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USAFA - Spirit of 76 - Legacy Project - REPORT! Interviews with the Long Blue Line.
This episode I am hosted by Charlie Williams (77) who has me discuss my USAF childhood, cadet days, and decision to join the Navy upon graduation. I also get to share some of my sea stories on the USS Saratoga in the Med and most importantly my time aboard the USS Midway home ported in Japan, there are times in this recording where it might be tough to hear everything so please let me know if it needs some cleanup, which I don't know how to do… Near the end I ask for anyone who wants to participate to reach out. But hang on to the end for some of my fun flying stories.
Kay brings in Charlie Williams and Michael Smith to this weeks show as they breakdown the day that led to their second ABT victory!
Get the latest genetic testing news straight from the people who develop the tests. Charlie Williams of shedtesting.com and Dr. Patrick Macknight of Aura Reptiles host. New episodes go live on the first of every month at 8PM EST leading into our flagship show, Snakes and the Fatman at 9PM!
Get the latest genetic testing news straight from the people who develop the tests. Charlie Williams of shedtesting.com and Dr. Patrick Macknight of Aura Reptiles host.
In this episode Neil Callin chats with Iain Thomas Dixon, Gemma Varnom, Charlie Williams and Tony Eccles from Parodos Theatre Company ahead of their production of Shakespeare's Macbeth, which runs at the Gaiety Theatre from the 3rd to the 5th of April.
When it comes to SEO - Google's advice is that you just need to produce great content for your users. But, at the same time, we know there are techniques for producing content that ranks well but doesn't necessarily match what the user wants or the business's objectives.In this episode, I'm joined by Freelance SEO consultant, Charlie Williams to discuss how we can produce content that ranks on Google but is also helpful for users and your businessIn this episode, we discuss:The concept that every page should have a specific job or goalStrategies for organising website content to meet these goalsHow recent changes in Google's algorithm are affecting SEO practicesThe shift towards rewarding high-quality content over formulaic approachesThe ongoing challenges and opportunities in the SEO landscapeA tonne of resources to keep up to date on the latest SEO trends and techniquesCONNECTCharlie Williams on LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/charlie-williams/ Charlie's website: https://chopped.io/ Charlie's X profile: https://x.com/pagesauce David Richter on LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/david-richter-clickpop/ or www.clickpop.co.uk LISTENSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/2rZo9Z5laMfQ9OsY9OVyPq?si=652f6e969f9e42ec Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/marketing-freed/id1731359462 YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@MarketingFreedPodcast Amazon Music: https://music.amazon.co.uk/podcasts/08eb4a0a-cdfd-4cf7-8801-20f983579715/marketing-freed PlayerFM: https://player.fm/series/series-3552796 Podchaser: https://www.podchaser.com/podcasts/marketing-freed-5619008 Deezer: https://www.deezer.com/en/show/1000659902
Charlie Williams is a 20 year Army Special Forces Veteran who is currently the founder and CEO of Pineland Resources. Pineland Resources provides search and rescue services throughout the state of North Carolina. They also teach Basic Land Search, Land Navigation, Man tracking, Search and Rescue management and control. among a myriad of other things. Seaux Larreau is 27 year U.S. Army Special Forces Veteran working mainly with 5th Group and 10th Group. He has over 30 years of experience teaching visual tracking tactics and techniques. He was instrumental in modernizing much of the equipment such as night vision, weapons, ammunition and other items now being currently fielded in the US Army Special Forces community.
On today's DNVR Buffs Podcast, RK and Jake dive in and look back on a massive weekend for Deion "Coach Prime" Sanders and the Colorado Buffaloes. Since Friday, four players have committed to Colorado. Former UNLV and IMG Academy tight end Charlie Williams, former Pitt EDGE rusher Dayon Hayes, former Ohio defensive tackle Rayyan Buell and former Texas offensive tackle Payton Kirkland have committed to Colorado. Three more transfers and a handful of recruits also visited Boulder over the weekend, who will be next to commit? Takeaways from Colorado's second spring scrimmage, Juju Lewis shows love to Colorado, new college football rules have been confirmed and much more. An ALLCITY Network Production PARTY WITH US: https://thednvr.com/events ALL THINGS DNVR: https://linktr.ee/dnvrsports SUBSCRIBE: https://www.youtube.com/c/DNVR_Sports Get Coors Light delivered straight to your door with Instacart by going to https://coorslight.com/DNVR. Celebrate Responsibly. Coors Brewing Company, Golden, Colorado. WATCH THE BUFFS ON FUBO: https://www.fubotv.com/dnvr - Start your free 14-day trial and receive 15% off your first month! Get 50% off nutritious, convenient meals to keep you energized on jam-packed days head to https://factormeals.com/dnvrbuffs50 and use code dnvrbuffs50. Download the Gametime app, create an account, and use code DNVR for $20 off your first purchase. Call American Financing today and you may not have to make next month's mortgage payment at 303-695-7000 or visit https://www.americanfinancing.net/DNVR. Check out FOCO merch and collectibles here https://foco.vegb.net/DNVR and use promo code “DNVR10” for 10% off your order. Download the Circle K app and join the Inner Circle or visit https://www.circlek.com/inner-circle! Get a FREE Any Size Polar Pop from Colorado Circle K's by texting DNVR to 31310 Find the nearest Avalanche Amber Ale near you at https://www.breckbrew.com/brew-finder/ When you shop through links in the description, we may earn affiliate commissions. Copyright Disclaimer under section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for “fair use” for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, education and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Two parts to Voice of the Valley today. In part 1, host Craig Larsen talks with Charlie Williams and Katie Berasi from the Lemhi Regional Land Trust. They explain the Trust is, what they do, and held a drawing for a new Side-by-Side. Part 2 was the Penalty Box with Fred Snook summarizing the sports activities in and around the Salmon area.
This week, Rhian gets the pleasure of chatting to Tony Eccles, Charlie Williams, and Lorcan O' Mahony of Parados Theatre, and Kensington Art Centre's Emma Goodwin and Callum Rowe, meanwhile Siobhan Flecther catches up with Wes Clarke.
The second and final part of our chat with the great man, so settle in for more great stories from the Isle of Man TT and racing across Europe from the master story-teller, Charlie Williams.Enjoy! Our Patreon Page is live! https://www.patreon.com/join/9993138Facebook: Off Track Podcast https://www.facebook.com/OffTrackTheMotorcycleRacingPodcast/ Instagram: @offtrackpodcastukhttps://www.instagram.com/offtrackpodcastuk/Twitter: @offtrack_https://twitter.com/OffTrack_ Us... IG: @thedaveneal | Twitter: @daveneal | Facebook: Dave Neal IG: @bencurrie61 | Twitter: @BenCurrie61 | Facebook: Benjamin Currie #61 Off Track Merchandise: https://www.hmycustoms.co.uk/off-track-podcast
The first of two episodes with the Cheshire TT legend and master story-teller. A distinguished career that included 9 TT wins, a TTF2 World Title and World Endurance success, it's a fascinating watch as Charlie paints the picture of the best of times...Facebook: Off Track Podcast www.facebook.com/offtrackthemotorcycleracingpodcastInstagram: @offtrackpodcastukwww.instagram.com/offtrackpodcastukTwitter: @offtrack_www.twitter.com/offtrack_ Us and the guests...IG: @thedaveneal | Twitter: @daveneal | Facebook: Dave NealIG: @bencurrie61 | Twitter: @BenCurrie61 | Facebook: Benjamin Currie #61Off Track Merchandise: https://www.hmycustoms.co.uk/off-track-podcastOur Patreon Page is live! https://www.patreon.com/join/9993138 Facebook: Off Track Podcast www.facebook.com/offtrackthemotorcycleracingpodcast Instagram: @offtrackpodcastuk www.instagram.com/offtrackpodcastuk Twitter: @offtrack_ www.twitter.com/offtrack_ Us... IG: @thedaveneal | Twitter: @daveneal | Facebook: Dave Neal IG: @bencurrie61 | Twitter: @BenCurrie61 | Facebook: Benjamin Currie #61 Off Track Merchandise: https://www.hmycustoms.co.uk/off-track-podcast Our Patreon Page is live! https://www.patreon.com/join/9993138
Charlie Williams has a long history in BMX. He's raced for such iconic teams as Robinson, Hutch, GHP, and currently Zeronine. Lately though he's known more for the incident that unfolded at Grands with Harry Leary. He took an elbow to the back right after the finish line from Leary. Over the next month things went viral with Leary's response to the incident on social media and an interview with this very podcast. For his actions he was dropped by Factory Daylight and given a suspension from USA BMX. Since Williams was on the receiving end of the elbow by Leary I thought it best to reach out to him and get his side of the story. He graciously agreed to do an interview with me. Not only did we speak about Grands but also about racing for Hutch and his recent move to Florida. I rather enjoyed this interview not just because of the Grands stuff but getting to speak with Charlie on all things BMX.
By now everyone has heard or seen what happened at Grands between Harry Leary and Charlie Williams who rides for Factory Zeronine. Leary says it's been an on going thing between him and Williams all season and it came to a head with an elbow to the back at Grands . This interview with Leary took place on December 7th while he was driving. I wanted to hear from him and get his views on the incident, the backlash, and losing Daylight Cycle Co. as a sponsor. In the end he's been suspended by USA BMX and under the same circumstances he told me he'd do it again.
