Saturday, December 8, 2007

Keyword Support For SEO in Online Marketing

Keyword Support



Keywords are one of the largest promotional tools available over

The Internet for online marketing websites. The suggestion is that the site
becomes in full view to traffic at high levels. Thus, keywords are related word
in to the Search Engines, which directs the visitors to a site area. The more
keywords used in articles written, thus produces higher traffic since your site
is often listed in the Top Search Engines online. According to many, the better
solution for marketing your web is by uploading articles to your web pages that
promote your sites purpose. In other words, if you are promoting bicycles, then
the keywords should revolve around bikes.

The article should have 2.5% or 3% and/or higher in keywords that relate to the
service, product, or else support you offer. The higher dense keyword the more
likely your website will reach Google and Yahoo's top search engine. Thus, this
procedure is commonly known as search engine optimizing.

At what time you consider writing articles goals to rich up the keywords, you
must also consider the types of customers that will visit your site. Thus, if
customers are searching for bicycles, then you want to consider what consumers
expect, or like. For example, writing an article goaled to reach an audience of
bike customers, you might use words such as, mountain bike, bicycle, parts for
bikes, and so on.

After considering keywords, and determining which keywords would best market.your site, you will also need to consider header keywords. In other words,
bicycles are the prime keyword, however bicycles come under many headlines
include Trek and so on. Many companies manufacture bikes, therefore you customermight consider a specific name brand, thus these names should be under yourheader keywords.

At the time you collect all the keywords for your site, you will need to
consider topics. Furthermore, it is not wise to use keywords in an end-to-end,
since this might confuse the audience, as well as the search engines. For
example, you would not write, "AT GRI we sell bikes for less, which less for
bikes makes it convenient for our customers, to receive bikes for less. This is
only redundancy, which annoys many readers. Therefore, write AT GRI we sell
bikes for less. Our bikes. You get the point. Anyway, few marketers believe that
placing keywords in a sequence that conforms to the topic or headlines is idea
for promoting a website.

Reference this Article : www. gsynetwork .com

Saturday, December 1, 2007

Off-page search engine optimization

Off-page search engine optimization

This method is in my opinion the hardest part in seo because it requires a lot of work on a daily bases. You could also do it 1 day in a week, it depends and some people don’t have to do it at all since they rather make quality content which makes these kinda automated, which is a good thing in off page optimization. Let me first tell you which these are and then i’ll explain it.

The off-page seo elements include:

  • Page Rank
  • Backlinks
  • Link Exchange
  • Anchor text
  • Relevancy
  • Directories
  • Traffic
  • Bookmark

So the most important off-page element are backlinks and Link Exchange. These are links to your web site - page that have to be relevant (for max results!) to your niche. The more links you have to a page/keyword, the better will it be ranked. That is why writing to other people and asking them to exchange links is important and takes a lot of your time. There are some tips and tricks to help you with it, but that’s just a topic for another post. So in short, off-page seo are the elements and thigs, that are on other websites and have impact (good or bad) on your sites.


Monday, November 26, 2007

Optimization On-page search engine

Optimization On-page search engine

On-page seo stands for all of the techniques and methods used on your web site that is hosted on a server. You have full control of how you make this changes and a lot of these can make difference in ranking for a specific keyword on page 500 or page 10 or maybe even higher (depends on the competition and a lot of factors which are explained in my blog).

You may know some or maybe even all of the elements i just named, but using them the right way so the search engines can enjoy your site is a different story. Also the list may get bigger since i may forgot some of the seo elements and will be adding them later.

Each of these elements has it’s own set of rules that Google and other search engines like. The purpose of these is, that you help the spider to read your content and site without any errors. This will show quality and will get you ranked higher.

The on-page optimization elements are:

  • Titles, Headings
  • Meta tags
  • Clean Design
  • Navigation
  • Content - Keywords
  • URLs
  • Sitemaps
  • File size
  • Site size
  • Domain name
  • Site age
  • Images - ALT
  • Outgoing links
  • and others…
For More information send your comments












Saturday, November 17, 2007

Google Top 500 Search Engine Keywords Of The Week

Top 500 Search Engine Keywords Of The Week

Headers defined Nos. : Position according to popularity
Count : Number of sightings of keyword in database.
Keyword : The keyword itself
The top 300 surge reportThese are the top 300 queries from the last 48 hours, which
represents the complete queries from the largest Metacrawlers
on the web (Metacrawler/Dogpile etc..) for the last 48 hours.

