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SMX West Day 3 - marathon day

Smx_west_2008Last day of SMX West i am spent both from full day sessions, paired with martini-based client dinners, and the next leg of travel ahead. Only 3 more days of this fun stuff to go.  This post i went ahead and weaved my thoughts into the post a little tighter. Hopefully my 10s of readers will follow along.

Keynote
Interesting (moderately) session on how search will be used as it evolved.  Reps from Google, Yahoo, and Live were on hand with Gord and Chris Sherman as part of a panel of experts.  I personally believe that they are right regarding their take on Mobile search (that GPS based search would be very powerful, and that the experience on the small screen needs to improve).

My take on most of this keynote and the conference in general is that search is obviously evolving, but has been VERY SLOW in terms of features and functions. Needed improvements to search (way more long term) will include some much better presented results (vs. the same 10 blue links we have all been seeing since 1996). Search engine technology development has been very much based around ways to exploit ad revenue (for good or evil (your call)).  As humans continue to expect more, and with more mediums having relevance, search engines results need to be much more fuzzy and comprehensive and all reaching.  Its an interesting pattern and topic i have seen resonate here since day 1 here at SMX.

I also sincerely believe that Mobile mashups and Local search are areas search engines do absolutely HORRIBLY. Everything with a city qualifier pulls from city center. LAME.  If you are on your mobile, and you do a search for something in a city (ex. san francisco sushi restaurants near nob hill) why cant a search engine see your GPS location, and match that with the query, and realize a more accurate search result may be based on a combination of that, vs. word match globally across the webisphere.  One other space that is RIPE for improvement is integration of live data integrated into auto nav systems - live traffic, simple searching, all using hot, live data.  That would be a much welcomed change and the data & technology to do both are here today.

Not really cool how search engines treat "mom & pops" as being on the hook to provide them all the data.  They claim thats the only way to improve local, and i call this a cop out.

one great thing about search both now, and in the future is that Search and Search Marketing are 100% quantifiable.  That makes it better than almost ANY other form of media and advertising.  Search will continue to grow and evolve and we can thank social networks and social media for this new set of eyes on how people search, interact, and research online.


Attended a session on: Growing Your SEM Firm
Moderated by Chris Elwell
Panelists: Fionn Downhill, Damian Finley, Lisa A. Williams

was only moderately engaged in the discussion for several reasons, but didn't hear anything overly compelling (to me).  Ahem...next.


Analyzing the competition

Its pardonable to be defeated, but never to be surprised. - Frederick The Great

Christine Churchill - Key Relevance

  • do searches for key terms (paid & organic)
  • Determined how competitive sites are optimized
  • look up WhoIs information to get information about the competitor
  • archive.org is also a useful history tool
  • Study their backlinks, how many, what sorts of relationships
  • check their traffic estimates - compete, hitwise, alexa, comScore - great for seeing what terms your competitors are getting traffic from and where people go before/after
  • PPC review - what engines they are using, phrases, bid strategy, quality of ads, SEO effort
  • Tools in the PPC space - keywordspy, keycompete, adgooroo, spyFu
  • Reputation management - google alerts, forums, blogs, etc., bbb, d&b, epinions

HitWise

  • bill tancer, GM Global Research
  • New book - CLICK
  • not much to say other than talking about how he and HitWise have the best tools on the planet for uncovering stats, research data, competitive analysis, keyword analysis, etc.
    • cheaper alternative is trellian or competitious.com

Jake @ STN Labs
Loose informal conversation on the realities of the visible web and how to research and more important, protect yourself from spys.  My guess is that 90% of the folks in the audience thought Jake was advocating hacking madly, but what he was trying to point out is our false sense of security that our websites are just securely chugging along and that all our information is safe from inquiries and prying eyes so nobody needs to mind the shop. Peoples answer that "my host takes care of that" is an absurd false sense of security. Almost as mad as having life vests on commercial airlines...whats the point?  The only way you're escaping a commercial airline "water landing", is if you have jumped out of the plane with your own parachute before impact. Wow, that's a tangent...i digress.  Here are some of his thought provokers.

