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Category Archives: Mathematics
Capitalism, Unions, and Offshoring (Part I): A Tale of Two Firms
Once upon a time, there were two firms, Meritocratus and Egalitarius. Both firms operated in the $10 billion widget industry, and each had 50% market share. Widgets were not a commodity. Purchasers were sometimes willing to pay a premium for a … Continue reading
Posted in Business, Finance and Economics, Investing, Mathematics, Policy, Politics, Predictions, Taxes, Unions
Tagged Capitalism, Egalitarius, Meritocratus, Offshoring, Unions
3 Comments
California vs. Delaware
Earlier this month, I travelled to Delaware for a family event. Before the event, I had been trying to open a business bank account for an LLC I incorporated in Delaware several year ago. I intended the LLC to be … Continue reading
Posted in Business, California, Finance and Economics, Mathematics, Policy, Politics, Taxes
Tagged California, Delaware, Government Bureaucracy, Red tape, Taxes
7 Comments
Generate Unique and Interesting Content: Ten Lessons From Four Months of Blogging (Part X)
My previous nine posts focused primarily on how to drive traffic to your site. Once you have been blogging for several months and have built up a small following, the next step is to keep your readers coming back for … Continue reading
Use Multiple Media to Engage Your Audience: Ten Lessons From Four Months of Blogging (Part IX)
Sometimes viewing nothing but text can get boring. Consequently, you should consider mixing it with other forms of media. The last thing you want is a boring and static blog that readers avoid like cancer.
Posts Follow Pareto, Not Gaussian, Distribution: Ten Lessons From Four Months of Blogging (Part VIII)
Another important blogging insight is that a very small percentage of your posts will generate a disproportionate number of your page views. In other words, the number of page views per post exhibits the characteristics of a power law (sometimes called … Continue reading
Leverage Your Personal and Professional Networks: Ten Lessons From Four Months of Blogging (Part VII)
Another way to generate traffic for your blog (and uncover unanticipated opportunities) is to leverage your personal and professional networks. Spread the Word Throughout Your Network Using Facebook, LinkedIn, and Twitter, as I have discussed in a prior blog, can be instrumental … Continue reading
Take Advantage of the News Cycle: Ten Lessons From Four Months of Blogging (Part VI)
Understanding the news cycle is critical for any blogger because potential readers are more likely to come to a blogger’s site if it offers content on a hot topic. As such, an important part of your blogging strategy should focus on … Continue reading
Posted in Blogging, Business, Education, Mathematics, Media, Predictions, Writing
Tagged Facebook, Google, LinkedIn, Quora, Technorati, The Economist, The New York Times, Twitter, Yahoo!
6 Comments
Leverage Social Media as a Distribution Platform: Ten Lessons From Four Months of Blogging (Part V)
Another way to reach the broadest possible audience is to leverage social media. After my first four months of blogging, social media accounted for slightly over 40% of the referrals to my blog. Of those referrals, Facebook has been responsible … Continue reading
Posted in Blogging, Business, Education, Mathematics, Media, Predictions, Writing
Tagged Facebook, Google, LinkedIn, Quora, Technorati, The Economist, The New York Times, Twitter, Yahoo!
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The Filter Bubble: Why Your Internet Reality May Be Different From Mine
I have often argued that one of the reasons that Americans have become increasingly partisan over the past several decades has a lot to do with the end of military conscription. No longer are Americans from different backgrounds, races, geographic … Continue reading
Posted in Blogging, Business, Mathematics, Media, Politics
Tagged Advertising, Eli Pariser, Google. Facebook, Media bias, MoveOn.org, Political polarization, Social media, TED Talks, The Filter Bubble
6 Comments
Title for Search When You Search for a Title: Ten Lessons From Four Months of Blogging (Part IV)
Search engines are another huge vector for site traffic. Serious bloggers should always register their sites with Google, Bing, and Yahoo!. According to Experian Hitwise, these three account for nearly 95% of all search engine volume globally, with Google taking … Continue reading
Posted in Blogging, Business, Education, Mathematics, Media, Predictions, Writing
Tagged Facebook, Google, LinkedIn, Quora, Technorati, The Economist, The New York Times, Twitter, Yahoo!
3 Comments