Refrence
More Information:
http://www.searchengineguide.com/wt/keyword_research/1114_wt1.html

SeeKeyword:
http://www.searchengineguide.com/wt/keyword_research/1114_wt1.html



Saturday, November 3, 2007

SEO Questions & Answers (FAQ) (Knowledgebase)

SEO Questions & Answers (FAQ) (Knowledgebase)

Q:

What is a Title?

A:

The "Title" of a web site is probably the single most important element for natural search engine positioning. The Title is placed within the "head" of the html, is generally 12-15 words long and should be descriptive in nature.


Q:

What is a keyword?

A:

A "keyword" or "keyword Phrase" is the word or words a person types into the search box on a search engine to look up subject matter on the Internet. If you are looking for a flag for your home or office, you might type in "American Flags". The Search Engine screens its database for those web sites it has obtained and looks for the words, "American Flags". Through programming, it then finds and places in order those web sites which it believes to be a match and displays them in order of relevancy. With proper design of a web site, you should have a keyword meta tag area within the head of your html to list the words or "keywords" which best describe your web site. It is important to reflect carefully when choosing your keywords. If you sell boats, but you are only licensed to do so in Maine, then your keywords might best be "boats for sale in Maine" or "Maine Boats", etc.

Q:

What is a Description?

A:

The "Description" of your web site also resides within the "head" of your html and is usually a sentence or two containing approximately 15 words which best describe your web site.


Q:

What is "body content relevance"?

A:

"Body content relevance" is the written "non-image" text on the page of the web site which is descriptive in nature and relates to the title, description and keywords. It is not mandatory to have relevant body content, but it most definetly will assist your ranking on the search engines.


Q:

What is link popularity?

A:

Link popularity refers to the number of web pages on the Internet which are recognized by a search engine to have a hyperlink reference to your site, or in other words are "pointing" to your web site as a reference.


Q:

What does the Submission Process Actually Do?

A:

The SUBMISSION programs send your web site address, "URL" to search engines and links using what is referred to as add-a-URL strings. After receiving the URL, engines use a "spider" to then parses through the HTML code looking for tags that begin with "


Q:

When will my Submissions appear on the engines?

A:

Every engine and directory is different. In some cases, your submission will appear within a few days. In some cases your submission may be much longer and in some instances, your web site may never get listed by that submission. Because of this, the idea is that the more engines you submit to, the better your visibility will be and if you submit regularly (every month), you have a better chance of getting added to the engines that didn't add you the last time. Many engines and directories put you in a queue. Some will manually add you when they get a chance. Some will wait to check your site out for content.


Q:

What is the difference between submission and placement and when will my first page paid placement list on the search engines?

A:

With search engine submission, we do not guarantee that a search engine will place your web site. With search engine placement, we ask for you to allow ten days for placement on the search engines. You will receive a ranking report at the email address you provided on your order form.

Q:

What is a search engine and how does it work?

A:

On the Internet, a search engine has three parts:

A spider (also called a "crawler" or a "bot") which travels to every page or representative page on every searchable web site, reads it, then using hypertext links on those pages, travels throughout the other pages linked by
that web site.

A catalog or Index which is created by programs compiling the pages read
from those web sites, and...

A program which receives your search request, compares it to the entries in the index, and returns the results to you. An alternative to using a search engine is to explore a structured directory of topics. Yahoo, which also lets you use its search engine, is the most widely-used directory on the Web. A number of Web portal sites offer both the search engine and directory approaches to finding information Not all search engines are created equal, but all of them have a few basic components that are essential to their use. Some components are more visible than others to the average user, but all of them must be working in tandem to create a high performance search tool. The three basic actions that have to be performed for a search engine to be useful are: Gather information, analyze information, and display information. The only major difference between major search engines is how these tasks are performed and how often they are performed. Gathering information Spiders are the programs that search engines use to collect information about web sites on the Internet. These programs traverse the world wide web gathering the content of web sites and store that information for later processing.

