Tag: google

Affiliate Manager

September 28th, 2009

Company Name: Zinch Inc.

Location (City, State): Salt Lake City, Utah

The Opportunity:
As one of the fastest growing start-ups in Utah, having connected over 1 million high school students with colleges and universities nationwide, is hiring. Do you like challenges, thrive on results-driven efforts, and have an eye for detail? We are currently seeking a star affiliate manager to drive efforts in our client success department.

Responsibilities:
- Manage affiliate performance with daily measurement and performance
Coordinate affiliate technical needs with IT
- Measure performance of site landing pages
- Measure site SEO and SEM practices
- Organize and drive e-newsletter strategy
- Manage social media strategy (FB, Twitter, etc)

Qualifications:
- Proven performance in web affiliate management
- Fluent with Google Analytics
- Proven experience in HTML/CSS (other programming skills are a plus)
- Fluent with Adobe suite and MS Office
- Ability to work independently, multi-task and thrive in a fast-paced environment
- Must be passionate about the internet and emerging web technologies
- Keen understanding of the most recent trends around consumer web usage including experience with social media
- HTML/CSS experience huge plus

Apply By Email: work@zinch.com

Popularity: 4% [?]

This post was submitted by Zinch.

Layoffs and Restructure at Google

January 20th, 2009

JoblessGoogle announced on their blog recently that they’ve not only reduced the number of contractors they’re employing but they’re now reducing the number of recruiters on staff by about 100:


    Our first step to address this was to wind down almost all our contracts with external contractors and vendors providing recruiting services for Google. However, after much consideration, we have with great regret decided that we need to go further and reduce the overall size of our recruiting organization by approximately 100 positions. #

Also, they are displacing up to 70 engineering employees by closing offices in Austin, Texas; Trondheim, Norway; and Lulea, Sweden, Alan Eustace, SVP engineering & research said.

In a Wall Street Journal story commenting on the changes at Google, Jessica Vascellaro reports:

    Google spokesman Matthew Furman said the closing of engineering offices in Texas, Norway and Sweden wasn’t motivated by cost cutting and that Google will offer jobs to the 70 employees affected by the changes. Alan Eustace, Google’s senior vice president for engineering and research, wrote in a blog post that the moves would help Google better coordinate its efforts across different geographic areas.Mr. Furman added that the 100 recruiters let go represents less than a quarter of Google’s total recruiter population. “Overall, we will be working with [those recruiters] to try to locate them other jobs at Google,” he said.

    He said that the company didn’t have plans to announce any further cuts at this time. In recent months, Google has taken measures such as reducing the hours of its food service and giving employees cellphones instead of year-end cash bonuses.

Popularity: 45% [?]

Google to Close Phoenix Office; Bloggers Fire Back: Contribute or Die

September 22nd, 2008

The official Google Blog noted Friday that Google will be shutting down their Phoenix, Arizona office in November.

We opened our Phoenix office in 2006 and hoped that it would develop to support many of our internal engineering projects, the systems that make Google, well, Google. But we’ve found that despite everyone’s best efforts, the projects our engineers have been working on in Arizona have been, and remain, highly fragmented. So after a lot of soul searching we have decided to incorporate work on these projects into teams elsewhere at Google. We will therefore be closing our Arizona office on November 21, 2008.

Tirana Magazine adds that “The office opened in 2006 on the campus of Arizona State University in Tempe, just south of Phoenix.” and “The closure is the latest of several: the company announced plans in July to close offices in Denver and Dallas.”

Startup Meme, among others wishes the Phoenix Googlers well, but what really caught my eye was this wry I-told-you-so-ish comment from Daily Hoopla:

“Google made the decision to put their campus on the Arizona State University campus nearly two and half years ago.  …. Clearly, Google was in it for Google, not the university and not the city.  Ask yourself, have you seen Google at local technical events?  Have you seen them contribute anything beyond job solicitations?  Google while we love you, we are disappointed you didn’t make it work.  I think your approach here was all wrong.  The next time you come into a community remember you receive in accordance to what you give.”

I like his clarity, and his comment. Maybe a little bitterness, but it makes a lot of sense… if you’re trying to tap into a technical community, then you need to GIVE to that technical community!

Popularity: 34% [?]

Wild, Wild… Google

March 13th, 2008

Google ads, those little bits of advertising text that litter the internet, have made some people a lot of money.  I run the ads on this site to offset the costs of hosting, but others have made a living off both placing ads, and buying the “little tiny classified ads” from G$$gle.

And, more and more frequently, there are people being tossed out of the Google fun house onto their backsides, banned from Google Adwords, without any recourse, due process, or even any warning.

Even Micro$oft isn’t that evil. 

Popularity: 26% [?]

Calendar: Podcast, Geek Lunch & More

March 11th, 2008

What’s your calendar doing? There’s a lot going on this week:

Podcamp SLC this Saturday 3/15

Geek Lunch Friday 3/14 @ Bombay House in Provo

And there’s more, thanks to the Utah Tech Events Calendar:

Wednesday, March 12
All day FamilySearch Developers Conference
4:30pm SLCFUG Monthly Meeting
7:30pm Provo Linux Users Group – Canceled

Thursday, March 13
5:00pm slc.north.rb Meeting
7:00pm UtahPython User Group Meeting

Friday, March 14
12:30pm Utah Geek Lunch by UPHPU

Saturday, March 15
10:00am Utah Podcamp
11:00am layton.rb Meeting

Tell me about more stuff happening!

Popularity: 30% [?]

Google Talk: Group Chat and New Emoticons

November 29th, 2007

Google Talk now enables conference-like group chats.

From their site:

Just launched!

Chat just got better with group chat and new emoticons

Group chat
Chat with multiple people without multiple windows. Invite your friends to a group discussion. To start a group chat, click ‘Group chat’ from the ‘Options’ menu when chatting.
Learn more »


New emoticons
Go from :) to and start sending richer expressions to your friends.
Learn more »


Popularity: 9% [?]

New Google Maps Mobile Knows Your Location

November 28th, 2007

BlackBerry 8830When I bought my Blackberry 8830, the last thing I bought it for was its on-board GPS. I didn’t even know it had one. Turns out, I wasn’t supposed to know about it since Verizon disables the GPS deep in the kernel of the device. Turns out that even Google was talking about how cool the 8800 series Blackberry devices are, and mine was crippled. Grrr.Verizon Wireless

Thankfully, I tempered my suddenly-burning desire to buy a bluetooth GPS puck or something nutty like that so I could absolutely know where I am all the time.

This was good because Google Maps Mobile has recently updated (along with almost all the other Google Mobile apps) to include GPS pseudo-location by triangulating signals from nearby cellular towers.

Adam Ostorow of Mashable says, “Between free Google Maps for Mobile and low cost GPS navigation offerings from many of the wireless carriers, the assault is on the expensive GPS device makers”

I downloaded it and ran it with some trepidation as other services like this have been crippled in Utah because they didn’t have access to know exactly where I am. Navizon, for example, kept saying I was in Ogden, which would surely burn up a lot of gas as I a m 2 hours South of there.

I was happy to discover that it fired up with my location centered in the screen. Zooming in, I found that it wasn’t exact, but very close. In the picture below, there’s a blue-dot in the upper-right corner. I am about exactly one street South of there at the Borders Bookstore in Provo.

New Google Maps Mobile knows where you are... almost. When I fired it up, it said I was a bit North of where I really am. The red arrow points to its location finder (the blue dot). The yellow arrow is where I actually am. Not *exact*, but but its not full GPS either... and for the (FREE) price, it's a great tool.

Popularity: 14% [?]