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現在の場所:ホーム / アーカイブ書評

書評

Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series) – 書評 / 感想

Last updated on 2016年1月24日 By 石崎 力也

If you don’t track your campaign . . . you will lose. Period.

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 573

cost-per-action

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 631

Your priority as a marketer is to minimize your CPA. It should be well below your average order size (ideally, around half). The difference between them tells you how much profit your website is generating.

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 635

cost-per-visitor

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 643

$/Index

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 644

Coverage is the percentage of the time that people see your ads when they search on your targeted terms.

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1010

things that are seen immediately upon page load are more likely to

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1243

catch the user’s attention. In contrast, page elements that the user needs to scroll to see (“below the page fold”) are far less likely to receive attention.

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1243

the position of your ads determines your clickthrough rate.

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1246

as ad position increases, so does the clickthrough rate.

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1263

ad copy plays an even more important role than the position or price of your ads!

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1283

First, it is much better to target a larger number of specific search phrases in your campaigns than just a handful of broad terms.

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1321

Second, the benefits of niche keyword targeting are typically higher for advertisers appearing in low positions than for those advertisers who appear in high positions.

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1323

spend so much time in the planning phase of your campaign finding longer, more specific keyword phrases.

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1336

“penny plus” algorithm.

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1376

bid jamming,

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1378

“pay-for-position” model

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1387

“do-it-yourself”

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1399

Ads would be awarded placement not only by the maximum bid price advertisers were willing to pay but also by their clickthrough rate.

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1414

To find out how much each advertiser actually has to pay for a click, Google calculates the minimum amount necessary to retain their position.

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1439

They do this by comparing the prices and quality scores for each adjacent ad.

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1440

some advertisers who use the pre-payment option on Google AdWords report that if their account balance reaches zero, then their average CPC will increase for a period of time after they deposit additional funds in their account.

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1448

Success in ad copy and landing page optimization increases your ad rank, resulting in higher placement for your ads.

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1461

“high-value” keywords.

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1519

“low-value” keywords.

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1521

Advertisers on low-value keywords will be faced with relatively low CPC caps, so more relative effort will be required to improve ad quality and coverage.

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1522

If your coverage is below 90 percent, then you almost certainly have an unresolved quality problem on that particular keyword.

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1544

Temporarily back your bids down to lower your average position and work on improving your clickthrough rate through ad copy optimization.

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1554

Surprisingly, average position and CPC are only weakly related.

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1556

CPC Curve.

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1607

Google Slap,

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1612

In other words, high-quality ads cost less and gain exposure to more search traffic (impression share).

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1629

Google’s bread-and-butter

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1711

For this reason, it pays to

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1734

have a variety of landing pages in your campaign.

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1734

average visit duration,

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1773

When a large number of searchers click an ad and then stay on the landing page or site for a long time, it strongly suggests a highly relevant advertiser.

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1774

(29 percent)

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1933

“Basic Digital Consumers.”

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1934

“Retail Scouts”

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1936

22 percent

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1937

prefer search and retail sites

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1937

most receptive group to digital coupons.

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1938

“Brand Scouts,”

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1939

(20 percent).

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1940

great reliance on paid search,

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1940

prefer specific brand sites to retail sites

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1941

features and perks

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1942

16 percent

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1943

“Digitally Driven Segment.”

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1943

convenience

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1944

receptive to advertising:

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1945

“Calculated Shoppers,”

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1946

no hurry

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1947

“Eternal Shoppers.”

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1950

2 percent

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1951

Every one of them

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1954

relies heavily on paid

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1954

search

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1954

This means that advertisers who fail to run effective paid search programs will be at a severe competitive disadvantage to those that do (and especially the top 1 percent).

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1959

“Visitor Intention Model”

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1976

anyone

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1976

“Brand Ladder,”

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1977

companies

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1977

correlation between the phrases that people type into search engines and their purchase intent.

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1982

Browsers

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1993

information rather than products,

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 1996

informational

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 2000

highly unlikely to buy at all.

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 2001

shopper.

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 2009

have an identified need

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 2010

considering their options.

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 2010

interested in buying now or later,

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 2011

Buyers,

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 2014

less time on the search engine and more time on vendors’ websites.

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 2016

instant gratification:

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 2019

fast shipping, high quality, low price, and so forth.

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 2019

navigational

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 2020

hard to convert.

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 2028

only one “right” result.

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 2028

Short,

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 2036

one-word keyword phrases

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 2036

browsers.

