SEO Search
Custom Search
Business Stamps
Current Labels
Reports
Card Scanner

Posts Tagged ‘About’

Discover thousands of Hidden Keywords that Google doesn’t tell you about


(www.hotkeywordsuggestspy.com) Visit our site for more information. Watch as I discover thousands more keywords than Google tell you exist. If you want thousands, or millions of hidden keywords get this now.

Flexicar talks about Google AdWords


adwords.google.com Monique Conheady talks about how Google AdWords helped accelerate the growth of her business

SEARCH ENGINE OPTIMIZATION TUTORIAL ABOUT COMMENT TAGS BY ARDAN MICHAEL BLUM


www.referencement-mots-cles.com Video: Presents my view that Google DOES read comment tags and that good tags will help greatly your general on-page SEO. Information presented in this video presents ideas which are a little-GREY HAT and is NOT intended for anything but your enjoyment. AGAIN: WHITE HAT SEO SHOULD ALWAYS BE USED – knowing tricks is great for your private fun but NOT for clients! You may also contact me via my site blumadvisory.com for further tips. Make sure to read EVERYTHING which Vanessa Fox writes and to understand clearly that in SEO 4 main rules are the key to your success: 1) The volume of ORIGINAL work on your site (add at least one new page per week). 2) Obviously the PR of inbound Anchor Text links. 3) The Age of your site and 4) the LOVE you place in your work. Google somehow can feel this :)

What do you think about Bing search engine?

I think it is worse. I rather use Google. What about you?

I just designed a blog about niche marketing strategy, how to bring it up on top of search engines?

I need to move my website to a new host – worried about my Google Pagerank – should I be?

Reason being, text of site will be the same but old system is an out of the box thing and therefore the structure will change – the site may look a little different to google. so should this affect my pagerank and if so will it hurt? it’s a business, so can’t really afford to lose a lot of traffic. wouldn’t mess with it, except old web host going under.

What Kind Of Keywords Should I Use If I Am Running An Ad Campaign About A Celebrity Poll?

I’ve tried using keywords related to the celebrity but it is not working. My ad does not get any hits. Any keyword suggestions?

Google’s Matt Cutts Talks About Pagerank

PageRank is that magic number between 1 and 10 that Google assigns to every website. It is a number that is computed using the link structure of the World Wide Web and it measures the relative importance of all pages. It is an important number that partially allows Google to return the best results to a user’s query.


Search Engine Optimization (SEO) gurus spend much of their time trying to improve a site’s PageRank because the larger this number the larger the traffic driven to the site via organic search results. Even though the algorithm for computing a page’s PageRank was published by Google’s founders in 1995, the algorithm has since been modified to scale up to the web’s enormous size as possible and also to circumvent being exploited by SEO experts. These continuous changes to the algorithm are not published and SEO engineers often find themselves trying to understand how the algorithm works by monitoring Google’s behavior.


It is widely believed that the larger a page’s PageRank the higher it will appear on Google’s homepage and the more traffic it will receive. As a result, many webmasters lose a lot of sleep over improving their site’s PageRank. Since the value of PageRank depends on the number and quality of incoming links, webmasters often pay a premium to have a high PageRank site link to theirs. In addition, webmasters can monetize their site by selling links to others; if they manage to get their PageRank to a value larger than 5 then they can sell these links at a high cost. All these have created an entire economy around Google’s magic number.


Matt Cutts is a Google engineer who maintains his own blog often talking about Google’s competition, marketing strategy and technology. Occasionally, Matt talks about the calculation and significance of PageRank. Needless to say, many SEO gurus study his blog trying to read between the lines and figure out how PageRank is computed and used. Recently, Matt wrote to answer some frequently asked questions about PageRank. In this posting, he reveals that PageRank is not an integer between 1 and 10 but instead a floating point number in the same range allowing Google a high degree of precision. In addition, he tells us that the number actually exported and shown on Google’s toolbar is in fact only an integer value. In addition, he points out that Google continuously calculates this number and only exports it to the toolbar once every a few months. People often notice that PageRank numbers are changing on the toolbar every 3 months and mistakenly assume that those are the only times that the numbers are actually computed.


