Friday, October 19, 2007

Search Engine Monopoly

Search Engine Monopoly

Writen by Omair Aasim

Ever wondered how one search engine is dominating the entire web. In any business, you have so much stiff competition. Is there any business that you can start that has no competition ? Whether you decide to open a restaurant or a real estate company - you are going to have a lot of competition. And picture the competition that you will have - you will have 100's or probably 1000 other people doing the same business. But in search engine competition, you can probably count in your fingers as to how many search engines there are. But still people are hesitant to go into this field.

Ever wondered what is the market of having your own Search Engine. As of today, this is a multibillion dollar industry and it is being dominated by one search engine. Imagine ten years down the road - when everything is moving towards the internet - what huge advantage it would be to have a search engine. Why do you think, companies like Microsoft are jumping into this market.

In order to break the monopoly of one search engine, Objects Search has introduced a concept of topic search engines. They believe that if there is a search engine on a specific topic - people looking for information on that topic would prefer going to that topic search engine rather than going to a general search engine like Google. For instance- say if there is a search engine exclusively for music. If a person wants to search something on music, would he prefer going to a specific music search engine or google.

Objects Search hosted solution allows you to run your own search engine.You can have your own special search engine such as travel, games,animals, medical, software, sports, music, cars or any other category you like.They create and host custom search engine for you by indexing only those sites which meets your selected category. You can also select to index the whole web instead of some specific category.

It is a very bold concept. Right now people are very hesitant to step into this field. They think it is not possible to compete with giants like Google or Yahoo. Well look at it this way, even if you dont compete with google and yahoo, but just by being in that industry - you wud end up getting a small piece of the multibillion dollar industry pie which would amount to a lot.

About The Author

Omair Aasim is the founder and president of Software Objects - the parent company of Objects Search. You can contact the author at objectsearch@gmail.com.

Mozilla or Godzilla?

Mozilla or Godzilla?

Writen by Jim Trivolette

It zips across the internet at speeds faster then any that has came before it. It's smarter and emulates human behaviors. It will accomplish things only dreamed about in the recent past. The Mozilla Googlebot has been released into the World Wide Web and it has been tearing through it since its release.

This new Googlebot has the ability to index many more pages then the old Googlebot. It can visit you so fast and so often it creates denial of service like attacks that can shut down hosting servers. This little crawler is the beginning of the end for many black hatters.

This Googlebot can read CSS, JavaScript, Div, and it also gets served up a website as if it were a normal person/viewer in effect bypassing bot redirects and cloaked pages. If this new bot has visited you it will come with this ID:

Mozilla/5.0 (compatible; Googlebot/2.1; +http://www.google.com/bot.html)

With the blazing fast speed of this new Googlebot, Google should have their data centers up and running sooner than we all thought. Sure there is some bugs still left in the system like crashing hosting providers but when you bring out this big of a change you can expect little else. Google should be praised over this monumental step into the future. With this new technology things on the net may change forever.

The effects of the Big Daddy data centers (be it good or bad) are starting to be felt by everybody. Many webmaster have reported better rankings but for every one of these we also hear of webmasters claiming they went from #1 to #6000 or not ranked at all. The search engine result pages (SERPS) have many more results for sites indexed, due to this new bot, to compete with. Just because someone had a keyword listed #1 out of 360,000 result doesn't mean they will continue to have #1 status with 1,150,000 results. In spite of trying to make currently relevant sites the most important, by adding more and more sites to compete with, these sites can be lost to better sites that haven't been indexed until Big Daddy.

One webmaster wrote that he signed up for Google adsense and was soon deep crawled by the new bot. Deep crawls were something that happened rarely and now Google deep crawls on demand? The bad part of this is that the new bot has shut down many servers and is being blocked out by these said servers. Google adsense uses the same bot so if the new Googlebot is denied access to your server don't expect to be able to hook up that new adsense account.

This Bot is the start of a new future and with the Big Daddy infrastructure Google will be able to make updates to the bot easier then they could have in the past. This bot is already doing things that have shaken the net, such as fill out and submit forms on websites to make sure the links work and click on live help links and initiate chats. It looks like the next step for Googlebot is going to be eyes and ears, time to watch movies and listen to .mp3's?

James Trivolette Lives in the West Virginia Mountains and works at http://www.blackwoodproductions.com as office manager/technical support. If you would like to learn more about the great products Blackwood Productions has to offer Head on over to the site or call us toll free at: 1-877-823-1543

Keywords or Bust

Keywords or Bust

Writen by Addie Scott

If you have already built a website, you know the importance of your keywords. If you are in the process of building a site, you have probably heard a lot about them. If you haven’t, you will. Keywords can make or break your website.

In essence you will find that you may, in fact, build everything around these keywords. They will lead you where you want to go. Choose the wrong keywords and rather then rising to the top, you will be left in the dust. It is a time to choose wisely.

If you can take a step back and put on your creative cap, you should be able to come up with some unusual and profitable keywords. The idea is to come up with words that will sum up the purpose of your page; words that are unique enough that others aren’t using them in the combination that you choose. With that in mind, it is also a good idea to come up with groups of keywords, or phrases if you will, rather than single words. Single words prove to be much more competitive and much more expensive.

There are tools out there that will help you with the process of choosing your keywords. These tools can tell you what words are popular; which words and phrases people are actually searching for. These tools can also suggest alternatives. By researching what keywords or phrases are searched for and how many results these keywords produce, you can help determine the success of your game plan.

I would definitely suggest dedicating significant time to this process. I can't express strongly enough how important this research is. A lack of time here can result in a tremendous amount of work later on. Many a webmaster/webmistress have tried to rearrange the wording on their site to work around their keywords, when it should be the other way around. When this happens, you end up with wording that is clunky and unattractive. If you choose your keywords wisely, they will be your foundation. You can, then, build from the ground up, rather than doing demolition work later on.

Take your time, use the tools available to you and build a successful website - a site which will bring in traffic, attract backlinks and that the search engines will love. You can, ultimately, have a finished product that will work for you and consequently result in a tremendous amount of traffic. Be good to your website and your website will be good to you.

It is a learning experience that will only make you stronger and wiser. Good luck!

For an ABSOLUTELY AWESOME and FREE SEO eBook, go to: http://www.flirtdirt.com/ebooks.htm

Addie Scott is also the author and illustrator of a soon to be published children’s book and is working on a how-to internet business ebook. You can visit her website at: http://www.flirtdirt.com

Keywords 101

Keywords 101

Writen by Joe Borges

There was a time when online website owners optimized their
websites based soley on keyword density. Keyword density used
to be the standard by which all websites were measured by the
search engines. Now the trend has changed. The search engines
take into account several different factors when judging the value
of a website and deciding how and where it should (or shouldn't)
be ranked. Now things have changed. There are the ever-
changing algorithms, the PageRank system (Google) and an
increasing importance is being placed on off-page ranking factors.

Keyword density is still important, it's just that its importance is not
a great as it once was. Website owners, however still continue to
struggle with this concept. What is the proper keyword density
percentage for an average webpage? Generally, you should aim
for a keyword density percentage from 2%-8%. What is keyword
density and how is it measured? Let's consider the following:

1. Keyword density is a measurement of the number of times a
keyword appears in content

2. Keyword Density = # of times a keyword is used divided by the
number of words on the page

Simple, isn't it?

The search engines decreased the importance of keyword density
because this is the one on-page optimization factor that is very
easy to manipulate. In short, spammers abused the system, and it
became more difficult for the search engines to separate useful
content from the spammers.

