Historically, I've been fairly narrow in what I read in the blogosphere and tech arena (almost all SEO-centric stuff). You can see my Firefox sidebar list here, which hasn't changed much since 2008 with the exception of the blogs and news sections. But, over the past 6 months, I've been broadening out considerably and found that it adds a great deal to the conversations I'm able to participate in and contribute to, especially as SEOmoz itself has expanded from the SEO world to the larger technology and startup world. For the New Year, I thought I'd share some of the sources that have contributed most on this front and some of my favorite posts/contributions from those sources.
#1 - Hacker News
(https://news.ycombinator.com)
I find more good stuff here than anywhere else, and the diversity is impressive, too. Tragically, Hacker News is also a place for lots of misinformation, fear, and loathing around SEO, but it's good to get a sense for how the rest of the technology world still views our niche. The signal to noise ratio is higher than on places like delicious/popular, the tech subreddit or Digg (which has become largely useless to tech professionals as its moved away from its roots).
A few items I've found via Hacker News include:
- Why everything you think about User Centered Design in Wrong
- On Self Promotion
- The death of the boring blog post
#2 - A VC
Fred writes compelling pieces consistently, almost never gets preachy, is self-promotional in a highly credible and useful way and brings up topics I wouldn't have thought about without him. Most of us can't have Fred on our boards or as an investor, but we can get into his head via his blog and participating more in the comments there has been a priority of mine for a while (he's built a remarkable community in the comments).
Some favorite posts:
#3 - Chris Dixon
Chris, like Fred, delivers crystal clear value propostions with his posts. And IMO, he's even higher signal to noise than Fred. I don't always agree with him on everything, but I like the way he thinks about problems, I like the ones he brings up and I think he has his finger intensely on the pulse of what startups and technologists (and technical marketers like SEOs) are thinking about and dealing with. It's a pleasure to see a new post from Chris - here's to hoping he makes many more in 2010.
Some favorites include:
#4 - Techmeme
Techmeme is an obvious choice, but it's also critical to the list. If it weren't for Techmeme, I'd have to wade through ReadWriteWeb, Mashable and Techcrunch post-by-post, every day. Don't ever leave us, Gabe.
No specific posts here - there's far too many to name, and the site updates much too quickly for me to even recall all the great stuff I've found here. However, I will say that I highly recommend m.techmeme.com for mobile browsing. It's been a joy to scroll through every time my wife takes extra-long in the dressing room at Anthropologie.
#5 - Answers On Startups
(https://answers.onstartups.com)
Launched just this past October, Answers On Startups has become a haven for learning more about the challenges, issues and questions entrepreneurs face in the technology world. I've recommended it before, and early on participated heavily (and I'd like to do more of that in the future), but if you're seeking answers from highly authoritative folks in a scalable fashion, this is the spot. I'm really impressed by the quality of many contributions there - the signal to noise is pretty exceptional.
Some of the best include:
- What's more important: release fast or getting it right?
- Free Trial vs. Freemium
- Qualities/skills of a CEO
#6 - Daring Fireball
In my ideal world, 5 years from now, when I've been put out to pasture by someone smarter and more capable, or bought out :-) I'd have a blog like this. Some entries are just links, some are lengthy and thoughtful and all are interesting and worth reading. Author John Gruber also brings a remarkably diverse range of topics to the site and yet somehow, signal to noise remains high.
A few recent picks:
- Google's Meaning of Open (a short, but flawless skewering)
- The Next iPhone
- A Liberal, Accurate Regex Pattern for Matching URLs
#7 - Steve Blank
A few of Steve's posts are not only relevant, but serve to actually change direction in the executive ranks here at SEOmoz. That's high praise, but if you read the blog, you'll see what I mean. Steve's been there, and his experiences run in shocking parallel to the issues we face or worry about on a regular basis. Even when I disagree with points, the logic and thought he puts into the post makes for a great read and a hard think.
Some of his best:
- The Elves Leave Middle Earth - Sodas are No Longer Free
- Lies Entrepreneurs Tell Themselves
- Good Enough Decision Making
#8 - NYTimes Most Emailed
(https://www.nytimes.com/gst/mostemailed.html)
Despite the financial and institutional problems they face, the NYTimes still puts out absolutely phenomenal content on nearly every area of life. From cooking to politics, travel to health, there is amazing material to be found in the Grey Lady, and the Most Emailed list is the place to find the best of the best.
