Archive for November, 2005

Posted on Nov 30th, 2005

My introduction to search engine optimization started in London a few years back and, after experimenting with Web Position Gold, I honed these skills to attain very good results in promoting clients’ websites. Later, I discovered that link building was a necessary but highly tedious monthly process. This I still do to an extent, but today I am increasingly drawn to article writing as the medium for promoting both ourselves and our clients in the world of Web 2.0.

As a former sub-editor for a number of publications in London, it is quite a stimulating pastime to research subjects that interest me. It is also as a valuable means of gaining exposure for our sites. So this year I will be writing for ourselves and our clients through submitting relevant articles to high PR websites; each will then provide us with valuable one-way links.

Also, these articles will appear in the WordPress section of our website so as to syndicate the information further via our RSS feed. As an aside, Google’s Adsense has been added to WordPress and I am keenly aware that the use of high-paying keywords could see some additional rewards for our efforts ― ‘search engine optimization’ ranking amongst the top performers.

According to www.weird-websites.com the top ten keywords are:
1) 213,259 paris hilton
2) 155,497 google
3) 124,016 yahoo
4) 121,086 ebay
5) 96,264 eminem
6) 96,262 britney spears
7) 94,014 mapquest
8) 93,708 tsunami
9) 90,841 girls
10) 90,334 89.com

So, submissions have almost been suspended to the free directories and our monthly SEO programme is now much more focused on article writing. They are not intended to only have SEO value; they are being written to provide readers with relevant and interesting content that may not be commonly available elsewhere.

There seem to be a plethora of e-zines out there that accept articles from writers, but I am concentrating on making submissions to the following list that have PR rankings of 7 thru 5:
http://www.ezinearticles.com - PR7
http://www.lilengine.com - PR7
http://www.webpronews.com - PR7
http://www.articlecentral.com - PR7
http://www.web-source.net - PR7
http://www.articlecity.com - PR6
http://www.goarticles.com - PR6
http://www.businessknowhow.com - pr6
http://www.articleCity.com - PR6
http://www.buzzle.com - PR6
http://www.web-source.net -PR6
http://www.xongoo.com - PR6
http://www.zinos.com -PR6
http://www.constant-content.com – PR5
http://affiliate-marketing-forums.5staraffiliateprograms.com - PR5
http://www.submityourarticle.com - PR5
http://www.isnare.com PR5
http://www.authorconnection.com - PR5
http://www.articlealley.com - PR5
http://www.articlesfactory.com - PR5
http://www.articlefinders.com - PR5
http://www.ideamarketers.com - PR5

Media Director of V9 Design & Build (http://www.v9designbuild.com), providing both local and outsourcing web and SEO services: we provide both brochureware and custom-designed websites, with tasteful design and branding, professional design and build, proven and successful SEO and e-marketing, e-commerce-driven database integration and content management systems.

Posted on Nov 30th, 2005

You finally have a website and you are ready to sit back and let the visitors start rolling in. How does that saying go? “If you build it they will come.” This may be true in Hollywood but certainly not true in the case of your website. You need to constantly work at improving your site to ensure that your website achieves a decent search engine ranking. This is a process that doesn’t happen over night but with some concentrated effort you can get better search engine rankings. Here are some tips on getting to the top of the search engines.

  1. Keep your design simple! Avoid gratuitous uses of flash, images/graphics, and special effects. As cool as these effects are, they hinder or sometimes block the search engine from seeing your sites content. Whenever possible use external elements (stylesheets and javascript). Less code cluttering up your page means search engines can find and index your content easier, leading to better search engine rankings.
  2. Research your competition and choose your keywords carefully. Keyword phrases tend to be more effective. For example: use “Toronto real estate web design” instead of web design. This could mean the difference between competing with 6 million websites or 100 thousand.
  3. Make sure your web pages include good meaty content of at least 250-300 words per page. Search Engines analyze the relevancy of your page/site based on the content. Your keywords should be represented in your content – if your keywords are not represented, either you have chosen the wrong keywords or you haven’t thought out your content properly. Search engines like sites that change their content regularly so find ways to keep your content fresh but the message clear.
  4. Use Meta tags (title tag, description tag and keywords tag) properly and use different Meta tags on each page of your site! Make sure your title is relevant and between 50 and 60 characters. Your description should not exceed 150 characters and should summarize the content of your page. Most importantly make sure the words/phrases in your keywords tag are represented in your content.
  5. Use alternate image tags. Besides being a good design practice, alternate image tags help the search engines verify the importance of the images on your page. When appropriate use your keyword choices in your alt image tags.
  6. Avoid using only image based navigation on your site. If you are using images as links to your other pages, make sure you absolutely use alternate image tags. Ideally you should also include text based links somewhere on your web page as well. You see this quite often in the footer of some web pages although you can always include test links in the content of your pages as well. Text based links help the search engines find ALL your pages not to mention they make your site more assessable. If your site is complex you should include a site map to help your visitors and the search engines find their way around your site. If you are using a sitemap put the link near the top of your page so that the search engine finds it quickly.
  7. Use heading tags and bold to emphasize your keywords. Don’t over do this! If you have chosen your keywords properly, your keywords should already be in weighted areas of your carefully written content.
  8. Do NOT use auto submit services to submit your site to the major search engines. As long as you have incoming links to your site from a site that has been indexed your web site should automatically be indexed. If you need to submit your website to a search engine do it manually and only once.
  9. Research and gather external links from sites that are relevant to your own. If your site is promoting health food a link from a human resources site will not help your website rankings and may actually penalize your site.