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 2037

Two- and three-word phrases

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 2039

shoppers’

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 2040

four or more words or phrases that refer to specific products,

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 2042

buyers

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 2043

Specific URLs, companies, or brand names

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 2045

navigational

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 2045

“owned”

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 2070

reflect a brand name.

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 2070

“product”

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 2074

target visitors who are looking for a category of products but not any one in particular.

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 2075

“problem”

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 2093

generic and generate a large amount of traffic.

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 2095

opportunity to connect with motivated searchers

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 2096

“occasion

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 2110

you’ll need to give a lot of thought to how you will engage with searchers at the instant at which they recognize they have a problem but have not yet discovered a solution.

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 2112

No matter what your business is, you should be able to come up with thousands of niche terms that are relevant to potential customers.

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 2219

no less than 5,000 keywords, but preferably 25,000 or more.

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 2220

Start out with a core set of keywords that reflects your business.

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 2246

But over time, build that list into hundreds or thousands of niche keyword phrases that reflect both what visitors are searching for and what your business sells.

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 2246

Start off your campaign with broad, high-volume keywords.

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 2269

Over time, expand your efforts to target more specific, niche search phrases.

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 2270

if your budget is limited, focus initially on niche terms.

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 2271

What behavioral category does this keyword fall in (browse, shop, or buy)?          Can I refine a browse keyword into one or more shop keywords?          Can I refine a shop keyword into one or more buy keywords?

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 2291

Try to go beyond just one- or two-word keywords.

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 2309

default

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 2657

your ads will be served for all searches that contain the keywords in your phrase (in any order), as well as any closely related synonyms or plurals.

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 2658

sometimes generate unwanted clicks,

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 2662

allows you to suppress certain words from broad matching while still allowing you to take advantage of it for the rest of the phrase.

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 2668

surrounding your keyword phrase in quotes.

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 2673

less traffic than broad matching,

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 2677

clickthrough (and sometimes conversion) rate is usually higher.

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 2677

square brackets,

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 2680

volume with this match type will be the lowest,

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 2682

clickthrough rates can be absolutely astounding

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 2682

over 99 percent of the conversions from the term keyword came only when there was another word in the search phrase.

Richard Stokes, Ultimate Guide to Pay-Per-Click Advertising (Ultimate Series), loc. 2725

Thinking, Fast and Slow – 書評 / 感想

Last updated on 2016年1月24日 By 石崎 力也

“The situation has provided a cue; this cue has given the expert access to information stored in memory, and the information provides the answer. Intuition is nothing more and nothing less than recognition.”

Daniel Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and Slow, loc. 241

affect heuristic,

Daniel Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and Slow, loc. 255

where judgments and decisions are guided directly by feelings of liking and disliking, with little deliberation or reasoning.

Daniel Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and Slow, loc. 256

This is the essence of intuitive heuristics: when faced with a difficult question, we often answer an easier one instead, usually without noticing the substitution.

Daniel Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and Slow, loc. 262

Intense focusing on a task can make people effectively blind, even to stimuli that normally attract attention.

Daniel Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and Slow, loc. 382

As you become skilled in a task, its demand for energy diminishes.

Daniel Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and Slow, loc. 581

In the economy of action, effort is a cost, and the acquisition of skill is driven by the balance of benefits and costs. Laziness is built deep into our nature.

Daniel Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and Slow, loc. 585

associative activation: ideas that have been evoked trigger many other ideas, in a spreading cascade of activity in your brain.

Daniel Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and Slow, loc. 852

This remarkable priming phenomenon—the influencing of an action by the idea—is known as the ideomotor effect.

Daniel Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and Slow, loc. 905

The general theme of these findings is that the idea of money primes individualism: a reluctance to be involved with others, to depend on others, or to accept demands from others.

Daniel Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and Slow, loc. 946

Cognitive strain is affected by both the current level of effort and the presence of unmet demands.

Daniel Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and Slow, loc. 1007

“The experience of familiarity has a simple but powerful quality of ‘pastness’ that seems to indicate that it is a direct reflection of prior experience.”

Daniel Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and Slow, loc. 1030

A reliable way to make people believe in falsehoods is frequent repetition, because familiarity is not easily distinguished from truth.

Daniel Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and Slow, loc. 1056

Mood evidently affects the operation of System 1: when we are uncomfortable and unhappy, we lose touch with our intuition.

Daniel Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and Slow, loc. 1176

how people manage to make judgments of probability without knowing precisely what probability is.

