I think everyone needs a little Hammer-time every now and then. Looks like I’m gonna be getting some of my own on Twitter.
Less than an hour after I wrote about MC Hammer’s new search engine on Search Engine Land, this arrived in my In box.

I think everyone needs a little Hammer-time every now and then. Looks like I’m gonna be getting some of my own on Twitter.
Less than an hour after I wrote about MC Hammer’s new search engine on Search Engine Land, this arrived in my In box.

It happened about a month ago. You may have seen it … or read it. It happened on my SEO/marketing blog when I published this post:
Here’s Why You Should Be Careful About Twitter User Photo Galleries
You could go read (or re-read) that if you want, but you won’t see anything that stands out as a mistake. In fact, you’ll see that it was tweeted 330+ times and liked on Facebook more than 50 times and you might wonder, what kind of mistake is McGee talking about?
I wrote that post pretty late on a Monday night, August 22nd. I finished at about 11:00 pm and decided that I should schedule the article to publish the next morning when humans are actually awake and online so that it would get more attention than it would at 11 pm PT.
Except I screwed up.
Rather than hit “schedule,” I hit the “publish” button. D’oh! And worse, it took about 20 seconds for me to realize what happened. And in that 20 seconds, the article had already hit my RSS feed and been auto-tweeted by a couple accounts that tweet any and all SEO-related articles they find.
So, the post was out there and it was too late to un-publish it. So, I decided to roll with it.
At 11:08 pm, when my Twitter stream is pretty much dead, I sent out a standard tweet about the article.

No big deal … until none other than Robert Scoble saw my tweet (I have no idea why he follows me) and decided to retweet it to his 200,000+ followers. Here’s what it looked like in his Twitter stream that night:

And within the next 30 minutes, my article was tweeted and retweeted and retweeted some more.
It was amazing to watch my @mattmcgee mentions. They came in one after the other in rapid-fire, like nothing I’d seen before. After about a half-hour, I finally tweeted again and mentioned that there were “a zillion retweets” — slight exaggeration, but it got the point across.
What did it all mean, other than a ton of tweets and retweets? Well, for starters, my blog set a single-day traffic record because of all of the Twitter activity.

Best of all, it wasn’t just a one-day thing. Traffic has remained a small percentage ahead of what “normal” used to be, which often happens when a lot of new people are introduced to a blog for the first time. August ended up setting a monthly record for blog visits.
And that’s not all; about a week after all this happened, I was checking out Klout and noticed this:

Two days after the article was published, and after all of the attention it got, my Klout score jumped way back up and even passed 70 for the first time. That and $4 gets me a coffee at Starbucks — I know. It means nothing, but it’s interesting to see the impact of one blog article and how it goes beyond just visits to the blog itself.
Moral of the story: For all the effort we give in trying to decide the optimum time to publish blog posts, you really have no idea what’s gonna happen when you hit that “publish” button — even if you do it on accident at a time when you assume no one’s paying attention.
Sometimes a “mistake” really isn’t.
(Stock image via Shutterstock, used under license.)
Look what I saw over the weekend when I was vanity searching my name in Google.


Marin Software is running PPC ads against my name and targeting the ads at small businesses.
Awwww, shucks. You flatter me, Marin!
(And yes, I’ll gladly thank you with that link above. New idea: Vanity PPC ads as a link building technique.)
Before I get too full of myself, though, it’s important to remember that Google itself was running PPC ads against David & Mike almost two years ago. And I don’t think Google has ever run ads against my name …. boo-hoo! 🙁
There are a bunch of different rooms on Turntable.fm for playing and hearing 80s music. The one I’ve been hanging out in lately is I (heart) the 80s, which is usually one of the more active/busy rooms going each day. (And is the main reason for my Turntable.fm addiction.)
What’s interesting is how the crowd changes from day to day, and sometimes even from hour to hour. Sometimes you’ll be in a room and you’ll have a hard rock/metal crowd, while other times it’ll be more of a new wave/Brit crowd. If you’re in the room with a new wave crowd and you bust out Dio or Dokken … well, best of luck. It’s probably not gonna go over too well.
But one thing I’ve noticed is that there are certain songs that seem to do well and get lots of love no matter what kind of audience is in the room. Here’s my list of 13 songs that always seem to do well in ’80s rooms.
1. Everybody Wants To Rule The World – Tears for Fears
2. West End Girls – Pet Shop Boys
3. In The Air Tonight – Phil Collins
4. Jump – Van Halen
5. Wanted Dead Or Alive – Bon Jovi
6. The Boys Of Summer – Don Henley
7. Take On Me – A-Ha
8. Thriller – Michael Jackson
9. Africa – Toto
10. Come On, Eileen – Dexy’s Midnight Runners
11. Don’t Stop Believin’ – Journey
12. Oh Yeah – Yello
13. Don’t You (Forget About Me) – Simple Minds
So if you ever find yourself in an 80s room and want to please the crowd, give one of those a try and see what happens.

That’s me on the DJ table spinning Don Henley’s “The Boys Of Summer” to a room full of happy music lovers. I’m in a room dedicated to 80s songs on Turntable.fm, and I’m completely addicted to this site.
If you love music and social networking, you’ll probably love Turntable.fm. The DJs take turns playing one song. The crowd votes each song as either “lame” or “awesome” and the DJ gains a point for each “awesome” vote. As you gain points, the DJ gets to change his/her avatar and gains status/reputation amongst other users. (It’s still a very early/limited beta, and additional point-related rewards are sure to be added later.)
In that photo, I have 577 points and an “evil green cat” avatar; as I type this, I’m closing in on 1,000 points and will upgrade to a gorilla avatar, or maybe the Deadmau5-inspired mouse.
There’s a big database of songs to choose from and add to your playlist, and you can also upload your own songs if your favorites are missing. (Like, oddly, Def Leppard is missing from the database.) I’ve heard songs on Turntable.fm that I loved 25 years ago and haven’t heard since. (Anyone remember “The Promise” by When In Rome?)
While the songs are playing, there’s also a chat window where you can have fun and talk with anyone else in the room. I’ve actually made friends via this thing — a group of folks that likes to hang out in one of the various 80s rooms that’s open at any given time.
Crazy, this Internet thing.
Last month, I was pretty excited when I got an email that said “Jesus is now following you on Twitter.” Now, I’m equally scared by this email.

Was it something I said? Something I did? Yikes.
Should I block this follower?? #scared #goaway
😉