To get better search engine rankings you need to keep it simple, natural and use your common sense. Don’t try to trick the search engines as this can often result in getting your site banned or dropped from the index.

Remember, it can takes month for your optimization efforts to pay off, but when they do you will enjoy better search engine rankings!

© 2005 Tanya Beaudoin o/a Office on Demand, All rights reserved. You are free to use this article in its entirety, as long as you include complete attribution, including live web site link. Please also notify Mrs. Beaudoin as to where the material will appear.

The attribution should read: “Tanya Beaudoin, B.A. owns and operates a Web Design Company – OOD Web & Graphic Design Studio - that specializes in e-solutions and graphic design (including web design, search engine optimization and internet marketing products like e-stationary and newsletters). To learn more about getting better search engine rankings, please visit Tanya’s web site at http://www.officeondemand.ca

Posted on Nov 30th, 2005

What keeps you up at night?

It’s a good question for you to ask yourself once in a while. For most eCommerce entrepreneurs one of the answers is the thought of revenue lost as potential customers abandon your web site without buying. That’s 97.4% or so of your visitors, according to the accepted industry average conversion rate. Are you confident that your site converts visitors into customers at the best rate possible? If so, you’re probably getting a better night’s sleep than most.

If not, you’re probably tossing and turning, thinking about ways to increase web site sales. You might think you have already tried every little conversion rate optimization tip or trick. Do you have a strong “Call to Action” benefit? Have you ever tested different messaging with tools such as split A/B landing page optimization? The web is always changing. Unless you are sure that there is no room for improvement, its clearly time to consider how you can take your website to the next level to increase online sales with a value added promotional benefit.

1. Bait your prospects with the right cheese.

Online shoppers are more sophisticated today. You should assume that your prospects will evaluate three to four competitors before deciding to purchase. You need to stand out and provide the right bait to get your prospects to stop and buy at your site, rather than move on to a competitor.. In some cases, merchants need to find a special kind of cheese that will get the mouse to click on certain shipping options or up-sells. Getting creative in what bait you use is what will increase conversion rates if you know what type of cheese will make that mouse click.

2. Create a value-added offer.

Sometimes you need to go beyond your product line to find a potential partner that could benefit from a cross promotion. Some gift items can be presented as bonus offerings that would bring a high perceived added value, such as. Phone cards with a volume discount. Such an item could even be co-branded as a special value- added thank you gift.

3. Offer free gifts that create viral marketing buzz.

Think of a gift or promotional item that prospects will keep on them at all times such as inside their purse or wallet. Giving this item away is what creates the viral marketing buzz for increased “buzz”, brand awareness, and ultimately more Internet sales. The example of a free co-branded phone card giveaway is a great way to get your customers to carry your brand at all times and increase repeat orders and referrals. Gifts like phone cards are especially effective because they are designed for repeated use. As a result, the customer will be exposed to your brand for the seven plus times experts say are necessary before a prospect is ready to convert to a sale or reorder. It’s also likely to more than carry its weight in referrals.

4. Create a personalized benefit.

Always look for ways to personalize your offer. Instead of “we” or” I”. talk to the customer individually as “you”. Make your prospects feel special, elite and make it personal in any way possible when giving away a value added benefit. Personalize your gift when possible and find a partner with whom you could cross promote a co-branded personalized items.

