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Archive for June, 2007

What is SEO Posted By : netZtrack

June 26th, 2007 No comments

SEO- Search Engine Optimisation. Over the last ten years SE’s (Search Engines) have become an ever increasing important factor in business promotion. The four major SE’s generate in excess of 700 million search queries a day, an outstanding fact that really emphasises the importance of utilising the potential reach of the Search Engine.

Original post by Article Dashboard: Internet Business | Seo and software by Elliott Back

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Search Engine Marketing – Protecting Your Search Engine Rankings Posted By : Andrew Gowans

June 26th, 2007 No comments

Your website’s ranking on search engines is a vital element of your overall internet marketing campaign, and there are ways to improve your link popularity through legitimate methods. Unfortunately, the Internet is populated by bands of dishonest webmasters seeking to improve their link popularity by faking out search engines. Read the good news AND the bad news…

Original post by Article Dashboard: Internet Business | Seo and software by Elliott Back

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Search Engine Marketing – Increasing Your Search Engine Ranking Posted By : Andrew Gowans

June 26th, 2007 No comments

You can immerse yourself in all the technical information available online to figure out how to optimize your web pages to achieve higher rankings. Or you can look at a few simple items on your pages, make some small adjustments, and most likely see improved rankings quite rapidly. The first item you should examine is…

Original post by Article Dashboard: Internet Business | Seo and software by Elliott Back

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Search Engine Marketing – Choosing A Search Engine Optimization Company Posted By : Andrew Gowans

June 26th, 2007 No comments

When looking at different companies, begin by considering the approach they employ to raise your search engine positions. Steer clear of companies that use cloaked, doorway, or bridge pages to raise your positions. These techniques violate most search engine policy, and in the worst case scenario, will only get your website severely penalized, if not removed entirely from a search engine’s index.

Original post by Article Dashboard: Internet Business | Seo and software by Elliott Back

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Search Engine Marketing – The Importance Of Keyword Selection Posted By : Andrew Gowans

June 26th, 2007 No comments

Your keywords serve as the foundation of your marketing strategy. If they are not chosen with great precision, no matter how aggressive your marketing campaign may be, the right people may never get the chance to find out about you. So your first step in determining your strategy is to gather and evaluate keywords and phrases. Then…

Original post by Article Dashboard: Internet Business | Seo and software by Elliott Back

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The Google – Duplicate Content Debate Posted By : Matt Bacak1

June 26th, 2007 No comments

Rumor has it that Google has implemented a strict no duplicate content rule. Is this rumor true? How can it affect your business?

Original post by Article Dashboard: Internet Business | Seo and software by Elliott Back

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Link popularity An important factor in affiliate marketing strategies Posted By : Theo Swan

June 26th, 2007 No comments

For any affiliate marketer, visitors are essential for your success. Fewer visitors will obviously lead to fewer clicks and lower commission. While there are many ways of attracting visitors to any website, gaining a high ranking on Google, Yahoo or even MSN will make a huge difference.

Original post by Article Dashboard: Internet Business | Seo and software by Elliott Back

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SEO and Article Marketing; Who Needs It? Posted By : Ben Anton

June 26th, 2007 No comments

This article explains the importance and neccesity of search enging optimization for businesses.
The article provides real life examples of where and when search engine marketing and optimization services are needed.

Original post by Article Dashboard: Internet Business | Seo and software by Elliott Back

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Facebook, Friendster Signal Changing Tide

June 26th, 2007 No comments

The world of social networking is changing, but don’t worry, it’s not permanent. It’s more of a tide than anything that reaches and recedes from all things. MySpace is changing, Facebook is catching, and Friendster is resurrected.

Facebook, Friendster Signal Changing Tide
Facebook, Friendster Signal Changing Tide

Like Internet dating in its infancy, social networks have graduated from something for the kids (with dating, it was the geeks) to a normalized part of society. Critics had similar concerns about Rock N Roll in its day, and short skirts, and tie-dye, and jazz and dancing.

