E-Business Library > When Sites Make it Hard to Shop

[SearchViews - Dispatches and Discussions on the Search Engine Industry. Brought to you by Reprise Media] Back in 2002 the gang at 37 Signals took a look at the homepages of 10 popular retailers and found most lacking when it came to came to a user's ability to buy products located on the home page.

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Tinderbox Syndicate: to these invaluable sites (some of which have been in my Blogroll for years): A list apart Boxes and Arrows Column Two Digital-Web Functioning form Guuui.com IAslash.org/blog IAwiki Informationdesign.org Jeffrey Veen OK/Cancel Signal vs. Noise xBlog I recommend theses sites to all students. (via Cosmos)

http://blog.searchenginewatch.com [Blog.searchenginewatch.com] Search Engine Watch Blog: October 2005 Archives: Interview Of Matt Cutts from Aaron of SEO Book is a nice talk with Matt Cutts, Google's spam fighter, webmaster relations guru, quality assurance czar and hands-down winner of the needs a better title sweepstakes at Google. Matt, officially a Google software engineer, covers not all SEO being spam, no one being able to guarantee a top ranking free listing on Google, asking for SEO references when hiring a firm, LookSmart's distributed Grub spider being his favorite crawler, how he color codes his email, buzz marketing, Mick Jagger being the Matt Cutts of rock 'n' roll and lots, lots more.

Findanisp.comhttp://www.findanisp.com [Findanisp.com] Most Popular "Stuff" For Sale - Ecommerce Web Sites: With one of the best selection of scooters (both gas and electric) on the Web, you're bound to find something for your liking. Plus, check back for updates on our promos for even more savings on the best scooters you'll find anywhere!

Bloggersblog.comhttp://www.bloggersblog.com [Bloggersblog.com] Bloggers Blog -- May, 2005 Archives: If professional bloggers emerged who came to be unduly beholden to their advertisers and started not covering certain stories or spinning them for the sake of their sponsors, other non-professional bloggers would just step into the breach. If corporate media bought up a few big bloggers, they would still have to compete against literally millions of independents, and if any of the independents was providing what the audience wanted better, the traffic would shift to them.

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