  • If you are doing research...
    • good webmasters are already researching their competitors
    • whois.sc is the best whois research
    • regional IP databases - first step to social engineering
      • find the ip, pump it into completewhois.com and find their ISP.
    • social engineering - getting someone to tell you something they're not supposed to
    • allinanchor - can be your friend
      • will return webpages linked to that target them
    • protecting yourself
      • watch for unnatural traffic - allinanchor, link:, cache, whois.sc
      • track them and send them on their way with 301redirects
      • serve 403 pages, send to differnt pages with different pricing, send them to their own site, serve midis and wavs to piss them off, or just silently track them

Search Marketing B2B Style
Slightly different slant on SEM which is a big element of our business, we are vested in the B2B space.  Tactics are different, distribution of ads and optimization activities are also different than B2C.  Some outlets that are interesting for B2B clients.

  • Ben Hanna @ Business.com went through their offers and advantages. They have a simple ad network and paid inclusion model.  We tried this at IDWholesaler a while ago, but it just didint work for their audience...almost NO conversions. But Business.com ads may work better for our clients like Graylift who are selling forklifts, or clients like Entrust Group who targets a professional influencer audience like Estate Planning Attorneys and CPA's.  Both clients search terms could be supported by articles and placement in the Business.com directories.
  • Patcicia Hursch - SmartSearch Marketing - focused more on tactics and things to do
    • she stresses getting beyond lead gen to things like: visibility, traffic, in addition to Lead Gen
    • also stressed the post click behavior that needs an effort.  These could include site UI optimization, landing page optimization, and/or microsite optimization.
    • have to get to buyers at the start of the process so you can influence their decisions
    • advertising in the tail is a valid concept that emphasizes the important of targeted long tail terms.
    • using ad copy to pre-qualify clickers - being specific will help you weed out lookie-loos that you don't want clicking your ads (ex it outsourcing vs. national it outsourcing service provider for companies with 15 to 300 employees)
    • align ad copy with query - depending on the type of search based on your sales lifecycle, your paid ads should adapt as the process moves.  learning > research > narrow options > buy
    • microsites focused on specific industries - or focused on specific solutions
    • test all your page elements on the landing pages
      • page layout
      • images
      • benefit statements
      • action triggers
      • names of downloadables
      • etc...
    • offer action options
      • trial
      • seminar
      • buy
      • not always one size fits all
    • simplify reg forms
      • 15 fields 5 %
      • 5 fields 9%
      • 2 fields 15%
  • Galen deYoung - Francis SEO - Organic search for B2B - focused purely on b2b seo
    • business purchasers - are different
    • matters what they search for and it matters what they type in...even if seemingly insignificant:  healthcare consultant, health care consultant, healthcare consultants
    • people search by:
      • subject, problem, person role, product, industry, geo
    • each distinct set of keywords needs a distinct landing page
    • see acousticsbydesign.com for one of his clients
    • page strategies
      • know keyword target and 3-5 long tail term modifiers
      • could be 3-5 words or even up to 7-8 words
    • great slides with good points.  fingers tired and cant keep up the typin.
  • covered some interesting tactics regarding lead management and lead nurturing

Okay, thats it for me.  I am off to the bar for a pre-flight round and then its off to San Diego for the Miva Developers Conference. No rest for the weary.

BL

Bleeding Edge Thoughts From The Leaders In Search - SMX West Day 2

Smx_west_2008Today I managed things at the office, learned loads, fired a client, negotiated a deal, made 5 new Twitter friends, inked a new partner deal, found 2 new freelancers, and bought a house all from the floor of SMX West here in Santa Clara, CA.  Not a bad little Wednesday all in all.  Here is my conference Day 2 wrap up.

Keynote Louis Monier - cueil
Topic: Past, Present, Future of Search
Started his presentation off on the wrong foot with me by using the extinct font Comic Sans for his slides.  I digress.