Cowboys Crosstalk presented by SWBC Financial services returns to The Star in Frisco with special guest Charlie Williams!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Cowboys Crosstalk presented by SWBC Financial services returns to The Star in Frisco with special guest Charlie Williams! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Welcome to The Day Trading Show. This podcast is hosted by Austin Silver and powered by ASFX. We bring you conversations with the best traders of our generation. No rented Lambos or fake Rolexs will be found here. Grab your indulgence of choice and enjoy a conversation focused on making money in markets, trading psychology, and becoming the best trader you can be! This is the best podcast in the world for day traders so make sure you're subscribed! Today's special guest is Charlie Williams. Charlie is an active trader and head of FX at Westwater Associates. Through his fund, they have roughly $15,000,000 under management at the time of filming. They are focused on trading capital on behalf of private investors and institutions. Charlie is a really great guy and gives out a ton of valuable information for any traders interested in starting their own fund and what goes on inside these types of firms. Follow Charlie on Twitter: https://twitter.com/cwillsmstrades & https://twitter.com/westwaterassoc --------------------------------------------------------- 3-Day Free Trial To Our Live Trading Room on ASFX.TV - https://asfxtv.uscreen.io/ More info on Trading Mentorship - https://asfx.biz/bsc Take the ASFX courses and see an instant improvement in your trading -- https://asfx.biz/education Stay Connected With Our Weekly Newsletter — https://asfx.biz/subscribe/ Connect With Austin: https://www.instagram.com/austinsilverfx https://www.twitter.com/austinsilverfx https://www.facebook.com/austinsilverfx
In the winter of 2017 I started battling depressive thoughts for the first time. I would come home to my beautiful luxury sky rise studio apartment, throw myself on the couch and cry for hours. I felt lonely, empty and hopeless. It felt like Heavenly Father had forgotten about me. It felt like all my friends were having children, getting married or had amazing jobs, and I was getting left behind. I had wasted time, made too many mistakes and that Heavenly Father was disgusted with me.
In 1950, a new word ‘brainwashing' entered the English language. From the paranoia of the Cold War a new type of Evil Scientist had emerged — the Mind Controller. But was there any truth to the fear?In the 1950s the CIA went to an eminent psychology Donald Hebb and asked him to investigate the possibility. His idea was to test what happened to the brain when it is starved of everything that anchors it to reality. Of anything to see, to listen to, to touch or smell.With nothing to hold onto, will the mind drift loose? Could it be reprogrammed?Dallas's guest today is Charlie Williams, a researcher at Queen Mary University in London who explores the history of brainwashing in the Cold War.Produced by Alex Carlon and Freddy Chick. Senior Producer is Charlotte Long.Discover the past on History Hit with ad-free original podcasts and documentaries released weekly presented by world renowned historians like Dan Snow, James Holland, Mary Beard and more.Get 50% off your first 3 months with code PATENTED. Download the app on your smart TV or in the app store or sign up at historyhit.com/subscribeYou can take part in our listener survey here. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In this episode Neil Callin chats with Charlie Williams, Thomas Iain Dixon, Bryony Grant and Meg Walker from Parodos Theatre Company ahead of their open air production of The Merchant of Venice in the Villa Marina Gardens from the 7th to 9th of September.
This episode is available on Spotify and Apple PodcastsIn this "Ask Us Anything" (AUA) session, we answer questions from a Linkedin live about SEO & AI, the state of the economy, careers and more.Topics* Breakfast Routines* Predictions on Economic Recovery* AI and SEO* Preparing for AI and SGE* Eli shares the best career advice he didn't take* The Importance of Working at Big Brands Early in Your Career* Best Practices for Prioritizing and Implementing SEO Initiatives in Companies* Impact of Generative AI on Jobs and Medical Professionals* Building a Nerd Wallet Competitor in 2023* Impressive AI SEO Marketing Tools* Workspace Labs beta and Google's Keyword blog* Eli and Kevin Discuss Marketing Evolution and Tactics in Today's Digital Landscape* Companies Collaborating with Influencers* Discussing AI advancements and future implicationsTranscript[00:00:05] Kevin and Eli Go Live: A Friday Conversation[00:00:05] kevin: We're live.[00:00:06] eli: We're actually live.[00:00:07] kevin: Is this real?[00:00:08] eli: Yes, it is real. We did it. Oh, my God. Eli, what's going on this Friday? How are you?[00:00:14] kevin: Let's enjoy the podcast for the sake of all the people, all the millions of people that are not watching us live.[00:00:20] Contrary Marketing Podcast: Live AMA[00:00:20] eli: All right, sounds good.[00:00:21] kevin: Hello.[00:00:21] eli: Welcome to the Contrary marketing podcast, where we give you ideas you might not be thinking about today. Eli and I are doing a live AMA. Not MMA live. AMA we're beating ourselves up only verbally.[00:00:33] kevin: No, AMU sorry. Aua ask us anything.[00:00:38] eli: Ask us a good point where you can already tell by this highlevel. We ask each other questions, and we want questions from the live crowd that we're going to ask each other as well. Eli, you want to hit it off?[00:00:49] kevin: Yeah, but Kevin, I hate to interrupt the flow here, but I'm not sure that we're live.[00:00:52] eli: I'm pretty sure we have 33 viewers.[00:00:54] kevin: We do. Okay, so they're there on my LinkedIn event. I just see our logo.[00:01:00] eli: It's not a multiverse or what do you call it? Metaverse.[00:01:03] kevin: Can't see myself. Okay, well, we have 33 viewers. Welcome, everyone. Welcome.[00:01:06] Morning Q&A and Discussing Breakfast Routines[00:01:06] eli: Eli, hit me with a question here.[00:01:08] kevin: What do you have for breakfast?[00:01:09] eli: I had egg beaters, cherry cheese, and two slices of bread. Kind of my standard breakfast. I have that almost every morning, and I don't mind it at all. And of course, coffee. Can't forget the coffee shopify, mark. Exclusive for the growth team.[00:01:24] kevin: How about you? So it's a little bit earlier in the morning here on the West Coast, so I had to skip breakfast today. But I did have my coffee, and it's the first thing I do is wake up, think about the coffee, and run to go get it. But let's do a real question here.[00:01:35] eli: Let's do a real question.[00:01:37] kevin: I think we're full of SEO questions. One day we won't have SEO questions. Let's do a non SEO question.[00:01:43] Predictions on Economic Recovery and AI-related Stocks Driving Bull Market[00:01:43] kevin: When do you think the economy will get better?[00:01:45] eli: Man, if I knew that, I would put all my money into the stock market at some point in time. Look, I'm not an economist, but I have very deep insights into a lot of companies right now and some companies who make a lot that make a lot of money. And I don't yet think we have bottomed out. I think we have seen some of the worst B, two B businesses that sell to other companies and that might slowly turn around or at least flatten out, but I think consumer businesses might get hit even harder. And so, again, this is not financial advice, and I cannot see the future. But if I had to make a guess, I think Christmas this year or maybe even summer next year. That's kind of a span where I think the economy will get better. But I can only tell by how good business is going for some of the companies that are working with. And right now, demand is down. Sales cycles are still very long. Revenue is down year over year. So that's my prediction. What do you think?[00:02:44] kevin: I actually think the stock market has probably bottomed out. I don't know if you saw this, but we're in a bull market, which is crazy, because I always tell people, you can't pull your money out of the market because you don't know the bottom until you're months past the bottom. I forget the number, but this financial advisor told me that if you would have invested in the top of the market in 2008, right before the market, like, plummeted. So if you invested in the top of the market in 2008, and then you would have pulled your money out at the bottom of the market in March of 2020, when the market had dropped like 40% or something, you would have still made like 180%. So that's the market, right? So you look at trends and you think everything's terrible, but you have no idea. The only way you can really make money in the market is by keeping your money there. So I didn't realize it, but we're in a bull market. So a bear market is when the market is down 20% overall, and a bull market is when it's up 20%. So somehow within all of this, in 2023, we're actually in a bull market, and the market has turned. So I think the market will probably improve because a lot of the layoffs, a lot of the bad things, things have sort of already been baked in. Whether the bad things continue is a whole different story. So again, the market is psychology of the market is maybe things aren't as bad. So people invest, and there's money being made there. But I do think economically, there's probably a lot more layoffs. There's way too much spending for the amount of bad economic news and the amount of layoffs, unemployed amount of people. I think we're probably still a ways away from there. Maybe things turn around next year when there's an election, because markets are psychology, economics or psychology, and candidates can mess things up, messing around with things and make it look a little bit better. Stimulus might not be a good thing. Creates inflation. It created inflation. But hey, if they stimulate the economy and they start giving that money, people might spend, there might be more jobs. And we go back to those 2021 days, 2022 days, where companies just way overhired. I think around the marketing layoffs in general, there were just too many hires, so companies are just ramping down. I don't think it's necessarily a function of the employees. It's even a function of the companies. They just way overhired, and they need to pull that back. In Google's case, Google had never really fired anybody or laid anybody off. So they each had too many employees over two decades of growing, and they need to pull back. No one knows whether Google will do more layoffs, but they're not talking about it. Facebook continues or Meta continues to talk about doing layouts.[00:05:10] eli: The one thing that you mentioned that's super interesting is that we're in a bull market. And when you look at the stocks that are actually up driving that increase, it's all stocks related to AI. So Nvidia is going absolutely nuts right now. Apple after their announcements, google, Microsoft is really those stocks driving the market, and it's all about AI.[00:05:31] Kevin and Eli Discuss AI and Answer Questions[00:05:31] eli: And that's one topic that we got a lot of questions for, and I.[00:05:34] kevin: Think we have to drink now. Now. You just said AI. Oh.[00:05:37] eli: Every time you say, oh, okay, here we go.[00:05:39] kevin: I forgot.[00:05:39] eli: Here we go. Coffee, a zip of water.[00:05:41] kevin: There you go.[00:05:42] Preparing for AI and SGE: Impact on Search Traffic and the Future of SEO[00:05:42] kevin: All right, we made it five minutes without using the word AI.[00:05:45] eli: It's a new record, I think.[00:05:47] kevin: Yeah, it is a new record here.[00:05:50] eli: The question I have for you is you wrote this series of posts about AI and SGE, google's new search generic experience. Let's cut straight to the chase. Most people tuning in here know what's going on and have heard about AI and Se. What do you tell people or companies who ask you what they can do right now to prepare themselves for SGE when it rolls out to the broader public and for AI in general.