Archive for May, 2005

Posted on May 31st, 2005

You may have heard that anybody can set up a website, get visitors and make money.

While that may have been true at the beginning of the internet revolution, that is certainly not true now.

There are many experts suggesting various techniques – some advisable, some less reputable. Some of these less reputable techniques can work for a time and may indeed improve your search engine ranking for a time. However, there are numerous stories of sites which have employed these optimisation techniques, but have suddenly and without notice disappeared from the search engines top 10.

There is one consistent way to work towards the elusive top spot, and that is by Building a popular website

Sound too simple?

Look at the top ranking sites, very often they are built by expert in their field, have quality content with good articles, and are interesting to read. They are not just the type of sites that have been built to attract Google Adsense income, but are created and run by people with a genuine interest in the subject area.

If you’re not an expert but want to create a website, then one of these best ways to get the search engines to notice you is to Become an expert.

  • Research your subject
  • Sign up to related ezines
  • Join mailing lists
  • Download free ebooks
  • Set up a blog – share what you’ve learned
  • One day – maybe you could be writing your own articles!

By keeping up to date on your subject, not only will you have useful information to create new pages on your site, add comments to your blog, but visitors will bookmark your page and return to visit for more information.

For further tips and ideas on how to build a website. visit How to set up your own home internet businesses

This article was submitted by Jen Carter, the creator of the InternetMillionairess.Com website.

Posted on May 31st, 2005

I’d like to say a few words about words. In particular, a special category of words. Words that you may not suspect are important. Words that are vital really, to your online business success.

Not too long ago the promise, heard round the world was, "Build it and they will come." Today, with somewhere in the neighborhood of 8 billion websites already Online, and the number growing so rapidly that some are betting big bucks on the number doubling each year, for many years to come, a more accurate prediction would be:

"If they can find it, they just might stop by."

Making sure that your site is easy to find, increasing the likelihood that once found — they will stop by, and assuring that once there — they will stay long enough to take the desired action: this is what organic search engine optimization (SEO), is all about. Some of the methods used to achieve those ends is what we will discuss here.

Now, we could talk about Conversion Rates (CR’s) or Page Rejection/Abandonment Rates (PR/AR), Cost Per Visitor (CPV), Ratio of New to Returning Visitors (RN/RV), Conversion Rate, Average Page Views (APV’s), Average Order Value (AOV), or my current favorite, Page "Stickiness", or any of a number of Key Performance Indicators (KPI’s), which are all the buzz, at the moment.

All I’m going to say about the KPI’s here is that they are all excellent ways to measure how well your SEO campaign is going. They will provide enough numbers to keep a mathematician happily counting, for days, and provide the basis for some very useful information, IF you’ve done your homework, taken advantage of optimal designing, including Organic Search Engine Optimization, and used the right words from the start.

Words mean different things ~to different people You say (pō tāt’ ō) and I say (pă tŏt’ ō)… and Billy Joe Bob, over there in the corner, says (spŭd) Stick close to me on this one. All of us, by reason of education, upbringing, geography, (probably heredity, but who knows?) have particular ways of referring to things. On top of this, there is the jargon associated with our professions, social institutions, and Alma Maters which most of us tend to use as a badge of identity and perhaps even superiority. But as anyone knows who has ever tried to get answers to simple questions from someone unwilling, or unable to talk in anything but the jargon of their own position, it doesn’t work too well.

The point I’m trying to make here is that no matter how great your (pō tāt’ ōs) / (pă tŏt’ ōs) are, Billy Joe Bob isn’t going to be able to find them in a search, and thereby know anything about them, till you break down and start calling them spuds, at least some of the time.

Q- Hey mack, you got any swage lube? This rebated boattail won’t slide. (* explanation at end)

The words that will bring people to your site and keep them there, long enough to take the action that you want them to take (sign-up, join, buy, etc.), are the words we need to find and use. The important thing to keep in mind here is that, just like you weren’t looking for the Key Performance Indicators (KPI’s) I mentioned earlier, so too your potential customers won’t necessarily be looking for your products and/or services by the same names which you call them.

The first thing I tell a new client who is looking at establishing/ improving their position on the web is to start talking with their customers and find out what they call the services and or products that their business offers. After getting past the strange looks and raised eyebrows, they usualy discover that their customers use completely different words to describe their business than they do.

Search Word Optimization Now we come down to the real crux of the matter. What words will your potential customers/clients use to find your particular goods/services? In the world wide world of the WorldWideWeb my number (#1) one advice is, "Assume Nothing." There is no reason to guess. Anything you don’t know (I try to start with the idea that I know nothing) can be checked out and proven, one way or another.