Some favorites:
- Twitter Chatter During the Superbowl (I love their interactive graphics)
- Using Menu Psychology to Entice Diners
- Google Keeps Tweaking its Search Engine
- 100 Things Restaurant Staffers Should Never Do (Part 1)
#9 - Venture Hacks
When I was out trying to raise a second round of VC this summer (big mistake - more on that in a future post), Venturehacks' historic content was invaluable. However, visiting the site made me realize how much good stuff there is that doesn't apply only to those currently raising money. They've got some seriously great writers/contributors, invaluable interviews and tackle tough subjects.
My personal favorites recently included:
- 10 Skills I look for before writing a check
- How to develop your customers like you develop your product
- The Arrogant VC: Why VCs are disliked by entrepreneurs
#10 - Twittersphere
Since they don't publish archives (the most frustrating feature), I'm unable to show off just how cool this site is and has been over the last few months, but just try visiting a couple times a day for the next few weeks and you'll see. It's remarkable how much good stuff gets re-tweeted (and how much junk - signal to noise is about 15%, which is still decent since it's easy to skim and consume at will). You can also get a sense for how important Twitter's link graph is to the engines through Twittersphere - a lot of pages that have 0 links will have thousands of tweets pretty fast.
Your turn! I'd love to see the sites outside the SEO world that give you the most professional value (and I'm certain the rest of our readers would too). Feel free to link drop even to yourself, so long as it's relevant :-)
What!? You don't subscribe to the World's Greatest SEO - SEOmofo.com? It's a gold mine!
your google results viewer thingy has been very useful to me in demonstrating to clients what happens if they dont think about SEO when creating pages.
lol...you just made it into mine
You made it in mine as well... Just for your About page alone! LOL
I subscribed to it last night and read all of your most recent posts - very good.
Trust me, he's not just being egotistical, it really is a fun site to read.
I know you from your snippet tool. We tried to sort out something about "-" that behaved strange in the Google serp.
I just don't know how I missed your page, its very good!
CommonCraft , Trak.in , BinayBonsai (just love the eccentric tone), & of-course Guy kawasaki
I had been looking for lists like this - decent reviews of a variety of pages on a relevant topic. Unfortunately, finding such lists is easier said than done. This list, however, compelled me to create an account on this site in order to comment, and to add the site to my RSS reader.
You should have a look on sites like Delicious (my profile there), where people have bookmarked useful articles.
You can search profiles using keywords and even set up an auto-notifier that sends you anything with the keyword "cheese burger", for example.
Hi, thanks for sharing Rand. Some are definitely going on my list to read.
Happy New year all.
Looking forward to hearing the VC horror story.
Here's my recommendation - many will be already aware of... https://99designs.com
Possible the most awesome pool of affordable design talent on the net. It's been really useful for commissioning some hot designs, but more importantly for helping me think like a designer and brief them properly (saving headache, revisions and resentment from both sides.)
Interesting, I haven't come across that site before. I've been to Guru and eLance but that one is new to me.
Good site but I disagree with sites like that where people tend to go for the cheapest price etc.
Thankfully, 99Designs have done it a little differently but where is the personal letter and phone calls? It's very impersonal now-a-days and I know a lot of designs agree with me.
This says it better than I could:
https://graphicpush.com/99designs-bullshit-20
a quote from that link twofish...
"99designs, a new site of considerably questionable motives and ethics"
This is just some bs hater post that completely goes against my personal experience of using the site and the results I've seen. It's a rambling rant that offers no value to my side of the business fence.
So yes, 99designs has pushed down the average cost of design and removes the personal relationship between client and designer. But from a small business/start-up point of view where you're spending your own real money (not some budget on paper), this is exactly what attracted me.
So many of those sources Rand has posted above reiterate the point that when you're starting out you need to:
1. Get an adequate product out to market ASAP
2. Manage your costs
3. Manage your time by priorities
This site, along with elance, textbroker and other crowdsourcing services are a godsend.