[00:06:16] kevin: So I've been preparing for this for many years by focusing on users, by focusing on product led SEO. I was never really algo centric. So this is obviously AI and SGE is an algo adjustment. Well, not an algo, but it's an adjustment in this search layout and it's adjustment of the search page. So my focus has always been on building great things for the search user. So that's just a user that happens to come from a search engine, regardless of whether Google Bing, I don't know, Yandex or whatever. So I think that that is what everyone should continue to do, build for that search user. Now, the makeup of that search user is going to change. And I think the big way that's going to change is that search user is going to move from top of funnel, which is very generic searches, to more mid funnel. And I'll give you an example. I'm in the middle of planning a trip to Europe this summer, and I'm doing a lot of googling most of the queries that I Google, they are bringing up SGE. So obviously that didn't exist a month ago. So if I would have done that Googling, there wouldn't have been any generative responses unless I did it on Chat WT. But so there's now I'm Googling most of the names of hotels. When I Google, there is an SGE response. Now, is the SGE great? I don't think so. When I Google the name of hotel, there's a couple of things that I'm looking for around the hotel. One is where is it located? And two is what are the ratings? So where it's located? Obviously. That's Google. That's a Maps query. And what it's rated? That is TripAdvisor or Booking.com or anybody that's collected a significant mass amount of reviews. Google telling me that it is 176 room hotel built in 1992 and is in some neighborhood which I don't know the name of the neighborhood is not very helpful. However, the fact that that exists, that that content is there does mean that the people that are looking for that information are no longer going to go to TripAdvisor. So I'm still going to TripAdvisor because it has information that I need. But I think this SG is going to disrupt the top of the funnel and that may be a good thing. Maybe it's a good thing that there were so many sites out there before that created aggregated content that didn't give so much helpful information and they just ranked on Google and then captured the click and it wasn't helpful for the user. But by being number one, they got the click and now you won't get the click. So maybe that's a good thing for the users. They just capture that information right away. So I think everything about search is changing and traffic is going to change. And the interesting thing is I keep polling this on LinkedIn. I love LinkedIn polls because I get a lot of responses. Most people in my polls have not seen SGE. Another one I did last week is 53% of people are not preparing for anything related to generative in the rest of this year. And then the insight that I took out of this is that many, many marketers don't know what it is and they just assume it's another Google algo change. This is something I just heard from a CMO of a company who reached out and said, hey, our SEO agency says don't worry about this thing. It's another algo change, we'll be fine. And I don't think that's correct. I think this is a fundamental layout change and traffic will absolutely change. And just assuming that it's no big deal is a huge mistake. Now, will it crush most sites? I don't know. Like, depends on the vertical, depends on where Google lands with it. If you're an informational vertical, wikipedia as an example is getting crushed. I think that marketers should be using this, should be paying attention, and things will change. What do you think? Are you in my Pessimistic camp or you're like, this is Google, this is Google being Google. You don't even use Google. You use chat GBT. You tell me this all the time or even this Google.[00:09:50] eli: Yeah, it's funny. I do think things will change. So I'm halfway with 1ft. I'm in your camp.[00:09:57] kevin: I do think don't agree. You're not supposed to agree.[00:10:00] eli: No, it's just 1ft.[00:10:02] kevin: Half agree, half a foot.[00:10:06] eli: I agree with one toe and my other toe. Tell me that. No, it's it's a middle toe. It's a little longer than a piggy toe. I don't see SG going live in its current form. There was this interesting article that the chief Editor of Tom's Hardware published a couple of days ago fundamentally criticizing the accuracy and information in SGE and two, how it's still lacking references and how much it's copying, how borderline plagiarism it is. I do agree with that argument, directionally, but not to the same intensity, if that makes sense. But I think there's something there, it's in beta. It is great that it's in beta and it should stay in beta until Google has found a really good fit. I still also think that Bing AI search answers are much, much better.[00:10:55] kevin: Right?[00:10:55] Consequences of AI Integration in Search Results[00:10:55] eli: So little sneak peek. I'm publishing this article on Monday, but one thing that I did so this article, the chief editor Thomas Pilch last time is Pilch of Tom's Hardware. He calls out one example which is best GPU and in SGE. SGE basically word for word copies a large part articles by Tom's Hardware, PC gamer and other authorities and then links to them like barely maybe the Corroborated results, but doesn't even give a good attribution. And I tried that same query, best GPU in Edge on Bing in the conversational AI search and the results were much, much better. Basically, I got a very quick list, clear attribution and citation and the accuracy was so much more on point. So, long story short, I don't think this train is stoppable, train is moving, AI is going to go in the search results. The question is how? I think the current form of SGE is too aggressive to go live and not have everybody up in arms. I think we'll see a more toned down version of that. But we still need to think about the question of how do we thrive in this world and what can we do to stand out? And there are a bunch of things depending on the vertical you're in, but it's a new game or 50% of the game is new. Let's put it this way.[00:12:14] kevin: Totally agree with that. It's new and I also think it will keep changing. I think you're wrong about when it's going to launch or what form it's going to launch. I think that Google is rushing to launch things like maybe Google wants to wait a little bit and put it out next year. But every time OpenAI launches something new and they launch something new this week where it relates to functionality and they improved the capabilities of Chat GBT, I think that panics Google and someone's fingers hovering over that button that just puts it out onto the whole world, man.[00:12:47] eli: I don't think they can launch like that. I think they said in the blog article they're aiming for December of this year. They already said that they made some improvements to SG. I think Denny Sullivan, the search liaison at Google confirmed that. But I still think it's way off these references. It's a small detail, but it's an important one. I think citations or references need to be an SG and they need to be clearer than where they are right now. But I'm willing to gamble and I'm willing to bet here. But it's a whole new skill set that we have to learn and some things that I've already noticed. Again, we cannot make deterministic statements about how it works before we see the change in traffic, before we see the actual public life version or the final version. But one thing that I've already noticed is that this idea of third party reviews for your products has become so much more important. And it makes sense why Google is launching product review updates for its current algorithm left and right. I mean, every year you see four or five of these and they are all incredibly impactful. I mean, I'm talking to some businesses who see decreases of 30, 40, sometimes 50% of organic traffic due to a product review algorithm, and they suffer because they don't have a clear indication of methodology, clear authorship, clear evaluation system for products. And so it makes sense now because in part, Google leads so hard on third party reviews for its SGE experience when it comes to ecommerce related searches or local business searches. So this whole idea of a review footprint and influencing reviews and getting reviews out there is just so much more important, and I don't see that going away. That's my take.[00:14:23] kevin: Yeah. All right, let's move on to the next one. Let me ask you one. Go ahead. We're totally switching topics here and then we'll come back to SEO.[00:14:31] Eli shares the best career advice he didn't take[00:14:31] kevin: What's the best career advice you ever got and didn't take?[00:14:35] eli: Wow, dude, I got no warning about this one. That comes out left field, so let me see if I can stand up a great answer that doesn't make me lay in bed tonight and think about, oh, I wish I would have said that instead of this. So, look, I'm going to be going to be completely honest here and completely transparent. Someone who I look up to and still do gave me the advice that I wasn't ready enough yet to go out on my own to advise companies at that level. I'm not aiming to toot my own horn here, but I'm catering to executives. I'm catering to CEOs CMO CTOs Coos C suite.[00:15:13] kevin: Right. Head offs.[00:15:15] eli: Somebody gave me the advice to say, you need to do a couple more rounds of years at a company in house, get to a higher rank, broaden your scope to be ready to really advise companies at that level. And I didn't take it. And it worked out for me. There is an alternate universe where I took that advice and where it worked out even better for me. So I cannot A B test it, but I decided to go out on my own. I'm very happy with it, it works really well and I'm learning a ton. So that's advice I didn't take.[00:15:43] The Importance of Working at Big Brands Early in Your Career[00:15:43] eli: Let me ask you that same question because it's a really good question.[00:15:45] kevin: Well, first of all, I told you to go out on your own much earlier, so I'm glad you finally took my advice. You just didn't take it early enough and I'm glad you spent some time at some big companies. The advice I didn't take was I should have spent more time working at big companies. And I'll tell you why. This came from someone it's funny when you talk to like an older person, let's say someone in there, we're not going to go and blame people in their 40s or being old. None of you are old, I'm over 40. But it's more when you talk to an 80 year old and they give you career advice. And recently we interviewed someone on our podcast who is a couple of generations older than us, does not experience digital the way we did, but he was very insightful and we'll talk more about that in future posts and in future podcasts. But early in my career, an older person gave me advice that I should work for big brands. And at the time I wanted to work for startups because startups are cool and startups are how you get rich and all the cool stuff, work at Unicorns and write good things on your LinkedIn and writing your work at some major company and have some not so exciting job and boring title and boring job. Didn't seem exciting to me. But the advice I got was that I should work at big companies because big companies teach you things that you could then bring to smaller companies. I think that's true. And I should have spent more time at big companies. I should have when I got my first job, I took the first one offering a job because they didn't want to not have a job. It was a big ish kind of company, a few hundred employees. Eventually IPOed was not a startup at all. And then from there I went to a startup. I really wish at that point in time I had gone to a major brand, because there's something about being at a major brand where you learn how those things work. Yes, it's boring. Yes, you're probably not in control of a lot of things, but you see how those things work. You can bring those experiences to a smaller company because ultimately small companies want to be big companies. And then there's the brand cachet. So the company I worked at after that first job no one ever heard of, it was a startup got swallowed up by another company that no one ever heard of. And I learned an amazing amount, but it doesn't really make my resume look that exciting. I was fortunate that after that company I went to SurveyMonkey, which was a well known brand, which is more of a well known brand than it deserves because it's not a huge company, didn't have a huge valuation. However, so many people have taken surveys from SurveyMonkey, just in their mind it appeared like a big brand. For all we know, Pepsi or Coke couldn't be that. There might not be massive brands, but you just see it everywhere. Obviously there are big brands, but something you see everywhere, even if it's not huge, it's perception. So I was fortunate that it ended up being at a big brand, but I think I wish I would have stayed more in big brands and gone to companies like that. And I know we talk about Google a lot, a lot of people will say, oh, Googlers are not that smart. In 2023, maybe in 2005 they were very smart, but in 2023 they're not that smart. It doesn't really matter because everyone thinks they're that smart and that's all that matters. So when they go to their next jobs, when they go to do consulting, I wish I could say I'm an ex Googler and then go and try and do SEO consulting, but I can't. So that's advice to anybody listening that's early in your career, if you have a choice between some really sexy startup and Apple, take Apple, do it.