September 15, 2008

Video hosting for Planaroo

I took along a video camera on the last Planaroo trip to Las Vegas, and took some video of the major sights and resorts.

While there's not much I can do about my skill (or lack therof) as a videographer, I do want to make sure that the videos look as good as they can when embedded in the page.  So after editing in iMovie '08, I uploaded files to both YouTube and Vimeo.  I think the Vimeo files look a lot better. 

Here is the same file, on both sites:


 

September 12, 2008

Hurricane Ike's impact on Planaroo's traffic

Now that I'm running this little travel site, I'm spending a lot of time thinking about the things that are important for vacationers.  Weather is a big one for Orlando-bound vacationers.  It's weird to be thinking of hurricanes while sitting here in sunny San Jose, but if a hurricane is heading to your destination around the same time you are, you're going to be very interested in the weather. 

So when Ike was way out in the Atlantic on its path to points unknown in the US, I threw up a hurricane information page on Planaroo and kept it updated twice a day.  I submitted the page to Google, Yahoo, and Live, and waited.

It didn't take long for Google to pick up the page because there wasn't much competition for the term "Hurricane Ike Disney World" or "Ike Orlando" -- traffic surged and I had more visitors in 4 days than I had all of last month. This illustrated a key benefit that the web has over printed and infrequently updated online guidebooks -- immediacy and flexibility.

Once people found the page they kept coming back to the site.  By day 3, 75% of the users were return visitors. I started to see incoming users who came from Google by searching for "Planaroo" and "Planaroo.com".  I hope some of those users come back the next time they plan a vacation.

Although the traffic is dissipating now that the storm has moved on to Texas, I've learned a lot from this experience:

  • Small sites can get big traffic if they anticipate events and web queries before they happen.  Planaroo was indexed days before people started searching for hurricane info.  As a result, two-month-old Planaroo consistently beat every other travel and media web site on Orlando hurricane-related searches.
  • Page titles are critical. Naming the page "Disney World - Hurricane Ike Hanna Josephine - Orlando updates" seemed to work OK.  Planaroo did well in searches for "Hurricane Ike Orlando" but it was always at or near the top for searches for Disney and hurricane information.
  • The sitemap file plays a huge role in getting indexed quickly and accurately.  Alerting Google when the sitemap has changed seems to have an immediate impact.
  • Frequent updates (and sitemap.xml refreshes) really help with ranking, even if PageRank is low. Make sure you alert the search engines to your updated sitemap if they're not used to spidering your site daily.  Inlcude the update time and date in the sitemap if possible.
  • Unusual short-term events can help to drive long-term affinity.
  • My distrust of third-party widget providers is at an all-time high. One flaked out and prevented my page from loading, and another (from a major media company) consistently showed the wrong current conditions.  I finally removed all of them.

September 04, 2008

Hurricane Ike and Walt Disney World

As Hurricane Ike gets closer to the US, traffic on Planaroo's hurricane information page is picking up steam in a big way. 

Most visitors are coming to Planaroo from Google after typing in a query like "Disney World Ike".  We're also seeing traffic from Digg and Yahoo Answers where I've tried to help some people with questions about the storm.

The page will be updated multiple times a day until the hurricane makes landfall.  If Central Florida attractions are disrupted, we'll include all the information on this one page. 

While most of the info is available online, it's very scattered so I think putting it together can really help people who have vacations planned for next week.

We'll also have info on travel plan changes if necessary -- how to deal with airlines and hotels when bad weather strikes.

Let me know if you have suggestions for the page!

September 03, 2008

August stats for Planaroo.com

I'm putting together the September 2008 newsletter for Planaroo's many friends and supporters, so I've been gathering some stats from August.  Here are a few interesting ones:

  • 1,045 absolute unique visitors in August
  • 87% of visitors were first-time visitors
  • 45% of visitors came from Google search, 26% from StumbleUpon, 15% were directly to Planaroo.com (most likely because of my blog posts), and the rest came from MSN/Live.
  • 46% of visitors used Firefox, 45% used IE, and 6% used Safari.
  • 83% of visitors used Windows, 11% used Mac, 4% used Linux, 1% on iPhone. (There are a lot of Windows users on Firefox.)
  • 78% of visits were from the United States.  7% were from the UK.
  • The site's most-visited page was the Space Mountain information page, because StumbleUpon sent a massive amount of traffic to that page for reasons unknown.
  • Only 2% of visitors were using dial-up.
  • Average time on site was 1 minute, 43 seconds
  • Average pages per visit was 3.3

I'm happy with these stats since the site has only been up for two months. It's a good start!

September 02, 2008

Hurricane Updates for Orlando

With three tropical storms with hurricane potential -- Hanna, Ike, and Josephine -- approaching the Southeast US, vacationers planning a trip to Orlando will be keeping an eye on the news to see how major attractions like Walt Disney World, Universal Orlando, and SeaWorld respond in the event of bad weather.

Planaroo will keep visitors updated with the latest storm information including special alerts, opening times, closing times, and service disruptions at the constantly updated Planaroo Hurricane Update page.

August 26, 2008

Online maps vs. custom maps

Planaroo.com launched its first custom map today -- an overview map of Orlando.  Expect to see more custom maps in the days ahead.

You may be wondering why we didn't just insert Google Maps to create a mashup.  That's a great question. Google Maps are high quality, free, and they have a great developer API. But when it comes to online maps for tourists, they leave something to be desired.