Keyword Relevancy

Since the search engines decreased keyword density as an SEO
factor, it has been replaced by keyword relevancy. Keyword
relevancy takes into account how well related your keywords are
to the content on your individual webpages. Thus, your title,
keyword and description META tags work together with your
content to produce your keyword relevancy. There are free tools
on the Internet that will allow you to measure your keyword
relevancy. Once that is taken care of, you rankings, including
PageRank, should get better.

Along with keyword density, which is still important, you should
focus on:

* Content, Content, Content (useful content)

* Keyword relevance

Once you have on-page optimization taken care of, move on to the
next step, off-page optimization techniques.

Joe Borges makes it easy to get your website optimized and listed in all the major search engines. Learn how to Optimize your website for online business success by visiting our Search Engine Optimization Firm website.

Joe Borges is an experienced professional SEO Consultant, helping internet businesses increase their web presence, website traffic and Search Engine Ranking. He is also an Internet Marketer with experience in website development and implementation. Get tools and strategies that you can use right now to increase your rankings and make more money by visiting ==>http://www.tekretail.com

Is Overnight SEO Success Still Possible?

Is Overnight SEO Success Still Possible?

Writen by Michael Pedone

As the owner of a search engine optimization company, I have seen the SEO industry evolve a great deal over the years but never more dramatically than it is right now. Lately I have noticed signs that the "free ride" of getting easy website traffic from search engines is coming to an end. And that has caused many optimizers and website owners to ask themselves, "Is overnight SEO success still possible?"

In the early years (very early), it sure seemed like it was. One could simply add a bunch of keyword meta tags and get almost instant results. Then, meta tags were out and doorway pages were in.

The next fad was links from any and all sites, the more the better. When relevancy in links became a factor, many webmasters rushed to get link scripts installed and set up link directories with relevant categories.

Then content got a good run for a while. And most recently, text link ads (paid links) became all the rage.

Paid Links: The Straw That Broke Google's Back?

As soon as link popularity became the holy grail of SEO and webmasters began learning how to artificially increase it with paid links, Google began working on filters to stop ranking manipulation. It also seems to have inspired the rumored "aging delay" in which new sites on newly registered domains face long waits to get indexed by the grand daddy of all engines.

While catching cheaters is a good thing, a lot of legitimate, quality sites are also getting caught up in Google's new fishnet. There is plenty of grumbling among webmasters who report waiting up to nine months to appear in the Google rankings for even the most obvious keywords such as their company name.

Yes, getting top rankings in Google is definitely a lot harder (and slower) than it used to be. This is partly because more sites are being indexed and the sheer volume of competition is making it tougher to rise to the top. But that's only part of the picture.

Google and the other engines are hell bent on preventing rankings manipulation, and since they hold all the cards, we'd better learn to play the game by their rules. And that, funnily enough, could mean going back to some of the "no brainer" promotional methods in use four or five years ago, when many of us took our businesses online for the first time. Back then, we did things like distributing articles and press releases and buying ads in relevant publications - not for the incoming links but for the visibility, traffic and credibility they generated. It just made sense.

With overnight SEO success a thing of the past, online business owners/operators not only have to change tactics - they also need to adjust their expectations.

Keeping SEOs on Their Toes

Responsible and workable SEO these days means not wasting your time or money trying to trick the search engines into ranking you highly for keyword phrases that you have no business ranking for in the first place. That's why it's so important before signing on with any optimization company to discuss these new expectations with them. You need to be an informed consumer because there are still SEOs living in the (very recent) past and still deeply committed to paid linking schemes, keyword stuffing, etc.

Now more than ever you as an SEO client need to investigate the optimization companies you're considering. That means pumping them for details not just about their proven results but about their methodology such as keyword selection and link popularity before you pay the deposit.

Another reality check: SEO is going to be a tad more expensive in this new world (unless you are among the few who have the time, skills and resources to do it yourself). Reaching your target audience with interesting and compelling information about your industry is now the best way to achieve link popularity. But it's definitely not as easy, fast or cheap as buying 100 site-wide text link ads or swapping links willy nilly.

If you don't have the resources to produce regular copy about your business or industry, hiring an optimization company that has content writers to do the research and writing for you is probably your best bet. The benefits of greater link popularity AND visibility will be worth it over the long haul.

In Conclusion...

SEO continues to evolve, which these days means we all need to accept that getting top ten placements for competitive terms will not happen overnight nor in one month or even two.

Your task as a responsible SEO consumer is to do careful due diligence in selecting an optimization company. Be wary of any SEO that offers a quick fix, uses dubious tactics, and guarantees #1 rankings. Expect your optimization results to improve gradually over time.

No, overnight SEO success is no longer a reality for competitive keyword phrases but don't let that get you down. It's still worth doing... only now it's worth doing well.

Anyway, the alternative - doing nothing - isn't really an option. It reminds me of a saying hanging on the wall in my karate class: "While you are sleeping, someone else is training to kick your...."

I'll let you guess the rest.

ฉ 2005 www.eTrafficJams.com

About The Author

Michael Pedone eTrafficJams.com A search engine optimization co. specializing in getting targeted, eager-to-buy traffic to your site http://prs10.blogspot.com Build link popularity through RSS feeds http://www.etrafficjams.com/rss-link-popularity.htm.

How to Improve Your Site Search

How to Improve Your Site Search

Writen by Tim Fidgeon

Making sure that your search engine makes it as easy as possible for your customers to find what they are looking for is business-critical. It is also very difficult - good search engines can cost an awful lot of money and require a lot of ongoing effort to keep them up to scratch.

As an example: on Monday 12th December 2005, I wanted to buy a copy of Jamie Oliver's new cook book Jamie's Italy from amazon.co.uk. So, I went to the "Books" section of their website and searched for "olivers italy" and these 9 items appeared on the results page:

1. "The American Tractor" by Patrick W. Ertel

2. "A Garden in Lucca: Finding Paradise in Tuscany" by Paul Gervais

3. "History in Exile: Memory and Identity at the Borders of the Balkans" by Pamela Ballinger

4. "Oliver Tractors" by Jeff Hackett, Mike Schaefer

5. "Wyoming (Moon Handbooks S.)" by Don Pitcher

6. "Wines of Australia (Mitchell Beazley Wine Guides)" by James Halliday

7. "All Music Guide to Jazz: The Definitive Guide to Jazz Music" by Ron Wynn (Editor), et al.

8. "Larousse Gastronomique: The World's Greatest Cookery Encyclopedia" by Prosper Montagne

9. "The Teacher's Calendar: The Day-By-Day Directory to Holidays, Historical Events, Birthdays and Special Days, Weeks and Months" by Holly McGuire (Compiler), et al.

Jamie Oliver's book didn't appear anywhere on the results page, even though it had been Amazon's 3rd best-selling book in the previous 24 hours.

The problem was that I had typed "olivers italy", instead of "oliver's italy" (which would have returned Jamie Oliver's at the top of the search results list). That single missing apostrophe was all that it took for Amazon's expensive search engine to splutter, fall over and fail.

So - if Amazon can't do it, it must be impossible, right?

Wrong - here are some things the boys & girls at Amazon could - and should - have thought about.

Two types of problems

There are two basic types of problems that a user can experience when they are searching for something:

- User-error - the correct search term is entered incorrectly (i.e. the user intends to enter a search term that would cause the search engine to return results that are relevant to their needs, but they enter it incorrectly).

- Search engine error - the wrong search term is entered (i.e. the user enters a search term that the search engine does not relate to their needs).

User error

People generally enter the correct search term incorrectly because they either:

- Don't know how to spell it.