Daniel Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and Slow, loc. 1669

when called upon to judge probability, people actually judge something else and believe they have judged probability.

Daniel Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and Slow, loc. 1671

“If you can’t solve a problem, then there is an easier problem you can solve: find it.”

Daniel Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and Slow, loc. 1674

Random processes produce many sequences that convince people that the process is not random after all.

Daniel Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and Slow, loc. 1924

“To the untrained eye,” Feller remarks, “randomness appears as regularity or tendency to cluster.”

Daniel Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and Slow, loc. 1932

you wish to estimate the size of a category or the frequency of an event, but you report an impression of the ease with which instances come to mind.

Daniel Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and Slow, loc. 2190

The world in our heads is not a precise replica of reality; our expectations about the frequency of events are distorted by the prevalence and emotional intensity of the messages to which we are exposed.

Daniel Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and Slow, loc. 2325

adding detail to scenarios makes them more persuasive, but less likely to come true.

Daniel Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and Slow, loc. 2694

joint evaluation, because it allows a comparison of the two sets.

Daniel Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and Slow, loc. 2705

causal base rates: a stereotypical trait that is attributed to an individual, and a significant feature of the situation that affects an individual’s outcome.

Daniel Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and Slow, loc. 2887

Our comforting conviction that the world makes sense rests on a secure foundation: our almost unlimited ability to ignore our ignorance.

Daniel Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and Slow, loc. 3381

We can know something only if it is both true and knowable.

Daniel Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and Slow, loc. 3386

To think clearly about the future, we need to clean up the language that we use in labeling the beliefs we had in the past.

Daniel Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and Slow, loc. 3395

A general limitation of the human mind is its imperfect ability to reconstruct past states of knowledge, or beliefs that have changed.

Daniel Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and Slow, loc. 3401

In the presence of randomness, regular patterns can only be mirages.

Daniel Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and Slow, loc. 3493

Confidence is a feeling, which reflects the coherence of the information and the cognitive ease of processing it. It is wise to take admissions of uncertainty seriously, but declarations of high confidence mainly tell you that an individual has constructed a coherent story in his mind, not necessarily that the story is true.

Daniel Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and Slow, loc. 3576

the person who acquires more knowledge develops an enhanced illusion of her skill and becomes unrealistically overconfident.

Daniel Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and Slow, loc. 3708

The first lesson is that errors of prediction are inevitable because the world is unpredictable.

Daniel Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and Slow, loc. 3729

high subjective confidence is not to be trusted as an indicator of accuracy

Daniel Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and Slow, loc. 3729

the confidence that people have in their intuitions is not a reliable guide to their validity. In other words, do not trust anyone—including yourself—to tell you how much you should trust their judgment.

Daniel Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and Slow, loc. 4068

“losses loom larger than gains” and that people are loss averse.

Daniel Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and Slow, loc. 4785

What is the smallest gain that I need to balance an equal chance to lose $100?

Daniel Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and Slow, loc. 4786

Rabin’s theorem shows that anyone who rejects a favorable gamble with small stakes is mathematically committed to a foolish level of risk aversion for some larger gamble.

Daniel Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and Slow, loc. 4811

The self is more motivated to avoid bad self-definitions than to pursue good ones.

Daniel Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and Slow, loc. 5095

tsuwaritaisakutoninnshinnchuunominnnanonayami seikatsuchiebukuroshiri-zu (Japanese Edition) – 書評 / 感想

Last updated on 2016年1月24日 By 石崎 力也

実は私も「痔」です(笑)。 妊娠期間中になりましたし、出産の時には脱肛というのですか?肛門が外に出てしまった(いきみすぎ・・笑)ので、しばらくは(少し汚いお話ですが・・)大きい方をした後に、肛門を押し込む(笑)

yumetsukikurabu, tsuwaritaisakutoninnshinnchuunominnnanonayami seikatsuchiebukuroshiri-zu (Japanese Edition), loc. 892

破水、これは赤ちゃんが産まれて来るときに産道を、できるだけストレスなく通過させるために、出産直前、またいきんでいるときに、するはずのものです。

yumetsukikurabu, tsuwaritaisakutoninnshinnchuunominnnanonayami seikatsuchiebukuroshiri-zu (Japanese Edition), loc. 923

尿はアンモニアのにおいです。 破水の臭いは生臭いといわれています。 この違いくらいしか、素人にはわかりません。

yumetsukikurabu, tsuwaritaisakutoninnshinnchuunominnnanonayami seikatsuchiebukuroshiri-zu (Japanese Edition), loc. 934