One way to find out what most people are calling what they are looking for, is to use one of the handy Search Term Suggestion Tools you will find on our SEO Tools page. Here you can input words and phrases you would like to use for your site keywords and see how many times they were searched for on an average day. Here we can quickly find out the differences between the words "we think" people would be looking for in order to find the services offered by this site and what they actually use.

For Example:

When checking the keyword phrase website development, a common phrase among those who do that sort of thing and one I’ve always used to describe what I do, the average number of searches per day comes up to around 750.

Now, that’s not a bad number but being as the operative word here is "optimization", we decided to try a few alternative phrases. When we checked the phrase web design the number of daily searches jumped to just under 14,000.

Any guesses as to which phrase we decided to use? The phrase web design & development not only says it more clearly to our human visitors but it also is searched for 2,100% more often than "website development" and is therefore much more "search engine friendly".

A Word of Caution There are those who believe that, by using less than honest tactics, they can influence the Search Engine Result Pages (SERPs) in their favor. Having subscribed to this theory once or twice, in the past, let me just say that while it is possible to gain some short term advantage in this way, the likelihood is that you will be found out, the url will be banned, and what ever time and financial investment you have put into it will be lost.

Be sensible with your copy and optimization efforts. Google, Yahoo, MSN, and all the rest have buildings full of brilliant engineers and statisticians who stay up all night studying ways to beat the cheaters. Just like your mama told you, honesty is the best policy. You might want to keep that in mind when shopping for an SEO firm.

It’s Only Words . . . Here, at Emerald Coast Entrepreneur, we strive from the start of every project to work towards a site optimized for both humans and robots. A site which will show up on the first page, in your main keyword searches, and have the look, feel, and WORDS to draw people in and keep them there long enough to take the desired action (buy, sign up, register, etc.). And first, last and always, a site which we can look on proudly together as having earned its placement by good honest effort and applied principles of organic search engine optimization.

With a start to finish holistic approach to business strategy, professionally written copy, Internet Marketing, design & development, all carried out within an integrated plan for optimized results, we can bring your business to a place of prominence and assure the leads/sales that you want.

Time has proven three indisputable facts pertaining to Organic Search Engine Optimization (SEO).

  • SEO is the most cost effective form of internet marketing available.
  • SEO usually provides an extremely fast return on investment. Many times within 30 days.
  • SEO continues to provide returns, long after an individual project is completed.

—————————————————————–
* Explanation: Hunters may skip this section.

swage (swāj) verb 1: form metals with a swage Swaging is the operation of cold forming metal through a die using high pressures, specifically in the manufacture of bullets. A rebated boattail is a method of sealing the bullet within the jacket in such a way that the seal is improved, reducing muzzle blast and increasing accuracy. Oh, why didn’t you just say so?

James Doc Lewis spends much of his professional time as SEO for Emerald Coast Entrepreneur a professional search marketing firm. Doc started practicing his search engine majic long before the term SEO was coined. Introduced by a friend, at the University of California at Berkeley, to the Usenet some time in 1982, when the idea of a world wide network was just starting to make a buz, he quickly realized that this was what he had been looking for. "I haven’t been without a computer and a way to get connected since." Doc was on the design team of the graphical user interface (GUI) for "Veronica", the second database of web documents, and forerunner of our modern search engines, a topic to which he gives constant study and receives numerous requests for consultation from around the world. To find out more about Doc and his unique style of SEM/SEO check him out at ECE, an integrated search engine marketing firm

Copyright © 2005 Emerald Coast Entrepreneur

Posted on May 31st, 2005

Search engines are constantly tweaking their ranking algorithms and when that happens some pages lose their top ranking positions. One such event was the infamous Florida Update. Many pages were practically kicked-out of the top 1000 pages for competitive keywords.

With recent updates, webmasters have been thinking that Google does not use PageRank because low PR pages can get very good rankings. Before that everyone was saying that PageRank was THE factor for top positions. Now, everyone is saying that keyword rich anchor text links from many different sites is the key for the top ranks.

All these recent events seem to indicate that search engine algorithms are totally unpredictable, right? Wrong!

All search engines are going in the very same direction. The scientific literature related to information retrieval and recent search engine patents reveal the not-so-distant future of search engine ranking algorithms.

Introducing Topic Specific Link Popularity

For the last few years search engines relied on General Link Popularity to assess the importance of every page. Relevancy was based on a combination of General Link Popularity (importance) and keyword matches on page and off page (anchor text of links for specificity).

General Link Popularity is measured by summing the weight of ALL incoming links to a page. With General Link Popularity ANY link improved the importance of a page. Webmasters started to buy high-PR links from totally unrelated sites. Pages were getting unrelated votes.

To combat this problem, Google implemented a Topic Specific Link Popularity algorithm. When a user specifies a query, Google determines the importance of a page by the Link Popularity it gets from RELATED to the keywords pages.

