35 Burst results for "First Page"

In Trump probe, grand jury hears from potential last witness

AP News Radio

01:01 min | 13 hrs ago

In Trump probe, grand jury hears from potential last witness

"A New York lawyer who could be a final witness in the hush money investigation against Donald Trump, says he brought documents to discredit the prosecution's star witness. Attorney Robert Costello and ally of Donald Trump, who counseled Trump fixer Michael Cohen after an FBI raid in 2018, says Cohen is not to be believed, when he testified about hush money payments, he said he made to women on behalf of Donald Trump. He's totally unreliable. Costello says he brought pages of documentation to be shown to the grand jury, but accused the Manhattan DA of cherry picking. Out of 321 emails, they cherry picked 6. Costello's appearance is an indication prosecutors are moving to wrap up the case. Donald Trump himself posted on social media. He thought he was going to be arrested this week and called on his supporters to protest. Portable barricades were delivered to the courthouse area to block off streets if needed. I'm Jackie Quinn

2018 Donald Trump Costello FBI Jackie Quinn Michael Cohen This Week New York 321 Emails Cohen Attorney Robert Costello Manhattan DA
Charlie Defines "Woke"

The Charlie Kirk Show

02:22 min | 1 d ago

Charlie Defines "Woke"

"I wanted to find woke. I want to play this piece of tape. She's a sweet person, Bethany mandel. She should have been more prepared for this. And it looks hard. You get put on the spot unless you host a radio program or a TV show. It's difficult to always have an answer. I mean, I think if she was asked to answer that as an op-ed, she would have done it, but it was she just kind of got a little twisted. Cut 92, Bethany mandel got asked a question by Brianna joy. Who I've debated actually. You guys should find that debate at turning point you say YouTube. Play cut 92, she gets asked the question of what is woke? Would you mind defining well because it's come up a couple times that I just want to make sure I'm on the same page. So, I mean, woke is sort of the idea that. This is going to be one of those moments that goes viral. I mean, woke is something that's very hard to define, and we've spent an entire chapter defining it. It is sort of the understanding that we need to totally reimagine and reduce society in order to create hierarchies of oppression. What bothers me about this clip and it's painful to watch is it makes us conservatives look stupid, okay? It makes as if we don't know what we're talking about because it would say well call the time. So we're going to dive into actually what woke is. Here's the best definition. Call everything systemically unjust until you control it. That's woke. Where does what come from? Woke comes from a particular activist who is wearing stay woke, get woke T-shirt, colloquially that was spread on Twitter, was that guy's name, del Rey or something, where you have now been awoken to all the systemic injustice, almost as if now you have the glasses and you can see the fault lines. You can see the fissures. You have awakened to the injustices. Before you were asleep and now you are awake. That is what the idea of woke means. But woke ism is tyrannical Marxism by another name. That's what it is. It is prioritizing race over merit. It is prioritizing characteristics that mean nothing. It is a full throated, negative campaign against the founding of America, woke ism is a campaign in crusade against people that they think are oppressors and turning people to believe their victims and then have the victims victimize others.

Youtube Bethany Mandel Del Rey ONE Brianna Joy America Cut 92 Couple Times Twitter 92
Tourists hoping to see Arizona falls forced out by flooding

AP News Radio

00:52 sec | 1 d ago

Tourists hoping to see Arizona falls forced out by flooding

"Tourists hoping to see world famous waterfalls on an Indian reservation in northern Arizona instead went through harrowing, flood evacuations. The official have a supai tribe tourism Facebook page, reported Friday flooding at washed away a bridge to the campground, tourists were mostly evacuated, some rescued by helicopter by Saturday floodwaters were starting to recede and visitors were allowed to hike with the help of tribal guides to navigate them around creeks on the back trail to get to the campground. Meanwhile, the tribe is building a temporary bridge from supai to Sedona several areas of northern Arizona have been slammed this week by storms. The resulting snow and snow melt at higher elevations wreaking havoc on highways access roads and even city streets. I'm Julie Walker

Saturday Julie Walker Friday Sedona Northern Arizona This Week Indian Facebook Supai
Dinesh Interviews Attorney Joseph McBride About New J6 Info

The Dinesh D'Souza Podcast

02:43 min | 5 d ago

Dinesh Interviews Attorney Joseph McBride About New J6 Info

"You released just a couple of days ago, really interesting document. In fact, I noticed a Julie Kelly commented, I've never seen this document before, and elaborate pre planning scheme by the capitol police for what was going to happen on January 6th. Talk a little bit about where you got the document and talk about the significance of it. What's in the document? So the good, to be honest, great to see you. And as always, very much appreciative. Of your work. So got the document about a year ago there and actually two documents. There's one that pertains to the Metropolitan Police department is another one that pertains to the capitol police. So the big one pertains to the Metropolitan Police department. That was given to me by somebody from the privates called the private world about a year ago. So the document had been circulating circulating, it was leaked. I obtained it through through pride and hints, and I sat on to it for sat on it for a while. Wondering, sort of seeing how the government was going to deal with it once it knew it was in circulation. And what did the government do? Apparently the government moves to have it suppressed, not maybe moved in court, but they made it subject to their protective order and what they did was they shielded it from the prying eyes of the public. Government should have never have done this, right? It's wrong. I obtained it through private hands that did not obtain it through the relatively database or anything like that. So I was wealthy my race to share it. I chose to share it at this time because the government has long been on the record saying that, you know, the idea that plainclothes officers were in the crowd on January 6th be the Metropolitan Police or capitol police was simply a lie that attorneys like myself or commentators and political journalists like yourself who made such a comment in that direction are peddling a conspiracy theories, nothing could have been further from the truth. This document unequally proves it. The capitol police document as well. It's about 20 pages, something like that. And the first paragraph of the page, they speak about concerns about antifa and in all of our trials, we've spoken about antifa at length. Judges have shut us down, prosecutors have mocked us, told us that it was a figment of our imagination. Imagination, and that our clients were lying, turns out the capitol police in the Metropolitan Police shared the same concerns as a Trump supporter who showed up with protective gear on January 6th.

Julie Kelly January 6Th Donald Trump First Paragraph Two Documents Metropolitan Police Metropolitan Police Department About 20 Pages Couple Of Days Ago A Year Ago Capitol Police About ONE Police
Trish and KeyCity Capital's Tie Lasseter Discuss the Economy

The Trish Regan Show

01:45 min | Last week

Trish and KeyCity Capital's Tie Lasseter Discuss the Economy

"Moving at a very, very rapid pace right now. But bottom line, the feds are saying, okay, you know what? We're going to guarantee deposits at any of these banks by opening this window, do you think that's the right move? Well, I think we absolutely needed it. The fed absolutely had to back in and ensure otherwise you're going to see a much larger problem with small business across the United States. We've got maximum $250,000 that the fed's going to ensure. I was talking to another business owner in Dallas where I am yesterday. And I mean, there are small business $5 million a year in revenue. So they're not going to, they're not going to lay that out across ten different banks and the deposits that they have in order to fit within the shared mandate. And it's too much red tape. Exactly. So they did what they had to do. But now everybody still freaking out. Even though the fed says, don't worry, you know, we're going to be here. We'll loan them whatever money. This fear factor, right? This is what's so dangerous in markets because once the fear factor starts, there are worries about contagion, are you concerned that we could see multiple bank failures in 2023? No doubt that there's going to be bigger problems. I don't know that we'll see multiple bank failures, but we're going to definitely see faculties across a number of regional banks. There's a lot of consumer spending going on. Great jobs market and all of a sudden you start to see the effects of rising interest rates and the difficulty to get and obtain cash and money and yet we're still spending. We would have increased interest rates all at one time or maybe over a two time period to get to a point that would affect inflation. It would have been much better than seeing what the lingering effects of a slow increase in an interest rate. Yeah, you and I are on the same page on that one. I mean,

Dallas 2023 Yesterday United States One Time FED $5 Million A Year $250,000 Ten Different Banks Two Time Feds
Thank You for Continuing to Support Our 'Food for the Poor' Campaign

Mike Gallagher Podcast

01:50 min | Last week

Thank You for Continuing to Support Our 'Food for the Poor' Campaign

"Missions here at the Mike Gallagher show is to welcome the generosity of our listeners to help people all over the world. We have a partnership with the Christian ministry food for the poor. I've been highlighting the great work of this great nonprofit relief organization for years. And right now, worldwide the perfect storm of economic decline loss of work, skyrocketing food prices, children are starving and food for the poor has people on the ground in Haiti, Honduras, the Caribbean, all over the world, and I told you Friday we were behind in our spring campaign. Our goal pretty modest goal of $40,000 and we were less than half that, well, you got us over the hump on Friday. Do you know that a $144 will feed two children for two meals a day for a year? That's an amazing way that you can start your work week. I hope you'll take a moment if you're listening to my voice. Please go to Mike online dot com and give whatever you can afford to give on the give food, give life bright red banner at the top of the page. And let's make a difference in the world. God calls us to be good stewards and to look out for one another. And I can think of a better way to do it than with food for the poor, a beautiful Christian ministry. I've traveled all over the world with these folks. And they mean a lot to me. They build a house in honor of my late wife. There's a Denise Gallagher house in Jamaica that a family proudly lives in and they had previously been living on the side of a hill under a tarp. That's the kind of work food for the poor does. Please go to Mike online dot com. If you're blessed and you want to share your blessings with the less fortunate, please go to Mike online dot com, click on that red banner at the top of the page or pick up the phone and call 8 four four H 6 zero hope 844-860-4673 and thank you. Thank you for your love for your support for your generosity.