[00:18:52] eli: Yeah, it depends on where you are in career and stuff, but I broadly agree, which I shouldn't.[00:18:56] Best Practices for Prioritizing and Implementing SEO Initiatives in Companies[00:18:56] eli: So I'm going to move on to the other question. I did ask some people earlier this week for questions that I can ask you, and I want to bring some of those up. So one of them is from Clay Kramer. Thanks, Clay, for submitting a question. And it is, what are some good practices for prioritizing and implementing SEO initiatives in your company?[00:19:16] kevin: So the best practice is one that's not followed in most companies, but is followed in the companies where SEO is the most successful, which is to think of it as an initiative instead of thinking of it as a thing to do. So in my career, and I'm fortunate that now my job is talking to many companies. Most of them I don't end up working for, but I talk to founders and I talk to C suite executives and learn about how SEO is done. In most companies, SEO is done as a tactic, as a thing to do. It does not elevate up to the level of executives. There's very little revenue reporting related to it. It's very black box. We're like, well, we don't know what's happening here, but it's magic, and we just fund the magic. And I think that's wrong. The approach is not that, it's this big strategic initiative that's tied into other strategic initiatives and it's part of a product plan, and everything we do needs to have some sort of SEO lens on it. Just like, well, there's the SEO person in the corner working their SEO black magic. And this is a tactic. And that is why a lot of the things that are talked about around SEO, they're just kind of considered tactics. And it's unfortunate that in a time like now where there's economic contraction and layoffs, the SEO who couldn't vocalize what they're doing couldn't communicate how all the things they're doing laddered into the broader picture could be on the chopping block. And I had a recent post on LinkedIn where I talked about how laying off an SEO team during a generational change in SEO makes no sense. That post was driven by how many SEO really, really smart SEO thinkers have reached out to me saying, I just found myself without a job. I was working at this big company, I'm doing these important things, and I was just laid off, and there's nobody behind it. There's nobody else doing SEO. I guess from our perspective as SEO consultants, this is good for us because when everything breaks and there's no budget to hire a full time employee, they will seek out a consultant to help them. But I think the first thing any company wants is a full time SEO employee that owns and drives and communicates what's happening with SEO. To me, that's the biggest myth is that it's not a strategic initiative. It's just a tactic, like build some links, like what we what'd you do on SEO this week? I built some links. Or what you do in SEO this week? I changed some title tags. Like, why? Like, how does that ladder into something? I just talked to a chief product officer at I don't know if they're fortune 500, but they're a really, really big public company. I asked them, like, what their roadmap was for SEO, and they're like, what would an SEO roadmap look like? They have like eight SEO people. And I had to talk to this CPO about how SEO should be important. And they're like, well, we're changing title tags. Then we're moving on to updating our XML sitemap. They're just things to do, and it's not an initiative. And they have eight employees, eight full time employees are spending a lot of money on and they have agencies and a bunch of other stuff. So millions of dollars a year, and it doesn't really tie to anything. It's not like we spend millions of dollars a year on SEO, and here's how we spend it on paid, and here's how it all ties together and CRM. No, we just do SEO. So that's my thing. What about you?[00:22:17] eli: I want to offer a different take. Of course. This is a contrary marketing podcast. I have to disagree.[00:22:22] kevin: Yeah, you just think SEO is dead. I'm with you.[00:22:25] eli: Yeah, I'm post SEO. Now. What is the news? Words AI optimization. Who even knows semantic optimization.[00:22:34] kevin: I don't know what's going on.[00:22:35] eli: So look, here's the thing, right? I think you should have both. You should have very clearly prioritized SEO projects. Where I agree with you, we have to agree with you is that most SEO strategies are actually tactics, not strategies. But what I think makes other sense is you have your top three SEO initiatives, and then you have your top three bets. And this is my contrarian stance here. I think SEO is so much of a black box now that you cannot expect everything to be properly projected and estimated. It's just not possible. There are some things that you don't know will work and will work out, but if they do, you get a competitive advantage. So the only way to move these things forward is to actually take bets. And so I've started working with clients, basically. We did that back at g two, and it worked out wonderfully. We had our big bets. Most of them actually worked out, but not all of them were based on perfect data, good logical constructs and argumentation. Of course, it's not just like licking your finger and putting it in the air and see where the wind is coming from, but it doesn't have to be properly projected and estimated by agreeing on a bet. You basically ask people to take a gamble. You get around all of these questions of, oh, how can we test it at a smaller scale? Like, how can we derisk it? How can we polish the stone so much until it's not sharp anymore? Or the knife, right? You tone it down. You tone it down. You tone it down, you launch it, and then it fails. And so instead, again, I'm pushing companies to take bets, not betting the farm, right? Not life or death type of bets, but let's allocate some capacity on things that we don't know will work out, but have good reason to believe that they might and try it. And that has proven to be very effective in my mind when it comes to prioritizing stuff.[00:24:22] kevin: Right.[00:24:22] eli: It's not just the numbers, but you also need to take a few bets.[00:24:25] kevin: I like that.[00:24:26] Impact of Generative AI on Jobs and Medical Professionals[00:24:26] kevin: All right. Yeah. Let me ask you a question related to this. So I got an email from someone, a medical doctor, a urologist. His profile picture had a stethoscope around his neck, and I checked out his LinkedIn, and he went to medical school as a real doctor. He's panicking about generative AI. Says gen of AI is cutting into his business. He didn't follow up yet. I'm curious why he's bothered by gender of AI, but that question generative AI is cutting into his business and is a urologist. It's interesting. What do you think doctors and service providers that don't provide a traditional service that you would think would be disrupted by generative AI should do about generative AI? I mean, ultimately, I think the doctor shouldn't worry is that doctor, and people come in and pay him to get treated physically, get treated. So cares. But I'm curious.[00:25:16] eli: You basically want to look. Out for tasks that you do completely virtually or completely digitally and that are legwork, right? Like, for example, there are some accounting tasks that you can replace with even chat GPT or AI. Want to be careful? You want to double check this, right? Let me tell you before I give any advice here. None of the technology is good enough yet for you to blindly trust it. Anything you do has to be double checked and viewed carefully.[00:25:44] kevin: Read the rest of the disclaimer. We're not medical advisors, lawyers, financial advisors. Thanks. And this has not been tested on animals. Okay?[00:25:52] eli: But in all honesty, for example, my dad is actually a urologist, and I know that he does a lot of work. What do you call this? Where my English is leaving me, where we talk into a machine and then somebody else types it out for you.[00:26:04] kevin: Dictation. Dictation.[00:26:05] eli: Thank you. Dictation. That you can perfectly replace it with AI. There are even tools. There's a tool. I'm giving you a recommendation right now. I'm not affiliated or anything. They're called audio pen. I think the purpose is more on the journalism side, where you can just ramble and speak and speak, and then audio Pen will kind of transcribe it for you and summarize it. Sorry, I mean journaling, not journalism. However, you can use that tool however you want. So if I was a doctor, I would use that for dictation so that there's not a poor soul that has to listen to it and type it down. And the reason doctors do that is because their handwriting is unreadable. And I know for a fact, but no, in all seriousness, I would use it for those kind of mundane tasks. Mundane, legwork, completely digital. That's where AI can already help you right now. I'm convinced that we will get to a point where AI will help you with diagnosis. There are interesting studies where AI can detect cancer and MRIs much more efficiently than doctors. Fun fact, the best results actually come from a combination of doctors and AI. Not just AI or just doctors. I'm not sure if we're there yet for the broader masses, that might take years, maybe decades. But I think right now the application is for very mundane tasks, virtually. And then in the future, I think AI will flow into every profession and into every job and make a lot of things a lot easier. I'm also in the camp of people who truly believe that AI is not going to replace more jobs than it creates. I think it will create a tremendous amount of new jobs. It will be a net positive impact. Do you agree or disagree?[00:27:40] kevin: No, I agree on that last point, that AI is not going to necessarily destroy jobs. It's like saying we don't want to have cashierless checkout at supermarkets because you got rid of the cashier's job. I don't know. Do you use this? There are sort of efficient, but then you have to call over the person, every other thing you check out to help you. So they're not great yet, but once they get a lot better, it's just a different job. I think AI is going to create a lot of new jobs. It's definitely going to take away old jobs. What you were saying around AI, and I think we should be clear about the difference between AI and generative AI. So AI has existed for a really long time. Like, there's AI that goes into cars, right? So like, obviously a Tesla is self driving that uses a lot of AI. I wrote an article about that recently. I think it creates a gigabyte of data every second. That's how much it's incorporating that's AI. It's like putting in all the sensors. But my car, it's not a Tesla. It's not a self driving car, but it has AI. That when I'm getting too close to a car in front of me and I'm driving too fast, it beeps and reminds me that I should hit the brake. So that's AI. It's just like processing information. So AI in general has been around for a really long time. Generative AI is newer, but the generative AI piece is that users can now access it and we can play with it and we can see how AI works. But it is actually not that complex. And we've talked about this before, it's just doing predictive statistics on future words and I think that is actually not that disruptive. It's just creating answers and sometimes it creates answers don't exist. Did you see the story about the lawyers who went to court with a chat chunk?