A link from a page will give you considerable Topic Specific Link Popularity when:
1) the page itself is optimized for your keywords
2) the page has a high General Link Popularity (PageRank)
3) the page is from a site owned by someone else (you can’t vote for yourself)

From a search engine’s point of view, implementing a Topic Specific Link Popularity algorithm is a very tough task when the queries need to be answered in less than a second.

All you need to know is this: the top ranked pages for competitive keywords are the ones with the highest Topic Specific Link Popularity.

You need links from pages that have high PageRank, are optimized for YOUR keywords and are owned by someone else.

How do you get these links?

1. Search for your keywords on Google and look at all pages that rank for your keywords. Seek links from these pages.

2. Reciprocal Links. Swap links with sites that can give you a link on a page optimized for your keywords. Look for pages with high PageRank that have your keywords in their title and in their incoming links. Reciprocal links work provided that they come from optimized for your keywords (related) pages.

3. Buy links from some of the top ranked for your keywords pages.

4. DMOZ and Yahoo’s directory usually have pages that are very well ranked for your keywords. You absolutely must get links from these pages. If you have a commercial site, don’t hesitate and buy a link from Yahoo immediately. It is well worth the $299.

5. Find out who links to the top ranked pages for your keywords. Many of their links will not be topic specific, but many WILL be. Try to get links from the related ones. A page is related when it has your keywords in its title, text etc.

6. Form a link exchange ring with some of your competitors. That’s a brutally effective strategy. Basically, you link to your competitors from your main optimized page (usually the home page) and they link to you from their most optimized page! Such rings can dominate the top positions and will be very difficult to outrank (it is difficult to get that amount of topic specific links). The caveat here is that the link exchange is on the main page and is not buried somewhere deep.

One more very important tip.

Increase the relevancy of the page that links to you by using your keywords in the anchor text and the description of your site! Yes, having keywords in the links pointing to your page increase your rankings not only by associating the keywords with your page but also by increasing the relevancy of the page that gives you the link! That’s the reason SEOs think anchor text is the most important factor. It is NOT. You can get a monstrous ranking boost from a link that does not use your keywords in the anchor text provided that the page has high PageRank and is optimized for your keywords (an example would be a DMOZ listing).

What about getting unrelated links?

Let’s say you buy a high PR unrelated link. The page that links to you does not have your keywords in the title and text. The only factor that makes the link relevant to your keywords is the anchor text to your site and your description. You’ll still get some benefit but that’s nothing compared to a link from an optimized for your keywords page.

Your site can’t get into Google’s top 1000 results?

If your site lacks Topic Specific Links, it may get filtered out from the results even if it has a good amount of PageRank (from non-related or affiliated sites). You need some threshold amount of Topic Specific Link Popularity to get into the top 1000 pages for very competitive keywords.

Two Final Points

1. Only one link per site can give you a Topic Specific ranking boost. Look for a link from the most optimized for your keywords page.

2. If you find a page that ranks well for your keywords, go for the link EVEN if that page has a lot of links on it.

To recap: the more optimized a page is for your keywords (measured by PageRank and keywords found on-page and off-page) the more Topic Specific Link Popularity Boost you will get from a link.

Topic Specific Link Popularity is and will be the key for top rankings. Anchor text plays a major role but it is not THE factor. PageRank is still very important especially the PageRank of the pages that link to you.

Hristo Hristov, owner of the Search Engine Optimization Guide

Posted on May 30th, 2005

While the "is SEO dead" debate may seem recent to you, this isn’t a new discussion at all. You can easily find articles with this exact same title from several years ago. And what have changed since then? Probably nothing significant, simply things have been taking its course.

IS SEO REALLY DEAD?

It’s not easy to answer this question mainly because there is no consensus on what SEO means exactly. However there are two clear types of SEO services that are living hard times:

  • Rankings-based SEO: This is the Wikipedia definition of SEO:

Search engine optimization is a set of methods aimed at improving the ranking of a website in search engine listings.

Sticking to this definition, SEO can also be referred as "search engine positioning" (SEP), as it tries to get your web site to the top listings in search engines for certain keywords. According to this approach SEOs (search engine optimizers) are failing, because it is harder than ever to achieve top rankings. This is caused by two main reasons:

  • The increasing volume of web sites online, which intensifies the competition.

  • The constant efforts of search engines to improve their rankings and make them less manipulable.
  • This picture won’t change over the time. On the contrary, as time goes by, the competence will be strengthened and top rankings will be even more unreachable.