Mike Gallagher Christian Ministry Honduras Haiti Caribbean Denise Gallagher Mike Jamaica
Newsmax's John Bachman on the Magic of Athens, GA

The Doug Collins Podcast

02:02 min | Last week

Newsmax's John Bachman on the Magic of Athens, GA

"Both of us being Georgia boys, both of us, you know, in this world and we're both in media. We both do all of those things and look, you can spend hours talking about the Biden administration and even dumb Republicans and everything else. We all get that. But coming from Georgia, there's things that matter. Georgia football, music, Arby's barbecue, a cornbread, anything, anything I think food number three, anything under that, you know. Food in general, but barbecue and for those of you for those of y'all in Texas, it is pork, barbecue. Let's just make this this out now. But anyway, those kind of music comes back. But also, and I've gotten dealing with this a lot when I was in Congress when I dealt with the music modernization act and I got to know a lot of these folks. But when you went to school in Athens, what most people don't realize is that Athens is almost an amazing, it's almost a Detroit of the south. And growing up, talk about it because you and the university of Georgia, you know, went over there in the music scene over there, the downtown saint is just an amazing place. It absolutely is amazing place. And that was part of the appeal. I mean, you grow up, if you grow up in Georgia, you hear about Athens, you know about REM, you know about the B-52s. Right when I was graduating high school, I was really starting to listen to a lot of widespread panic. And I was there in the spring of 1998 when widespread panic played in downtown Athens right there in the middle to see him play. And that was right before I started college, I was still a senior in high school and we had just lost in the state or the state of the regional baseball playoffs. My buddy Michael Nelson and I drove to Athens, didn't have a place to stay, but we went and watched widespread panic. And I remember I called my dad the next day and this is before cell phones. I caught him from a pay phone at a waffle House on three 16, and I said, dad, just checking in, letting you know everything's okay. And my tad said, what happened last night, John, I woke up and I read on the front page of the AJC that there was widespread panic in Athens last night, and I said, dad, dad, it's just a band.

Texas Michael Nelson John Athens Spring Of 1998 Last Night Both Detroit Next Day Congress AJC Republicans B-52S Georgia REM Biden Three Food Arby 16
'Scalia: Rise to Greatness, 1936-1986' With James Rosen

The Eric Metaxas Show

02:04 min | Last week

'Scalia: Rise to Greatness, 1936-1986' With James Rosen

"So this book Scalia rise to greatness really is the most in depth treatment of Scalia's life. It benefits from a wealth of documentary and personal sources that were either overlooked by or unavailable to his previous biographers. One such source is a secret oral history of his life that justice Scalia conducted in Supreme Court chambers with an interviewer in 1992, and which is now being published for the first time in these pages. And so Scalia was born in New Jersey. He moved when he was 5 to queens. He loved queens. He grew up in a multi ethnic neighborhood playing stick ball and what part of the queen since I grew up in Queens, I have to ask. Elmhurst queens. Okay. My people are from elmhurst. This is kind of amazing to me thinking of him growing up in LA. I feel the synchronicity coursing through me right now. It's actually, I don't know, I'm touched by that. Wow. So, and he was, as you say, devout Catholic, his father was an Italian immigrant who came to the United States not knowing English with only $400 in his pocket in 1920. His mother was the daughter of Italian immigrants. They both wound up becoming teachers, his mother in elementary school teacher and Scalia's father, a Professor of romance languages at Brooklyn college for 30 years. Now, between the liturgy of the Catholic Church itself and the reverence for text that he inherited from his parents and specifically his father, a romance languages professor who was leery of translation from one language to another and its ability perhaps to warp the original meaning of text, Scalia grew up with from all of these influences, a profound reverence for the inviolability of sacred texts. He went to Jesuit institutions for high school and college, Xavier high school in New York City, which was a rare hybrid of a military academy run by Jesuits. And then he went to Georgetown university in both places, he was top of his class Magna cum laude at Harvard Law School top 5 of his class there. He had an incredible prodigious capacity for hard work,

Scalia Elmhurst Queens Elmhurst Supreme Court Queens New Jersey Brooklyn College LA Jesuit Institutions For High S Catholic Church United States Xavier High School New York City Georgetown University Harvard Law School
Caller: Does Anyone Trust a Government That Lies to People?

ToddCast Podcast with Todd Starnes

01:23 min | Last week

Caller: Does Anyone Trust a Government That Lies to People?

"Well, my first point in the second time for a second, but the first point is for you and everybody listening. Does anyone out there believe that a government that lies to the people and hides from the people taxes, the truth about the origins and vaccines for COVID-19, the Russian collusion collusion hoax? And intimidates the people and controls free speech on social media that that government is not totally willing and capable of election rigging, cheating and fixing. Is there anybody out there that believes that? It's a great question. Secondly, you were just talking about Californian pollution and environmental whatever. If I get this project done Todd, would you write a forward for me for my upcoming book called Sarah feces and walking guide to San Francisco and other great American cities? That sounds like one heck of a book a page Turner. If I've ever heard of one well, yeah, I don't know what you're going to use the pages for, but maybe somebody out there on the streets can find a use for them. Well,

Todd Sarah San Francisco Turner
John Solomon Unpacks the Decision to Investigate Trump

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast

02:01 min | Last week

John Solomon Unpacks the Decision to Investigate Trump

"Some more information and another story about how the decision was made to investigate Trump and how that was actually just a politicized thing, which we all knew, but again, now it's coming out this much later that that also was purely politically driven. Yeah, this is a very important thing. Citizens united day bossy conservative watchdog group of file to foil lawsuit for your battle. They finally got some early documents. What these are are interviews that key players in the Russia investigation gave to the Justice Department watchdog the inspector general. And what the attorney general Loretta lynch former attorney general for president Obama, Joe Biden revealed is that the effort to begin raising questions about Donald Trump and Russia collusion began much earlier than July 31st, 2016 when operation crossfire hurricane that now discredited Russia collusion probe. It actually began in the spring and it began with the New York FBI office opening up counterintelligence inquiry on Carter page, one of the advisers to Donald Trump. And though this would be a low level thing that, by the way, raises a lot of questions in itself because Carter page was a CIA asset, no reason to suspect he was up the wrongdoing. It got all the way to the top of James Comey and Andrew mccabe very quickly. That's odd. Very odd for that to come in. And they go to Loretta lynch and say, hey, we may have a problem with the Trump adviser just letting you know, sidebar conversation. But probably the right thing to do is just give Donald Trump a defensive briefing. Let him know that there might be Russians targeting his campaign. Now that would have been the right thing to do. But that's not what James Comey, Andrew mccabe, ultimately, do they open up the ultimately open up that crazy investigation that gets discredited. And it basically turns out to be a political dirty trick carried out by Hillary Clinton and her team. But imagine how much history could have changed if back in the springtime, Andy mccabe and James Comey did what lynch suggested. And just did a defensive briefing three years of the Trump presidency, probably wouldn't have been a squandered.

Loretta Lynch Donald Trump Russia James Comey Andrew Mccabe Carter Justice Department Joe Biden President Obama Hurricane FBI United CIA New York Andy Mccabe Hillary Clinton Lynch
Jason Lewis and Doug Discuss 'Comfortable Conservatism'

The Doug Collins Podcast

02:11 min | Last week

Jason Lewis and Doug Discuss 'Comfortable Conservatism'

"Right now in the United States House, it's less than 8 years. Did you and most people don't realize this, that in this next Congress, they'll be less than 40% of the membership of the Republican caucus have ever served with anybody that they came in before Donald Trump. So, I mean, I mean, it's huge turnover. And you see it a little bit in the Santa. It's always the anomalies. It's always the Schumer as the Pelosi's the Dan youngs even. I put that. But what happens is, is what you just touched on. Is the staff on Capitol Hill, which you got a lot of great folks, but a lot of those committees have been there 30 years and they don't like change. Then you go into the bureaucracy. That's where I think the biggest problem is, you know, I got, you know, if you want to talk to me, it's fine, but let's have a some kind of at least turnover in Washington and these cubicles up and down these streets because that's where the real governess is going because we in Congress sort of gave our power away to them. Right. No, you're right. We don't do civil service reform. All is lost. I think incoming president has control over three or 4000 employees out of 2 million. So, you know, he's going to come and go and you're going to get those political appointees. But really, Peter strzok and Lisa page proved where the departments are. And the same with these committee staffs and all of that. So I couldn't agree with you more. Look, what I write in the book, Doug, is that too often Republicans want to revert back to what I call comfortable conservatism. And by that, I mean, what are you going to alienate related advocate for term limits? And I happen to be in favor of them, but I agree with you that I'm in favor of them for everybody. But who are you going to alienate? Nobody. Wearing a Ukrainian flag lapel pin. We really going to alienate nobody. You talk about a tax cut. We believe in tax cuts, but it's about as safe a political position as you can get. But if you start talking about we really shouldn't have a biological male swimming against my daughter swim team in college. We really shouldn't have lawlessness in the streets, although they are talking about that. But we ought to close the borders. Or how about this? We get to the point right now with China. We're not too many generations ago of you unleashed a bioweapon on the world. That would have been considered an act of war.