[00:29:14] eli: Yes.[00:29:14] kevin: Those lawyers should be disbarred anyways because they didn't proofread their work. So I don't think all of a sudden it was like AI AI, but this is just generative AI. It's like, obviously uses neural networks and it's AI, but it is not certainly not taking doctors work.[00:29:27] eli: Yeah, I agree a little bit.[00:29:30] Building a Nerd Wallet Competitor in 2023[00:29:30] eli: But anyway, I wanted to take some life questions because we got some really cool life questions. Thank you all for submitting them. So, question for you, Eli Bujal Patel asks, what are your thoughts on building another behemoth like Nerd Wallet starting now? Would you start a Nerd Wallet like site, basically an affiliate on steroids in 2023?[00:29:50] kevin: Absolutely not. So I think that if you look at all the big affiliate sites, they stumbled upon something by accident and then it became massive and it worked out really well. I don't think you can go and look at something somebody else created and then say, I'm going to make a better Nerd Wallet or I'm going to make a better book site than Amazon and I'm going to sell my traffic back to Amazon. I think if you stumble upon something that there's like an open niche for and you create a bunch of content, there's potentially an opportunity. Again, it probably has to be more midfunnel than top of funnel, but I wouldn't go and say, oh, Nerd Wallet's missing this, and I'm going out Nerd Wallet. Nerd Wallet. One interesting stat I heard around the finance space in particular is Motley Fool. So now it's fool.com. I think it's been around for 20 years. They produce upwards of 100 pieces of content per day. So it's not a great content, but it's content. So if you were to create your own competitor to Fool.com today, you have to catch up with 20 years of 100 pieces of content. That's expensive. So don't disrupt something that already exists that is successful, because you have to outdo them. You have to outbrand them and show up in ranking. So I wouldn't go there at all. What do you think?[00:30:59] eli: I kind of agree. I wouldn't build a copy or another Nerd Wallet. I would be much more curious about how can I build a chat bot that replaces Nerd Wallet? We are at the verge of a huge technological shift that opens up a lot of opportunities. And so instead of thinking about these SEO models, which are under severe threat from AI, I would much rather think about what does the next evolution of Nerdwall It look like? What are they working on right now that I can compete with them on? I would wonder, what APIs can I use to train and feed a chat bot to become incredibly good at giving credit card advice?[00:31:34] kevin: Yeah, an interesting thing is I like this space. I like messing around with finance and seeing what's out there. So Google is they're pulling back from some of those queries. There was SGE on it. So if you look for Best credit card, there's no SGE on it anymore. But I think where Google falls, and I like your chatbot idea is Google can't do that next step. So if you did a query and again, it's gone. Right? But let's say it still exists, best Business credit card. And Google had an SGU and list out like, hey, here's this Chase card, and here's this Wells Fargo card, and here's this Discover card. Those aren't clickable results. So they basically replicate Google in an SGE response. It's not fulfilling. So I still think you go down to like, Nerd Wallet and then you click because from Google's little SGE summary, it's not enough to be like, that's it I'm Googling the Chase business card because that's what I want. So maybe that's why Google got rid of it. Maybe they got rid of it because they wanted to put the ads back. But I do think, yeah, chatbot is the way to go. Get more information. You don't need to read a 1500 word article to get a decision. Again, this requires huge behavior change. But you say, here's me, this is what I want. What's best credit card in response? And then there's your affiliate link.[00:32:39] eli: Agreed. Man, let's do a couple more.[00:32:41] Impressive AI SEO Marketing Tools[00:32:41] eli: Igal staultner also asks live thanks for your question. Igal hey guys, if you're already speaking about AI, what's the best use of AI you have seen in SEO marketing tools? To this day, I haven't been that.[00:32:53] kevin: Impressed with any SEO tool. What about you?[00:32:55] eli: There are two that are really interesting, and I'm probably going to get comments from all the other ones that I didn't mention. So I think one that's really impressive is by Word by W-O-R-D. It can first of all create content at scale across many different keywords and it can also find programmatic SEO place just with a URL.[00:33:16] kevin: Pretty impressive.[00:33:17] eli: The other one is write Sonic. They just published their fifth version of their Writer and I tried it out. I threw it into clear scope and I got a B plus out of it. Not saying that clear scope is the ultimate indicator for great content. There's more than that, obviously, but I'm noticing myself changing my mind where I thought for a long time that AI content is always going to be trash. And I'm starting to actually see counter evidence that some AI content is getting really, really good. So I've spent a lot of time over the last couple of days rethinking what the human contribution to content is and what content even means on the web and for SEO in general. So I would mention those too. There are a bunch of really cool other AI tools. We're using Summarize for the podcast. In part it creates really good descriptions and intros and Summaries. And then one app that I also like, based on AI, is called Poised PO. I sed. It gives you live feedback on how you talk, if you use a lot of filler words, if you say a lot, if you ask empathetic questions, if you're confident, assertive, et cetera. There are some really, really good tools sprouting left and right based on AI. And if you think about the fact that it's only been six months since Chat GPT got so popular, I feel like the next six months are going to be wild and I feel like the next twelve months are going to be even wilder.[00:34:37] kevin: So I thought you were going to say that around writing. I'm not impressed with the writing tools because I think most of them again, I haven't used byte words, but I think most of them are driven towards creating spam outside of SEO. Google just launched some new stuff. Did you see this? They improved Google Lens. Again. I use Pixels and use Android. But they improved Google Lens and got Now Google Lens can detect the skin condition. Just really cool. That's AI. And then I'm in the workspace labs. So there's a new thing in Gmail which is write for me so you can say what you're trying to say. It uses you and all the things you've written in the past to write an email for you. I did test it out, and it signed my name the way I wouldn't. Have a great day. Best, Eli. Right? I don't like that, so that's kind of weird. But again, it's kind of cool. Like, if you want to write a really long email, I hereby resign from this job. I hate this company, and all of you should burn in hell, or something like that. It can smooth that out for you. In general, I like Smart Compose, which I think most people use in Gmail already, which is it figures out what you're trying to say and just finishes your sentence. So this is right for me. Is that on steroids? So lots of cool AI stuff out there. When it comes to SEO, I think the approach to SEO has been more about, like, let's create a lot of high quantity content that may be of dubious quality. So not impressed yet, but please reach out if you have a really cool use case of AI and SEO.[00:35:58] Workspace Labs beta and Google's Keyword blog[00:35:58] eli: All right, I just signed up for the Workspace Labs beta while we were talking. Just Google workspace.[00:36:04] kevin: Lab beta.[00:36:05] eli: I thought I would get it automatically by being a customer.[00:36:07] kevin: Anyway, actually, a funny note here on how you could find out about these things. So Google's product blog is called the Keyword. Have you seen this? Of course. Okay, so it's called the keyword. That's the name of it. It's like blog. Google.com. Or actually, it's Blog Google. They don't dot the blog post right there on the homepage is virtually try on clothes with a new AI shopping feature. Like, if Google had a drinking contest for how often they say AI, everyone would be drunk.[00:36:34] Eli and Kevin Discuss Marketing Evolution and Tactics in Today's Digital Landscape[00:36:34] eli: One question comes from Charlie Williams. Actually like this question. I'm curious to know how Eli's approach to marketing has evolved over the years and what he thinks are the most important tactics for success in today's digital landscape.[00:36:47] kevin: I think my marketing has improved because I just learned more marketing, and that would be my advice for anyone new in their career, which is learn from what you're doing. I think that in today's digital landscape, it's just a digital representation of regular marketing. I love looking at old ads. Kevin, you ever go to museums and they show you like, I don't know, this is what it looked like in the 1920s.[00:37:08] eli: I do sometimes, too.[00:37:09] kevin: They were really good. They did good marketing. We're just doing it digitally. Something works on LinkedIn. Like when you have a viral post on LinkedIn, it's copywriting. So they did copywriting back in the day about, like, the invention of a washing machine or a car that had windows that you could roll down. I think marketing is the same. You're appealing to users and you're tracking them, and you're convincing them to trust you and give you money. Digital just allows you more tools. I don't know that tactics necessarily change. You want good copy, a great product, great message that resonates think the thing that many marketers potentially miss and actually working on a new book on this topic is they don't understand their users enough. So they understand themselves, they understand what they think will work, and they understand best practices about marketing, but they don't put themselves in the user's shoes. And sometimes that comes from, like, being a user, and sometimes that comes from good surveys. I had a friend who was he did market research for Skype. Part of his role was he went to all the places where people use Skype. So we went to India and Nepal and Bangladesh. His job was to not interview users, but he went to the users houses and he ate dinner with them. So props to Microsoft for doing that. Ate dinner, and he learned about them and how they were Skype users and how they use Skype to connect to people. Whatever it is you're marketing, understand the users motivations and why they want to pay you, then don't. Just like I watched a video on how to write good copy, and I watched a video on how to use TikTok for messaging. Ultimately, it comes down to humans buying things. So understand those humans. What about you? What's your evolution of marketing, man?[00:38:47] eli: What's the evolution? So my evolution of marketing has become a better understanding of the right playbook for the right business. I grew up in this very Silicon Valley type growth world where everything is highly measured as a strong product lens, the rigidity of testing, validating, and launching. And I think that's mostly applicable for certain types of companies, usually marketplaces, user generated content platforms. But I think there's this whole other cohort of companies who might be even bigger than the first. They're not able to measure most things. One example are enterprise companies who have long sales cycles, right? I'm talking about more than three months, sometimes six months, or even a year, who sell highly priced software to other enterprises. And they just need to play by different playbooks. They're not going to be able to test and validate everything as much as these other companies. For them, it's much more a before and after type of situation. So my lens has become more refined based on the business that I'm working with and picking the right playbook for the right business. I think we're getting really close on time.