¡Viva México!
For example, my friend Curtis and I are flying down to Mexico City this Friday for a Labor Day weekend trip.  We visited the city years ago and had a good time. Curtis speaks passable Spanish, and I've never let language be a barrier to travel. We saw some of the major sights around the city last time, but this time we wanted to stay in the historic central district to minimize travel. After researching hotels on TripAdvisor I reserved the Sheraton Centro Histórico on Hotels.com.

Now it's time to figure out what do to. 

A trip like this one puts me into tourist mode more completely than a trip to Orlando or Las Vegas (Planaroo's first two cities) ever could. Thinking like a newbie visitor helps a lot with feature planning. I know the Sheraton is in the historic district, but I want to see what's around the hotel. The Sheraton's web site includes an embedded MapQuest map of the entire city that's entirely useless.  MapQuest hasn't evolved much over the years, and even if the map was focused on the neighborhood it wouldn't be very helpful. (No offense to my friends at Starwood. I can see why Mexican maps would be a low priority.)

Google Maps is my go-to online map provider, so I scooted over there instead. The Google Maps product was revolutionary (scrolling!) when it first launched, and they are constantly expanding coverage, improving the points of interest database, and tweaking the feature set. Maps should eventually play a huge role in mobile advertising and e-commerce so the investment makes a lot of sense. Google Maps doesn't actually have the Sheraton in its POI database, but a user seems to have entered it manually.  Given the user-provided info Google quickly found the Sheraton. All the usual goodies are there -- map view, satellite view, terrain view, Metro locations, etc. It even displays a photo (the hotel's rooftop patio?) if you click on the marker. 

Context
But what's around the hotel worth doing?  There are lot of buildings, but they all look alike. There are parks and roads, but it's hard to tell what's on the tourist path and what's not. It's far better than the MapQuest map, but I still can't plan a trip with it. There is far more information than what I really need in this case.  And at least for now there is no way to filter out the stuff that isn't relevant for a tourist.

Conclusion
Automated mapping systems are fantastic at giving point-to-point directions, but they provide too much information for vacation planning purposes. 

When you're planning a trip you don't need to see every road and building -- you need to see the ones that are most likely to appeal to travelers like you.  Guidebooks do this very well, and maps are a big part of their appeal.  It's certainly possible that online providers like Google and Yahoo will be able to offer that type of functionality in the long run, but that will require the providers to create a lot of metadata that isn't easy to compile or to keep updated. For now, hand-crafted maps are still the best way to get a handle on an area at a macro level.

Unfortunately, the beauty of automated mapping systems is that they scale.  Custom maps take time and money, so we'll need to be careful about how many and which ones we commission. (I found a great freelancer on Elance.com.) Still, I think they're worth the investment. 

Thoughts?

August 25, 2008

Walt Disney World park and attraction updates

Planaroo.com now displays refurbishment and closure alerts on Walt Disney World park and attractions pages.

Here are the latest additions:

  • The Hall of Presidents will be closed from Nov. 1, 2008, until July 1, 2009.  Expect to see a new president when the attraction re-opens.
  • Country Bear Jamboree will be closed from Sept. 28 until Oct. 31 for refurbishment.
  • Pocahontas and Her Forest Friends at Animal Kingdom will soon close permanently.
  • Fantasmic will switch to a two-nights-a-week schedule in 2009.
  • The Nine Dragons restaurant at Epcot's China pavilion is closed for refurbishment.
  • Typhoon Lagoon will be closed from Oct. 26, 2008, until March 22, 2009 for refurbishment.
  • Blizzard Beach will be closed from Sept. 28 until Oct. 26, 2008 for refurbishment.

August 18, 2008

At long last, WDW content

There is (finally) content on Planaroo's Walt Disney World page.  It's just some basic info, but it will soon be joined by maps and more.  I'm trying to finish up the Orlando stuff before I start adding the Las Vegas pages.

Also, I started processing the Las Vegas video over the weekend.  Here's a sample of the Bellagio fountain:

August 16, 2008

Off-topic: Overheard at Safeway

Little girl: "Mommy, I want some doughnuts!"

Mom: "We do not need any doughnuts."

Little girl: "But I like doughnuts."

Mom: "We are not getting doughnuts."

Little girl: "But daddy loves doughnuts, too!"

Mom: "The LAST thing your daddy needs is a doughnut. You just lost this argument."

August 15, 2008

Back from Las Vegas

Trip report
Thanks to a last minute assist from United I made it home from Las Vegas by 5:15 p.m. Thursday afternoon.  That's much better than the post-midnight arrival that I was originally booked on.

The trip was a success, and I now have photos and videos of virtually everything in Las Vegas that a typical tourist would be interested in. Right now I'm burning 7.5 GB of photos and videos to DVD.  I've been super-paranoid about data loss since 1993, when my staff and I lost an entire edition of the University of Alabama at Birmingham college newspaper (in QuarkXPress format) in the middle of the night because of a disk error. If you want to know what shame feels like, try distributing a 4-page broadsheet newspaper comprised mostly of ads and hastily re-written wire stories.

Traffic
Until recently most of Planaroo's traffic was coming from StumbleUpon.  The numbers looked great, but most of it was going to the Space Mountain page.  And while all traffic is good traffic, some traffic sources are better than others. 

For example, users who come from StumbleUpon are viewing about two pages on average.  That's not surprising because users who stumble into a site probably aren't sure what they're looking for, if they're looking for anything at all. 

On the other hand, users who come from search engines are task-driven.  They typically fall into one of three groups:

  1. They find what they're looking for and leave
  2. They don't find what they're looking for and leave
  3. They like what they see and stick around

I'm happy to say that a lot more traffic is falling into that third bucket recently.  It's still early, but this is a very encouraging trend.

My Photo

September 2008

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