United States House Dan Youngs Congress Peter Strzok Donald Trump Lisa Page Schumer Pelosi Capitol Hill Santa Washington Doug Swimming China
Ukraine military identifies soldier seen in grisly war video

AP News Radio

01:39 min | Last week

Ukraine military identifies soldier seen in grisly war video

"Ukraine's chief prosecutor has tentatively identified a man apparently shot dead by Russian speakers in a video that circulated widely on social media as a missing Ukrainian soldier. I'm Ben Thomas with the latest. The grim 12 second video shows a man in Ukrainian army fatigues, apparently unarmed, standing in the Woods in what appears to be a freshly dug hole smoking a cigarette. Someone off camera can be heard saying in Russian film him. Lifting his chin, he says. Glory to Ukraine. Just before the gunshots. Monday, Ukrainian president volodymyr zelensky called on his nation to respond to those words in unity, saying glory to the hero. Glory to Ukraine. We will find The Killers. Tuesday formed mister de mitro kole said the incident explains what he calls a genocidal war. The Ukrainian man was clearly murdered, simply for expressing his Ukrainian identity and love for his homeland. It is a war crime and a violation of the Geneva conventions and the international humanitarian law to kill an armed prisoners of war. Adding the perpetrators of this cold blooded execution must be brought to justice. Ukraine has opened a national investigation. And I also urged the International Criminal Court prosecutor to launch an immediate investigation into this crime. On its Facebook page, Ukraine's 30th mechanized brigade identified the man as Timothy shader. I'm Ben Thomas

Ukraine Ukrainian Army Ben Thomas Volodymyr Zelensky Mister De Mitro Kole Geneva International Criminal Court Facebook Timothy Shader
McClellan becomes 1st Black woman for Virginia in Congress

AP News Radio

00:42 sec | Last week

McClellan becomes 1st Black woman for Virginia in Congress

"A black lawmaker from Virginia has made congressional history. I Norman hall. Democrat Jennifer mcclellan was holding the receipt of a poll tax her father once had to pay, tucked in the pages of a family Bible when sworn into the U.S. House. She is the first black woman to represent Virginia in Congress. House speaker Kevin McCarthy held a ceremonial swearing in with mcclellan, who was joined by her two children on the chamber floor, Virginia's now the 23rd state to be represented by a black woman, according to a recent Pew Research Center analysis of historical records, mcclellan recalled voting struggles of the Jim Crow era, she said her grandfather had to prove he could read and find three white men to vouch for it. Norman hall, Washington

Norman Hall Jennifer Mcclellan Virginia Mcclellan Kevin Mccarthy U.S. House Congress Pew Research Center Jim Crow Washington
Monica Showalter: Another Pulitzer Prize Discredited As Propaganda

Mark Levin

01:48 min | Last week

Monica Showalter: Another Pulitzer Prize Discredited As Propaganda

"Nonetheless Monica showalter writes another Pulitzer Prize discredited his propaganda she writes in the American thinker Remember all that political hay the far left and its media Made during the Vietnam War about the wickedness of America's South Vietnamese ally in the importance of abandoning that country to the communists Here's the Pulitzer Prize winning AP photo that was supposed to prick our consciences Make us turn against that so called immoral war against the communist takeover and it's the picture Excuse me of South Vietnamese police captain Coldly executing Viet Cong captain on von lem There's no doubt about it The photo is hard to look at she writes its crude rough wartime justice The film is even harder to look at He ran on the front page of The New York Times cropped from the original To fill the space and make it impact even more impact even more immediate And it got the results the anti war left wanted public sentiment abruptly turned against the war as a result of that photo The people were abandoned by the Americans who cut and run Evacuation from Saigon embassy on the rooftop was only recently bested by Joe Biden's Afghanistan pull out And after that the re-education camps rolled in the boat people launched into the high seas and the killing fields of Cambodia began Jane Fonda must have been so proud of herself Just one problem The context was missing And that context mattered

Monica Showalter South Vietnamese Police Von Lem Pulitzer Prize Viet Cong Vietnam Saigon Embassy America The New York Times Joe Biden Afghanistan Jane Fonda Cambodia
Sheriff William Snyder: Illegal Immigration Creates More Problems

The Dan Bongino Show

01:44 min | 2 weeks ago

Sheriff William Snyder: Illegal Immigration Creates More Problems

"I thought correct me if I'm wrong like I said I follow the Martin county sheriffs but we're talking to sheriff Bill Snyder from Martin county Florida had an interesting interaction with a group of illegal aliens recently But did I see on the page recently there was some kind of a car accident incident with someone who was here illegally So again sheriff what you're saying here is it's not just that you violated the law by coming here illegally Yeah that's obvious That's why it's called a legal illegal immigration But you create the opportunity for sex trafficking Number one for people to be used as mules to pay off their dad which creates a drug problem number two but also if you can't get a driver's license and you hit God forbid it hurt or even kill someone Now there's no insurance company involved The person's hurt in the hospital as this kind of stuff all cascades and creates even more problems as a result of the illegal immigration Oh damn look this a complex public safety problem This morning when I came in the first report I looked at was Driver They don't have driver's license So what happens They get scared They're just they're people They're breaking the law that driving without ever having a driver's license They crash into a car They don't have insurance they leave the same We see that day in and day out We have so many unlicensed drivers in this county that we are starting an operation next week where we'll be targeting people who have never had a driver's license And so what you said is right Dan It's a cascading chain of events that marginalizes these people and makes legal people here more vulnerable to trouble to crime You're right

Martin County Sheriff Bill Snyder Florida DAN
Checking in With 'Chicks on the Right' Miriam Weaver & Amy Clark

ToddCast Podcast with Todd Starnes

01:59 min | 2 weeks ago

Checking in With 'Chicks on the Right' Miriam Weaver & Amy Clark

"Two great ladies. I've known them for a long time now. I suppose. You know them as chicks on the right, Miriam weaver and Amy Clark, ladies. Hi. It's been forever. It's fine. Oh my gosh, way too long. Way too long. All right, so tell me where are you guys still in, did somebody move so you moved? You guys were in Indianapolis. And I moved to Texas. Moved to Texas. All right, very nice. So what's happening in Texas? Well, I mean, a lot of great stuff is happening in Texas, but she's going to be moving to South Carolina soon. And so we decided, you know what? We're just going to do the podcast thing, which is what we're doing now, which has been the greatest decision ever. Ever. So it wasn't hard to leave radio? No. No. Not at all. It really wasn't. I mean, we loved working in radio together. But it was a good run. And once we kind of started doing our podcast at the same time, we did a morning little hit video on our video on our Facebook page, just via video. And that started becoming really, really popular, so we decided this should be what we do all the time. Yeah. Love it. Love it. Well, I've always admired your logo the red stiletto heel. I tried to emulate that, but it's not a good look for me. No, and I'm really embarrassed we were I don't know why sometimes I just say really inappropriate things during interview. This is why I don't like being interviewed. This is why we get along well. And so we had the moms for liberty and there are wonderful ladies, very good wholesome Christian women. And so we're having a conversation about makeup and I had just come off of the newsmax hit so I had makeup on and all that kind of stuff. And I told the woman I said, you know, I'm the only straight guy you probably know that knows his bronze number. And she turned white as a ghost. I just felt really bad about that. We see a couple. There have been a couple of guys racing walking around here with makeup on. It takes some getting used to, 'cause it's like, you know, we see a lot more of that now, like just in everyday life in a different realm. Guys with makeup. It's a little

Texas Miriam Weaver Amy Clark Indianapolis South Carolina Facebook
The Left Now Wants to Destroy the Suburbs

The Dinesh D'Souza Podcast

02:05 min | 2 weeks ago

The Left Now Wants to Destroy the Suburbs

"Not content with a large degree, many of our inner cities. Not content with creating plantation style urban dependency. Not just in the ghetto, but also in the barrio and then in a rural equivalent on the American Indian reservations, not content with doing all that damage. The left now wants to destroy the suburbs. And they want to destroy the suburbs. They want to convert the suburbs, if you will, into the kind of urban plantations that they've created in the inner cities, and on the Indian reservations. Why? Because it pays political dividends. It brings political benefits to the democratic party. The Biden administration has issued new rules specifically 200 pages of new rules. And the rules require a quote equity plans. In hundreds and hundreds of suburbs around the country. Now, equity is the new mantra of the diversity equity and inclusion. It's a new mantra of critical race theory. It's that we don't want equality, and we don't even want equal treatment under the law. We want equity and equity here is defined as equal outcomes. What the Biden administration is doing is relying here on the fair housing act. Let's remember we had the Civil Rights Act of 1964. The Voting Rights Act of 1965 and the fair housing law of 1968. The fair housing law is pretty innocuous. It says no discrimination in the sale rental and financing of dwellings. So the basic idea is that if you want to buy a house or rent a house, it's based upon the fact that you have enough money to do it. And if you have enough money, it can qualify for the mortgage. And you're willing to pay, then it doesn't matter whether you're a Christian or a Jew or a Hindu. It doesn't matter if you're a male or a female. It doesn't matter if you're a black or white or brown.

Biden Administration Democratic Party
Are Monkeys Native to Dallas?

The Doug Collins Podcast

01:15 min | 2 weeks ago

Are Monkeys Native to Dallas?

"A page on Instagram Dallas news or whatever the case allows TV, whatever it's called. And they give you updates about everything going on in the area. And some guy posted up on his phone and he said, he said, I believe there's a monkey in the street. And it really looks like a monkey in the street. Like it really does. But the kicker is that he said, in his post, is this native to Dallas? Judd. When I read that, I just couldn't, I couldn't fathom. I'm hoping he's joking, but if he's not my God, what a moron. Is this native to Dallas? Yes, yes it is. You know what? Can you see him? Dallas monkey. You moron. Anyway, I just thought that was hilarious. I hope Liz and I hope for I hope it's out and it's enjoying itself out in the Dallas summertime. It really does look like a monkey. I don't know what it is. It wasn't very clear, but if it is, I hope he's safe and hopefully headed back to the zoo because we all know that's where he was from. Well, no, not necessarily something. Yeah, it could have just been the native monkeys that live here. Unbelievable.