99design is great.Â
there is another new website for logo design
www.48hourslogo.com
which is similar to 99design, but in 48hourslogo, the client can get the logo concept within 48hours. I think it is good to both client and designers.
 Nice one if you want to improve your writing skills:Â
www.copyblogger.com
(https://www.copyblogger.com/the-best-of-copyblogger-2009/#more-6234)
Rand thanks for sharing your list. How do you manage to read all that, and be able to blog, manage your company, your wife, etc ???? I just can´t do it... What would you say is the time you spend reading stuff every day?
There are some great design related articles at https://www.smashingmagazine.com/, infrequently posted to but awesome Analytics articles at https://www.epikone.com/blog/, and absolute hilarity at https://theoatmeal.com/.
 Oh, and if you want to go to a blog that is never updated, check out https://www.brian-hancock.com/ =P
Nice, i think one of my favorites was the Steve Blank post about working smarter not harder and not sacrificing family for your latest startup project. That's pretty good advice that a lot of people are afraid to talk about.Â
Very interesting and useful post. Thanks for sharing.
[link removed]
Thanks for the share..very interesting.
Indeed you have great list of resources of seo, news and for new ideas and like us guy you gave good tools to learn alot from your learning curve https://www.seomoz.org/blog/rebuilding-my-firefox-sidebar-amp-ranking-the-seo-blogs
thanks for it
Skill-Guru is spot on with Mashable. Very nice site over there.
 We all here have been amazed with the number of webproworld news articles showing up in the FRESH SERPs for industry news, webseoanalytics, and the SEO.com forums: good topics and great mods.Â
I was a little disappointed and annoyed by Mashable. They clogged up my reader with so many poor articles that I just had to remove it.
That being said, about 20% of the articles appealed to me, so give it a try.
I absolutely loved this. I found about 5 new things to add to my RSS, and better than that, they are now almost certainly 5 of the top 10 blogs in my RSS. Thanks Rand.
Some good stuff here. I've just added a few to my list on Google Read (to be honest, I'm just getting into using Google Reader so they are some of the first on my list!).
Darren (AKA SEO Mofo) I've checked out your's as well, and it will be making it on the reader.
Great list! It should be noted that OnStartups' answers zone is based on the StackExchange platform, which is a superb system for Q&A sites.
Oh thanks for sharing the information. quite useful .I go to answers on startups frequently which is really useful.
hey, welcome to SEOmoz! (noticed this was your first comment) As a design company, which online resources have you found useful?
Hi lindop.
nice to meet u here:)
recently i am interested in SEO and wanna know more about it. So I went to some websites like SEOmoz,Stonetemple,stephanspencer.
See your profile, you are a senior SEO consultant. Hope I can learn something from you too:)
Thanks for the list. I hadn't heard of many of these but I have added several ot my Google Reader.
That's just great, now i'm going to have to visit https://news.ycombinator.com in addition to my existing channels I frequent. Thx Rand, thx.
That is a great list. I have been following some of them. I am not sure if you have missed out techcrunch.com and mashable.com intentionally.
Nice collection Rand.
Here are some of my own favorite websites.
Online marketing
WebdesignSmashing magazineA list ApartVeerle's blogDeviantartthefwa (favorite website awards)Webdesigner depotÂ
Thanks a lot, Rand! Now there are even more sites in my Google Reader. For the sake I've it, I'll just list the names of the interesting ones (in no particular order):Â The Official Google Blog: I like to keep up to date with them because it's basically my job.A List Apart: Really interesting articles about anything web-related from information architecture to user experience testing.Freelance Folder: Small site by Mason Hipp and a team of talented writers. Posts are usually short and sweet. Although this recent article really annoyed me.Smashing Magazine: A wide range of interesting articles on design, photography, code and more.QuickSprout: Impartial and interesting business advice.Jason Santa Maria: Just pure interesting.SEO Mofo: Interesting & Funny SEO lessons.Andy Beard: You know :-DMatt Cutts: You know :-DSEO Theory Blog: You know :-DSEOMoz/YouMoz: Probably my number 1 site. Not because I'm brown-nosing, I just like the writing style.I won't link to them all because it'd seem like one hell of a spam posts. They're just ones you should check out!!!