There are two basic ways that spiders can find your web site. You can tell the search engine about your web site, or let it find your site on its own. Typically search engines will have a place on their web site which allows you to suggest a site to them. After a site has been suggested, the search engines spider will visit that web site to collect information about it. Spiders also follow the links on each web site to find linked sites to visit. This is how a spider will find your site by itself. The more web sites that link to your site, the more likely a spider will find your site without you telling it your sites URL.

Usually search engine spiders will revisit your site when you submit your URL again. When the spider finds a link to your site, or after a specified amount of time has passed since its last visit. Depending on the number of web sites that the spider needs to visit and the resources that the spider has at its disposal, it can take days or months for a spider to visit or revisit your web site.

Displaying information
Search engines take a search request from a user and display a list of web pages that relate to that topic. These returned sites give clues to the algorithm used to analyze the web pages in the search engines index. When a search engine displays the file size of the web page or a percentage next to the web site, it can be used to help figure out how to optimize your web pages better for that search engine. Some search engines return results in the order of relevance, others mix up the results to make sure the web sites returned are from different sites. No matter how a search engine displays the information requested by a user, this result is typically the first impression of your web site. It is important to follow any guidelines that search engines give and do research on how each search engine analyzes web pages so that you not only get a good ranking for your search, but the description of your site is accurate as well.

Q:

What is an algorithm?

A:

The term algorithm (pronounced "AL-go-rith-um") is a procedure or formula for solving a problem। The word derives from the name of the Persian mathematician, Al-Khowarizmi (825 AD). A computer program can be viewed as an elaborate algorithm. In mathematics and computer science, an algorithm usually means a small procedure that solves a recurrent problem.


Q:What is a search engine and how does it work?

A:On the Internet, a search engine has three parts:

A spider (also called a "crawler" or a "bot") which travels to every page or representative page on every searchable web site, reads it, then using hypertext links on those pages, travels throughout the other pages linked by
that web site.

A catalog or Index which is created by programs compiling the pages read
from those web sites, and...

A program which receives your search request, compares it to the entries in the index, and returns the results to you. An alternative to using a search engine is to explore a structured directory of topics. Yahoo, which also lets you use its search engine, is the most widely-used directory on the Web. A number of Web portal sites offer both the search engine and directory approaches to finding information Not all search engines are created equal, but all of them have a few basic components that are essential to their use. Some components are more visible than others to the average user, but all of them must be working in tandem to create a high performance search tool. The three basic actions that have to be performed for a search engine to be useful are: Gather information, analyze information, and display information. The only major difference between major search engines is how these tasks are performed and how often they are performed. Gathering information Spiders are the programs that search engines use to collect information about web sites on the Internet. These programs traverse the world wide web gathering the content of web sites and store that information for later processing.

There are two basic ways that spiders can find your web site. You can tell the search engine about your web site, or let it find your site on its own. Typically search engines will have a place on their web site which allows you to suggest a site to them. After a site has been suggested, the search engines spider will visit that web site to collect information about it. Spiders also follow the links on each web site to find linked sites to visit. This is how a spider will find your site by itself. The more web sites that link to your site, the more likely a spider will find your site without you telling it your sites URL.

Usually search engine spiders will revisit your site when you submit your URL again. When the spider finds a link to your site, or after a specified amount of time has passed since its last visit. Depending on the number of web sites that the spider needs to visit and the resources that the spider has at its disposal, it can take days or months for a spider to visit or revisit your web site.

Displaying information
Search engines take a search request from a user and display a list of web pages that relate to that topic. These returned sites give clues to the algorithm used to analyze the web pages in the search engines index. When a search engine displays the file size of the web page or a percentage next to the web site, it can be used to help figure out how to optimize your web pages better for that search engine. Some search engines return results in the order of relevance, others mix up the results to make sure the web sites returned are from different sites. No matter how a search engine displays the information requested by a user, this result is typically the first impression of your web site. It is important to follow any guidelines that search engines give and do research on how each search engine analyzes web pages so that you not only get a good ranking for your search, but the description of your site is accurate as well.