Dallas Judd LIZ
"first page" Discussed on The Paid Search Podcast

The Paid Search Podcast

05:25 min | 1 year ago

"first page" Discussed on The Paid Search Podcast

"Your podcast i have listened to every episode and appreciate the ridiculous value share for dave. Thanks dave thanks for the question and complement and chris. What do you think creating a new campaign for every single audience pros and cons Well i let's. Let's explain to some of those. That may not understand what it means. There is audiences inside of google ads. And this is typically used as a data gathering tool you. Can you can get observation data from an audience so as with any google ads manager. That is maybe a bit too ambitious. I'm they start to think that data is so far ahead of everything else. They put data consumption data reading data gathering so far ahead of everything else. It actually overrides just the basic structure in management of google ads campaign and over it become so complicated that you actually lose sight of the goal in other words. You can't see the forest for the trees. I mean you're missing the point. It's the campaign is gonna fail because of what you're doing so says an amazingly complex thing that really should not be made that way so for every audience that they want to track they might create a new campaign so they can have that data separate from each one so jason. When i'm assuming they do. Is they sit the audience to targeted so that the only get that targeted otherwise they have massive cannibalization. I can't even imagine. I don't know but anyway it's it's absolutely tremendous. It's a huge mistake. And i've never heard of tremendous or horrendous tremendous as in the complexity a tremendous campaign built and horrendous tremendously horrendous. Don't look the definition. I see dang it now. You're right very very great in amount scale or intensity. Thank you okay. Do think people people are I think The so that's the definition. The informal is extremely good or impressive. Excellent so you're actually right chris. Everyone's wrong in the way they use tremendous as kind of a positive adjective. It's actually just describing these size or scale of something. Yes we learned from the great. Chris schaffer today. I want to think about what they do or or get into their head This this is. This is insane. It is Insane and what about the people like me that fit into more than one audience so like I'm a fast food enthusiasts. But at the same time i'm in the market for health and exercise women because i go fast food and then i gotta burn it off so which which campaign in my going to show up on. It's just it's it's it's it's not using the system the way it's kind of like you go into the matrix and You just walk around. And you're like what if i punch these people but it's not a real punch and just a bunch of chaos. It's just like your misuse ever your power. I would love to sit in on that like that first meeting after. They've done the build in explain their strategy. I'd love to listen in on that because that sounds like oh man it's out to be. It'd be an interesting thing to hear about exactly how they build that. In what what information they're gathering from it because boy that's truly unique so thanks for sharing david..

google dave chris Chris schaffer jason david
"first page" Discussed on The Paid Search Podcast

The Paid Search Podcast

01:56 min | 1 year ago

"first page" Discussed on The Paid Search Podcast

"Opco. Dot com slash. Psp to we appreciate their sponsorship been great sponsors and not just because they've been faithful to to continue to sponsor the show and keep the show going but because we constantly hear about people that try out the tool and it's you know it's one thing to tell people about a tool but another thing to hear people say yeah. Yeah i i went to it. I tried it out. It was a no-brainer kept using it. You know it was. It became a daily part of my process. So if you're running one account if you're running fifteen burning hundred accounts this tool can become a part of your daily process and the great thing is the pricing scales with what you need. So it's a very affordable thing whether you're an agency or a freelancer or just running your own company with your own google ads that you're paying for yourself. Tried out if fits everyone you get an eight week. Free trial use. The lincoln are description and check it out. Okay thanks chris. And we're gonna get a question now from david from lehigh. We were talking with an agency who creates a new campaign for every audience. You gotta finish. I just now i just. I thought we're gonna have a laugh. Track there like sick. Yeah we should ask my bad my bad. I would love your input on the pros and cons of doing this. One comment they made is that you could have over one hundred campaigns which for me sounded anything but a good thing remind me of the old skaggs days with keywords.

"first page" Discussed on The Paid Search Podcast

The Paid Search Podcast

06:09 min | 1 year ago

"first page" Discussed on The Paid Search Podcast

"I've always taken it as your google's telling you your bid is lower than they like and my first instinct is always. That's just a i offer from google. I never took it as we will not show on the first page. We will show you on the second page. Where i don't know five percent of search traffic ends up going or something like that. And if you do the click if you do the numbers on okay you get a four percent or five percent rate in the first position but now you're on the first position of the second page so you're getting a five percent to rate on the three percent of the impressions that make to the second page of getting pretty small so you won't get locked traffic. Yeah so is. Was it saying that. I never took it as i always took it as. Hey we see that the first page bids generally is this level for your topic your for your keyword more specifically and we're just letting you know that and we're letting you know if you read language air you're eligible to show but it's going to be limited and i always took it as. Hey we're not telling you that you're only going to show on the second page. We're just telling you you're below the standard. I page for this keyword. Expect lower traffic than you would get if you bid more and my my feedback was always. Thank you for telling me. I'll get more traffic. If i bid more i understand. That's how the system works. But i like trying this bid level. And so i guess we'll talk about what we do about it in a second but chris that's how i always took it just that i i'm still gonna show if possible on the first page and maybe get some traffic. But if i don't understand why not. Because i'm bidding low but i never took it is. I'm ruled out of the first page. What about you..

google chris
"first page" Discussed on The Paid Search Podcast

The Paid Search Podcast

05:56 min | 1 year ago

"first page" Discussed on The Paid Search Podcast

"Because then what's the point. You're just what's the message thing because that's when you don't have a big payoff inland. Yeah chris one question for you you give a very nice answer about that preview tool yes but let me push back a little bit. Let me dig in here. Everybody here that. I think i hear the curtain being pulled and i think the wizard of oz might be exposure a okay. I'm not going to go that deep. I'm not going to go is about to do. We're going to ask. Do i use the tool myself. At all i was gonna. I was gonna ask you when the last time i used. I knew amir change and the answer in this context ones the last time you used the preview tool in this context to reassure. What are we doing here chris. So let me you let me ask you now that we're could towards the end of the wizard of oz here. If you if. I'm getting the sense you might agree with me that things are so personalized so the technology is so intense that trying to control whether your ad shows up or not in seeing it all the time in the results or in the preview tool might be kind of a futile effort. Do you agree with that. And then would you do when a client Ask you why my ads not showing up or if you need to see the ad for yourself or you have a question. Do you like me. Read the data inside the account to let that guide you these days or is there something i'm missing at. You're you're right I was answering the question for been and all those that you know are trying to become greatest gloves manager number three. And i like the security of google telling me why it doesn't show but in reality the highest level is when you can look at the numbers and say oh well. I'm not showing up because my search impression share ad due to rank search pressure loss due to rank is thirty percent so obviously my bids aren't quite high enough so then i would dig into which keywords are losing positions louche which you're losing search impression share and you can look at us like which ones have really low click through rates or you know there's all kinds of things you can look at but you're right the real deep answer is to look at the numbers and you'll bend see just a a good question here from then. That really opened up conversation for us. I think the reason why you and i kind of don't really look the search results anymore to kind of validate something. We're trying to see in. The count is because once you realize just how many factors can cause your ad not to show when you wanted to show..

chris amir google
"first page" Discussed on The Paid Search Podcast

The Paid Search Podcast

05:15 min | 1 year ago

"first page" Discussed on The Paid Search Podcast

"Earth. You won't because. I already am not stopping a made that clear in the past few weeks. I'm not stopping. I'm still putting in fifty hours a week. And if i'm putting in fifty hours a week and you're putting in fifty hours a week and i'm already headed you. Yup it's over. How could you ever catch me. Yeah you'd have to die so if you're trying to become the second best google ads manager on the planet knelt. I would say i'm already. They're going to do that either. Chris is there and he's being number two number two. And then if you're trying to become the third then going for it and you'll be on the podium with us but if you are trying to become the third vase major on the planet i would and this isn't a joke like this. This is being facetious or anything. I would really try to get away from senior ads in the search results and thinking that you know how to run the matrix because you're going into the matrix and going in there and going into the search results. If you really know what's going on you'd be able to get that feel in that data from your google ads account the reason why i'm emphasizing. That is because in my experience and it's very very a prestigious experience there so many factors that cause your ads to show or not to show that. I have not found clarity when i look at the google search results. All i find is more questions and doesn't solve anything for me and so i've just given up on it and this has changed in the last couple years. Things have gotten really really complex in terms of auctions and add rank and individual personalized results. I i've just given up in terms of looking at it. So i i just look at the date in the account. If you if you wanna know if your ad showing up well did you get impressions on that ad on that keyword. What's your search impression share..

google Chris
"first page" Discussed on The Paid Search Podcast

The Paid Search Podcast

04:53 min | 1 year ago

"first page" Discussed on The Paid Search Podcast

"If you think emergency plummer phrase match is gonna get your show on emergency plummer spring as the city named there but yet you probably will show on emergency plummer spring. But if it's phrase match emergency plummer you'll show on a heck of a lot of other stuff too and you might not have enough budget left to show up on every spring texas search or you just might not show up on it so i don't like not targeting it for that reason on phrase and then on exact match emergency plummer spring in someone doing the search emergency plummer exact match in spring texas. That is a close variant however. I have no assurance that i'm going to show up on that search because it's it to me close where i have zero search that i will show up and i don't know if i will or not and so because i don't know i wanna target is its own keyword and then the other reason i targeted it as its own cure. What we talked about in the first part of the question getting data on that individual keyword and then having the ability to bid on that individual keyword but for all those reasons go keywords always would target those around keywords. Okay chris. let's move on. Ben from minneapolis minnesota. Hey guys loved the show. I have been having issues. Getting client adds to show up. I know it's a bad idea to search for client ads but there are times when i want to physically test something with tracking or just see the ad any idea. Why would be having issues with this. And how can i resolve it. I absolutely understand vince. feeling here. this is this is probably the most anxiety ridden type of thing that managers deal with. You know we deal with the digital product you build this machine and you wanna see the output right. You wanna see the output of what that machine does and sometimes we build and we all be deceased numbers on the screen. Sometimes you just want to be able to see. The ad is going to be able to search. So i absolutely understand so. I'm not going to say that you know you're being silly. You don't need to see it. Just focus on the numbers. I understand that. Need so my one thing that i find works and and this is. This is for me because i work with a lot of clients that are in my area. I may not be able to just search and see their ad. They may not be local to me or it might be national so i can't be sure i'm going see their ad. The favorite thing that i use is a very basic tool. That's been around for a very long longtime. It's the ad preview and diagnosis tool..

plummer texas minneapolis minnesota Ben chris vince
"first page" Discussed on The Paid Search Podcast