- Have made a typing error

It's important to realise that there are millions of potential customers who can't spell very well. For example, a 2003 survey of the literacy (i.e. reading and writing) estimated that there were 16% of English adults (aged 16 to 65-year-olds) had literacy levels no higher than those expected of an 11 year-old (source: The Skills for Life Survey).

Also, let's not forget that according to the British Dyslexia Association around 4% of the population are severely dyslexic and a further 6% have mild to moderate dyslexia problems.

This means that your search engine has to account for people making basic knowledge-based spelling mistakes.

Your search engine should also account for people who know how to spell what they are looking for, but make typing errors. The main categories of typing error are:

- Characters close to one another on the keyboard being entered erroneously (either in place of - or in addition to - the correct letter). For example: wrong/wring ; for/dfor.

- Characters being omitted. For example: missing/missng ; oliver's/olivers.

- Characters being entered too many times. For example: impossible/imposssible.

- Characters being entered in the wrong order. For example: disaply/display ; being/ebing.

Your search engine should allow people to make these mistakes and still return useful and relevant results.

Even though we have named these types of issues ‘User error', if your search engine fails to return information that that the user is looking for it is, of course, your fault and not theirs!

Search engine error

When people enter the wrong term into a search engine, it is only wrong because you have not anticipated it. You should aim to cover as many bases and anticipate as many different search terms as possible.

What to do

The next steps for making your search engine perform better are really simple:

- Sit down and make a list of all the spelling errors, typing errors and alternative search terms that you think could possibly be relevant to your site (e.g. actually look at your keyboard and think about what letters are close to one another).

- Ask other people in your organisation to make similar lists.

- Do some research into what search terms people are using on your site (e.g. interviews, questionnaires, check your search engine logs, etc.)

- Apply everything you learn to your search engine.

And that's it. You now have the knowledge you need to begin improving your site's search engine.

Other thoughts

- Improvements in word processing software have made people lazy typists. Software that auto-corrects many spelling and typing errors means that people are no longer forced to review and correct their work to the same extent as in the past. This means that many people are getting out of the habit of precise spelling/typing. So, when they move out of an auto-correcting environment (and onto a website, for example) they are more likely to make - and less likely to notice/correct - mistakes!

- Search results pages should display the search term the user entered in large text (e.g. 28pt). This would help people spot any inadvertent errors.Results pages should also provide the telephone numbers for customer enquiries/assistance.

This article was written by Tim Fidgeon. Tim's crazy about web usability - so crazy that he's head of usability with Webcredible, an industry leading web usability and accessibility consultancy ( Webcredible - http://www.webcredible.co.uk ).

How to Get Your Website Listed in DMOZ

How to Get Your Website Listed in DMOZ

Writen by Monia Hassan

It sometimes not very easy to get a website listed in DMOZ, although it helps in achieving higher search engine ranks especially in Google so its importance should not be neglected.
Through this article I will provide guidelines on what you should do while submitting your website to this directory.

What is DMOZ?
DMOZ is an important directory also known as The Open Directory Project (ODP), classified into different categories full of websites.
Getting listed is free in this directory where pages are manually reviewed before inclusion.

Benefits of DMOZ listing
Since page rank is a significant factor for high search engine ranks i.e. the higher the page ranks the better the chance Google finds your web page.
DMOZ has a high page rank therefore it helps a website page rank value leap to higher levels.
Huge number of websites is in queue for editor’s review; therefore it takes a long time to see listing results due to limited editors for each category.
We ask ourselves sometimes why our website is rejected by editors, what has gone wrong when everything done seems so right.

In order to know that the delay is not your fault, concentrate on submitting website in the most appropriate category because submission in different category from what your website talks about will lead your website to be improper place for review, what happens next is the editor transfers it to somebody else & the process goes on until the it reaches its category which might take very long time.
Also sites with unique quality content are included therefore you should put emphasis on placing text content with relevant keywords otherwise site could be subject to rejection.
Rejection of a website could sometimes not be notified, to know whether your website is accepted or not, check by typing URL address & see results.
DMOZ editors are always seeking out useful websites for review so once the above guidelines are followed properly this means you have done your best, so leave the rest to them.

Monia Hassan is specialized in providing SEO services. Working for Moon Search Engine Optimization Company(http://www.moonsearchengineoptimization.com) specialized in SEO services.
Writing SEO articles is part of her task, to help increase people knowledge of what trends are used by search engines on an updated basis

How Keywords Affect Your Rankings

How Keywords Affect Your Rankings

Writen by Lawrence Andrews

We all want to know how keywords affect our rankings, but to find out we’ll need to do a little work. Many say keywords are the key to good search engine rankings, although they aren’t at all the only factor.

If you need a tool to help you decide on your keywords, try Overture's Search Term Suggestion Tool – it allows you to test your keyword rankings by showing you statistics on recent searches for them. It’s a great tool when you have no clue which keyword you should choose, as it can give you a list of terms that were recently searched on.

Keyword Density.

Keyword density refers to the number of the keywords contained within your text relative to the amount of text there is. Preferred keyword density ratios vary between search engines, but you should generally try to keep them between two and eight percent (major search engines prefer the lower end). Keyword analysis tools can help to optimize a web page’s keyword density. These tools are good if you’re not sure of what you’re doing, as they’re very intuitive and explain things as you go.

Counting the Keywords.

Many SEO experts will tell you that the keyword density of your text isn’t a very important factor, and that you should be careful not to overdo it. So is there a limit? How many times should you use your keywords? SEO experts won’t be able to answer these questions for you, because no-one’s really sure of the answer. The best answer is that it changes regularly, and you can never be sure – you have to experiment to see what works for you.

Location of Keywords.

When testing the effects of keyword location, we found that pages with the keywords at the top and bottom of the page ranked higher on Google than pages with the keywords in the middle.

Many other search engines also give keywords more or less weight based on their location, but keep in mind that each search engine’s algorithm is different. Here’s a list of how most search engines prioritize keyword positions, from most to least:

1. Domain name.

2. Page title.

3. Headings (i.e. H1, H2, etc.).

4. Body text (the first 2 to 3 KB usually counts more).

5. Meta tags (especially description).

6. Links (including keywords in the URL or link text of links to you).

7. Alt text (the ‘alt’ descriptions for your pictures).

Really, though, keyword density is one of those areas where you’ll have trouble on your hands if you try to second guess the search engines. Be cautious.

About The Author:

Lawrence Andrews is an ePublisher, software developer, consultant, and author of numerous books. Visit his Private Label Content and Software site at http://www.lmamedia.com for more information about
SEO and PRL.

You may use this article freely on your website as long as this resource box is included, a link point back to my site, and this article remains unchanged! Copyright 2005 Lawrence Andrews

Google Update Jagger - Ranking Results Disrupted

Google Update Jagger - Ranking Results Disrupted

Writen by James Lipson


The latest Google update nicknamed 'Jagger', has,
and is, causing major distress to web site owners the world over. As with most
Google updates there is an initial period of movement in ranking position. This can
be, and often is, quickly followed by a cavernous empty feeling in the pit of your
stomach. However, before you panic and think about leaping from a tall building, or
shooting your local Search Engine Optimization (SEO) expert, take a deep breath and
remember this is normal and natural, the dust will settle. Google updates can last
anywhere from 1 day up to 8 weeks depending on how extensive the update may
be. With an estimated 16-24 billion web pages in its database, is it any wonder
these updates take as long as they do?