Finally, I would like to point out that Matt specifically says that PageRank is considered by Google when a user performs a search. Matt says, “By the time you see newer PageRanks in the toolbar, those values have already been incorporated in how we score/rank our search results.” Some people have questioned as to whether Google still uses PageRank in their search engine algorithm. They claim that it only exists to sidetrack SEO experts with malicious intent. Matt’s sentence claims that Google still uses PageRank in ranking search results reinforcing the belief that it is still relevant; the actual importance of PageRank, however, is hard to establish and as Google has said in the past, the results presented to users are the product of a very complex algorithm with many parameters including PageRank.


My advice to webmasters is to have a link strategy and try to gain a healthy PageRank value. I would not recommend that people obsess over PageRank and instead focus on content. Good content will force other websites to link to yours helping you improve its PageRank. Be very careful of SEO companies that promise you many riches if you are willing to pay them a hefty sum of money to improve your site’s PageRank. Increasing this one number by itself is not likely to have such a large effect. Original, fresh and keyword content is still the best way to achieving success online.

Peter E. is the creator of The Dollar Factory, a portal for webmasters with free guides for search engine optimization and website promotion. If you are a new or old webmaster, join our growing community at Webmaster Portal: The Dollar Factory (http://www.TheDollarFactory.com)

Google’s Matt Cutts Talks About Pagerank

PageRank is that magic number between 1 and 10 that Google assigns to every website. It is a number that is computed using the link structure of the World Wide Web and it measures the relative importance of all pages. It is an important number that partially allows Google to return the best results to a user’s query.


Search Engine Optimization (SEO) gurus spend much of their time trying to improve a site’s PageRank because the larger this number the larger the traffic driven to the site via organic search results. Even though the algorithm for computing a page’s PageRank was published by Google’s founders in 1995, the algorithm has since been modified to scale up to the web’s enormous size as possible and also to circumvent being exploited by SEO experts. These continuous changes to the algorithm are not published and SEO engineers often find themselves trying to understand how the algorithm works by monitoring Google’s behavior.


It is widely believed that the larger a page’s PageRank the higher it will appear on Google’s homepage and the more traffic it will receive. As a result, many webmasters lose a lot of sleep over improving their site’s PageRank. Since the value of PageRank depends on the number and quality of incoming links, webmasters often pay a premium to have a high PageRank site link to theirs. In addition, webmasters can monetize their site by selling links to others; if they manage to get their PageRank to a value larger than 5 then they can sell these links at a high cost. All these have created an entire economy around Google’s magic number.


Matt Cutts is a Google engineer who maintains his own blog often talking about Google’s competition, marketing strategy and technology. Occasionally, Matt talks about the calculation and significance of PageRank. Needless to say, many SEO gurus study his blog trying to read between the lines and figure out how PageRank is computed and used. Recently, Matt wrote to answer some frequently asked questions about PageRank. In this posting, he reveals that PageRank is not an integer between 1 and 10 but instead a floating point number in the same range allowing Google a high degree of precision. In addition, he tells us that the number actually exported and shown on Google’s toolbar is in fact only an integer value. In addition, he points out that Google continuously calculates this number and only exports it to the toolbar once every a few months. People often notice that PageRank numbers are changing on the toolbar every 3 months and mistakenly assume that those are the only times that the numbers are actually computed.


Finally, I would like to point out that Matt specifically says that PageRank is considered by Google when a user performs a search. Matt says, “By the time you see newer PageRanks in the toolbar, those values have already been incorporated in how we score/rank our search results.” Some people have questioned as to whether Google still uses PageRank in their search engine algorithm. They claim that it only exists to sidetrack SEO experts with malicious intent. Matt’s sentence claims that Google still uses PageRank in ranking search results reinforcing the belief that it is still relevant; the actual importance of PageRank, however, is hard to establish and as Google has said in the past, the results presented to users are the product of a very complex algorithm with many parameters including PageRank.


My advice to webmasters is to have a link strategy and try to gain a healthy PageRank value. I would not recommend that people obsess over PageRank and instead focus on content. Good content will force other websites to link to yours helping you improve its PageRank. Be very careful of SEO companies that promise you many riches if you are willing to pay them a hefty sum of money to improve your site’s PageRank. Increasing this one number by itself is not likely to have such a large effect. Original, fresh and keyword content is still the best way to achieving success online.

Peter E. is the creator of The Dollar Factory, a portal for webmasters with free guides for search engine optimization and website promotion. If you are a new or old webmaster, join our growing community at Webmaster Portal: The Dollar Factory (http://www.TheDollarFactory.com)

How Many People Know About Dmoz?

Well at least 2 – you and I!

Powered by Yahoo! Answers