[00:39:55] Is SEO Dead?[00:39:55] eli: Let's do one more short question. E G live?[00:39:59] kevin: Is SEO dead? Sorry, that's not short. It's a short question. That's the long answer.[00:40:05] eli: It's fair. You caught me on this one.[00:40:07] kevin: You know what?[00:40:08] eli: Yes and no. I know it's not the answer that everybody wants, but SEO in its old form, I think, is going away. And out of it comes a new type of SEO that has maybe that has a core, maybe 50% of it is similar to what we did before, and that 50% is different. And I'm personally very excited. We're basically coming out of an exploit cycle and we're going back into an explore cycle and I'm all here for it. So I would say SEO is dead. 50%. That's my quick answer.[00:40:36] kevin: What do you think? No, it's not dead at all. It just changes. SEO doesn't die until search engines die. And I don't think search engines will die like Chat, GBT and generate. AI doesn't replace search, it just changes outwork. It's like saying SEO is dead because featured Snippets and Knowledge graph, I mean, I think links are going to probably go away in some way or another because links matter less in generative AI. However, brand matters and links and mentions and brand visibility matters. So just change what you're doing and change where you're going. Obviously, all those useless websites with guest posts that don't exist, those were a waste of money to begin with. So that probably have to go in. That's my quick answer. We'll do a whole Is SEO dead episode once it dies. So stay tuned.[00:41:22] Kevin and Eli's Final Conversation Topic[00:41:22] eli: Eli, you got one last one. All right, you did it in this one. Sorry, it's my turn.[00:41:27] kevin: Last one. Quick. Short one.[00:41:29] eli: Short one.[00:41:29] kevin: Now I have to pick.[00:41:30] Fears and Questions Clients Have About the Impact of Generative AI[00:41:30] eli: What is the biggest question that all your clients asking right now? What are some common questions that we haven't covered yet that you see bubbling up amongst your clients?[00:41:41] kevin: Do you have a discount available for startups? No, I don't, because I need to say bandwidth for the people that don't ask for a discount. I'd say a lot of companies are really freaked out by genera AI. I'm hearing it everywhere. If there's any listeners on the podcast that want us to do, like, a deep dive at your company on what we see in genera AI and our predictions, because I don't think anybody really knows we're available for that, we'll put a link in the show notes to how to contact us for that. Everyone's freaked out because there's change on the horizon. It's the same way when presidential elections happen, investment banks put out their statements of like, this is what we think Trump would do as president. This is what we think Biden would do as president. We're just prepared for all eventualities. I think when it comes to generative AI, it's really unpredictable and it's unknowable. So you have pessimists like me saying, everything's changing. You have optimists like Kevin. They say, don't worry, just keep doing what you're doing. And they don't know. They don't know. Do they hire for it? Do they fire for it? How do they plan? How do they message things to investors and board members and all stakeholders? So that's the biggest what about you? What's your biggest question?[00:42:51] eli: Man it's also related to AI, but I'm trying to not make it related because we're talking about this so much and I feel like I'm just going in circles here.[00:42:59] Companies Collaborating with Influencers like Sports Teams[00:42:59] eli: So the other really big question is what should we invest in that we haven't invested in right now? One really cool thing that I'm seeing is companies collaborating with influencers, more like sports teams. They're almost on full time payroll. Influencers, that is, for specific companies, that creates a lot of amazing content and they build real audiences, they build great engagement. And it's this amazing partnership between people who stand out in a space or have a lot of experience and expertise in a space and companies who get a real benefit from them. It's a great win win mix. If I had to tie that back to the whole AI discussion. We've seen this new Perspectives tabs roll out on Google, and I personally have a huge wish and a huge hope that it will be a new ground where influencers or creators, whatever you want to call them, can get a lot more traffic and a stronger voice. And it's kind of a way for companies to find a new playing field and forge these win win situations together with influencers and audiences. So I'm going to keep it to that one.[00:43:59] kevin: Love it.[00:44:00] Discussing AI advancements and future implications[00:44:00] kevin: All right, well, thank you, everyone. This has been epic. First time of recording live. Let us know if you want to do this again. And for everyone else that didn't record Live, well, follow us on LinkedIn and, you'll know, or listen to us live, follow us on LinkedIn, you'll know, next time we do it. That's a wrap.[00:44:15] eli: Thank you, Eli, for being a good thought partner, as always. And thank you all for tuning in. Happy weekend, and we'll hear you next week.[00:44:20] kevin: Thank you.[00:44:21] The Contrarian Marketing Podcast: Exploring Unconventional Business Strategies[00:44:21] eli: And now it's your turn. Head over to Contrarianmarketingpodcast.com and subscribe to the free weekly newsletter to get a summary of today's episode, key takeaways and community content. And while you're there, go to today's episode and leave your opinion in the comments. We'll feature the best thoughts in the newsletter and on the podcast. Also, if you like today's episode, please feel free to leave five stars on Spotify and Apple podcasts or wherever you listen to podcast. As always. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.contrarianmarketingpodcast.com
Sixty years ago this summer, Ironton, Ohio, native son Bobby Bare started work on his debut album for RCA Victor. The LP's title track — “500 Miles Away from Home” — would turn out to be one of the best-selling singles in the 88-year-old Bare's long career.Composition of the song is generally credited to folksinger Hedy West, who is said to have put it together from fragments of a melody she heard her uncle sing to her back in her native Georgia. One of Hedy's influences was a traditional tune called “Railroaders' Lament.”In 1961 West copyrighted the song, which many of us first heard the following year as the second track on Peter, Paul and Mary's wildly popular self-titled debut album for Warner Brothers.Enter Bobby BareIn 1953, an 18-year-old Bobby Bare left Ohio, getting a ride to California and playing music along the way to earn tips to help pay for the gas. In Los Angeles, Bobby struggled to break into country music or rock and roll as a performer and/or songwriter. He had little luck with his recordings, finding more success playing in nightclubs, until he was drafted into the Army in 1959.After his military service, Bare's big break came in 1962 when Chet Atkins signed him to record country music for RCA. His first single for the label was 1962's "Shame On Me,” followed by the Dennis Dill/Mel Tillis composition, “Detroit City,” which charted and won him a Grammy for best country & western recording of the year.It was after that Grammy that Bare recorded his 500 Miles Away from Home album.For the title track, Bare and his friend Charlie Williams wrote new lyrics to the melody that he characterized as “an old campfire song.” Years later, talking with interviewer Gary James, Bare remembered creating his version when he was living in North Hollywood down the street from Glen Campbell, his sometimes drinking buddy.“I was driving back from San Diego one night,” Bare told James, “and I was surfin' the radio and I heard Peter, Paul And Mary singing the old campfire version of ‘500 Miles' and I thought, boy, that's great! “Soon as I got home I got Glen's album and it was an instrumental. There were no lyrics. I called Charlie Williams up. I said, ‘Hey Charlie, come over and let's write some lyrics to this.'”“500 Miles” put Bobby Bare firmly on the musical map. His version became a Top 10 hit on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100, as well as a Top 5 hit on both the Country and Adult Contemporary charts. The Song's Incredible Legs“500 Miles” has been extraordinarily popular with singers all around the world. In America, it was covered by everyone from the Kingston Trio and the Country Gentlemen to Sonny & Cher, the Brothers Four and Elvis to Reba McEntire, Jackie DeShannon and Johnny Rivers.Beyond these shores, versions of “500 Miles” have been recorded in Albanian, Assamese, Bengali, Chinese, Czech, Finnish, French, Germany, Hebrew, Hindi, Indonesian, Japanese, Slovenian, Spanish and Vietnamese. Whew!Our Take on the TuneWhen we play our monthly gig at Sal's Speakeasy in Ashland, Ky., we often like to have a salute to local folks who've made it big in music. For instance, we regularly perform “When You Say Nothing at All,” the song generally associated with Kentucky's late Keith Whitley.At our next show, we intend to offer “500 Miles” as a tribute to Bobby Bare and to all our Ironton, Ohio, friends.Incidentally, “500 Miles” also has a tiny West Virginia connection too. Composer Hedy West was the daughter of Don West, Georgia poet and coal mine labor organizer of the 1930s.Don co-founded the famed Highlander Folk School in New Market, TN, and later ran the Appalachian South Folklife Center in Pipestem in West Virginia's Summers County. Don died in Charleston, WV, in 1992 at age 86. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit 1937flood.substack.com
In this episode we bring to you a special guest and long time friend, Charlie Williams. Charlie is an expert in the corporate and sales world. We will discuss stories, strategy, the ups and downs of sales, and much more. If you enjoyed this episode check out the rest at the links below!https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/ideadrop-podcast/id1620230538https://www.ideadroppodcast.comhttps://www.youtube.com/channel/UCggAQMJqc-mekAAquha5Q8QExecutable frameworks to help you become 10X more consistent in setting up and building outbound and inbound funnels that directly contribute to pipeline development. They Got Acquired They Got Acquired is the first to build an independent database of online business acquisitions between $100K-$50M
In this episode Neil Callin chats with Charlie Williams and Alex Armstrong from Parodos Theatre Company as they get ready to launch the audition material for their July 2023 production of Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice.
In a world of increased content scrutiny, how do we effectively manage our content portfolio? Even at a basic level, content inventories are great to understand the challenges your site faces. In this episode, Charlie Williams shares 5 ways to use content inventories to improve your site's content quality, including: 1. Understanding how much content you have and how popular it is 2. Checking what Google has indexed at scale with the URL Inspection API & log file data 3. Finding hidden sections of poor quality 4. Auditing on-page SEO elements 5. Scraping key page attributes For more Episodes of the In Search SEO podcast: https://www.rankranger.com/blog/podcasts Rank Ranger: https://www.rankranger.com/ Start a free Rank Ranger trial: https://www.rankranger.com/free-trial
It's a two part Voice of the Valley today. In part one, Host Will Rasmussen talks with Taylor Smith from the Lemhi County 4-H clubs and their upcoming open house. In the second part Will talks with Charlie Williams and Shelley Lowder from the Salmon School Garden.