5. Give away a high perceived value item.

Offering something for FREE is always nice. But the word “free” can carry negative connotations. You always want to keep the perceived value of any gift or offer high.

Example:

Get a Free phone card with your order today

Vs.

Receive a complimentary phone card worth more than 1 hour of free calling to the U.S. and many other countries as a personal thank you gift for your order today.

Grab your prospects today, and give them an incentive to buy on your site. Now its time for you to find your special “cheese” that will get your prospect’s mouse to click on your personalized high perceived-value benefit.

Brian Hawkins has several years of experience providing tips on conversion rate optimization while working for two leading search engine marketing agencies. Currently Mr. Hawkins is an affiliate marketing manager for Pingo’s prepaid phone card service and is responsible for establishing phone card partnerships and affiliate relationships. Pingo phone cards are a service of iBasis one of the ten largest carriers of international phone calls in the world. Brian can be reached at 781-505-7865 or email: bhawkins (at) pingo.com 2006© iBasis, Inc. All rights reserved.

Posted on Nov 29th, 2005

When i launched my site i thought it would be a big task to optimize my site ranking in google search engine. But its not that hard trust me. I will be picking up points which will will help you in your sites ranking optimization. Here i go :

Before buying a domain

1. Always check which domain you are buying. Never buy a domain with a common name, very hard to optimize. Try a name which is not common.

While preparing your webpages

1. Add meta tags—> description, keywords, title. Give the first prefrence to the words related what your site is about like for website designing —–> website design studio - sycamore.in, dont write the name of your site first. Add only relevant words as the search only picks up the first 3-4 words only while searching, rest are picked up they are not found on any other website.

2.Keywords are written as –> website, designing, so on and description–>website design, flash template design,etc.

After launching your site ( adding link )

1. Try to add your website in all the search engines and open directories. It is very necessary step. Open directories are the best to boost up your ranking.

2.Article writing is the best way. Submit your articles to the popular article submission websites.One is ezinearticles.com.Really good one.

3. If you are lazy like me add comments to various blogs you find on the net.I use www.globeofblogs.com to find all teh blogs. And do taKe a look where you are adding your link the page should have a page rank where your comment is being added otherwise it will not be of much help.

4.(important) Why adding links is so important? When google’s crawler starts to crawls the websites present on the web, it checks for the links on the pages which are already cached in its database. If your link is not there your site will not be crawled. Its like a chain reaction, one is linked to the other, other is linked to another. But if your site is a new submission it will have to wait to get a tocken. After the token is recieved then only your site will be crawled. But if your link is found on a site which has a good rank in google. Your site will be crawled and pages from your site will be cached. For eg if google crawls a site on 21st of every month and your site is linked to it your site will also be crawled on that day. Before adding the link to a page do check when has google cached that page.

Please do read all the points carefully.These can fetch you a good rank in google. This article is the private property of Bikramjit Singh.You can distribute it further in any way but please make sure that the name of the author remains intact while publishing.

thanks

by Bikramjit Singh author for sycamore.in and sarvpriya.com

Posted on Nov 29th, 2005

The first step to developing any search engine optimization effort is picking keywords. The general consensus is pick keywords with solid amounts of traffic and a minimum of competition. At the risk of being laughed off the Internet, here’s a different view.

Going Big…Going VERY Big

Should you do research to identify keywords receiving lots of traffic? Absolutely. Of this group, should you identify the keywords with the lowest amount of competition? Again, yes. After all, who would be foolish enough to try to attack keywords with a few million competing sites? Well, me for one.

People that go for a keyword phrase like “for sale by owner” [2 million plus searches a month and KEI of 0.000000000…] are often dismissed as amateurs with unrealistic expectations. For those of us that have been in the business for some time, this bias deserves some reconsideration. The motivation is greed…pure and simple greed.

Seo greed is arises when one achieves top listings in Google, Yahoo and MSN for a site. Using the example above, assume the client is a car-listing site and you’ve conquered all the listings for “car for sale by owner.” Yes, it took 15 months, but the client is happy and so are you. Or are you?

After a few weeks, you start thinking, “Damn, I should have gone for the phrase ‘for sale by owner’ and the extra 700,000 searches a month.” You start getting visions of changing the site, but the anchor text in links and so on is already set. In the end, you feel dissatisfied because you want more, damn it!