  • Black Hat SEO: In the aim of getting higher search rankings, Black Hat optimizers use techniques that are frowned upon by search engines (and that are often unethical): invisible text, keyword stuffing, forum and blog spam… While you might benefit temporarily from those techniques, they aren’t worth the risk: sooner or later your web site will be penalized or even removed from major search engines.
  • THE THIN LINE BETWEEN GOOD SEO AND USABILITY

    Leaving apart wrong approaches and penalized methods there are still a number of aspects that SEO can improve to make your web site more appealing to search engines, through "White Hat" techniques. However you will come to the conclusion that these techniques are not exclusive to SEO.

    • By making your internal pages be three links or less away from your front page and making their urls static (without data following a question mark "?" in them) you will improve the search engine indexability of your site. This is, without a doubt, a determinant factor. No SEO technique will work unless the pages of your web site are indexed by search engines. But by doing this you will also improve the user experience: your web pages will be accessed easier and faster, and their urls will be more human-readable.

  • By making light pages with clean HTML code, external CSS files… you will avoid potential indexation problems (search engines might not fully index big files), but you will also allow users to download your web site faster.
  • By adding meaningful information to page titles, meta tags, links, image alternate texts… you will increase the search engine relevance of your pages, but you will also help users orientate themselves thanks to a more descriptive and understandable web site.
  • By using structural elements on your pages (headings, lists, bold text…) you will assist search engines to make sense of your web site and assign more importance to significant information, but you will also help people skim your content and easily find what they are looking for.
  • Read above: easier, faster, more understandable… usability concepts. Good SEO and usability come hand in hand in order to achieve a global Internet marketing success. SEO companies that focus exclusively on search engine rankings are doomed to failure because they don’t think long-term. On the contrary, White Hat SEO put forth best efforts to develop a web site that is appealing to search engines, but also to users, and this is the only way to ensure your web site’s ongoing success.

    According to this, search engine optimization is not dead, but it needs a different approach: SEO can’t stand as an independent aspect of your web site, it must be considered an integral part of your global marketing strategy.

    Original article published by Javier García: Is search engine optimization (SEO) dead? in Monetizing the Web
    Read more articles on Search engine optimization

    Posted on May 30th, 2005

    Google’s new AdSense program is a smart move for marketers at their newly traded company. Many Internet entrepreneurs see it as a good way to make a lot of money in trickle payments, while Google enjoys high stock valuations, quarterly profits and thankful stockholders with additional shareholder value. One way some authors are attempting to attract AdSense traffic is to set up websites with specific content with key words. There are many possible venues for this, for instance a website with a news theme or online magazine. Perhaps a website with information about all sorts of things, many subjects, some news, blog, forum and many pages with a large amount of content.

    Question is where might one get that amount of content? Well you can buy it? Write News articles or even recruit authors to write for payment or for a by-line link. If you do choose to recruit content writers or others then there are things you should think about. There are ways to post articles to increase hit ratings on the AdSense. In fact most website owners botch this part, even do not read the instructions from Google.

    But there is more to it than that because there are ways to create two-pages for each piece of content and pages for groups of contents of a certain type, which simply by the the titles of other pieces of content increase key words and better placement of the AdSense types of ads that the bot sees to determine the best possible choices. Another thing you should consider is that the articles first paragraph and title should be in the key words and meta tags of the page to bring in viewers.

    For instance no one comes from a Google search to read an article on The History of Mining in the United States only to see AdSense ads all over on how to create your own newsletter, ezine or buy software to build content for an online news site. You see? It would be much better for you and Google your advertising partner to have ads which fit; mining equipment, john Deere, caterpillar tractor heavy equipment, probably all good key words, not Creating a friggin news letter or buying news generating software or RSS feed.

    You should ditch all your unrelated information on other pages except for to and from home page, if in fact these pages of news and contents main intent is to attract AdSense click throughs. If your major amount of money comes from Key Word ads then you should make that the first priority, AdWords on top, sides and your stuff at the bottom and no mention of your main sites listing, concentrate on the content of each pages, do not keep copying you home page encoding. Concentrate on the content, news and/or articles on the key words or metatags on that page, tight, quick fast loading graphics underneath maybe something short about your main sites mission, but not anything which will allow Google’s AdSense bots to assume that online news site owners are coming to the page. When people come to read my articles or that of someone who is specializing in financial stock market theory or investing they are not looking for that stuff, they are interested in starting a site just like yours, tools or software needed to do it. Just like they are not reading an article about let’s say scrapbooks on your site to look ad ads for golf, vacations, boats or scuba gear. How many hits are you getting for each subject, how many hits, how much money have you made on those articles? Well, do you know? Maybe if they would increase you could expand your business and pay more attention you might be in the mega cash flow range that you seek? Think on it.

