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	<title>Comments on: Web Analytics, 140 Characters at a Time</title>
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	<description>Thoughts, musings, and, hopefully, not too many redundancies on the world of business data. If you missed the irony in the previous sentence, you may struggle with my writing style.</description>
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		<title>By: Gilligan on Data by Tim Wilson &#187; Another Great Web Analytics Wednesday in Columbus</title>
		<link>http://www.gilliganondata.com/index.php/2008/06/16/web-analytics-140-characters-at-a-time/comment-page-1/#comment-450</link>
		<dc:creator>Gilligan on Data by Tim Wilson &#187; Another Great Web Analytics Wednesday in Columbus</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 18 Jun 2008 02:14:44 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>[...] We literally had attendees coming from far and wide. Judy Thaxton-Borlin from Brulant, who sponsored the evening (thanks!) headed down from Cleveland. And we had the entire Chicago office from Resource Interactive. Unfortunately, our speaker fell through due to a scheduling mix-up &#8212; we were slated to have the Community Manager from Bazaarvoice, but settled for a couple of handouts from the recent Bazaarvoice Social Commerce Summit 2008. We had a good discussion about social media &#8212; where, when, and how ratings and feedback work on a site (Bazaarvoice&#8217;s specialty, and Nicole West of Bath &amp; Body Works discussed how they&#8217;ve used the technology, as well as the challenges they&#8217;ve come across in mining the data and assessing the impact of the initiative). We had a conversation about Twitter &#8212; myself (@tgwilson) and Bryan Cristin (@bigbryc) being the biggest users in the group, although neither of us are diehard advocates. That led to the tale of #wa and Twitter. [...]</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>[...] We literally had attendees coming from far and wide. Judy Thaxton-Borlin from Brulant, who sponsored the evening (thanks!) headed down from Cleveland. And we had the entire Chicago office from Resource Interactive. Unfortunately, our speaker fell through due to a scheduling mix-up &#8212; we were slated to have the Community Manager from Bazaarvoice, but settled for a couple of handouts from the recent Bazaarvoice Social Commerce Summit 2008. We had a good discussion about social media &#8212; where, when, and how ratings and feedback work on a site (Bazaarvoice&#8217;s specialty, and Nicole West of Bath &amp; Body Works discussed how they&#8217;ve used the technology, as well as the challenges they&#8217;ve come across in mining the data and assessing the impact of the initiative). We had a conversation about Twitter &#8212; myself (@tgwilson) and Bryan Cristin (@bigbryc) being the biggest users in the group, although neither of us are diehard advocates. That led to the tale of #wa and Twitter. [...]</p>
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