The Paid Search Podcast

02:12 min | 1 year ago

"first page" Discussed on The Paid Search Podcast

"Might be company for fencing right. It's just another way of saint. Vincent company That is you know it's it's another kind of like middle of the road keyword. I don't exactly know what that means. But i wouldn't add that. He would probably just leave it. So that's an example of kind of a neutral just let that pass but Great question company company companies that do fence companies that new fence weird kind of search that you're gonna show up on any way because a close variant people don't search in that exact way that often there's no point to really burn yourself with that data but yet commercial fencing company that's different Intent or at least it's clarifying the intent. Yeah absolutely okay. Let's jump to a second question. From ben he actually sent in a walker sitting in a double pounder. That's not what they say is they. Don't say they say two pounder a quarter pounder double. I don't notice anyway. he's question is. Let's say chris chris uh-huh they say a royal cheese. Oh in the uk. He would know what that is. Haven't had that we don't. We're not sponsored by mcdonald's. But i really want mcdonalds. Burger sounds really good. Now let's say i'm reading bins question. Now let's say i'm just targeting the town of spring in texas with my location settings. Now i i got here a guy. Israeli buttery to a guy from slovakia. Not even a dallas or houston spring originally from the uk. And he's like just using an example of spring texas he's probably never been to spring texas but he's just throwing it. I love it is really is really in the in the ball game here. Let's say i'm just targeting the town of spring in texas with my location settings. I've got the key word. Emergency plummer in an ad group then. Of course it's gonna trigger when somebody searches for that search term from that chosen location. So again is there any benefit of me. Having emergency plummer spring as a keyword as opposed to just emergency plummer shirley's if someone searches. I'm still gonna show on that search..

chris chris Vincent texas uk ben mcdonalds mcdonald slovakia plummer dallas houston plummer shirley
"first page" Discussed on The Paid Search Podcast

The Paid Search Podcast

05:01 min | 1 year ago

"first page" Discussed on The Paid Search Podcast

"If you would like the special eight week free trial you get it. Just use the chat box in the bottom right corner and tell them. Hey i heard about you on the pacers podcast. Can i have twice as long to try out this tool for free and they will say yes. Welcome to the club boom. You're in that's all it takes so obt dot com slash. Psp to thanks. Chris this first question comes from ben from slovakia but originally from the uk. Let's say. I have a keyword like fencing company in exact match in my search terms. I see the search commercial. Fencing company has come in due to a close variant. Obviously i'd go ahead and add this keyword. Of course this search term as a key word as it's a great search term for me that's a best practice correct but with google already showing my ad for close variants of that keyword. What's the real point of adding. It is a keyword inside the segregate. How do i benefit. So chris fencing company exact match the search term came in commercial fencing company due to close variant. We talk about adding good search terms as keywords. But why why should someone add. Commercial fencing company is a keyword when they saw it come in as a close variant. If they're already getting that search term as a close variant. What's the point of adding. It is a cured. Yeah this is. This is a really important question. It's a very simple question but it's very important. I hear this question a lot. And so i know a lot of people have this question. What is the importance of adding the keyword. If i'm already getting it and my interpretation is this. The reason i do this is because not all keywords are created the same fencing company is. Let's say a good keyword. Okay but commercial fencing company. I would label that as a great keyword so therefore the two key words aren't on the same plainfield for me. You know. I may not bid the same for those. I'm might really like the opportunity to bid on a keyword. This gonna bring me a lead that could be you know. Tens of thousands of dollars because it's some big commercial job big huge fence more than just fencing company. Fencing company is very what what you know is is semi looking for a little playpen for their dog or are we talking about a massive corporate job for you know a property wide fence made of metal with all these gates and everything is a massive different so the reason i'd like to add words in keywords in not just rely on close variant is because i want the opportunity to be able to make decisions myself about whether these are important to me in a just. The bids possibly create new ad copy for that. Pull the ad copy from fencing company keyword and put it into a commercial vinson company. So i can mention.

pacers slovakia ben Chris uk chris google
"first page" Discussed on Dadpreneur - Business & Digital Marketing Talk

Dadpreneur - Business & Digital Marketing Talk

05:26 min | 1 year ago

"first page" Discussed on Dadpreneur - Business & Digital Marketing Talk

"Absolutely. And i think with much technology obviously digital some of the sort of like the gen z now. The earlier millennials are understanding more but even gen z. I keep hearing actually had a call. Yesterday was a client and he had his young staff and they were trying to debate. We wanna put a chat on the website and alex. What should we do. Want to ask for information upfront. Which is what you're asking like so like before they even initiate the chat. I gotta get your name full number. An email and the the young staff was saying there was two of them. Said no not at all. Just start to chat. Be helpful resourceful. Answer the questions and then say hey and and again the more experienced executive which was the actual business owner was saying no. I want to talk to people. So i wanna drive does chats to the call center to talk to the sales team and they're saying yes but we don't need to sell them. We need to be helpful. I so it's just funny. Because the the gen z and the younger ones. They're saying like no listen. Just i need things that are automated. And i don't even care if it's ai. Hit and then and then the you know the us older dudes are saying like no. We gotta talk to people. But i think there's a happy medium there you know and i don. I don't think you have to get everything. Because then i telling people i have to gain something or you can't talk to me and that's right. See i think those squeeze pages and taking their information. I is like the mullet. Today's society right. It's it's outdated. It's a- literally outdated and the thing is because you know it's like if i'm searching for something on the internet i there's going to give me. Their search is to give me page after page after. Page of competition right. Now i go through that page after page after page a competition and if the first page says give me your email address and i was just information and the second page says nothing in contact us. Give me a call if you wanna talk about this I'm moving on to page three. Until i see guys. Hey this your problem. This is how i can solve that problem. And here's some ideas you can try right now and then you'll let us know face start. Start out with giving me value. I'm going to number three every time. Because it's like they're talking to me as opposed to and and all that can be done through video. all that can be done with. Prerecorded video you. Hey if a problem. This is what i see because the video is personal it re it truly is a personal experience that they're going through because they're looking at face and they're talking to face..

two Yesterday second page first page Today gen z page three them number three alex
"first page" Discussed on eCommerce Fastlane - Shopify - Shopify Plus - E-Commerce - Ecommerce Business

eCommerce Fastlane - Shopify - Shopify Plus - E-Commerce - Ecommerce Business

07:50 min | 2 years ago

"first page" Discussed on eCommerce Fastlane - Shopify - Shopify Plus - E-Commerce - Ecommerce Business

"Is when we realized that the biggest challenge for us and for our customers is the marketing of this bar. That's into court to us. You know even the accident. Pc experts they have their methods and strategies to bring Peres as otherwise week dinners. Confide them spending money without actually making any says bolster myself other founder partner. We're both coming from science background. Alon or other funder was an israeli defence force computer expert and myself with the strong backgrounds in i might phd in a machine learning and we both also had another experience working closely with excellent. Experts like Here who's got experience in driving. Ppc to election performance results. We realized that we can implement advanced technologies to help online stores and out when competing on the show purrs attention. We then created prototype ran a pilot the some of the users of our marketplace and the results were practically amazed so despite lined with decided if you're going to be focusing only on building this technology is now the only i robot in the market capable of creating and managing ed's search campaign from start to finish even the ed's the creative finding the relevant keywords grating hundreds and sometimes thousands of and thousands of keywords. Ab testing them against each other and optimizing While score to lower the bit cost improve the impression share. Let's pivot over anthony. Because i think we're going to get into some of the call it the brass tacks but getting really into the nitty gritty of the tactical side of the business. And so let's talk about. Maybe some of the assets that maybe i shop a fight brand would obtain. Let's say they're starting out and they're going to start using the okano service for their brand. They can see the benefits of having machine learning and some ai and in casting a much wider net. So does speak. Can you dig into a little bit about. Maybe what are some of these tangible assets that are available to shop if i- brands if they choose the seattle Platform turned a ready. Says a still would once in order to gather hottest google so we provide them with all the essentials. We provide them with campaigns. We provide them with original creatives. Which of course compose as pa that adds the keywords and we will provides whether this timetable to intangible is of course questionable but professional management service. And that's obvious helps them with us gaining And improving their activity and also all the kind of technical problems. Download those facing when they start out on google so making sure the trucking's in place ensuring that new promotions with kind of pushed out to the market setting up a google ads campaign. It is quite complicated. All do it's in any case is complicated. It requires quite a significant efforts in terms of conducting. The keyword research was identifying which pods of your website which nanan pages use lights promotes. And of course you need to write relevance and attractive creatives with their own. Need the relevant interested shoppers jill still so disgruntled to think about and we provide them kind of an all encompassing advertisement package something which we find helps both established those also starting schools gets those google ads and started compete quite quickly in the economist markets. That's gonna ask because. I think those listening today. I think there's a very diverse range of entrepreneurs or some people that say w- entrepreneurs so there like looking to get an into e commerce and they want to open a shop in store and get started so there's those types of people listening today there's also people in the mid market and his people in the enterprise side of the business so are able to maybe talk about a little bit about. Maybe what you believe. The differences are or if there is between maybe a startup company and then establish brand when it comes to a google ads and just new customer acquisition for me. What i find quite interesting. is that In the online markets. Whether you're an established brand new your thoughts up in a play 'cause to be treated as an equal now the good news. Is you want to create on brian. Today is it's easier because a lot less expensive than at say critic brick and mortar bryant. We believe kiana that. Even the newest of startups can compete at the same time as the biggest brands star. What distinguishes Which do see competing against the browns from those regards is the contents of your ads. The promotions that you'll still has an of gosta the space that you take on the results page critical factors which can be the make or break as to went into deciding whether or not you drive. interested drivers tool that uses joe websites. Now once they get your website. It's really kind of your mission to make those converts way expert zip bring quarantine traffic. But it's up to the the storm's whether it's a soft orange published brand to make correa of good value proposition providing brave in evidence throughout the entire user. Johnny now evidently the way is very helpful but oneida of flying and without reasons branston always be striving to create an leverage the name recognition and one of the ways to elevate your brand name recognition is of cosby presence in his many such results as possible whenever a such as made for of product. That's you'll brand is selling and that would be in the niche of the category. You're involved in as part of it and then so you want to be part of that conversation around your brand name and the range of products that you sell so i was thinking about the whole idea of these search engine. Now i'm gonna call it. Sem but the search engine marketing campaigns. Since you're in the weeds a lot with a lot of brands like are there any key points that a brand needs to consider when they're running an sem campaign for experience running on sem campaign requires constant attention. You cannot assumed increasing and running a campaign is kind of one of effort. You need to constantly monitor before of each key. Was that such volume. I bids also the competition. The seats he all the time spent the sights older. These different factors in though if it's even worth while bidding on them in the first place and and more so it's critical to keep testing. He was audiences and all the available marketing that offered by google. Now let's earning to these retailers to be creative times optimize their website and ppc campaigns daily. But you need consider that a large number of competitors. What's it gonna make you'll Click go up and possibly appropriate go down so it's crucial. The campaigns are optimized and i'm keywords and as a coast tested in order fuel brands remain competitive.