A Different Approach

Okay, I am not advocating you throw competition analysis out the window. You should absolutely find keywords that have solid traffic and low competition. If nothing else, you need short-term carrots to keep you motivated. That being said, you must also plan for the inherent evil greed in your twisted little seo soul. Don’t even try to deny it.

Here it comes…

I am advocating you go for keywords with monstrous amounts of traffic, competition analysis be damned! Yes, I know. What a fool.

Throwing caution to the wind, I am even going to argue that…[drum roll]…you consider one-word keywords! I know… Blasphemy!…Insanity!…Stupid Moron…etc. But think about it. When you’ve accomplished your goals with low competition keywords, why not have a go at the biggies? What if you get them…even a few?

Putting it all together, my theory is this. Identify the low competition keywords, optimize your site and so on. Just make sure you also throw some “wishful thinking” keywords. If the optimized site survives for three or four years, you might just be thankful you did.

I’m off to optimize for the keyword “travel.” Lets see, Expedia is listed number 1 with a page rank of 8 and 67 thousand back links on Google.

Ha! Expedia I mock thee!

Halstatt Pires is with http://www.marketingtitan.com - an Internet marketing and advertising company in San Diego, California.

Posted on Nov 29th, 2005

could provide you with some basic seo tips & tricks for drive traffic your site & building inbound links to your site. The SEO is on going project for your website & it will cost you a fortune & most small websites cannot afford to pay for this service. As you all may know, in any SEO, If the content is king then link is the queen. Webmasters and website owners are forever looking for links, one-way inbound links are always more valuable than reciprocal links. The oneway or inbound links to your website from other sites will provide higher exposure to your site in SERP (Search Engine Results Page) & Web Traffic to your site as well. Here are the some of the top twelve ways to build inbound links to your website are listed below.

1. Submit your website to free web directories.
2. Submit your website to premium web directories
3. Contribute to articles websites.
4. Submit press release about your website & products.
5. Request your website visitors to link to your site
6. Exchange links with other similar websites
7. Submit your website for reviews
8. Offer free web hosting space in exchange for links.
9. Participate in award programs.
10. Contribute to forum.
11. Contribute to blogs.
12. Word of Mouth & "tell a friend" page in your site.

Liz - Business Development Manager for new UK Search Engine called UKCrawler which, brings best british only web search results.

Posted on Nov 28th, 2005

For years, so-called experts and real experts have published ebooks on how to beat the search engines, how to use them to your own ends, and how to perform all kinds of tricks to make your page rank higher.

The truth is, tricks don’t work long-term. Search engine spam has been greatly cut down, if not eradicated, by the last change Google made. No one really knows the precise secrets of how key words in text work. And though inbound links are great, when everyone has the same inbound link sources, it starts getting tricky to edge out the competition.

The one proven and consistent way to get great rankings from the search engines is through good, accurate, and fresh content.

What Makes Content Great?

The first consideration for your content is how well it works for people visiting your site, not web spiders. You’re not selling products to programs, but to people. The first thing you need to do is write a good article that is pertinent to your site, without worrying about what it may do to search engine placement.

At this point, a lot of webmasters make a serious error: they use a content generator to create keyword-optimized nonsense. No matter how well done this is, it performs two functions: first, it makes the customers mad. If you’re depending on affiliate sales, placing third in Google rankings will not do you any good when your potential customers click away in disgust.

The second thing it does is allow the search engines to locate unnatural structures. Nonsense text will have a number of structures within it that are extremely rare in the English language: fig booty, for instance, is not likely to turn up anywhere. By comparing your document with billions of others, search engines can tell whether you have an overly large number of these structures. If you do, your ranking will sink like a rock.

But the text. Once your excellent article is written, you can go through and optimize it for your keyword. Don’t aim too hard at a specific number of mentions for your keyword; about 5% is good, but if it doesn’t work, don’t force it. If you’ve written your article properly, you shouldn’t have any trouble finding places for your keyword. If possible, slip keyword mentions into any header text and into the first and last paragraph.

In addition to this, spellcheck and pay attention to your grammar. A poorly written and spelled article screams amateur, and no one trusts that.

If you don’t feel comfortable writing this article, you can hire a professional copywriter for very reasonable prices these days. Look for someone who specializes in web content and keyword articles.

Graphics: Helping Your Placement

Search engines key on text, not graphics, so the more text you have on your home page and subsequent pages, the better you’ll do with placement. Even though graphics can be visually appealing, text helps pull in the web spiders. Always try to put your text together first and insert your images last.