During this update period web site
owners will see their search engine results vary from day to day, (if not hour to
hour), sometimes with wild swings in either direction. Don't Fret! For any given key
phrase the ranking results can drop from 1 to 100, or
visa versa (cross your fingers). Either way don't become too attached to these
temporary results, they will change. One way to put your fears
at ease during this transition period is to check your Google Page Rank (PR) and see
if it has moved as well. If it has stayed the same then you can be fairly certain the
key phrases will bounce back. However, if your PR has dropped as well as your key
phrase ranking then it may be time to take a closer look to see what is going on. If
you are unfamiliar with obtaining a Google PR please use the link below for an on-
line check:


http://www.freelance-help.com/google-ranking-report/pagerank-
checker.php


Google only updates their
Page Rankings a few times a year, and depending on where you are this is either a
blessing or an excruciating long wait. This lag time does, however, make it a fairly
good barometer with which to gauge your site. As with most aspects of SEO this can
change without any notice or logic.


With the ever changing multitude of
contributing factors to Google's elusive ranking algorithm rest assured that if your
site has suffered lower ranking so have millions of other web site owners. Granted
this doesn't really help you sleep at night, that's what Ambian is for, but it does
confirm that you, and by you I mean we, are not doing anything wrong with the site.
Just wait and watch, once the update is over and the dust has settled we can see
where we are, adjust our SEO plan accordingly, and continue gaining key phrase
dominance!

James Lipson owns a professional web site design and development company whose
main focus is custom web site design and Search Engine Optimization and Recognition.
Contact James today at http://www.websight.org for more information.


Google Sitemaps Explained

Google Sitemaps Explained

Writen by Kenneth Elliott

Once again Google is taking the lead at making their search engine results the most relevant in the industry. With Google sitemaps webmasters don't have to wait for spiders to index their sites. Google sitemap empowers the Webmaster to submit page links pertaining to sites through one sitemap page. And what's great about this process is that when you add other pages to your site, all you need to do is add those pages to the sitemap file produced by Google. Google. Will even help you debug problems with your pages.

Now you might ask: Does this program replace Google's normal methods of crawling the web? Google has stated that this program does not replace their normal methods of crawling the web. Sitemaps just gives Google additional information about sites that they would or may not have discovered otherwise.

Will this process increase time to index? Google has also stated that since sitemaps is a Beta program they cannot guarantee when or if URLs will be crawled or added to their index.

So how would I participate in this program? I am glad you asked this question. First, access is free, yes free. Any site owner can participate in the Google sitemaps program. Site owners with single page sites to owners with millions of ever changing pages. Now lets get into the fun part, creating a sitemap. There are a number of ways to create sitemaps using the sitemap protocol.

1. If the majority of your site is a HTML static file or your URLs can be found in your access Logs or if you have a text file that contains a list of URLs in your site, you can use the Google sitemap generator.

2. If the majority of your site is dynamic URLs and may not show up in your access logs, you can generate a list of URLs as a text file and then use the Google sitemap generator.

3. You may not be able to use the Google sitemap generator. In this case you may be able to use a third party tool to create a sitemap.

4. Create the file manually or use a script based on the sitemap protocol that extracts dynamic content as URLs and includes information such as last modified date for those URLs.
Once you sitemap is complete its time to place the file on your site. You must place the completed sitemap in the highest directory that you would like Google to crawl. Why is this so? Because Google can only accept URLs contained in your sitemap that are the same directory level or lower. If you only have access to sub directories place the sitemap at the tip most directory you have access and ensure the URLs listed in the sitemap are at that level or lower.

Now add the sitemap to your sitemap account and your all done. Its as easy as that.
Things to keep in mind

1. A sitemap can contain a list of URLs or a list of sitemaps.

2. If your sitemap file contains a list of other sitemaps then you should save the sitemap file as a sitemap index file and use XML format provided for that file type.

3. A sitemap file can only contain no more than 50,000 URLs. If your site ahs more than 50,000 URLs then split up the URLs into smaller sitemap files and link them together.

4. Completely specify each URL

That's it you're done. Enjoy the new traffic.

Kenneth Elliott is the owner of Market Associate, ISaved Home Decor and Designer Handbags websites. He helps real people realize their dreams of a successful affiliate experience. Discover why so many have found their ideal business with Kenneth Elliott today.

Don't Get Banned by Google

Don't Get Banned by Google

Writen by Mike Ralph

There are many Black Hat techniques that people use to try and influence Googles ranking of their sites, the simple thing to remember is that THEY DO NOT help your rankings, are simply a waste of your time and sooner or later will lead to a Google ban for your site. Sure there are sites that use these techniques and are getting away with it but they will eventually get penalised as Google always manages to find them eventually.

As I said please avoid using these techniques :

Alt Image Tag Stuffing

This is a way that webmasters try to 'force fill' keywords into their website, thus the search engines can see these keywords and their site visitors see no difference at all to layout and an excessive use of certain words.

What happens is that webmasters insert graphic's that relate to their subject and then add an alt image tag to it. The search engines see this but a visitor will only see it if they hover over the graphic and a pop up will appear.

What you tend to find is that mis-informed webmasters add multiple instances of the keywords that they are targetting with a view to increasing key word density when the search bots visit the page.

The real purpose of an alt image tag is if the web site graphic doesn't load then the text will appear instead of the graphic, this is particularly important if a visually impaired visitor gets to your site.

My advice would be to keep it simple, use your keyword once and use the tags to present an accurate description of the graphic.

Hidden Text

Hidden Text is simply text that visitors to your site cannot see when they visit your webpage(s). Its used for the same reasons as described in the alt tag example. All that is involved is the webmaster adds the text (usually keyword spam) to the page in the same colour as the background and as such it becomes invisible to the human eye but gets picked up by the search engine bots.

Meta Tag Stuffing

Meta Tags are vital parts of the make up of a web page but again abusing them with a view to influencing the search engine bots can cause you problems. Basically the keyword tag is loaded with hundreds, even thousands, of the exact same keyword into the tag. For example, the tagetted keyword is DVD and the meta tag looks like:

< name = "KEYWORDS" content="DVD, DVDS, DVD, DVDS DVDS DVD SELLER, DVD, DVDS DVD, DVD, DVD, DVDS, DVD, DVDS DVDS DVD SELLER, DVD, DVDS DVD, DVD, DVD, DVDS, DVD, DVDS DVDS DVD SELLER, DVD, DVDS DVD, DVD, DVD, DVDS, DVD, DVDS DVDS DVD SELLER, DVD, DVDS DVD, DVD">

The important thing to remember is that Google does not use this tag to rank your page due to wide scale abuse so why bother, it is also a pretty rediculous thing to do.

Title Tag Stuffing

The same principle as above but using the title tag, use your keyword once in the title and make it an accurate description of the page and its content, that is sufficient.

If you have to resort to black hat techniques then the set up of your site is wrong and they will eventually lead to the site being panalised. Its a pure waste of effort, they dont work and could kill your site.

Mike - Webmaster and eBay Power Seller at Online Auction Trader

We offer free templates, information and product sourcing to enable you to develop your online auctions into a sustainable, long term income stream.

We also operate a Traders Forum where any advice can be sought on any aspect of Online Trading.

Basic Search Engine Promotion

Basic Search Engine Promotion

Writen by Jim Edwards

I can't tell you how many times people have asked me, "How
to do I get my site to come up in the top ten of the search
engines so I can get hits and sell my product?"

What they really want to know is, "How can I get people to
show up to my website without spending any money on
advertising my site!"

People usually don't like my answer because accomplishing a
"top ten ranking" on any search engine always requires
careful thought along with a significant amount of work.

Three types of "Search engines" abound on the Internet.
They include true search engines, directories, and links
pages.

At last count approximately 10,000 sites referred to
themselves as search engines, though only about a dozen
sites rate your attention since they drive 97% of the
Internet's search traffic.