それに、日本では健診のたびに超音波検査など、結構詳細に検査を行ってくれますが、海外では、それほど詳細な検査を行いません。

yumetsukikurabu, tsuwaritaisakutoninnshinnchuunominnnanonayami seikatsuchiebukuroshiri-zu (Japanese Edition), loc. 955

お産は自然なことで、なるようになる、というような考え方の先生が多いようですね。 何もなく、順調な妊娠であれば、気にすることはないと思います。

yumetsukikurabu, tsuwaritaisakutoninnshinnchuunominnnanonayami seikatsuchiebukuroshiri-zu (Japanese Edition), loc. 958

Wearable Devices Change Everything (Japanese Edition) – 書評 / 感想

Last updated on 2016年1月24日 By 石崎 力也

て

Toshinao Sasaki, Wearable Devices Change Everything (Japanese Edition), loc. 260

堅牢

Toshinao Sasaki, Wearable Devices Change Everything (Japanese Edition), loc. 585

単

Toshinao Sasaki, Wearable Devices Change Everything (Japanese Edition), loc. 829

です。  ライトノベル作家野崎ま

Toshinao Sasaki, Wearable Devices Change Everything (Japanese Edition), loc. 856

kno

Toshinao Sasaki, Wearable Devices Change Everything (Japanese Edition), loc. 856

乱という状況で、今後は加えて血圧や体温などいろいろなセンサ

Toshinao Sasaki, Wearable Devices Change Everything (Japanese Edition), loc. 1074

Why Smart People Make Big Money Mistakes and How to Correct Them: Lessons from the Life-Changing Science of Behavioral Economics – 書評 / 感想

Last updated on 2016年1月24日 By 石崎 力也

Being cost-conscious when making little purchases is where you can often rack up big savings.

Gary Belsky and Thomas Gilovich, Why Smart People Make Big Money Mistakes and How to Correct Them: Lessons from the Life-Changing Science of Behavioral Economics, loc. 422

When we incur a loss or expense, we prefer to hide it from ourselves within a bigger loss or

Gary Belsky and Thomas Gilovich, Why Smart People Make Big Money Mistakes and How to Correct Them: Lessons from the Life-Changing Science of Behavioral Economics, loc. 425

expense.

Gary Belsky and Thomas Gilovich, Why Smart People Make Big Money Mistakes and How to Correct Them: Lessons from the Life-Changing Science of Behavioral Economics, loc. 426

stretch your enjoyment from the good things in life, you should “segregate gains” whenever possible. Spread them out.

Gary Belsky and Thomas Gilovich, Why Smart People Make Big Money Mistakes and How to Correct Them: Lessons from the Life-Changing Science of Behavioral Economics, loc. 1025

Weber’s law implies that the pain of two moderately bad experiences will typically exceed the pain of experiencing both at one time.

Gary Belsky and Thomas Gilovich, Why Smart People Make Big Money Mistakes and How to Correct Them: Lessons from the Life-Changing Science of Behavioral Economics, loc. 1032

The more choices people face, the more likely they are to simply do nothing.

Gary Belsky and Thomas Gilovich, Why Smart People Make Big Money Mistakes and How to Correct Them: Lessons from the Life-Changing Science of Behavioral Economics, loc. 1078

“extremeness aversion.”

Gary Belsky and Thomas Gilovich, Why Smart People Make Big Money Mistakes and How to Correct Them: Lessons from the Life-Changing Science of Behavioral Economics, loc. 1206

once people develop preferences—even small ones—they tend to view new information in such a way that it supports those preferences.

Gary Belsky and Thomas Gilovich, Why Smart People Make Big Money Mistakes and How to Correct Them: Lessons from the Life-Changing Science of Behavioral Economics, loc. 1791

they tend to discount any new information that doesn’t fit their preconceived opinions and feelings.

Gary Belsky and Thomas Gilovich, Why Smart People Make Big Money Mistakes and How to Correct Them: Lessons from the Life-Changing Science of Behavioral Economics, loc. 1792

Any individual who is not professionally occupied in the financial services industry (and even most who are) and who in any way tries to actively manage an investment portfolio is probably suffering from overconfidence. That

Gary Belsky and Thomas Gilovich, Why Smart People Make Big Money Mistakes and How to Correct Them: Lessons from the Life-Changing Science of Behavioral Economics, loc. 2246

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