thousands Johnny okano Today google first place hundreds both each key today Peres one brian Alon branston Pc keywords seattle israeli
"first page" Discussed on eCommerce Fastlane - Shopify - Shopify Plus - E-Commerce - Ecommerce Business

eCommerce Fastlane - Shopify - Shopify Plus - E-Commerce - Ecommerce Business

08:15 min | 2 years ago

"first page" Discussed on eCommerce Fastlane - Shopify - Shopify Plus - E-Commerce - Ecommerce Business

"Welcome to season. Four of ecommerce faslane. This podcast helps. Resilient entrepreneurs thrive with chiappa fi and now on episode one hundred fifty one. You're listening to commerce fastlane. The podcast showed help you build manage grow and scale a successful and thriving company powered by shop by listen to real conversations with partners and subject matter experts as they share proven practical strategies platforms and the best shop of i apps dow accelerate your business. The time is now for you to improve efficiencies row revenue profit and lifetime customer loyalty please welcome your startup founder. And strategic advisor steve hutt. Today's episode is brought to you by our good friends at veasley you want to maximize the value of visit to your store. Both for the business and for the site visitor. Of course she do then look no further vice -ly a flexible personalization and search for your five business. Hundreds of shop five merchants at every stage of their business life cycle trust veasley from businesses. That are just starting out to establish brands with nine figures in annual sales with vice league. You'll build the tailored user experience by adding personalized touch points at every stage of the visitor. Journey on your shop advice store vice these enterprise grade tools like the one on one real time personalization. Ab testing predictive search dynamic filters and merchandising will ensure that your store visitors see the right products at the right time which will boost critical metrics such as average order value and conversion rate with vice lease post purchase and email recommendations. You will also drive repeat visits and sales by turning one time buyers into repeat customers which increases your lifetime value and your brand loyalty all in the same process. You can also get access to vice. Leigh's best in class. White glove support and customization services use their prebuilt and custom widgets search results collection filters pages. Everything works together as far to building your brand experience perfectly and all of this with blazingly fast response times to. That's don't leave revenue on the table and don't waste the opportunity to convert visitors into loyal customers. Start today in finding how much vic- will benefit your shop. Five business head on over to vice law dot. Io or search for vice lii in the shoplifting app store to begin your fourteen day. Free trial no credit card required. Well hey there. It's steve and welcome back to the e. Commerce fascinating podcast. Now this your first time listening. This is an ecommerce show where we have honest and transparent conversations of obe building an thriving with your store powered by shop fi or shop five. Plus if you're ambitious and a lifelong learner than this is the right place to be today. New episodes available twice. Weekly with your favorite podcast player like apple podcasts. Google play spotify and many more you can also stream a current episodes including very relevant back catalogue directly from ecommerce fastlane dot com now in today's episode. I'm delighted to have to guests. Pretty rare usually my interview shows are usually only with one founder. But today mix. I'd have to one is founders. Emma's offer of a company called. Oh ano- that's okay. I am oh an anthony. Who is the head of ppc's or paid acquisition and customer operations for okay analysis. Exciting dow both on. Today's they both bring unique context to their platform. The okano solution really. They've developed some really interesting. Ai artificial intelligence and technology. And what does it helps shop by brands to get on the first page of google. It is a very interesting conversation. There's a ton of learnings kind of prepped. A few questions ahead of time. I want to make sure that we share the value of the software solution. Why built it in the technology behind it and maybe a few case studies. We can squeeze out by the end of the show of success. More looks like to use the platform. So so i offer and anthony welcome to e commerce battling houston grisly. Thank you for My pleasure and i know their time zones. That's the great thing about doing a podcast. Even though it's super early in the morning for me ish Mid afternoon evening for others but you know what where there's talent and whether technology we have to be there and we have to interview and we have to kinda share the value what these different platforms can offer for shoplifting brands. So let's talk first. Maybe offer can you talk since. It's your company even part of the founding team. Can you talk. Maybe on a high level i about nine mentioned bed at the top of the show but what does okinawa. And what problems does it solve for shop. If i star owners thanks takes against this is a pleasure talking about. I think that perhaps the biggest judge for online ecommerce retailers after having set up their store in taking care of the supply is grating demand. They need to bring in traffic of interested. Chippers that increases in volume and still be profitable so there are many factors that makes these complicated tusk unlike brick and mortar store. Shopping mall where everybody knows where these on the internet. There is a huge evergrowing competition with large number of e commerce retailers in every category or competing for the same audience which is their chauffeur at own strive to get to the first page to increase their chance of making a san and actually be visible for those online shoppers yano as developing a technology. That automates the entire advertising vs on google in such a way did rights lower costs and bitter replacement through constant continuous optimization of the campaign quality score this leads to lower click cost and the for that there are the return on investment is improving and so those are online ecommerce retailers can be more profitable and closer since i know. We're going to dig into some of the specific tactics about how the technology works by know. I ran the tool through a couple brands. That i manage and And i think even our demo that you shared a month back. It was pretty powerful. That there's just there's no way. Am i know for. Anthony is going to get into this. But there's just no way possible to do this. By hand and the benefits of utilizing technology to create vol- first of all to understand the market that you're involved in and the keywords that could potentially drive traffic to your collections and product pages and landing pages. So there's that part of the technology of understanding your business but then the other part is instead of fighting all the most aggressive keywords in these head terms there's ways of expanding very wide with a large amount of ads in google that allow you to be more competitive and find these almost hidden gems as low hanging fruits or people that aren't using them as much where the cost per click significantly lower. So i don't want to. I don't want to take the thunder from from anthony. but so let's maybe talk quickly about the founders journey. Because i think that's one thing that i believe sets the stage a bit so i understand the problem that you're solving and that completely makes sense was talk about the journey of actually wanting to build this technology because it just fascinates me that you know why you'll build what they build so maybe you can share some details on just on the founders journey and mimi what kind of uniquely positioned the team. I guess to have the desire and then have the.

Anthony today google Emma steve hutt first page Today steve twice five merchants nine figures fourteen day first time one thing Four Both Five business Google play spotify one founder Hundreds
"first page" Discussed on Talk Nerdy to Me

Talk Nerdy to Me

05:46 min | 2 years ago

"first page" Discussed on Talk Nerdy to Me

"Signature in before we get into this next few preview subscribed to the channel man. It really helps us out. allows us to do more videos like this. I'm boxing's reviews previews interviews. What have you without the subscriber's it makes it really difficult. So this cry but while you're at it the bill icon that we'd be notified whenever we put up a new all right. This is going probably be a first. How do this again. But they were since co book. This go oh you mean the books with all the tna on the cover. Yeah yeah those are the ones Sadly that's what people remember in scope for is all the tina but they actually have some pretty good story if you ever read the a female centric with their heroes It's more than just tna. I guess that sells books for them. But it's they have some good stories even even this one only has a little little cute girl in the front This is men goat and the bunny. Man crypto zoologist. Then you're gonna like this. It's kinda plays around with law. The other crypto decrypted. The people know about use it. You don't see goatman on the cover but that's a representative of bunny man. Those are both cryptic You've seen before. I'm not sure where she. Tim but anyway you basically you have go man. R-maine goat be confused with demon goat. Man go in bunny man Starch right out. I mean very first page homicidal rabbit with action you find out. He carries an axe because he has policy. Can't carry a gun. The trigger so carries an Phil employed the goat man and I'm sorry the man goat. And bunny man phil floyd they. I guess fill is the mango. He's somebody devil's spawn. Not really sure about the origin on bunny ma'am don't think it really tells a lot about his origin. Start right out into the action and They're killed a bunch of mutale hillbillies i. We don't know why they had some women locked up in a in the cellar that once they release them The women turn on them too. I it's a man. Go in a bunny man. It's kind of freakish them out. Mangoes able use guns in. Use them to fullback Also mango quite the ladies man. He has no problem picking up the women were as a fill. Or floyd bunny man. They're not to hubbub him the They consider him a furry. I don't have man goat and bunny me. I guess maybe just got forever whereas why mango looks more man than goats. So.