These sites include Google, Yahoo!, Overture, MSN,
AltaVista, AllTheWeb, Lycos, DMOZ, and a few others.

When a visitor logs onto a search engine looking for
information, they enter "keywords" about the subject in
hopes of obtaining a list of relevant websites.

Each search engine or directory operates with its own rules
about judging a site's relevancy to a keyword search.

They look at text on the web page (body text) as well as
words you can't see which reside in the actual code of the
web pages.

This code includes such things as alt tags, title tags, and
others.

Depending on the search engine, what you can't see may
represent a far more important part of ranking well than
the words appearing on the page.

Search engines look at how many times a keyword shows up in
the various parts of your website as well as actual
location on the page.

Assuming that an important subject for your pages would
appear at the beginning of a page, those web pages starting
with the keyword should rank better than those that don't.

Also, in many cases, the more websites linking to your site
will drastically impact your rankings.

Entire books and websites exist to teach eager website
owners how to pump up their rankings on all the various
search engines, however these promotion tips will serve you
well in your quest for the "Top Ten!"

** See what others have done for maximum exposure!

Go to the various search engines and perform a search under
which you would like to appear.

Dissect those pages to find
the common elements that make them show up.

~ How often and where do the keywords appear on the page?

~ How many words on the page in total?

~ Do they put keywords in their hypertext links?

~ How many other sites link to them and could you easily get
a link from those sites too?

** Beware of registration vs. promotion

Plenty of companies will "register" your website with
thousands of search engines for about $50-$100.

But simply submitting to the search engines won't do much
for you. Without the proper structure in your website, only
sheer luck will cause your site to pop up in the top ten!

(c) Jim Edwards - All Rights reserved
http://www.thenetreporter.com

About The Author:

Jim Edwards is a syndicated newspaper columnist and the
co-author of an amazing new ebook that will teach you how
to use fr-e articles to quickly drive thousands of targeted
visitors to your website or affiliate links...

Simple "Traffic Machine" brings Thousands of NEW visitors to
your website for weeks, even months... without spending a
dime on advertising! ==> "Turn Words Into
Traffic"

Aviation SEO Writing

Aviation SEO Writing

Writen by Lance Winslow

Are you an SEO writer and looking for a power play to attract viewership to your website in hopes of them clicking on an aviation high paying AdSense Word? If so, may I suggest that you spend a few weeks concentration on only general aviation articles? You should be able to write 10-12 good general aviation articles per day. Learning about aviation is fun and the research is fun too. You may even find folks willing to help you as there are those diehard aviation buffs out there who know every thing about aviation.

Does your website have an aviation section; can you write these articles with a proper general aviation slant? It is not that hard you see. Let me tell you the types of articles you need to write and the titles and key words you need in these articles. I recommend the following.

Learn to Fly

Buy a Cessna

Piper Cub

Sail planes

Hot Air Balloon Races

Reno Air Races

Sea Planes

Beechcraft Aircraft

EAA Aircraft

Fractional Jets

Corporate Jets

You need to put up plenty of specially tailored aviation articles. Perhaps also put up articles on aircraft washing, plane detailing, maintenance to round out the subject matter. Since many websites have information and links with travel and leisure sections this is a good add on. You may even consider some military aviation, UAVs, etc., as this may be somewhat applicable and bring in more ad revenue too. You should be thinking here.

Lance Winslow

The Art of Persuasion

The Art of Persuasion

Writen by Wayne A Davies

Human beings share six tendencies that allow us to be persuaded.

None of us is immune to these tendencies, which is what makes them so useful to those of us who want to sell products over the Internet. These six tendencies are...


  1. Scarcity

  2. Authority

  3. Reciprocation

  4. Social validation

  5. Friendship

  6. Consistency

This article takes a brief look at each of these six tendencies, and discusses how to use them in your online business.

For a more in-depth discussion see Dr. Robert Cialdini's brilliant book Influence: the Psychology of Persuasion.

Scarcity

We tend to want something more if it's hard to get. This tendency harks back to a time when everything worth having (food, clothing, shelter) was in short supply.

Most people in the western world no longer have to struggle to provide food, clothing, and shelter so our focus has shifted toward luxury items. And our tendency to place value on scarce items has shifted with it. That's why people are prepared to pay huge sums of money for the works of dead painters. After all, once an artist is dead there will be no new works.

You can take advantage of this tendency in your advertising. The easiest way to impose scarcity is to make a special offer, and then place a time limit on it.

A time-limited offer not only forces the prospect to make an immediate decision, but has the additional bonus (for you) of punishing procrastination.

Authority

Authority is an increasingly important tool to advertisers.

Anyone who lives in a modern western country is bombarded with information, and tends to rely on 3rd party experts when forming opinions about matters outside his or her immediate area of knowledge.

Popular methods of utilizing authority in advertising include...


  • Quoting the results of scientific studies

  • Printing testimonials from qualified scientists

  • Printing celebrity endorsements

Essentially, the advertiser is borrowing authority from a 3rd party. While you can borrow authority to promote any product, you must ensure that your 3rd party is a credible source of information in the mind of your prospect.

Reciprocation

Most people are more likely to comply with a request when...


  • The person making the request has already given us something (i.e. free gift)

  • The person making the request has promised to give us something

Reciprocation works because most of use feel the need to pay our own way, and are uncomfortable accepting something for nothing. Reciprocation may also reinforce the power of friendship and consistency.

Most advertisers use reciprocation by giving out a free sample, hoping to demonstrate the usefulness of their product. Unfortunately, this technique is so common on the Internet that it has lost some of its power.

As people get used to receiving free samples, and realize that this is merely part of the marketing for that product, the less inclined they feel to reciprocate (that's why I don't offer free samples).

Social validation

Sheep tend follow the leader. People aren't unlike sheep, in that we tend to do what other people do.

We're influenced by the television we watch, the results of opinion polls, and the opinions of the people we meet every day.

Even better, from an advertiser's perspective, is the fact that most people are completely unaware of this tendency. That makes social validation a very powerful tool.

Common ways to use social validation in advertising include...


  • Testimonials

  • Published sales results (e.g. One thousand people can't be wrong)

  • Being #1 in the category (e.g. Number one selling vitamin)

  • Personal referrals

If your best friend raves about how great a product is, chances are it will carry more weight than it does when the advertiser tells you.

Friendship

The more you like someone, the more likely you are to comply with a request they make of you. In fact, you may even feel honored by such a request.

Friendship isn't an easy tendency to apply on the web, because you're essentially selling to complete strangers. This tendency requires that you establish a personal relationship with the prospect. Chances are, if you're selling a $20 product on behalf of someone else, there's no direct relationship at all.

Of course, you can still make your website as friendly to the visitor as possible. You'll help the process of winning over new friends if you supply a lot of useful information for free (reciprocation) on your website, and answer queries quickly and efficiently.

Consistency

A person is more likely to take a specific action if he or she has already made a public commitment to do so. That's because we tend to want to demonstrate consistency in our lives.

Your use of this tendency can be as simple as getting your prospect to complete a short survey.

For example, a person selling banner advertising might ask 3 yes/no questions in a survey...

Do you use online advertising?

Do you pay for online advertising?

Do you buy banner advertising?

Elsewhere on the page, the person conducting the survey may run an ad that promotes banner advertising. Not only is the advertiser more likely to get a visit, they're also more likely to get the sale.

Of course, you need to find a way to get the prospect to take the survey in the first place. And the survey needs to have a credible purpose.

In the above example the advertiser might explain the need to understand what buyers of banner advertising want, and offer 100 free banner ads as a reward for taking the survey. This achieves the following...