Most likely there was a time when daily hygiene was tantamount to snobbery. Things change with acceptance. MySpace exchanged one stigma for another, immediately branded a site for teenyboppers, and then the fishing hole to catch a predator.

Despite that, and despite the concern that such a youthful audience replete with perverts would fizzle out over time, the site has continued to grow, even to the point that the majority of the 109.5 million visitors to MySpace users are now over 35, both according to comScore.

Of course, you know what happens when the grownups raid your secret hangout, right? The He-Man Womun-Haterz Club can’t thrive in a cloud of perfume, the mice can’t play with the cat around…choose whichever cliché you wish.

You might note also though that Rupert Murdoch is rumored to be looking for a way out, if he can exchange MySpace for a nice chunk of Yahoo.    

Anyone not signing up for MySpace these days (really, is there anybody?) are defecting to Facebook, Friendster, and Bebo. It’s not really defecting as much as it is double dipping, though. Over half of social network users maintain multiple profiles, flitting from network to network the way they would rooms at a party.

In the past six months, after Facebook opened up to non-collegiates and developers, the site has more than doubled in number of unique visitors, growing from 23 million users in December 2006 to 47 million in May 2007. During the same period, Bebo jumped from just under 11 million visitors to 17 million.

But the most explosive recent growth has been, surprisingly, from Friendster, a company that just so happens was awarded a US patent on social networking, signifying how long they’ve been in this game. The site has steadily grown since December from 18.7 million visitors to 24.8 million.

While that’s less than the others in terms of visitors, the site, and VentureBeat, point to the page views, spiking by 40 percent just last month to 9 billion. The company attributes the sudden spike to "fixing" the technology that stymied its growth in 2004, just as the meteoric rise of MySpace was to occur.

Friendster’s graph server, which made it impossible to manage four quadrillion factors (we’re assuming Venture Beat is using not using that number as hyperbole), has been revamped to more easily show how users are linked to their friends, and by what degree of separation, similar to a feature used on LinkedIn. But the main result of this revamp is that users are better able to track what’s going on with their friends, thus increasing page views per user.

While that may seem like cheating, it’s growth nonetheless, and of the others in the top seven networks – HI5, Tagged, and Piczo – Friendster is the only one not stagnant or declining over the past half-year. 

So what happens next? Who knows for sure? It seems Murdoch is thinking of jumping ship, perhaps just for a better opportunity, or it could be he detects the changing tide. Maybe Facebook is catching up too fast. Maybe Friendster is poised to sue the whole lot of them.

Or maybe it’s just the natural, social flux of things.

Original post by Jason Lee Miller and software by Elliott Back

Categories: Search Engine Optimization Tags:

Yahoo Turns Off The Radio

June 26th, 2007 No comments

A Day of Silence has swept across the bandwidth of a number of music webcasting services as they protest new royalty rates that could put them out of business for good.

Yahoo Turns Off The Radio
Yahoo Turns Off The Radio

If you want to hear the future of web radio with the Copyright Royalty Board’s new rates in place, chances are your regular music listening fix will be broadcasting the bitter sound of silence today.

Yahoo discussed its participation in the protest. Ian C. Rogers of Yahoo Music wrote on the official Yahoo blog how the new rates, effective July 15 and retroactive to January 1, 2006 (not a typo) would devastate what has been a boon for music fans:

The situation webcasters are in is simple: the new royalty rates are higher than the revenues anyone can hope to make from related advertising. In other words, we all lose money on Internet radio starting July 15th. Yahoo! has no intention of operating LAUNCHcast radio as a loss-leader. This senseless rate hike needs to be changed, or our business will have to.

Yahoo joins major music names like MTV and a host of other sites in protesting the proposed rate increase. Some, like Pandora, have placed a letter on their home pages explaining the protest. KCRW will loop an hour-long program where webcasters discuss the issue.

SaveNetRadio has more information about the Day of Silence. They urge interested people to contact their elected representatives in Washington DC and politely express their concerns about the potential loss of online radio.

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Original post by David A. Utter and software by Elliott Back

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