  • The web is only as good as its index
  • Claims that the only way search will work is to have robotic index (Mahalo & Clusty would disagree)
  • Future - long tale terms, which don't have a single answer, do not offer any guidance from search engines (today).
  • eCommerce search works differently because they allow you filters and guidance to complete and structure the query. 
  • Current engines work very similar to the way that they did in 1995.
    • word soup - build points based on frequency and structure and shingles within the doc.
    • links and anchors - page rank and inbound links increase relevance
    • user behavior - whatever gets the most clicks gets the highest rank
    • UI - still sitting around 10 blue links.
    • is anything new other than "scale" (millions to billions of pages)
  • fundamental q - what portion of the web are they indexing and ranking - search can be a lot more than it is today.
  • The Future
    • search should provide insight
    • is Human Powered search the answer (Wikipedia, Mahalo, Squidoo) - he says no.
    • is personalization the answer - filling in the blanks? It will only help so much because it cannot discern what you want or desire based on your basic demographics like age, geo location, language, etc.  that would assume we are all the same.  not true.
      • ex. diamond = jewelry if you are a woman, baseball if you are a man
    • is vertical search an answer - the more specialized or niche, the more likely it will work but only on a VERY THIN scale so this doesn't scale.
    • what about natural language processing? problem with natural language is that there are too many variations on written language.  wont match the realities of the web.
    • semantic search/semantic web - everything gets marked up...issue is that there is no motivation to put this level of detail into the META and backgrounds...also it is too exploitable.
    • !spell checker - the concept of type a word in and see what version has more matches.  That returns the "norm" and allows you to make a decision.
    • !aggregate information - structured data comes into play and returns better results based on known options and frequent selections - this leads to research assistant as a concept...
      • research assistant - part of the evolution of search
    • Bottom line - size matters - you have to have the whole web.  Nobody will ever be able to decide based on any robotic factors what, or what is not important to you.


Multi-variate Testing

  • Johnathan Mendez - interesting base level knowledge presentation. worth reading this optimization blog, he has some great ideas.
  • Closed Loop Marketing - getting more from your multivariate testing
    • have a plan & a goal
    • choose the right starting place - get your program to the right place first, then start testing...not before!!!
    • gather inputs
      • who
      • baselines
      • other info
      • apply best practices
      • integrate usability testing
      • work with designers that GET IT
    • elements - what elements matter headlines, call to action, button, hero image, bulleted benefits, tables & charts, forms, etc.
  • seth rosenblatt - optimost/interwoven
    • another great presentation that outlined countless justifications for testing, optimization, and design.
  • Jon Diorio - google
    • discussed Google's free analytics process
      • identify impactful page, section or element
      • develop hypothesis for each element
      • test a few variations (2-4)
      • repeat (if needed)
      • google.com/websiteoptmizer - upcoming seminars for beginners
      • review tom ash landing page optimizer book
  • Gregg Makuch - Widemile
    • current Fuze partner and experts in multivariate testing and optimization - lots of traction in this area


SEO & Social Media Marketing

  • Rand from SEOmoz.org had a great presentation about "cool shit on the internet"[his words] - Rand is a great speaker and always offers a wealth of information about social media marketing (SMM).
    • why is social media so important? its BIG. growing at an exponential rate (especially globally)
    • blogosphere is fully engaged and the way they find blogs is that they click links on other blogs.
    • influencers spread content via a number of social media methods.  There are a number of turn on's/off's
  • Neil patel from acs - ran through a number of great case studies on different business types and how they use social media.
    • HP example
      • photo sharing
      • social news
      • social networks
      • blogs
    • american greetings
      • assisted with a popular photo/flash combo to raise their presence on "greeting cards" in search because of the viral video
    • life insure
      • embraces the fact that publishing content on dying which resonated in the social networks
    • Gawker media
      • 90% of their traffic driven from social media efforts.
  • Barbara Boser from 3 Dog Media - added some insight on how important commitment and participation are required to be successful in social media.
    • prepare to be consumed for at least 2 months
    • read what is popular in the different communities
    • look for tools you can use within sites and on the web
    • subscribe to as many feeds as you can - particularly popular sites in the community you want to break into
    • keep your profile and persona unique
    • memorable avitar
    • match gmail account ad IM that match your username
    • see top users and associate with them - watch out for people who are too high maintenance
    • vote fast and often
    • dont submit more than 2-3 stories and dont submit stories from your own site
    • avoid hitting top users too fast and hard
    • make sure your profile is listed on all the sites you are in
    • never make multiple accounts on the same site
  • michael grey - greywolf seo blog & atlas web services - took the leading edge tact and had a number of new concepts and topics to discuss
    • current event social media (oscars, deaths, etc) - oscars/prius post good for auto blog
    • twitter is seen as a great traffic generator - lots of great plugins with twitter that make it possible to publish where you are.  try not to "sell" in twitter, but rather use it for persona development.  Can also be used for product releases or service
    • let people who monitor you know you're out there.
    • jetblue, carnival, southwest, amazon gold deals, woot, all use twitter as a sales channel
    • tactics: look into your profile, make it real
  • Top social sites for marketers are:  Digg, StumbleUpon, YouTube,


SEO 2.0 for Web 2.0 sites
interesting set of concepts/opinions on the new emerging programming and development techniques that are having influence and are buzz-ie on the web.  Lots of opinion, all of which i agree with.