Tim first both first page phil floyd Phil tina
"first page" Discussed on Conscious Millionaire Show ~ Business Coaching and Mentoring 6 Days a Week

Conscious Millionaire Show ~ Business Coaching and Mentoring 6 Days a Week

04:23 min | 2 years ago

"first page" Discussed on Conscious Millionaire Show ~ Business Coaching and Mentoring 6 Days a Week

"To <Silence> <Speech_Female> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> <Speech_Music_Female> reach you. <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> Shoot me an email. <Speech_Female> I am laura <Speech_Female> at simple <Speech_Female> success plans <Speech_Female> dot com <Speech_Female> and just reach <Speech_Female> out and what started <Silence> a conversation. <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> And <Speech_Male> if you want all the ways <Speech_Male> to reach lara as <Speech_Male> well as all the notes <Speech_Male> from today show <Speech_Male> go to conscious <Speech_Male> millionaire. Show <Speech_Male> dot com. <Speech_Male> Just scroll <Speech_Male> down until you <Speech_Male> see the title of <Speech_Male> today's show how <Speech_Male> to create a one <Speech_Male> page strategic <Speech_Male> plan. <Speech_Male> Click on it and <Speech_Male> all the notes will be <Speech_Male> there now. <Speech_Male> You know you <Speech_Male> are always expanding <Speech_Male> growing <Speech_Male> moving in new directions. <Speech_Male> That's why you're such <Speech_Male> an exciting person to <Speech_Male> know what <Speech_Male> is your next <Speech_Male> summit and what <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> might be a challenge <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> or obstacle. You <Speech_Male> have to overcome to get <Speech_Male> to that new <SpeakerChange> mountaintop. <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> So i <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> am in hiring <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> mode <Speech_Music_Female> <Advertisement> <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> Building alp <Speech_Female> my online <Speech_Female> course into <Speech_Female> a four week <Speech_Female> boot camp in <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> a yearlong accountability <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> program. <Speech_Female> And <Speech_Female> so i am hiring <Speech_Female> coaches <Speech_Female> to help me <Speech_Female> implement <Speech_Female> all of that <Speech_Female> because as <Speech_Female> true to my vision. <Speech_Female> My <Speech_Female> role is the chief <Speech_Female> instigator. <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Female> That means <Speech_Female> i think things <Speech_Female> up. And i do the design <Speech_Female> and then <Speech_Female> i have people who do the <Speech_Female> implementation for <Speech_Female> me. So i'm <Speech_Female> i'm in hiring mode <Speech_Male> which is <SpeakerChange> a new <Speech_Male> spot to be <Speech_Male> and so <Speech_Male> once again since <Speech_Male> you're hiring and lot <Speech_Male> of people like to get <Speech_Male> hired to do things <Speech_Male> what's the email <Speech_Male> that people should <Speech_Male> send you their <Speech_Male> information so <Speech_Male> you can talk to <Speech_Male> them and see if <Speech_Male> they're right for <Speech_Male> the fit that you're <Speech_Female> looking for <Speech_Female> it's <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> laura at <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> simple success <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> plans <Silence> <Advertisement> dot com <Speech_Male> which <Silence> legs you <SpeakerChange> wanna leave. <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> Oh <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> free me. I <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> wanna have a billion <Silence> <Advertisement> dollar impact <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> <Speech_Female> on <SpeakerChange> my client. <Speech_Female> Though by the time <Speech_Female> is said and <Speech_Female> done when you add up <Speech_Female> the the change <Speech_Female> that happens with my <Speech_Female> clients. <SpeakerChange> I wanted <Silence> to be a billion bucks. <Speech_Male> I <Speech_Male> love <Speech_Male> that user <Speech_Male> or nonprofit. <Speech_Male> You'd like to <Silence> shout out <SpeakerChange> to laura <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> absolutely. I'm a big <Speech_Female> fan of best <Speech_Female> friends. Animal <Speech_Female> sanctuary <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> They have been doing <Speech_Female> amazing <Speech_Female> work with <Speech_Female> homeless animals <Speech_Female> of all <Speech_Female> shapes and sizes <Speech_Female> all over the country. <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> So <Speech_Male> big fan. <Speech_Male> Well you know talking <Speech_Male> about animals. <Speech_Male> I think <Speech_Male> you know <Speech_Male> it's a you <Speech_Male> know. Ninety seven <Speech_Male> years old door <Speech_Male> skate ninety seven <Speech_Male> years old when she passed <Speech_Male> away recently. <Speech_Male> And <Speech_Male> i certainly grew <Speech_Male> up to doris day and <Speech_Male> rock hudson and all <Speech_Male> those things so <Speech_Male> you know what a wonderful <Speech_Male> person and <Speech_Male> why am i bringing up. <Speech_Male> Because she is such <Speech_Male> an animal person <Speech_Male> she was always taking <Speech_Male> an animal's always <Speech_Male> taking care of animals. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> I want to <Speech_Male> thank you again <Speech_Male> for showing up because <Speech_Male> the truth is you <Speech_Male> didn't come for javy <Speech_Male> lar- you came <Speech_Male> for yourself and that's <Speech_Male> a good thing because <Speech_Male> you want to make a bigger <Speech_Male> impact with your life. <Speech_Male> You wanna make <Speech_Male> more money and live <Speech_Male> a fulfilling <Speech_Male> and financially <Speech_Male> successful life. <Speech_Male> We're to help <Speech_Male> you do that. Get <Speech_Male> to that first million <Speech_Male> or your next <Speech_Male> billion. Thank <Speech_Male> you so much <Speech_Male> for joining us. Today <Speech_Male> i look forward <Speech_Male> to connecting with <Speech_Male> you on the next <Speech_Male> conscious millionaire <Speech_Male> and <Speech_Male> laura thank <Speech_Male> you so much for <Speech_Male> being are <SpeakerChange> featured guest. <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> Thanks for having <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> me davie. <Silence> <Advertisement> I had a great time <Silence> <Speech_Male> this. <Speech_Male> Jv and if you're <Speech_Male> listening

"first page" Discussed on Conscious Millionaire Show ~ Business Coaching and Mentoring 6 Days a Week

Conscious Millionaire Show ~ Business Coaching and Mentoring 6 Days a Week

04:39 min | 2 years ago

"first page" Discussed on Conscious Millionaire Show ~ Business Coaching and Mentoring 6 Days a Week

"Posey author of how to plan your entire year on one sheet. You know it's time for the twenty four hour challenge laura. Could you get the challenge today to everyone. Who's listening absolutely is i said earlier. The big secret is to create your vision for what you want to build and you can absolutely do that in the next twenty four hours. I want you to think about how much money your business is going to generate much profit. You're going to generate a wants you to think about how many employees you wanna have contractors if you'd rather have contractors wants you to think about your role in the company. What is the job that you're doing at the all the things that other people are going to do for you. I want you to think about what you're known for which your secret sauce. And then finally i want you to think about. How do you give back when your company is fully going hitting also on all cylinders. How are you going to give back to your community and be really specific. I want you to pick individual charity organization and think about how much time and or money you want to donate to them every year. So that's your challenge. Why love that. And i want to follow that up with thanking you for showing up today as i frequently say they're no accidents. I think you're here because this is the information you need. Whether you want to make your first million or your next million. We're here to help you do that. And make a positive impact with your life. I particularly want to thank all of our listeners fans and friends in seattle washington and said vana georgia and now it's time for the conscious millionaire coach questions. Laura water three coaching secrets. That will help coaches who want to make more money. Grow their business in a big impact with their life. Wanna have a plan and stick to it to pick a target market in dig as deep as you possibly can in there and three find great joint venture partners who serve your target market but do something that you don't so that they can refer people to you and you can refer people back to them absolutely and and laura and i do that because we work in different aspects and so we can help one another and it's a lot of fun when you have friends that you can help they can help you. And you're helping your clients grow as well you know. You've got your book how to plan your entire year on one sheet and by the way we're going to have a link to that on the show notes at conscious millionaire show dot com. What's a book that you recommend for any coach listening today. I'm a big fan of the book profit. I by mike mccallum wits. I think it really helps coaches understand how to spend their money in the smartest way as they're growing a business i find that a lot of folks don't spend enough money paying themselves. They spend too much money investing as they like to say in the business which is usually just burning money for reason and the book will give you a really great structure for how to spend your money. Wisely will in my book conscious millionaire. Grow your business by making a difference. I focused on what i call the new path to making your. I know ian and it doesn't start with prophets. It starts with your big impact because when you're making a big impact one you feel pull to..

mike mccallum vana georgia first million today twenty four hour one sheet Posey seattle washington Laura water three twenty four hours three coaching secrets show dot com conscious laura next
"first page" Discussed on Conscious Millionaire Show ~ Business Coaching and Mentoring 6 Days a Week

Conscious Millionaire Show ~ Business Coaching and Mentoring 6 Days a Week

04:56 min | 2 years ago

"first page" Discussed on Conscious Millionaire Show ~ Business Coaching and Mentoring 6 Days a Week

"And one of the maximums that i learned a long time ago that i always live by instead. It confused mind always says no so people. Don't exactly what you do and what you're fantastic at if they don't know exactly what you're superpower is you have to work really hard to get them to be your client whereas if you've got a really tight niche and really tight focus and you do this one thing it's really easy for people to think of you and go out. I need to hire that person. And i know i'm gonna get exactly what i need from them. I think that's a really good point. Is that the real difference of oftentimes between coaches who excel and really build a business and have fast growth. And those who don't is how much laser focus there. Is you know that and mike. My formula for creating wealth is conscious focus. Atkin going to be conscious of where you wanna go and then just take focused action to get there. You know leaves us and gentleman. I want you to know that later in the show. We're going to have a twenty four hour challenge for you and you can be assured when we come back from the break. We're not going quite yet. We're gonna have the twenty four hour challenge and it's going to be laser focused and that's how you're really going to build. What are we talked about. Some of the challenges of coaches. But why do you think. Let's let's talk about the dire thing. So many coaches ended up going out of business. I'm bringing that up. Because i don't want that to happen to you. You're listening today because you want to grow your coaching business. But why do you think so. Many coaches get started and to three years later. They're they're onto something else and they gave up because it didn't work for yeah i think a lot of it is not really understanding. What kind of business they want to build. And i think some of them leave the business because what they end up building as job that they hate. They end up building. A point of coaching practice where their calendar is just full of coaching clients. All day long and if they're not trying to get coaching they're trying to get new. Coaching clients in it just becomes this endless spin cycle and they hate it. It's exhausting and so they have. They've all the risks of in an entrepreneur but none of the freedoms and so it's sort of the worst of both worlds and a lot of just give up and go back to the corporate world where they came from on the flip side. There are those coaches that never get to that place where they've replaced their former in calm. They're constantly and starvation in stress mode are constantly trying to get people on their calendar. They're trying every kind of marketing. They can possibly try. They're going to every networking event. They're blasting stuff all over social media. They're trying facebook ads..