LARKHALL, the performance alias of Charlie Williams is a composer, a pianist and also a creative coder. Charlie earned an M.Phil. at the University of Cambridge's Centre for Music and Science, where he developed SingSmash, a game you play by singing. That landed him a job helping to develop audio-recognition app SHAZAM. Topics:Why LarkhallEarly SHAZAMSoftware & App developmentPhysical and Location transitionBuilding a network and teamOpen source and Rework cultureDisklavier™ Yamaha acoustic pianoVisual representations of musicChallenges and constraints of technologyPre-Order the new album and see LARKHALL on TourTaking audio and visual compositions on tourSupport LARKHALL on Tour BUY TICKETS HERE: https://www.larkhall.org/Challenges of live performances Episode References:Disklavier™: https://uk.yamaha.com/en/products/musical_instruments/pianos/disklavier/index.htmlProcessing!: https://processing.org/OpenFrameworks: https://openframeworks.cc/TouchDesigner: https://derivative.ca/Reaction-Diffusion Model: https://www.sciencedirect.com/topics/engineering/reaction-diffusion-model. LARKHALL: https://www.instagram.com/larkhallmusic/https://www.facebook.com/larkhallmusichttps://twitter.com/larkhallhttps://www.tiktok.com/@larkhallmusic YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/LarkhallMusicBandcamp: https://larkhall.bandcamp.com/BUY TICKETS HERE: https://www.larkhall.org/ Lou: https://www.instagram.com/loutemlett/https://www.linkedin.com/in/louisetemlett/ LOUTECH Learning - find out more: https://www.loutech.co.uk/ MUSIC CREDIT:ARTIST: LARKHALL | ALBUM: Say You're With MeTRACK: Between Light and Leaveshttps://larkhall.bandcamp.com/ See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
In this edition of the podcast, Anthony is joined by former Tar Heel receivers coach Charlie Williams to talk about the greatness of Hakeem Nicks and Dwight Jones, the importance of guys like Brandon Tate and Brooks Foster and the experiences that he has had in the NFL with the Buccaneers and Colts. If you or someone you know has a gambling problem, crisis counseling and referral services can be accessed by calling 1-800-GAMBLER (1-800-426-2537) (IL/IN/MI/NJ/PA/WV/WY), 1-800-NEXT STEP (AZ), 1-800-522-4700 (CO/NH), 888-789-7777/visit http://ccpg.org/chat (CT), 1-800-BETS OFF (IA), 1-877-770-STOP (7867) (LA), 877-8-HOPENY/text HOPENY (467369) (NY), visit OPGR.org (OR), call/text TN REDLINE 1-800-889-9789 (TN), or 1-888-532-3500 (VA). 21+ (18+ WY). Physically present in AZ/CO/CT/IL/IN/IA/LA/MI/ /NJ/NY/ PA/TN/VA/WV/WY only. Min. $5 deposit required. Eligibility restrictions apply. See http://draftkings.com/sportsbook for details.
USAFA - Spirit of 76 - Legacy Project - REPORT! Interviews with the Long Blue Line.
This episode you meet Charlie Williams, an F-4 and F-16 pilot on active duty, a Delta pilot for over 18 years, a high school forensics (debate) and drama coach/teacher, and currently published author. Charlie was in 5 squadrons, 5 groups, has 5 Polaris yearbooks, and is working in his 4th career. He is quite the character and has a bunch of wisdom to share.
5 AHS seniors will share their thoughts about their years in school. 3 Valedictorians, Grace Harden, Emily Carpenter, Rocky Rub and 2 Salutatorians, Nevaeh Miehe and Charlie Williams have much to say.
The AGC Experience podcast features our AGC Talks speakers sharing their message in an audio podcast that you can listen to from anywhere. Listen in to our recent AGC Talks featured guest. Listen as Charlie Williams shares Finding your niche. The difficulties of transition for veterans a motivational talk with AGC Indiana July 2021. There are many challenges facing veterans as they move back into society. Hear one post-9/11 veteran's story of transition and finding his purpose again. Learning Objectives: Difficulties in transition for veterans Fighting stigma Veteran concerns Why a veteran can be a force multiplier How you can help Speaker Bio: Charlie Williams is the Program Director of Warrior Reunion Foundation. He is a Marine veteran and former police officer. He holds degrees in Aviation Technology and Aviation Maintenance and is a guest lecturer for the Military Family Research Institute at Purdue University, providing instruction on military culture and transition difficulties to behavioral health clinicians. AGC Accelerated Global Connections is a business networking organization that helps connect business professionals globally through in person networking, motivational talks, and online social profiles. To learn more about AGC and membership in this growing organization. Visit https://www.joinagc.com/
In this episode Neil Callin chats with Charlie Williams, Peter Wicks and Lisa Smith from Parodos Theatre Company ahead of their debut production of Much Ado About Nothing, which is playing at The King's Court Theatre from the 7th to 9th April 2022.
A talk programme dedicated to films and television shows, presented by Marcus Ako, Laura Sampson and David Campbell, on Resonance 104.4FM at 7pm (UK) on Fridays. Podcast episodes available from Monday morning at 00:30 (UK) #ItsAllAboutThe3Way #ShootTheBreezeShow #TheIdiotOnTheWritersBlock Reach us on Twitter, on Facebook, email shootthebreezonresonance104.4@gmail.com or Instagram In the 11th season's fifth episode, Marcus and Producer Dave jump into more interviews with filmmakers from 2022's run of the Paris Intl Film Festival. They speak with the following filmmakers: Alan Cross For The Love of Noise Konstantin Korenchuk and Simon Pilarski 4 Tage bis zur Ewigkeit Yohann Grignou and Antoine Breuil The Underground Sistine Chapel Charlie Williams and Theodore Bouloukos Front Stage and Back
On the tenth episode of "The Texas Private School Podcast", host Walker Lott interviews recruiting coordinators at Argyle Liberty in Ross Roby, Plano John Paul II's Charlie Williams, and Parish Episcopal's Broderick Sublet. This is the second of two episodes talking about recruiting for the future classes, if you haven't seen the first one check it out! As the award show is now completed, be on the lookout for that later this week! Walker Lott https://twitter.com/walker_lott https://www.instagram.com/_walkerlott_/ Wes Tolleson https://twitter.com/tolleson_7 https://www.instagram.com/tolleson.7/ Ryan Schroeder https://twitter.com/RyanSchroeder25 https://www.instagram.com/ryan.schroe...
Charlie Williams, COO of Armed Services YMCA, joins Dane Neal, in for Steve Bertrand, on Chicago's Afternoon News to talk about their newest program Operation Ride Home and how Jack Daniel's came to be involved. ASYMCA offers programs for child care, mentoring and food support to strengthen military families.
Charlie Williams, COO of Armed Services YMCA, joins Dane Neal, in for Steve Bertrand, on Chicago's Afternoon News to talk about their newest program Operation Ride Home and how Jack Daniel's came to be involved. ASYMCA offers programs for child care, mentoring and food support to strengthen military families.
Are you still trying to find your place in the world? You are not alone, Veterans all around the United States are in the same spot as you. We leave the Military behind, but we also feel we leave ourselves behind in the process, and that journey to get direction after is the real front lines of a transition effort. Today, I am talking with Charlie Williams, a part of an organization called Warriors Reunion Foundation. They bring together combat units who served together to rekindle the friendships that were left behind in time. It's a process that helps us reconnect with the good in our lives, the lives we protected, the lives we saved, and remember who has your six. Charlie served in the Marine Corps from 2003-2007, has served in law enforcement, and now is the Program Manager for the foundation. This is a special interview in the history books as we dive into several topics that hit the core struggle that Military Dads are faced with. Topics Covered: Finding service after serving Why reuniting units is important Finding your place in the world after serving Integrating your work with your parenting Demonstrating grit to your kids How to pass life lessons onto our kids How to connect with guest https://www.linkedin.com/in/charles-williams-b97795193 (LinkedIn) https://www.facebook.com/WarriorReunion/ (Facebook) https://www.instagram.com/warriorreunionfoundation/ (Instagram) https://www.facebook.com/WarriorReunion/ (Twitter) https://www.warriorreunionfoundation.org/ (Website) Thank you for Listening to the Episode! Be sure to subscribe on https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/the-military-veteran-dad-podcast/id1448127126 (Apple), https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6Ly9taWxpdGFyeXZldGVyYW5kYWQubGlic3luLmNvbS9yc3M (Google), https://open.spotify.com/show/2I1mwoZ0VaR9tLdCwwxsg2 (Spotify), or wherever you get your podcasts. And feel free to drop us a line at ben@militaryveterandad.com. Follow Ben on Social Media to stay up to date on Military Veteran Dad – https://www.facebook.com/benjamin.killoy (Facebook) | https://twitter.com/BenKilloy (Twitter) | https://www.instagram.com/militaryveterandad/?hl=en (Instagram) | https://www.linkedin.com/in/ben-killoy/ (LinkedIn) For help, resources, and community support, please join the https://www.facebook.com/groups/militaryveterandad (Military Veteran Dad) Facebook Group. Be sure to check out all the http://www.freedadcourse.com/ (free courses) available to help you come home to a better tomorrow. Heads Up: My episodes may contain affiliate links! If you buy something through one of those links, you won't pay a penny more, but we'll get a small commission, which helps keep the lights on. Thanks! Support this podcast
Welcome to the rebrand. We at Fuzzy Dice really don't care about helping others as we can barely help ourselves so we are now WAG+EW. In this proper episode we delve into the Jim Davidson deconstruction with a side order of Morrissey, Charlie Williams and a whole host of nonsense. Get stuck in as it's crap weather and you will be staying in. Also we accidentally ended up creating a pitch of a brand new sitcom that will be pitched to Channel 5. ShownotesFirstly start with Jm Davidson's website. A love letter to his fanbase. Wel, ones who have access to the internet (outside of prison) https://www.jimdavidson.org.uk/The strangest revelation is that everyone's favourite nationalist (and possible unconfirmed racist vegetarian) performs at Las Vegas. Rather na sell out, right? Here is actual news that he did perform some Smiths songs there https://www.nme.com/news/music/morrissey-las-vegas-residency-setlist-footage-photos-smiths-songs-303574170's black comic, Charlie Willims, was a controversial figure in the comedy circuit so read his story herehttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charlie_Williams_(comedian)If you are truly mental and have never heard of Squid Game you should be ashamed. First read it here and then watch the series:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Squid_Game
Michelle James looks after Spotlight this week, with a trip to Port Erin to check out new art and community hub 'Artea'; while she's there, she also meets the artists Clare Payne and Nathan Cardy who are behind the latest exhibition. She also catches up with Charlie Williams and Alex Armstrong, the theatre loving pals who are behind new classic company 'Parodos', who are starting their run with Shakespeare in the Spring.