  • Sherry Thureau - CSS & Search engines
    • obvious advantages of using CSS
    • couple refreshers:  make sure you create a sense of place - make sure your CSS clearly shows visited and non visited links.
    • keep your headings and H1, H2, Text matched up.
    • title tag should be 40-60 characters - cant H1 a page
    • CSS should never be used to exploit search engines
    • images are not satan and can easily be optimized.  THINK OF YOUR USERS!
  • mikkel deMib Svendsen - web2.0 and ajax etc.
    • web.2.0 importance - new types of applications, deeper interaction, embrases power of human interaction, but may be exclusionary to some
    • Mikkel says say NO to AJAX - it breaks a unified model of the web - it breaks the standards of the web. can only link to the application, not to the page.  people cant be referred back (by search engines) to the same piece of information...thus search engines may never fully index AJAX apps
    • always ask WHY, when people say they want to use AJAX or FLASH.  They can be used for good, but usually for no real reason.  Must improve conversion or make something better.
    • be careful when using AJAX applications...they are NOT secure.
    • social web 2.0 is great [duh] for SEO
      • higher freshness, grammar issues (but it doesn't matter, the message comes through)
      • great to have 20,000 SEO's - you want their comments, but be careful with SPAMMERS

great conference so far all in all.  Much different than SES.  A tad more out on the bleeding edge, but cool for me and lots of great ideas to take home to the Fuze Basecamp.

More coming for Day 3.

BL

Blended Search is Hot | Fuze reporting from SMX West | Day 1

Smx_west_2008 Arrived a little late so that i could hang an extra night at home with Lori & Cole. Lots going on at the homestead.  More on that later.  Reporting from the floor [literally] from SMX West 2008 in Santa Clara, CA.  Since these are mainly my shorthand notes, some of it will make sense, some of it will be Greek to most. I'm sure some of this will end up in someones "hack-ie" presentation slides - i just hope i get to heckle them with questions about the source when i see them.  Anyway, here are some topics that are pretty hot...

Blended Search Revolution - When 4th place Ask.com started their ad campaigns showing off that they got rid of Jeeves (something i will never forgive them for), they introduced something more profound than i think they imagined.  They introduced the concept of blended search.  Blended search is nothing more than a mashup of data on a search result screen.  This lets people see local results, combined with video (YouTube), with images (flickr), with reviews (yelp), and alas, with paid and organic search results.  This is VERY logical and for the last 10 years has never really had any attention.  Now it is getting attentions it aptly deserves.  Here are some thoughts...

  • People use search in 3 primary ways:
    • In & out - answer a question, settle a bet, move on
    • discover - research, spend time looking to buy something, monitor a concept, etc.
    • Explore - Browsing with no specific goal, surfin the net, etc.
  • To accommodate these very TYPICAL search results and keep people on their sites longer, this mashup/blended result is their answer.
  • What this finally means for the industry is that what we know now as the concept of "search engine optimization" (and the one that all those jackass "SEO Experts" call to solicit you about), is GOING TO DIE.  Pack your bags snake oil salesmen.
  • SEO experts wont be able to influence or exploit results through "service" it will require companies to get involved in the conversation, put their information everywhere, and let natural search take their course.
  • What's this mean for web users? This makes search engines USEFUL again.  Once again, the playing field is going to level.What this means for monitization and the Web 2.0, 3.0, 4.0...companies building and evangelizing their powerful social tools...your space is on RED HOT fire.  You own a concept, you get rich.
  • Watch for UI changes from Yahoo, Google, Live, and refinements from Ask.
  • I think i like search again.  :-)

