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Twitter Weekly Updates for 2011-11-14

Google+: Direct Connect

Google+ Pages: Direct Connect – Another Game-Changing Feature of Google+

The caption from the YouTube video above says it all:

With Direct Connect, you can automatically add Google+ pages to your circles from Google Search. Just add + in front of the page you’re searching for.

The combination of Google+, +1 buttons on websites, in Google search results, Google ads and more, and the addition of Google+ pages for Small Business, Social Media has a new powerhouse. If you are unaware of what Google+ is, haven’t yet created a Facebook Page, or you want more profit for your Small Business, now is the time to create a Google+ profile and get familiar with the Google+ pages that major brands like Pepsi and others launched yesterday. Google gives EVERY business, brand, band and beyond to the power to create a Google+ Page. We create the W3 Consulting’s Google+ page late last evening; feel free to add us to one of your Circles! And, see you on Google+!