twenty four hour facebook today both worlds three years later mike one thing one many
"first page" Discussed on Conscious Millionaire Show ~ Business Coaching and Mentoring 6 Days a Week

Conscious Millionaire Show ~ Business Coaching and Mentoring 6 Days a Week

05:56 min | 2 years ago

"first page" Discussed on Conscious Millionaire Show ~ Business Coaching and Mentoring 6 Days a Week

"A this is your host gave kremlin third. And i am excited because of a good friend with me. Today she's been on the show before and she is an expert on one page. Planning helped me welcome her because she is an internationally recognized speaker author and consultant. She's known as the one page one hour breakthrough specialists for her unique ability to simply and easily laser. Focus her coaches to get dramatic results. Her simple strategic plan used by over twenty five hundred companies from startups to fortune. One hundred. she's the author of how to plan your entire year on one. Sheet helped me welcome. Laura posey laura. Thank you for joining us for the show. Thanks for having me. Jv always looked being on your show. Well i'm really excited. You're here you've been here before and your information is just so laser. Focus you work. With a lot of entrepreneurs coaches consultants are kind of people. I'm curious with coaches. You know in your experience. What do you find holds coaches back from really growing their business in my what i find coaches really are lacking is a vision for their business and a plan to achieve it. I e say that building your dream. Business is a lot like building your dream house so once you have the vision of the house that you want to build you can create a blueprint and then you can actually hire people to help build it and i see the same thing with businesses if you have a really clear vision for what it is you wanna bill. It becomes a lot easier to know exactly what it is to do to get you there. And i find that coaches for some reason. Don't start with that. They often just start with. Oh i'm going to be a coach. I'm going to get some clients and they end up playing business. Honestly that most of them end up hating well and and you know. I work with a lot of coaches and i finally just decided on our website at conscious millionaire dot com to describe what it is that i think like you. Hold a lot of coaches back. I think that they get stuck in. What is typically the first stage of building a coaching business. I call that a coach practice. It's all about getting leads in its closing clients but it's not actually a business. The next is when you're a coach entrepreneur and you're building an asset that separate from you that can be valued they could ultimately be sold. And then you're gonna build it like any other entrepreneur. Would you're going to build a business. Let's flip it and say you know talk about successful coaches that really are blasting through building row businesses. What do you see success. Civil coaches doing you know. I think you hit the nail on the head. They're they're building a saleable assets building an actual business that does require them to be there every single day. They're no longer trading time for money and they're building something that can live on beyond them so that they are building that salable asset and they're saying no to everything that isn't moving them that in that direction. And i see this over and over see so many people they they'll oh that looks like a great opportunity and they jump on it and my question before they jump on it is always hayes and in your plan and if it's not let's the pause button for a minute and not. Just go chase after everything. That's out there..

Laura posey Jv One hundred Today one hour over twenty five hundred compa one page kremlin third first stage laura coaches conscious one single day millionaire dot com
"first page" Discussed on Short Wave

Short Wave

09:46 min | 2 years ago

"first page" Discussed on Short Wave

"So today. We're speaking with just weighed in experimental. Physicists at college. London and every night for the past three years just has written a wikipedia entry about a woman or poc scientists. And if this sounds like a big commitment that's because it is. But what motivates. Just keep with. It is the possibility of using wikipedia to combat the bias. In science. We see it in who gets through peer review. We see it in who gets big papers. Cited we see who gets big grants. We see it and who wins awards. And that means that the people that we celebrate and champion incredibly homogeneous and when wikipedia launched the internet was a very small space and it was very dominated by particular types of people. This kind of you know. Tech bro attitude that we still see in silicon valley and places like that majority white majority western a lot from north america some from western europe and those were the first people to start using it engaging in contributing to wikipedia backed according to a twenty twenty study. Eighty seven percents of wikipedia. Contributors are men with media includes wikipedia wick wicky quote a bunch of other platforms and for just this bias in. Authorship creates a bias in who gets a biography so this huge systematic bias against women against people of color against people from the global south against people who are from any kind of particular marginalized group. So it's kind of two things when we have a very diverse editorship and to the things they writes about a not very diverse and this is obviously impacted by the way that science celebrates people and who took about who we define as notable. Right right just to confirm by. Now you've written what nine hundred articles for the site. Oh no no. How many i've written i've written one thousand two hundred one thousand two hundred whatever so sub usually get a bit excited so obviously that's not three hundred sixty five times three so sometimes i get a little carried away but in general i try and stick to one a day sometimes. Yeah yeah. I mean. I've been going for three. Yes so i've done a pretty good job that in those i. We thought a lot about how to ask you this question. Because twelve hundred articles is an extraordinary accomplishment as far as contributing to this encyclopedia. And so the question we're going to go with is if you could build a quarantine bubble with some of the people that you've written about living or deceased who would you include and why should question so so for sure. I'd have to have some of the people developing vaccines enough air. The person who created the oxford vaccine which is is the vaccine this just been approved for use in the uk. A viral vector vaccine is a phenomenal professor. Sara gilbert sara gilbert has had this kind of fascinating rich directory working on the development of a whole bunch of different vaccines that can walk in different corona viruses and kiss kubat. I don't know if you've come across any of your reporting. She's she's a young african american women who is at the national institute of health and had walked back scenes for for sars and mers. So has this really great legacy but also alongside. I kind of scientific research. An extraordinary publication list works to support people from undeserved communities and walks to really amplify the voices of scientists who too often overlooked but also to support young people and getting into an ethic about science. So that people at different ends of that curric- his kizzie is still very young. Where saratoga established professor but both of them have this kind of extraordinary pathway to really ultimately creating the thing. That's going to save the entire world so suddenly. If i if i had according to about they would be in it. I think that. I mean how many people might out in my quarantine babo because i could keep going. There's no official guidance but the often cited wisdom is less than ten. I'm so primed and ready to tell you stories about everyone. I'm so excited about them. So mainly because i have been. She's someone who i wrote about right at the beginning of my wikipedia. A mathematician who gladys west. She was born in virginia in the thousand nine hundred and she went to college. She went to a historically black college and university to study maths. She goes off in becomes the teach <hes>. She then eventually what the us government. Wes she did the early computations and calculations for gps so for all of the technologies that almost everything that we do day to day relies on. Now you know you get in your car keys your phone. You try and navigate took particular location. You use the technology that gladys west created. And when i made gladys west page in two thousand eighteen is really hard to find. Information about. Her book is what for the us government so lots of things are adopted. A couple of months. After i put the page live so after i'd finished writing it and put it onto wikipedia. She was selected by the bbc is one of the top one hundred women so she went into the kind of top one hundred women in the world for any intentional creation. Contribution ebba and when you're on a web page like fat when you're on a page so much traffic and insight people hop over to the wikipedia page really quickly so you could just see the numbers of page views of of the wikipedia. Page going up and up and that meant that more and more people contributed to it so grew story grew. How did that make you feel. I just loved it. I was reflecting on this a lot with with my parents lockdown wife. I kept going live. I kept doing this. And i find nothing more rewarding honestly than seeing other people get recognized then champion for what they've done so absolutely love to have quarantine bubble that so many things that i want us. Yeah and you're collecting. I suppose historical information across different websites and books to write these biographies. Has it ever feel like time travel. Yeah completely does feel like time travel. It's it's so it's so interesting. The things that i find kind of thrilling and exciting now feels such a kind of privilege in a rush to be able to get access to all of the resources that we can do. Now you know online libraries. Nine archives sites archived magazines scientific journals extraordinary places that that turn to for this and there are times when you just feel like fantastic achievement. So so if you see in a lot of the world's when women get married they take their partner's name so sometimes it's quite difficult to find out things about their lives if they got married and all of their publications in this new name. And when you find that one link that one connection that tells you that maiden name and then you can go back and find their phd thesis or who was there examining all this extra level of information. So when i get to that. I'm like jump off the sofer like this is great and say yeah. It's completely like a portal into another world. Right i mean. I've chills just listening to you. Talk about this kind of forensic reconstruction of people's lives and who they were outside of who. They married or other kinds of societal markers of that. Yeah a big part of it. I think a big part of my efforts wikipedia. Who i've met the people that we've trained editor phones is to not just make pages about women no make pages about people of color but to make them as good as the comparable page would-be about a white man. Yeah yeah you've been amazing way of connecting all these dots. I really appreciate hearing that <hes>. I wanna ask you one one last thing. Which is i know that in a lot of ways just talking to you. It sounds like this project is part of such a bigger desire to see science really include nbc driven by all kinds of people. And what do you think it will really take to bring more women and poc's into science so that they stay. Oh such a good question and such a huge one. I mean they're very preliminary simple things that low hanging fruit. If you will know why we don't already have in place you know proper care and support for people who have caring responsibilities so whether that's you know elderly parents or sick parents or especially now in the pandemic who seeing the importance of the childcare and how that skin influence women scientific careers if they're having to work from home but i think more than that we need to really look a scientific institutions and ask really critical questions about why people are leaving. Why do we see. So few black professes. Why do we see so few women in position of leadership. Why do lgbt he. Plus scientists not feel comfortable being out when they're in the scientific workplace and then really put money to and take action to address those individual needs. But i think from a kind of how you get more diverse people into science. I really honestly think the answer is improving our education systems and really support our teachers better. Pay them as well as we pay are bankers so that they stay and so that they create kind of inspiring science lessons. Then go out and got this next generation to come in who keep pushing for this change that we want

cairo npr wikipedia emily london jess