Silver Quintette - "Sinner's Crossroads" Mighty Travelneers - "Liar" Rev Campbell and His Wonder Boy - "No Room For Liars" Bishop Manning and Family - "Talk About Trouble" Blair Gospel Singers - "I've Got Heaven On My Mind" Blind Roosevelt Graves & Brother - "I'll Be Rested When The Roll Is Called" White Rose Quartet - "I Want To Be Just Like Him" [Recorded by Steve Grauberger and Matt Arnett, 2003.] Charlie Williams and the Five Singing Sons - "Through The Years" Five Blind Boys of Alabama - "Without The Help of Jesus" Helen Harvey of Aurelian Springs - "(Don't You Wait Till Tomorrow) Too Late" Universal Jubileers - "It Ain't Right" Sons of Faith - "What You Gonna Do" Sensational Jubineer Gospel Singers - "I'm Going To Pray" Brother Huggins and the Heavenly Echoes - "Jesus Loves Me" Sensational Harmoniers - "Hard To Get Along" Friendly Seven of Cleveland, OH. - "Come On Up To Bright Glory" Crusaders - "I've Got Him" - I Thank You Lord Five Great Wonders - "I've Got To Make The Journey" https://www.wfmu.org/playlists/shows/109230
As JMU exits the Colonial Athletic Association, what's left for William & Mary? Brendan, Cameron and John attempt to answer that question as well as anybody can in the constantly changing landscape (0:00). Should the Tribe consider a switch in conference affiliation? What are the pros and cons of staying in the CAA?Then, we move on to talk a little about recruiting (22:08). What do we see in recent Tribe MBB commit Charlie Williams? Also, an update on the women's side and an offer Swanson's staff has extended.Have a question for for us on the pod? Fire it over to brendan@nobidnation.com or tweet at us @NoBidNation. Visit the blog at nobidnation.com.
This week, in honor of the release of "No Time to Die," we welcome guest Charlie Williams to discuss which James Bond actor has wielded the tuxedo and Walther the best over the course of the past nearly 60 years. Is it Sean Connery, the original? Roger Moore, who appeared in the most Bond films? Or Daniel Craig, who portrayed Bond for the longest?
There are a lot of 'things' down in the Houston area, indluding the National Funeral Museum. Now this may sound kind'a weird, but there are a lot of cool things that have been collected regaring funerals. Famous carriages, or ideas that were so close as to only be used once, then there are limos and other artifacts.With all this Halloweenish material at hand, the Houston Mopar Connection Car Club has been teaming up with the museum to host a car show each Halloween. This year the event will be on Sunday, October 30, 2021 with several charities to receive the benefits of the event. We talk with Troy Hawkes and Charlie Williams to learn more, so check out their Trunk or Treat, some cool cars, and a suprisingly neat museumEach week we try to have a car club to spotlight as we think it is a great wayto promote automotive comaraderie. In our feature segment, Don Armstrong has been over in the New Car Showroom with the new 2021 Ford Bronco 'Badlands Edition' and he has some things to say about this new SUV that is resurrecting a classic off-road name plate.----Be sure to subscribe on your favorite podcast provider for the next episode of In Wheel Time Car Talk six days a week, and check out our live broadcast every Saturday, 8a-11aCT simulcasting on YouTube, Facebook, Twitch and InWheelTime.com.In Wheel Time Car Talk can be heard on you mobile device from providers such as:Apple Podcasts, Pandora Podcast, Amazon Music Podcast, Spotify, Google Podcasts, Stitcher, iHeart Radio podcast, TuneIn + Alexa, Podcast Addict, Castro, Castbox and more on your mobile device.----- ------ ------Want more In Wheel Time in real time? Follow InWheelTime.com for the latest updates!Twitter: https://twitter.com/InWheelTimeInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/inwheeltime/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/InWheelTime/ YouTube: https://www.YouTube.com/InWheelTimeTags: In Wheel Time automotive car talk show car talk Live car talk show
Charlie Hale for me was a face of comedy in the 1990's. It was a happy face surrounded by many more funny men in the 90's version of the TV show the ComediansCharlie talks of his early days on the circuit in a double act to going solo and performing with puppets in golf clubs and sometimes while fights were going on, he sings with Zippy on Radio 1, he took advice on Christianity from Bobby Ball, he phoned The White House pretending to be Nelson Mandela and he made Muhammad Ali laugh.Name a Sports personality Legend and Charlie has worked with them all, find out more in this edition of “Voices of Variety”
In this episode, the Nerds and friends talk about Loki Episode 5. See the episode on youtube: https://youtu.be/Rb1bG3Is5Ts Check out the kickstarter By Hazzum Productions: https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/hazzum/pitter-patter-1-2?ref=project_link Guest: VT (Trey McDonald) https://vtanimation.com https://www.youtube.com/VTAnimation https://www.youtube.com/VTOriginals https://www.twitter.com/VTAnimation https://www.instagram.com/VTAnimation Demo Reel: https://youtu.be/f04T3RoEaIE Sketchfed Studios: Sean Luc Acevedo & Charlie Williams https://sketchfedstudios.com/ Tom Aglio https://www.tomaglio.com/ Host Follow us: Facebook / Instagram- @thenerdsoftheround Twitter- @thenerdsOTR Tik Tok: Thenerdsoftheround Tone From Across the Hall: Instagram - @tonefromacrossthehall Sebastian Bonet: Instagram / Facebook - @sebastianbonetart Tik Tok: Sebastian_Bonet Law: Facebook/Instagram/Twitter- @taosbylaw YouTube- https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCo8pnVLzCILHe9DfJqS5m5Q Twitch- https://www.twitch.tv/taosbylaw Music By LuCyph (@LuCyphNY) https://distrokid.com/hyperfollow/lucyph/the-agenda --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/thenerdsoftheround/support
In this episode, the Nerds and friends talk about the Black Widow Movie Watch the Episode on youtube:https://youtu.be/_3YbQyXpkks Check out the kickstarter By Hazzum Productions: https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/hazzum/pitter-patter-1-2?ref=project_link Guest: VT (Trey McDonald) https://vtanimation.com https://www.youtube.com/VTAnimation https://www.youtube.com/VTOriginals https://www.twitter.com/VTAnimation https://www.instagram.com/VTAnimation Demo Reel: https://youtu.be/f04T3RoEaIE Sketchfed Studios: Sean Luc Acevedo & Charlie Williams https://sketchfedstudios.com/ Host Follow us: Facebook / Instagram- @thenerdsoftheround Twitter- @thenerdsOTR Tik Tok: Thenerdsoftheround Tone From Across the Hall: Instagram - @tonefromacrossthehall Sebastian Bonet: Instagram / Facebook - @sebastianbonetart Tik Tok: Sebastian_Bonet Law: Facebook/Instagram/Twitter- @taosbylaw YouTube- https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCo8pnVLzCILHe9DfJqS5m5Q Twitch- https://www.twitch.tv/taosbylaw Music By LuCyph (@LuCyphNY) https://distrokid.com/hyperfollow/lucyph/the-agenda --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/thenerdsoftheround/support
Charlie Williams is the CEO of the Charles Williams Real Estate Investment Company (CWREIC), which invests in development and property management opportunities, specializing in self-managing their own portfolio of residential communities. The company has a 51 year old history and was founded by the late Charles Williams Sr. As a Real Estate Broker and CPM, […] The post Charlie Williams of Charles Williams Real Estate Investment Corporation appeared first on Business RadioX ®.
A congressionally-chartered panel of defense acquisition experts Tuesday delivered the third of three promised sets of recommendations for modernizing how the Defense Department buys. Some things DoD can do on its own authority. Others will require Congress to act. For a summary of the final report and what comes next, Federal Drive with Tom Temin spoke with David Drabkin, the chairman, and Charlie Williams, a member of the Section 809 Panel, about the recommendations.
Thank you Charlie Williams for our first review Part of the Bicycle: http://www.visualdictionaryonline.com/transport-machinery/road-transport/bicycle/parts-bicycle.php 11 Annoying Types of Cyclist: https://www.bicycling.com/rides/g20049208/11-most-annoying-types-of-cyclists/ Visit us on Facebook, The Encouragement Ride Podcast Twitter: @encourageriding Thanks to Jay Lusteck at No Fish Guts Productions. Visit Jay at www.JayLusteck.com Music by Charlie Chastain
Mariella Frostrup talks to Marina Lewycka about her latest book, Various Pets Alive and Dead. We'll be discussing why the publishing industry has become so enamoured by the next big author and what is happening to the more established, but not so prominent career novelists with Matt Thorne, Alexandra Pringle and Charlie Williams. And Guy Fraser Sampson talks to Mariella about Mapp and Lucia and his new novel Lucia on Holiday.