  • It specifically targets people who buy banner advertising

  • By taking the survey, the prospect is immediately identifying himself as a 'buyer' of banner advertising (consistency)

  • The answer to question 2 and 3 reinforce this tendency

  • The 100 free banner gift for taking the survey introduces the power of reciprocation

The final page of the survey should thank the prospect for his or her answers (friendship), and immediately collect the necessary information required to display the prospect's banner.

Once that information is collected (giving you contact information and strengthening the relationship), the advertiser can present a one-off special offer (scarcity) that allows the prospect to add more banner advertising to his or her account at a special low price.

Chances are, the advertiser will get the sale!

Even if the sale is refused, the advertiser can still go back to the prospect with another offer when the 100 banners have been delivered.

The big challenge

None of us is immune to the six tendencies, and they can easily be incorporated into your sales approach.

One excellent method for coming up with unique ways of developing a new sales approach is to take this challenge. Give yourself one day to find five different ways to sell your product.

Each sales approach you develop should include a minimum of three of the tendencies discussed in this article.

This isn't as easy as it sounds! By forcing yourself to find five different ways to sell your product, you'll come up with at least one that is very effective. You can then try all five and see which one produces the most sales.

You'll find more articles by Wayne Davies on The Internet Marketing Ezine: http://blog.mailyourad.com/

Predictions for 2010

Predictions for 2010

Writen by Dave Chase

2005 puts us at the mid-point of the first decade of the new millenium. What will things look like at the end of the 1st decade of the new millenium in the world of advertising? I thought I’d project where the ad industry is headed and what 2010 (or sooner) might look like. This two-part article will take those discussions a few steps further. First, we’ll look at a scenario that is likely to be common by 2010 when the heretofore separate worlds of TV advertising, search marketing, behavioral targeting and inventory yield management blend together. If you buy some of this scenario, it’s interesting to look at the implications for ad agencies. In part two, I’ll speculate on the likelihood of Google being the biggest “ad agency” in world. If you look through the prism I lay out, it will cause you to think differently about where the industry is headed whether or not you agree with some of the specifics.

Search marketing, Behavioral Targeting and Yield Management’s alchemizing effect on TV advertising

The accountability and efficiency of search marketing, behavioral targeting and publisher inventory yield management can look pretty compelling to a media planner compared to the relative lack of trackability of a TV spot today. What happens when you combine the best of these worlds? Let’s look at a scenario that might take place when these worlds are combined.

It may easy to write this off as the ramblings of a guy who has spent too much time in the technology industry but before you do that, consider the following:

• All major search engines keep a search history indicating your interests, needs, likes, etc.

• Forrester projects that over half of TV households with have a DVR device by 2009.

• Today, most DVRs keep track of what we could be considered a “search history” of everything that your household has watched and what you plan to record in the future.

• With your implicit approval, that “search history” of your TV behavior could be combined with your online search and surfing behavior which would create a profile that would be quite precise regarding your preferences and interests. Whether one company delivers all of this technology (e.g., Microsoft or AOL) or a deal is done between DVR suppliers and search engines, this can easily be accomplished.

• Most people’s broadband Internet access is provided by cable companies today. Setting a cookie applicable to both the TV and internet access is relatively trivial.

• Tacoda, a leading behavioral targeting company, has over 80% of the North American Internet audience in their network. They have a wide variety of non-personal demographic information about their users.

So let’s fast forward five years and look at a scenario with a couple in their late 30’s we’ll call Mike and Jill. Periodically, they talk about the need for a vacation but have had a hard time agreeing on a location. Jill’s idea of a great getaway is a “spa weekend” with mud baths, cucumber bodywraps, aroma therapy and countless other “treatments” that sound like some form of torture to Mike. Meanwhile, what Mike would really like to do is make a trip to a Final Four as his alma mater is in the Top 10 and he’s sure they are going to make it a long ways in the “Big Dance”. Whenever he talks with his buddies about the “Big Dance”, Jill is confused Mike has never liked to dance.

One thing they can agree on is their enjoyment of watching Alias together although they are watching Jennifer Garner for different reasons. The rest of Mike’s TV viewing largely consists of watching ESPN, Fox Sports and ESPN2 so he can be smarter than his buddies when it comes to filling out his bracket. Meanwhile, Jill loves watching the Travel Channel and shows on other networks about “getaways” whether they are about “romantic getaways” or “girls’ weekends”.

During the week, Mike often eats his lunch at his desk while reading some of his favorite websites (www.foxsports.com, www.ESPN.com, etc.). He’s checking out the latest rankings to see where his alma mater is ranked and analysis from experts on the “Road to San Diego” (the site of the 2010 Final Four). He notices one of the ads on the webpage he’s reading is about a San Diego vacation. Though he’s never been to San Diego, he knows it has a nice climate and gets the bright idea that he could kill two birds with one stone if he suggests that a trip to San Diego would be a nice place for a trip with Jill and another couple friend (the husband of that couple also happens to be a college buddy who enjoys hoops as much as he does). Suddenly, the $500 daily spa fee doesn’t sound too bad for Mike if it means he can attend the Final Four.

Since Jill had Arizona in mind for a “spa weekend”, he figures he needs to sell Jill on San Diego. He surfs over to his DVR home page to see if he can find some shows that highlight San Diego that he can highlight and record for Jill. It turns out one of the shows is in 30 minutes on the Travel Channel so he’s able to record it for later viewing even though he and Jill aren’t home at that moment. It also turns out that one of the past episodes of Alias had Jennifer Garner’s character incognito at a beach party at the Hotel del Coronado in San Diego (she snuck into the private party by swimming in from the ocean in scuba gear with a party dress in stow).

Over dinner that evening, Mike brings up the idea of San Diego as a great location for a vacation and that late March is a particularly nice time to visit (failing to mention that the timing happens to coincide with the Final Four). He lets her know that he’s marked some San Diego shows for her to watch including the Alias episode since they have a “Season Pass” for Alias (i.e., it records/stores all Alias episodes). Jill is surprised and impressed that Mike has gone to this trouble.

Meanwhile, let’s take a look at what’s going on behind the scenes. The cookie that the cable company has stored is keeping track of various actions that Mike and Jill are taking (sites they visited, shows they watched, searches they performed). This behavior is combined with the ad marketplace system running at Google or the particular search provider of choice. This system is similar to Google’s Adwords system or Overture’s Precision Match. In the future, it’s likely to include “behavioral targeting” attributes as well.

In this ad marketplace, millions of similar actions are aggregated and offered up to what by 2010 will be millions of advertisers for sale in a real time automated auction. These marketers will have established their spending levels, behavioral and demographic profiles. In the time it takes for an average search to complete, several advertisements have already been sold against each of the programs recorded for Jill. On the media outlets’ sites, they are doing additional optimization (aka “inventory yield management”). This optimization determines what the optimal type of ad to serve is. In one situation it might be a textual advertisement while in other cases, it might be a more traditional form of TV ad.

As Jill goes to watch the shows Mike has teed up, the ad delivery system is poised to take action. The way in which the ads are viewed will be dependent on the couple’s billing preference with the cable provider (yet another yield management variable). They may have chosen the free cable option that requires them to watch ads at set periods. As the show starts, a number of advertisements appear at the bottom of the screen. A couple of these have a dollar sign next to them indicating that they can reduce their cable bill if they watch them. This is attractive particularly since Jill wants to watch them anyway since they are infomercials for a San Diego area spa. She can choose to watch them now or later.

Later on in the evening she checks her email before going to bed. The ad delivery system knows this is the same person who has been watching ads about San Diego area attractions so it serves up some discount offers for packages to San Diego which she emails to Mike with a message about how excited she is about going to San Diego. Who knew that an ad delivery system could enhance marital harmony?!