When you do insert images, always fill out the alternate text for the image with a description including your keyword. This is a nifty little trick that can also boost your page ranking. And if your images are a critical part of your sales – for instance, if you sell posters – always put the name of the work or a description of the product in the alternate text so that the new image search engines can find it easily. Make sure your descriptions reflect the image and don’t include inappropriate keywords.

Adrian Lawrence is the webmaster for http://www.discountdomainsuk.com a leading Domain Registration service. Please feel free to republish this article together with working hyperlinks.

Posted on Nov 28th, 2005

Keyword Selection

The most important component of search engine optimization is keyword selection. Search engines use key words and phrases to find and rank websites. The crawler or spider-based search engines, so called because they sift through websites and add them to their databases, sort through millions of websites by following an algorithm, or set of rules.

The algorithms for the various search engines are not exactly the same (which is why a search of the same keyword brings different results). However, they follow very similar processes. Most of the search engines rank websites based on where and how often a particular keyword is used on the website. They will rank a website higher if, for example, the keyword is used in the title, placed near the top of the page, and if it is used often.

Choosing the right keyword or phrase and placing it properly is an art that is refined through practice and trial-and-error. In the e-market, time is money and competition is fierce. Your business cannot afford to languish while you get up to speed on the latest SEO technology. The use of a good e-marketing professional makes good economic sense.

Keyword Expertise Now

Valiss has the SEO expertise you need now. We know how to get the best results in the shortest amount of time. With Valiss, the keyword selection process is quick and efficient. Your search engine utilization is maximized to bring more visitors to your site who are interested in what you have to say or sell.

Posted on Nov 28th, 2005

For about a year, as one would have noticed, there has been a tremendous growth in web-articles. It would appear to be a case of just too many. This begs the question, ‘Do all contents make qualified reading?’.

If the answer is a qualified ‘No’, I feel prudence demands we revisit our skill as content writers and look closely at our ability to improve thereupon. Putting it mildly, it is almost incumbent on us to do so. Lest readers of this article suspect another instance of ‘know-all-arrogance’, let me confirm that I do not intend to cast aspersions. Instead, I just want to let some light enter through the cobwebs of contents mushrooming around us.

How it all started – the keyword game

Not long back, search engine optimizers had their eyes riveted on meta-keywords, and every seo expert worth his salt rushed in to stuff keywords there. Word went around that this would guarantee top rankings, and soon enough we came to see ‘mile-long’ keywords jostling for space in the meta-tag. Thereafter opinions surfaced that there should be commas between keywords. Some said commas were not needed. Others felt to the contrary and suggested further that there must not be space after commas, and so on.

To be true, this tactic did pay for a good length of time, till search engines awoke from slumber to take note of this ‘wise’ misuse. Instances were often where websites stuffed completely unrelated yet highly popular keywords to catch eyeballs. Those were days when search engines were supposedly weak in their algorithms, and as a result, websites with overstuffed meta-keywords had a field day.

Things were to change soon. If Google was thought to have taken lead to totally wean away from the importance of meta-keywords, others quickly followed suit. This dramatically altered the game for good.

On to incoming links

At the time when meta-keywords was slowly fading into oblivion, in came the next avatar, namely ‘incoming links’. For all that followed, Google has a fair share to contribute. Why? First, Google declined to crawl a new website unless it is linked from at least another website which is already in Google’s list. In its opinion, a new website is considered an orphan (and not to be crawled) till it is recognized by another ‘known’ website.

It is a good logic. But that did not seriously dampen a newbie’s spirit to come into being. In the process, locating a known website, where to link from, became the first step before coming alive. What though did alter the eyeball game was something more that Google announced.

Google frankly said incoming links do weigh a lot in its consideration of a webpage’s importance (and ‘popularity’ by corollary). No sooner Google’s preference became apparent that a no-holds-barred game started. Link farms cropped up in every nook and corner of the web. Businesses that only offered links flourished like there would be no end to good days. It was indeed fortuitous that Google’s ‘noble’ intention could give birth to thousands of link-related ventures all over the web, many of them spurious.

Links turning sour

Here is a perfect example of antithesis – you want one, get something completely different. No doubt when Google stressed on links, what it had in mind was to help surfers shuffle unhindered between related topics across a wide section of similar web contents. What happened instead in many cases was chaotic intermingling among websites that were as disparate as chalk from cheese. Not that Google cared for them, but the idea persisted that a link is a link, no matter where it came from.