Search Marketing and Persona Models

  • Decision process factors: knowledge, risk, reward, emotion - low to high
  • Objectives - criteria, candidates, budget/scope, research (basic), research (detail), options, decision
  • Humans can only consider 4-5 chunks of information, decide what meets their criteria, and move on.
  • Use REAL PEOPLE on your site to identify faster with your visitors.  Stock images are USELESS to show you are approachable.
  • understanding the way men and women differ in their browsing, navigation, and selection criteria is critical to success.
  • All great marketing requires empathy
  • Establishing personas - practical personas - view 37signals.com/svn
    • research (demographics & psychographics) - adlab.msn.com, quantcast.com, compete.com, trellian for keyword discovery, wordtracker, claritas.com
    • NOTE: you cannot build personas based on keywords
      • brainstorm - narrow from 5-10 to 1-3 focal personas.  Some may need to be driven away.
      • write
      • create campaign
      • segment audience
      • measure, adjust, repeat

More Blended Search - Focus on Local

  • Blended local search differs on Live, Yahoo, & Google
    • Live - getting started, varying results based on relevance and distance
    • Yahoo - looks like google present
    • Google - new local one box, added 10 listings, varies display wise depending on how they interpret what you are searching by. Same amount of space
  • overall - the closer you are to any city center, the better you will show up in local search
  • good strategy to run your blog on a separate domain that is keyword loaded - interlinking will add to your link popularity.
  • create a review function - part of link building
  • verified listings - business profiles
    • manual verification - small number of businesses (google, yahoo, live)
    • feed based verification - reach local, localeze, infousa
    • trusted sources - internet yellow pages, feed providers, social review & niche sites
  • strategies
    • cross link contact pages

Blended Search Results - ecommerce/retail tactics - What works?

  • dont forget about how to's
  • ratings and votes - are relevant
  • who links to you in important
  • research what people search for
  • keep your profiles up to date
  • re-energize forums
  • implement ratings and review
  • analytics
    • track referrers
    • add paramaters to URLs
  • build relationships with customers - it is ABSOLUTELY not about SEO anymore
  • Optimization
    • product feeds need keep titles tied to what people search for
    • each engine will represent product based searches different (currently Live does it best)
    • brand name is very important for search results from feeds
    • use long tail terms in title, especially for highly competitive products
    • always include photos! - no photo = no show! in MS Live
    • insure photos are available through image search
    • seller rankings matter in google - manage ratings at contributor sources
      • dealtime, nextag, shopzilla, etc.
    • other important factors
      • page rank, prices, popularity for keywords, click behavior & time on page, quality scores based on keyword density
    • Chris from NetConcepts was an excellent speaker
         
    • Getting products into results
      • optimize prod feeds
      • optimize yahoo ssp
    • Blended search is a work in progress - its mostly experimental until things settle out
    • Organic's goal is a research and brand vehicle,alternatively, SEO refocuses from keyword user relevance
    • search results, universal search anyway, have changed the users eye patterns from
      an F to an E pattern
    • Other tips
      • respect sources
      • become a reference
      • test now
      • embrace the new dimensions of search

I think that about covers day one.  I can sum all this day up with a quote I heard at a session: If Starbucks can learn to make coffee again, we can also learn a new way to optimize search. All of it left me thinking this should be a great conference. More to report on day 2 & 3.

BL

Does luxury need to be for everyone?

I ask again, does luxury (in all its forms) belong in the hands of the masses? My frame of reference for this post comes from the folks at Bag Borrow or Steal but I'm gonna put a long tail on this kite so read on...

I've had this post brewin' for a while now because I have a strong opinion/concern about the state of the union and our desensitization to price tags, luxury brands, goods, cars, clothing, water, vodka, etc. I can remember a time when luxury was unknown, elusive, unattainable and generally "not for you".  On a recent trip to Monaco one of our lead designers (we'll call him Dan) was told this very thing when he tried to go to the world famous, ornate, baroque, Casino with his new wife...both dressed in their Sunday best (good enough to get them anywhere in San Francisco or Manhattan). They were greeted at the door, looked up and down and simply told, "It's not for you." Shocked, they courteously left.

