I will start 52 businesses this year
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Category — #01 Business a Week Project

SEO Penetration & Keyword Density update 2009

Okay, here are the most searched for phrases from which people land on this site:

www.business week.com
enfp business
site:businessaweek.com
dumb product names
book of mormon reading calculator
funny pharmaceutical names
enfp in business
enfp consultant
enfp consulting
pharmaceutical names
enfp
famous book editors
business headers
karate consultant
martial arts consultants
mormon businesses
enfp businesses
businesses for enfp
colin jensen
enfp and business
fortibus es in aro
fortibus
safaripetstore
pharmaceutical product names
365 book of mormon
print shop for sales
famous book editor
book of mormon one year
pharmaceutical product naming
consulting headers
fortibus consulting
book of mormon pictures
“colin jensen”
enfp and consulting
book of mormon 365 days
safaripetshop
the business of week
mormonism franklin planner
enfp personal growth
latin teacher skype
businesses for enfps
business for enfp
“ramprint”
dumb names for products
dumbest product names
dumb product name
martial arts consulting
book of mormon reading calc
business undertakings
creative 4

So people want to know more about what to do with your life if you’re an ENFP, they want some help being organized reading their Book of Mormon, they want to talk about Adobe CS4, and they want to know why pharmaceuticals have such dumb names despite their being billion dollar products.  And a couple plugs for Latin, Safari Pet Shop, and martial arts consulting (I need to remember the ones at the bottom of the list are still statistically significant.)  Ironically, the two winners (ENFP Consulting and the 365 Book of Mormon), are my most personally neglected holdings.

Maybe I should combine the 365 Book of Mormon with ScriptureForum.net somehow… anyone?

May 14, 2009   No Comments

Google Radio Stations Mashup

Okay, here’s one I don’t have the skillset to program, but I’d love to partner up with someone on (and just because it’s on the net doesn’t mean you can steal my idea without repercussions):

I have moved probably 30 times in my life, and I’m not a banker’s son or an army brat.  Most of the time I’ve had to rediscover radio stations in the new area, and realistically that takes me a year.  When I travel, I end up listening to NPR or 80s music, solely because I know I can find it without a hassle.  And when I go on a roadtrip, I hit seek frustratingly every 5 minutes.  What the world needs is a way to plan your radio usage as you plan your trips, to search possible stations relative to your location.

It seems that from the FCC or online you could easily get a database of every radio station in the nation and their signal strength–even every broadcast antenna and its strength.  That, by definition, has to be public information.  I want someone, and I think Google itself should do it, to mashup that database with a map, a la geolocation.  Three axes, two for location and the third, normally the size of the pin, would be the strength of the signal.  That would basically give you a good map of which radio stations are in your area, and which radio stations are strongest in your area.

Granted, signal strength gets boosted and wanes throughout the day, but if that’s pretty even-keel across the market, that should be graphically negligible (they’ll all go up, they’ll all go down, but what you’re looking at is the relativity.)  Some stations can reach hundreds of miles at certain times of the day, but if not dismissed that variable could be approximated with a gradient.  Mountains get in the way, but again, people will understand that.  If we could factor in all that stuff we’d be making coverage maps for Verizon/AT&T/T-Mobile.  I’m not proposing a “can you hear 102.7 now?” guy driving up and down the street–that wouldn’t be viable–not even for Google.

What I am proposing is a simple mashup, financed in the usual ways, and with a huge emphasis on usability.

April 14, 2009   No Comments