    "Lance Winslow" - Online Think Tank forum board. If you have innovative thoughts and unique perspectives, come think with Lance; www.WorldThinkTank.net/wttbbs/

    Posted on May 30th, 2005

    The Internet may have started as the fervent brainchild of DARPA, the US defence agency - but it quickly evolved into a network of computers at the service of a community. Academics around the world used it to communicate, compare results, compute, interact and flame each other. The ethos of the community as content-creator, source of information, fount of emotional sustenance, peer group, and social substitute is well embedded in the very fabric of the Net. Millions of members in free, advertising or subscription financed, mega-sites such as Geocities, AOL, Yahoo and Tripod generate more bits and bytes than the rest of the Internet combined. This traffic emanates from discussion groups, announcement (mailing) lists, newsgroups, and content sites (such as Suite101 and Webseed). Even the occasional visitor can find priceless gems of knowledge and opinion in the mound of trash and frivolity that these parts of the web have become.

    The emergence of search engines and directories which cater only to this (sizeable) market segment was to be expected. By far the most comprehensive (and, thus, less discriminating) was Deja. It spidered and took in the exploding newsgroups (Usenet) scene with its tens of thousands of daily messages. When it was taken over by Google, its archives contained more than 500 million messages, cross-indexed every which way and pertaining to every possible (and many impossible) a topic.

    Google is by far the most popular search engine yet, having surpassed the more veteran Northern Lights, Fast, and Alta Vista. Its mind defying database (more than 1.3 billion web pages), its caching technology (making it, in effect, one of the biggest libraries on earth) and its site ranking (by popularity and links-over) have rendered it unbeatable. Yet, its efforts to integrate the treasure trove that is Deja and adapt it to the Google search interface have hitherto been spectacularly unsuccessful (though it finally made it two and a half months after the purchase). So much so, that it gave birth to a protest movement.

    http://groups.google.com/

    http://groups.google.com/googlegroups/archive_announce.html

    Bickering and bad tempered flaming (often bordering on the deranged, the racial, or the stalking) are the more repulsive aspects of the Usenet groups. But at the heart of the debate this time is no ordinary sadistic venting. The issue is: who owns content generated by the public at large on computers funded by tax dollars? Can a commercial enterprise own and monopolize the fruits of the collective effort of millions of individuals from all over the world? Or should such intellectual property remain in the public domain, perhaps maintained by public institutions (such as the Library of Congress)? Should open source movements gain access to Deja’s source code in order to launch Deja II? And who owns the copyright to all these messages (theoretically, the authors)? Google, as Deja before it, is offering compilations of this content, the copyright to which it does not and cannot own. The very legal concept of intellectual property is at the crux of this virtual conflict.

    Google was, thus, compelled to offer free access to the CONTENT of the Deja archives to alternative (non-Google) archiving systems. But it remains mum on the search programming code and the user interface. Already one such open source group (called Dela News) is coalescing, although it is not clear who will bear the costs of the gigantic storage and processing such a project would require. Dela wants to have a physical copy of the archive deposited in trust with a dot org.

    This raises a host of no less fascinating subjects. The Deja Usenet search technology, programming code, and systems are inextricable and almost indistinguishable from the Usenet archive itself. Without these elements - structural as well as dynamic - there will be no archive and no way to extract meaningful information from the chaotic bedlam that is the Usenet environment. In this case, the information lies in the ordering and classification of raw data and not in the content itself. This is why the open source proponents demand that Google share both content and the tools to access it. Google’s hasty and improvised unplugging of Deja in February only served to aggravate the die-hard fans of erstwhile Deja.

    The Usenet is not only the refuge of pedophiles and neo-Nazis. It includes thousands of academically rigorous and research inclined discussion groups which morph with intellectual trends and fashionable subjects. More than twenty years of wisdom and erudition are buried in servers all over the world. Scholars often visit Usenet in their pursuit of complementary knowledge or expert advice. The Usenet is also the documentation of Western intellectual history in the last three decades. In it invaluable. Google’s decision to abandon the internal links between Deja messages means the disintegration of the hyperlinked fabric of this resource - unless Google comes up with an alternative (and expensive) solution.

    Google is offering a better, faster, more multi-layered and multi-faceted access to the entire archive. But its brush with the more abrasive side of the open source movement brought to the surface long suppressed issues. This may be the single most important contribution of this otherwise not so opportune transaction.

    About The Author

    Sam Vaknin is the author of "Malignant Self Love - Narcissism Revisited" and "After the Rain - How the West Lost the East". He is a columnist in "Central Europe Review", United Press International (UPI) and ebookweb.org and the editor of mental health and Central East Europe categories in The Open Directory, Suite101 and searcheurope.com. Until recently, he served as the Economic Advisor to the Government of Macedonia.

    His web site: http://samvak.tripod.com

    Posted on May 29th, 2005

    A good headline is so badly needed that without it your SEO content provider is doomed to fail. It matters little how good their writing is or even how good they are in finding the best keyword phrases.