Feeling about, one is tempted to surmise that Google’s algorithm was structured in a way that gave preference to links between related topics, yet not factoring in the possibility of unrestrained quantification. As if that were so, Google started altering in sporadic spurts the way search results are presented. The screening continues and each time this happens, the search results assume different hues.

Predicting Google is a zero-sum game, and I am not one to hazard a guess. Yet looking at stories around, I can’t help saying Google has probably relegated importance of incoming links. If indeed that proves to be true, what emerges is building reciprocal links will shortly become passé.

Content to rescue

This brings us to links from contents. Here was where the web started. To recall old days, it was for content that we began referring internet. Content then was more in the shape of quality information. There was a ring of authenticity in what we saw on the net in the sense that people who published pages in those days seldom resorted to misinformation. Once commerce entered the scene, the entire picture transformed and degenerated into what we see today. Perhaps that was inevitable given the fact that no public domain can ever remain free of litter.

In a way therefore, the coinage of the term ‘Content is king’ is indicative of returning to roots. Or, is it? Coming back to where I started, one can’t help being suspicious of this new-found love for content. For, if you look around, you’ll find there is no dearth of content per se, but rare are those contents that offer you quality information.

Overflowing supply

I happen to receive hundreds of articles everyday. Sifting them is tedious and after I devote couple of hours each morning, I am more often than not left utterly disappointed. To be sure, most articles, barring a few, will pass the test so far grammatical perfection is concerned. But only a handful offers new insight or some sense of analytical thinking. A frightening majority is dull, boring, repetitious, and easily predictable. If I were to post guest articles in my website (which I don’t for other reasons), I would have had tough time selecting the right ones.

Why such proliferation of contents? The reason is not far to seek. Since content became ‘re-important’, for many websites the game shifted to acquiring large volumes of it, quality being of no concern. No wonder, there is a huge need of ghost writers these days, for how else would you expect to gain prominence double-quick! Prominence for what? If it is only to fetch links (through author bylines) or to impress search engines, luck may soon run out.

The reason is simple. Accumulating quality content is an ongoing effort, not something you do off and on. Top information sites like SearchEngineGuide, Clickz, Travelwriters, WilsonWeb and others are doing it for years. It thus follows that any effort to attract search engine’s attention, whether by sheer number of keyword-enriched articles or by garnering author back-links, has to be planned for longer term.

It’s not my case to prove or disprove any point, but who knows an overdose of content may not after all be to Google’s liking! Better to be trim than fight to become fat overnight.

A freelance web designer and content writer, and an avid web watcher, Partha Bhattacharya owns and operates WebInfo, a free internet web marketing and webmaster resources. Ideal for both start-ups and regulars alike. Dealing mostly on current topics, Partha’s blog is a good primer to understand tricky issues on search engine marketing. For content writing assignments, view Partha’s Elance Profile.

Posted on Nov 27th, 2005

Many webmasters today fail to understand the differences between a search engine and a directory. Failure to differentiate between the two has often led to failures in effectively using Internet directories.

Search engines use automated programs called spiders, which find and collect information from web pages in order to add them into the database of the search engine. The search engines also find other WebPages through links, and human editors review each site before adding them into their directories.

The reason why directory submission is so important these days is because many search engines use human edited directories in order to determine the value of the websites they index. This is why it is important for you to carefully review the directory you choose to submit your site to and how to correctly submit it.

The first important factor to consider when submitting your site to directories is the design of your site. Since many directories are human edited, your site will be reviewed to decide if it should be listed. Websites with poor designs may be seen as being negative in the eyes of those reviewing them. You may need to hire a web designer in order to give your site a professional look.

The second factor is following the submission guidelines of the directory. Each directory has its own specific rules which must be followed in order to get your site accepted. Always take the time to carefully read over these rules to make sure you’re following guidelines. It is a waste of time and energy to submit your site to directories without first reading the guidelines, as many of them will reject your site if you don’t follow directions.

The third important factor in directory submission is making sure you use the correct title, keywords, and descriptions in the right category. Study the directory you’re interested in prior to submitting your site in order to determine how most of their sites are listed. Use basic keywords, which relate to your site’s content, and don’t add keywords, which are not related to your site.

If you add incorrect keywords you will annoy the editors, who rely on keywords to bring up the results in their directories. It is a fact that many search engines today relies on quality links from human edited directories. It is important to do your research in order to save time and get the best results from your work.

Mansi aggarwal recommends that you visit directory submission.

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