This doesn't happen in the US, as long as you're willing to pay. $12 bottle of water, hell yes. $50K for a Hummer + $10K for rims, yes please. $300 for some True Religion Jeans, why not. My last trip to the Motocross I saw 20 yr olds carrying Gucci bags (to accompany their crooked Fox racing hat and their "proud to be a bitch" wife beater).  I will only guess that it was a swap-meet-Gucci, but the point is that the masses are all FASCINATED with luxury.  I am quite certain that a decent percentage of folks who buy luxury items can actually afford them, but more than can, do buy these items. Why? Tabloid magazines, MTV et al have become evangelists for the Bling generation where luxury is "in" and anything less is inferior. Is anything unattainable?  The concept of layaway (where you put a lil' somethin' on it) is a thing of the past. Now it's about instant gratification. Wealth, in general, has a completely different meaning to current generations than say my Grandfather who lived through the Great Depression.

And, what happened to normal brands?  They're all GONE.  At least when you look at advertising for clothing, travel, transportation, hotels, alcohol, entertainment, etc., etc.  Still in an effort to keep some sort of posh exclusivity, makers of luxury had to create a new Super/Ultra/Uber Luxury level, just to keep the riff-raff out. One of many examples of this illogic is in nightclubs. Last time we went out big in Las Vegas we went to LAX in the Luxor (where Paris Hilton frequently "makes it rain").  The only way to get a decent table with a view and some room to breathe (without dropping $20K at the gaming tables), was to buy our way in. I believe the night for 20 was in the range of $4,000. Who would pay that?  Everyone apparently, the place was PACKED!  And not just LAX, rather, every one of the Vegas super clubs was packed with people paying the same tabs we did. And at the very same time, equally packed were clubs in LA, New York, Miami, the ATL, etc.  I think we're all takin' crazy pills because this has somehow become the rule vs. the exception.

I really don't even know why I am on this rant. I consume luxury as much as the next guy, but at the risk of sounding egotistical, I am not [presently] bangin' it out paycheck-to-paycheck either. Still, nothing is going to change, until the economy forces it to.  Looks like here in 2008, the great economic equalizer may be ready to wield its sickle.

OK, back to the BASIS for this post.  Here is what got me juices flowin' on this topic.  I went to Babelfish (on the great Altavista) to translate something from English to French to send off to a colleague in Paris.  On the translation screen I saw this ad...

Rent_luxury

...and dammit I thought I was losing my mind.  Rent a f-ing handbag?  Yes. Now, in true Netflix fashion, the genius' at Bag Borrow or Steal [applicable name] will RENT you a Hermes, Louis Vuitton, Chanel, etc. bag, just to impress your [easily impressionable] friends.  Keep it a day, week, month, year, they don't care, its all razor blades as far as they're concerned. When you're done with it, you just send it back and they send you the NEXT one on your list.  What's next?

  • Will people soon start asking what sort of lease rates are available on a new Versace clutch?
  • Will my wife finally get her feet into those red-sole Christian Louboutin shoes because they have a payment plan?
  • Will I soon be renting my William Rast Denim?
  • Could I launch a new gum brand, packaged in a suede lined wrapper, available only at high-end boutiques, and get people to pay $15/pack just because Jay-Z & Jessica Simpson chew it to freshen their breath and whiten their choppers? [this is a topic in itself]

Don't laugh...all of this is theoretically possible. Part of me says brilliant, and part of me says that this is a sign that Armageddon is coming. You be the judge.

Whew, thats a lot of key bangin'. I'm glad I got it out. I feel so much better. I think I'm gonna go down to the CalAve and do some shopping.

WBV

IRL and Champ Car Racing Series to Wed.

Champ_irl_love Its about damn time.  Sir Tony George and the stand off-ish CHAMP CAR crew have finally agreed to bring the 2 series' back together.  As a fan of open wheel racing this is a HUGE change and gives hope that there may once again be a future for an elite racing series in the US.  Not sure why IRL had to wait till CHAMP CAR went bankrupt before making the deal...that move can only be ego driven, but at least its inked and we should get back to seeing more than 7 cars hit the grid later this year.

Nice job gentlemen...start your engines!

WBV

Serena Williams HP Jumper EA Cross Marketing Overload

What happens when cross-marketing goes racing out of control with no brakes.  This spot exemplifies the term 10 lbs of shit in a 5 lb. bag

Her game character looks pretty good though. Still looks too hard. I will stick with Wii tennis...no learning curve. WBV

On the road again...

Visit us at Inman Real Estate Connect San Francisco - July 23-25th, 2008
...and then on to: SMX Local (San Francisco), OMS (San Francisco), RTO Pro-Am, OMS (San Diego), and Bonneville Speed Week

Twittering...


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