Will these sort of events transpire five years from now? My belief is that they are largely foreseeable. Undoubtedly, the specifics won’t take place exactly like this, but it’s not a huge leap to get to this place with consumers and businesses that are more than willing to benefit from the experience.

If you buy all or part of this scenario, what does it mean for the parties most financially vested in the ad marketplace – media outlets, ad agencies and marketers? It means further evolution in their business models. Perhaps the most radical impact will be on ad agencies that have already seen their business evolve. In part two, I’ll make the provocative statement that Google will be the largest ad agency in the world by 2010. While this potentially ludicrous notion may not seem worth thinking about, viewing the ad agency business through a Google prism should cause ad agencies and their clients to experience profound insights.

If you want to have more fun with the previous scenario, you can weave in various other variables that include, but aren’t limited to, the following factors:

• Product placement evolution. At one time there was a website that allowed you to buy products that were shown in TV programs. Think about that woven into the aforementioned ad marketplace. This is an evolution of what AdvertisingAge’s Madison+Vine regularly reports on.

• User reviews. User ratings of various advertiser products could become another variable determining which ads get served. Amazon-like collaborative filtering can be facilitated thus increasing content consumption.

Will Google be the biggest ad agency in the world by 2010?

In part one, I laid out a future of how Internet-based advertising models will pervade the TV world. If you buy some of these factors, there are inevitable industry changes that will happen to the ad industry. I will make the provocative statement that Google will be the largest “ad agency” in the world by 2010. While this potentially ludicrous notion may not seem worth thinking about, viewing the ad agency business through a Google prism should cause ad agencies and their clients to experience profound strategic insights.

Dramatic industry shifts usually don’t happen from obvious places. Ample evidence of that exists if you look at various businesses whether you look at the music business, the encyclopedia business, the newspaper classified business, the retailing business or many others. Companies that too narrowly define their competition inevitably have their business cratered from unexpected places. Aggressive, growth-oriented companies whether they are Google or Wal-Mart don’t care about pre-existing industry dividing lines. If it wasn’t them, some other organization would gladly eat away at incumbents’ businesses even though the leaders of the change are attractive “bogeymen” for those under attack.

If you take a step back, the purpose of ads and search are to connect buyers with someone selling what buyers want (even if they don’t know they want it yet). In both cases, fees are collected from the people who have something to sell for connecting them with buyers of those items. No one is rushing to categorize Google as an ad agency -- “they’re in the Search business”. You don’t have to study Google very hard to realize they aren’t limiting themselves to the “search business” which is increasingly hard to define in any case. It’s important to recognize that Google isn’t charging for search; their income is from advertising. As the old saying goes, if it looks and quacks like a duck, it is a duck. If they were considered an ad agency, they’d already be in the top 5 with a much stronger trajectory than any of the top 5 agencies.

You may be saying, “wait a minute, they are more like a media outlet than an ad agency” (which is largely true today) but withhold judgment for a moment and some interesting insights can be drawn. To begin with, they are already doing media planning if the business has a high volume of clicks and it’s highly likely they are working on ways to make that easier (and thus scale to smaller advertisers).

If I walked into most offices of the leaders of the largest ad agencies in the world today and stated that Google/Yahoo/MSN are their competitors, at best I’d get a polite laugh. They may say that I don’t “get” the ad agency business. Having been on both sides of the challenger/incumbent equation, I can say unequivocally that not “getting it” is usually an advantage for the challenger. The challenger isn’t shackled by the current way of thinking and perhaps more importantly, the current business model. Like virtually every other company (especially a public company), Google and “their competitors” are inspired by what will make them the largest sum of money. Today, Google’s revenues are advertising-based, but tomorrow they may have increasingly more characteristics associated with the agency business. Comparing some of the assets that agencies have versus Google is instructive. I’ll put these in context of some of the criteria I used to evaluate the ad agencies that I worked with when I held large ad budgets.

1. Efficiency with my budget: When my team owned the relationship/budget with an agency, I counseled them to look for padding and inefficiencies as the model shifted from a commission-based model (which had its own issues) to a salary multiplier that seemed like a fair approach based upon the number of people on the account. Furthermore, it was hard to know how well the agency negotiated with media outlets to get the best CPMs. With Google’s Adwords, you bid on how much you are willing to pay for a click which can range from pennies to dollars depending on the term. Google has a great feature where if you bid $1.50 for a click and the next highest bidder is $0.75, they’ll adjust what they charge you to $0.76. This looks like a more efficient way of spending my ad dollars and infinitely more trackable.

2. Consumer insight/research: I’ve worked with some fabulous media buyers and account planners. Their ability to dive into various syndicated research to identify the media properties with the optimal demo/psycho-graphics often impressed me. However when you combine the almost unbelievable volumes of click behavior across many thousand websites that provides a very robust picture of brand motivation and preferences. It’s an approach virtually any cold-blooded capitalist selling stuff would appreciate and is unrivaled by other means of capturing actual buyer behavior.

3. Ability to reach my target buyers where they “live”: Google’s Adsense offering (i.e., syndication of their contextual search ads) has major implications and makes them look an awful lot like a media agency. Not only does Google serve up ads on their own high-traffic site, they are syndicating their ads to virtually every nook and cranny of the web. As an advertiser, it gives them an efficient way to reach into highly targeted sites that would be impossible to buy in a manual manner. Anecdotally, I’m seeing Google ads on all kinds of obscure and relatively low traffic sites that happen to be highly relevant to me professionally or personally.

4. Ability to service local, regional and international markets: This has at least two dimensions: First, can you run particular ads for people who live in particular geographies whether that is England, New England or Boston? Second, is it easy to localize the advertisements themselves? Particularly on the first point, it’s much easier to do this with Google than the machinations an agency has to go through to make it happen (e.g., working with dozens of different media outlets around the country/world). On the second point, it’s comparing apples and oranges since localization of text ads is easy compared to localization of ads that involve more than simple text. That said, they cover many languages and countries today so it’s a straightforward process.

5. Focus on driving results vs. their ego: Since much of the execution of a campaign on Google is strictly driven by machines, there is no ego involved. From time to time, one runs up against this dynamic with agency creatives where they are more focused on winning awards than selling your product.

6. Creative work: This is an area where it would appear that agencies have a clear advantage if for no other reason that the creative palette is very limited with Google today. If you look at some of the trends outlined in part one combined with increased bandwidth and broadband penetration in the next five years it seems inevitable that the Google creative palette provides won’t be so limited. The advantage Google has in this scenario is that the cost to launch and test a new campaign is low so creatives can refine their creative and copy while avoiding the high stakes and slow turnaround of typical campaigns of today that are bogged down by approvals at the client level. This quick turnaround should shift creatives perspective from thinking of how limited their palette is to relishing the opportunity to get immediate feedback on campaign ideas that may be conceived of, executed and killed/expanded in less than a day.

7. Account service: This is an area where agencies should maintain a clear advantage for the foreseeable future as people-oriented service is a core part of their value proposition. As Google and others gain an increasing share of their customers’ wallets, there will be an expectation of increased account service for large accounts. In a competitive market, Google will respond if Yahoo or MSN try to offer better service. This factor can diminish the inherent advantage agencies have.

8. Media neutrality: Most agencies like to claim media-neutrality but it’s virtually impossible to find in practice. The core obstacle is that the client’s budgets aren’t media neutral. There are often different teams, let alone different budgets for different media – print, online, broadcast, etc. This makes it virtually impossible for agencies to be media neutral. The philosophy behind Google’s technology is media neutral. It just so happens that it’s all executed on HTML webpages right now. Take the notion of delivering ads in the content you prefer to consume, on the device (PC, mobile device, etc.) you happen to be using at the moment and delivering the most relevant ad at the moment you consume it and extend it beyond online. It’s not hard to imagine this happening when your TV and radio have their own IP addresses along with your more traditional computing devices (this is already in process).