    Good keyword phrases will give you a good position in search engine results, but if you have a poor headline, readers will ignore your site listed at number one on the page. Instead they will eagerly click on the site listed at number ten and right at the bottom of the page, simply because it has a more catchy interesting headline.

    You do this yourself all the time. Just try and remember the times you have clicked on the site that is listed right at the top of the results from your search? Not many I can assure you. This is precisely why without a needed catchy headline, a lot of the other good wok from your SEO content provider will be wasted.

    There is something else that is very important once you’ve gotten somebody to your site. Everybody knows that the longer you can keep them there, the higher a chance you have of making some money from them. The only way to keep them there is with good content packaged in the sort of headlines that grab them by the scruff of their necks and drag them to read your content. That’s what is needed from a SEO content provider to succeed at your site.

    Are you considering hiring a ghost writer? If so don’t do anything until you’ve read a few more articles at the author’s hire a ghost writer blog.

    Posted on May 29th, 2005

    From the very beginning of the Internet, the number one challenge which all of us have faced is how to attract qualified visitors to our websites. Throughout the boom years, one of the most popular solutions was to get massive funding, relatively easy to get in those days, and "buy" traffic, by various means.

    As an iconoclastic younger developer, with ambitions of beating the "big boys" at their own game, more time than money or the connections to get it, I sought a less capital intensive methodology to achieve the same results. Years of study and rapt attention to the pertinent forums, trying everything that even seemed to make sense (making many mistakes along the way, and learning much from each one), then carefully monitoring the results, has lead to many highly workable tools in our SEO bag of tricks. The outcome of these trial and error methods, (lots of both) lays the foundation of our SEO services and the basis for the ongoing growth of traffic to your website and ours.

    The simple fact of the matter is this: Expertise in any other form of writing in no way qualifies one for the type of writing required to optimize a website for the Internet. There are many sites which have less than correct punctuation, grammar, and even spelling which rank #1 in their optimized search phrases. This is not to say that I don’t think these things are important, only that to be found in the search engines, they are not the most important consideration.

    The flip side of this argument is equally true. Just because someone knows all the ins and outs of all of the search engines, can write algorithms in their sleep, has lunches with Dr. Eric Schmidt and is on a first name basis with Larry Page and Sergey Brin, does not, in any way, make them a writer. All of the writing on this site was done as a collaborative venture between Susan K. Thompson, a professional writer with strong academic credentials and real world experience, in both business and marketing, and myself. Was there a lot of editing and re-write? Yes. Were there disagreements? You bet! Was it worth it? Look at the record.

    Emerald Coast Entrepreneur was launched on May 1, 2005 with most site optimization in place and submission to the directories just beginning. With a total monetary investment of less than $100.00, and a time investment, I’d rather not think about, but which approached 300 hours, the site was given a PR5 ranking by Google on it’s first update, less than 2 months after launch.

    Studies show that over 90% of all online users use search engines to find what they are looking for, whether products/services, or just plain old information.

    The following twelve points will, I hope, summarize a philosophy, approach and methodology to the SEO question which is both sound and effective, along with giving some helpful insight into the industry itself.

    1. Content. Content. Content. Effective, professional, optimized Copywriting is the single, most important factor in any SEO campaign. Search engines index websites based on the content found on each page of the site. With a thorough understanding of the language and grammatical conventions combined with intensive research, to find and exploit the market focus, one can move a website to the upper echelon of the "SERP’s" (Search Engine Results Page) in a methodical as well as ethical manner.

    2. Analyze Web Logs. Measure everything, at least twice, and then check again. While I would be the first to say that many of the procedures that make up website optimization are more art than science, one needs to take a very scientific approach to the results of the effort. This is done by methodically keeping a record of, and making an analysis of the sites web logs. There are a number of specialized software which make the job easier but at the bare minimum, one needs to keep a close eye on the site visitors and their activity while on the site. No matter how well planned the strategy, it is largely theoretical until proven by the results, which can only be measured by the logs, and a thorough analysis of their content.

    3. No one can guarantee a #1 ranking on Google, or any other search engine. Those who promise such feats will either optimize for such vague search term phrases as, ("green stunted widgets with purple Polka-dots and icing") that no one will ever likely look for, or they are making a false claim, which they have no intention of keeping, or they have an inside edge at Google, something which they will loose, quickly, when the honest folks at Google find out about it. The other option, that they will take the money and run, is worth mentioning here but I’ll be polite.

    4. Some things are just plain silly. You don’t need to submit your site to 50,000 search engines. Businesses which offer this service are suspect, at best. 85% of the search results on the Internet come from one search engine, which, if you have one link from an established website, or better yet, a directory, will find your site just fine, on it’s own. Four (4) search engines account for over 90% of the traffic on the web. As for any supposed benefit which may accrue from being listed in an obscure search engine in Botswana which specializes in safaris to the Kalahari Desert and receives 7 hits per day; well, you figure it out.

    5. SEO is not Pay-per-Click. While no one would argue the effectiveness of getting increased traffic and sales, through a well planned, pay-per-click campaign, the fact remains that the conversion rates are generally low and they cease the moment the "pay" stops. With a well planned and executed SEO campaign, while results may take a bit longer, they continue to produce, and in fact grow, long after the work is done and paid for. Quite often we have found that after a thorough optimization of a site, only minor adjustments are needed on an ongoing basis, primarily related to new content and/or new items of sale or service.

    6. SEO is not witchcraft, Druidism, shamanism. Neither does it require any special chants, ceremonial fires, or vestments, though some of us do like to howl at the full moon, on occasion. There are no "Top Secret" practices which a reputable SEO can not tell a client, a judge, or his mother, for that matter. The very nature of the Internet has always been cooperative and there is nothing about SEO that can’t be learned, with a heavy dose of time and money. A reputable SEO firm will give you an item per item breakdown of just where the money goes. Be wary if you sense a secretive atmosphere or any unwillingness to answer questions. While there are technical points which might take some background to fully understand, if one has a solid overview of the entire situation, a simple explanation should be easy enough to come up with.

    7. Do-it-yourself SEO. Yes, you can execute your own SEO campaign and find a reputable SEO firm to help plan and organize it for you. About one half of my own clientele do some part of the actual work themselves, or have their in-house dedicated personnel do it, after discussion of the goals and aims of the business/website, a thorough website analysis, comprehensive search phrase research, and focused instruction on the ways and means of achieving high SERPs. These preliminaries are followed up with a detailed program of suggestions and methods which the client can then implement themselves or hire others to perform. Average savings; 30-40%.

    8. Phased Implementation. While many companies spend thousands of dollars per month on Search Engine Optimization, an alternative is available which will pay dividends to you in increased sales and leads without the high initial investment. The most important consideration is to have a reputable firm handle the initial evaluation and suggested optimization planning first. The trial and error method will cost much more, in the long run, with or without the desired result. After studying the plan and establishing a workable budget you may implement the plan as finances allow.

    9. Remember the old saying, "If it sounds too good to be true, it probably is." Never was this more true than in the realm of SEO. While concrete and measurable gains will always come from a well thought out and executed optimization strategy, the Internet is a competitive media and we all want to be number one. Accept that a steady upward movement, over time, will place you worlds ahead of a flash followed by a crash.

    10. A thought to ponder. At stake, in the race for the top, is the very existence of your website, your business, and quite possibly your reputation. Beware of any "shortcuts" or less than ethical schemes that anyone might suggest to further your business goals. When it’s all said and done it is you, the business owner, who bears the responsibility for any company or individual you hire. Insist on knowing exactly what the strategy is and what steps are being performed to implement it. If it seems, in the least, suspicious, ask for and get an explanation. In this case, not only is Ignorance not bliss, it could very well be the beginning of the end for your business.

    11. All incoming links are not created equal. Both the relevance to your line of business and website subject matter and the PR value of the incoming link determine how valuable they are to your own PR ranking. With Google starting the trend, nothing new there, and most of the others following close behind, the days of grabbing all the inbound links, in any way possible, are gone. Not only will low ranked and/or irrelevant inbound links not help, they will, in fact, cause a penalty. Link farms, free-for-all link schemes, automated link accumulation software, or any other fad that doesn’t carefully screen the links and websites they are coming from will, in the long run, do more harm than good.

    12. It’s more than just facts and figures. The relationship between an online business and SEO is, perhaps, one of the closest of business relationships. In order to be effective, a SEO must know not only the facts and figures pertaining to the endeavor, but s/he must know something of the dreams and aspirations of the business principals. Things which don’t normally come out in a prospectus are often invaluable information when searching for the "right fit" into the complex world of the Internet. My own clients sometimes ask, due to the frequency of my calls and email in the early phases, "Am I your only client?" I usually laugh and say something to the effect that until I know your business almost as well as you do, yes, you are the only one that counts.

    James Doc Lewis spends much of his professional time as SEO for Emerald Coast Entrepreneur a professional search marketing firm. Doc started practicing his search engine majic long before the term SEO was coined. Introduced by a friend, at the University of California at Berkeley, to the Usenet some time in 1982, when the idea of a world wide network was just starting to make a buz, he quickly realized that this was what he had been looking for. "I haven’t been without a computer and a way to get connected since." Doc was on the design team of the graphical user interface (GUI) for "Veronica", the second database of web documents, and forerunner of our modern search engines, a topic to which he gives constant study and receives numerous requests for consultation from around the world. To find out more about Doc and his unique style of SEM/SEO check him out at ECE, an integrated search engine marketing firm

    Copyright © 2005 Emerald Coast Entrepreneur

    Posted on May 29th, 2005

    These days with millions of websites out there, you need a way to get noticed. When your company website is ranked highly in the major search engines, customers from all over the world can find your front door. suddenly, your virtual storefront becomes prime business property and you are making sales 24/7.

    What can a web site owner do to make sure your site appears in the top 2 pages in any given search engine? You could buy some submission software, read some books and try it yourself. But what if you miss something and find your site’s not positioned, or worse, banned. The only other option is to hire a search engine specialist.

    There are alot of self-proclaimed, "SEO specialists" and "search engine submission" companies, so you need to know what to look for in the positioning program they offer.

    Here are my top five things to look for in a Search Engine position program:

    1. SE Optimization (SEO) – The pages on your site are checked for the percentage of keywords you want to target, and the quality of the content on the page. Your SEO consultant should make recommendations regarding your site content to improve it in the eye of the Search Engines.

    Key search engines like MSN and AOL Search still rely on metatags or html code that include keywords related to your site. A good SEO optimization of your metatags can mean the difference of a #40 ranking vs. a Top 20 ranking.

    2. Pay per click (PPC) – PPC search engines like Overture (formerly Goto.com) and Findwhat can get you targeted, fast traffic while you are patiently watching the other search engines to rank your site. Recently, Overture’s top 3 keywords results show up at the top of searches on Yahoo! above the Yahoo! paid sites. For some keywords, paying for a top 3 position can be very expensive, but with careful research you can find some keywords available for 5 cents per click.

    3. Regular monitoring - You should get an initial report in 4-6 weeks and then preferably a monthly report. Your SEO consultant should provide ideas on achieving better rankings for keywords that are not doing as well as you’d like to see. While a Top 10 ranking is the ideal, some Top 20 rankings are realistic.

    4. Inclusion in select pay for inclusion SE indexes and directories – Inclusions in fee based can be useful if you want to target specific search engines or directories like Looksmart and Yahoo! Depending on your budget, you may want to purchase inclusion right away or hold off until the other Search Engines pick you up first. Your SEO consultant should provide the option to help you get into fee-based inclusions, and be able to explain the benefits and differences of each one.

    5. Submission to key SE directories – To rank well on Google and in turn, Yahoo! web pages, you need to be listed in the Open Directory Project directory. Directories like ODP are human edited and depending on the category, it can take from 3 weeks to 2 months to get accepted.

    Yahoo! is another key directory, and you MIGHT be able to get your site in for free still, if it’s non-commercial or a very localized business to a specific city or region. Your SEO consultant should submit your site to ODP and monitor it to make sure it’s accepted, and depending on the extent of your program, offer to submit your site to the Yahoo! free submit, if it’s appropriate.

    By Jim Lisi
    Website Consultant

    About The Author

    From 1996 - 1999 Jim Lisi worked in the web-hosting services industry at Concentric Network, which was bought out by XO Communications. In 1999, Jim was offered the position of Director of Sales at TopTenRanking Inc, a top web promotion company in LA, California. Starting in 2000, Jim Lisi formed his own web promotion company, EzRankings.com, utilizing some of the best website promotion specialists in the industry today.

    www.EzRankings.com; jlisi@ezrankings.com;
    info@ezrankings.com

    Posted on May 28th, 2005

    No top content provider will be able to achieve the needed results without understanding the proper use and impact of the resource box. Skill at compiling the resource box can make a substantial difference in the traffic generated at the end of the day.

    What are resource boxes and why are they so important these days? Resource boxes usually appear at the bottom of articles posted in article directories and usually contain author information. Quite often you will find information like the author’s qualifications to write the article that has just been read, how to reach them and a link to their web site. Any Top content provider will quickly realize that an effective resource box is needed to get as many people as possible to visit the web site.

    An effective resource box is important in these days of stiff competition at search engines. Many times you will find that articles posted at article directories will get a better ranking than the same articles posted at your web site. This means that your article will enjoy much higher traffic at somebody else’s site. It is therefore very important that your top content provider includes what is needed in your article resource box to get as many readers as possible to click on the link to your site.

    Some of the most effective techniques in getting people to click on your site’s link in the resource box is to offer some special free software or free item of value like a special report for instance. Other times, depending on the content of your article, simply promising more badly needed information will get you lots of traffic via a good resource box put together by an excellent top content provider.

    Are you considering hiring a ghost writer? If so don’t do anything until you’ve read a few more articles at the author’s hire a ghost writer blog.

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