9. CRM: Marketers and agencies working on their behalf spend large sums of money to create and maintain an accurate customer database that helps paint a picture of their customers’ behaviors, likes & dislikes, demographics etc. It’s not unusual for a marketer to spend millions each year just keeping their database up to date with basic information such as addresses. Meanwhile, Google’s customers do much of the maintenance work themselves as their cookies capture every web search, links you clicked on and when you did it. One area that Yahoo & MSN have a clear advantage over Google is a much larger database of demographic information via their email/IM users (certainly one of the drivers for Google launching Gmail to much fanfare). Combine the demographic information with the surfing and searching behavior, and there isn’t an agency in the world who wouldn’t die to get their hands on that rich picture of their clients’ customers.

Conclusion

Is Google explicitly out to get the agencies’ business? Unlikely. It just so happens that when you look at the natural progression of their activities, it ends up dramatically impacting the agency business. The ironic thing is that they are probably spending significant sales & marketing resources cultivating agency relationships with complete sincerity. Like many other successful businesses, over time they will have more and more channel conflict where parties who were previously 100% complementary start to step on each others’ toes. In the end, Google won’t look like an ad agency anymore than eBay or Craigslist look like a newspaper classifieds business, but they will capture money from the same customers as the business that they are pilfering. It’s the agency leaders that should ask themselves what facets of Google’s business do they need to develop or co-opt. Agency leaders would be wise to ensure they don’t have blinders on regarding their current business and their partners, or they are liable to be victims of an inevitable force.

Dave Chase is a partner with Altus Alliance, which specializes in driving revenue traction for emerging businesses. Before joining Altus Alliance, Chase spent nearly 20 years in the industry with over a dozen years at Microsoft in various senior marketing and general management roles, including his role as MSN’s managing director for industry marketing and relations. In that capacity, he was responsible for MSN taking a leadership role within the Interactive Marketing industry to grow Online’s share of the overall ad market in concert with AOL, CNET, Yahoo!, Google and other market leaders.

Chase played leadership roles in launching several new businesses within Microsoft including Microsoft’s entry into the enterprise software and server business which is now an $8B business. Starting at the dawn of the commercial Internet, he was integral in Microsoft’s entry into consumer internet businesses that achieved both critical and financial success.

Pixel Advertising: Fad or Trend?

Pixel Advertising: Fad or Trend?

Writen by Oudam Em

Pixel advertising is an innovative marketing concept introduced by 22-year-old Alex Tew that allows advertisers to buy advertising space on a per-pixel cost basis. The more pixels an advertiser buys, the larger their ad and the greater the chance that it will be clicked on. Selling one million pixels at $1 each, Alex's Million Dollar Homepage has created quite a buzz in the news media and has easily reached its $1 million target.

Thanks to the stunning success of Tew’s Million Dollar Homepage (MDHP), pixel ad sites have mushroomed all over the net. There are even commercial scripts that you can buy that will allow you to set up your own million-dollar homepage in less than 15 minutes. However, this does not mean you'll make a million dollars…or even a thousand dollars…or even the cost of the script.

Alex Tew’s pixel advertising concept was simple, so simple that it eventually led many people to pound their heads on the wall repeating to themselves, “Why didn’t I think of this first?” But his idea was also novel and original. And because of its novelty it commanded a lot of attention (and free publicity) from the media.

Needless to say, no news organization will rush to report about a second million-dollar homepage, let alone one set up in 15 minutes with a purchased script. This is not to say, however, that there is no room in cyberspace for the second or third or even thousandth MDHP. In fact, there are presently at least a thousand MDHP clones hoping to capitalize on the pixel advertising craze. Many of them have managed to make a lot of money despite not being the original.

Some people view MDHP clones as little more than shameless imitations trying to leech off Tew's original concept. This would be the case if his idea, while fun and original, has little use beyond his website.

On the contrary, the clones have proved quite the opposite. Their successes have demonstrated that Tew's Million Dollar Homepage was worth much more than $1 million. Moreover, they have lend legitimacy to the concept of pixel .

While the original MDHP has made "internet history" (in Tew's words) by achieving its $1 million goal, it is unlikely to become anything more than just a blip in internet history if the concept is not adopted and refined by others. In fact, most MDHP clones have achieved their riches not by ripping off Tew's site verbatim, but by borrowing his pixel advertising concept and finding creative uses for it.

Far from being just a fad, pixel advertising holds an enormous promise as an alternative, cost-effective channel for online advertising. But the concept is still in its infancy, and to avoid becoming internet history, it has to evolve. An important aspect of this evolution is how limitations inherent in the concept itself and in how pixel advertising is being used are addressed.

Perhaps the most obvious argument against pixel advertising is that its current use is largely limited to websites with seemingly useless clutters of ads with no content whatsoever. At best these sites offer advertisers little more than a source of non-targeted traffic.

An obvious solution to this is to incorporate pixel advertising into content-rich sites. Instead of selling pixel advertising exclusively through a site with nothing but a giant grid of picture ads, banner-sized pixel grids may be incorporated into a site with real content. A good example of this application is the relatively small and unobtrusive pixel panel placed on http://www.ezclassifieds.org/. Since most people go to ezClassifieds.org to post and look at ads, the site is an ideal place to offer pixel advertising to visitors. Obviously, incorporating pixel ads into content sites involves a lot more work than installing a ready-made script on a new domain. It involves developing a content-rich site and *then* offering pixel ads as an alternative to text links and traditional banner ads.

Used in this way, pixel ads are at the very least superior to traditional banner ads. Unlike traditional banners, a pixel banner may contain ads for several advertisers. Plus, pixel ads are not confined to predetermined shapes and sizes. Many pixel ad scripts will automatically resize images submitted by advertisers, eliminating the need to edit them to conform to the publisher's requirements. Purchasing pixel ads is usually painless and often fully automated. Since most people have grown accustomed to ignore banner ads, pixel ads are likely to generate higher click-through rates.

Copyright 2006 Oudam Em

Oudam Em is the publisher of MillionDollarBuzz.com, http://www.milliondollarbuzz.com/, a pay-per-click pixel advertising site. This innovative model incorporates performance-based pricing into pixel advertising, allowing for more systematic and equitable pricing of pixel ads. MillionDollarBuzz.com also syndicates pixel ads to content-rich websites, extending the use and effectiveness of pixel advertising.

How to get Free Publicity to Boost Your Business

How to get Free Publicity to Boost Your Business

Writen by Sevim OR

Publicity is the most powerful marketing method for online and offline businesses. That's why many business owners advertise their businesses in newspapers, on TVs and Radios, in newsletters, journals, magazines and other publications.

But, advertising your business in media is unfortunately extremely expensive. You have to issue attractive adds with color photos to grab the attention of the readers of the print media, among so many eye catching ads of your competition. To generate a competitive advantage through advertising in media is not affordable at all for new businesses, especially for start ups.

Advertising on TV is even more expensive. So, it's very hard for many businesses to advertise their offers to target audience in print media and on TV, if not totally impossible.

Then, how can business owners who don't have big budgets to spend on very expensive advertising campaigns promote their businesses to catch the competitive advantage? Isn't there any affordable way for them to market their ventures effectively?

Yes, there is. In fact, there are two very effective marketing strategies, even much more powerful than those expensive advertising campaigns . . . and they are mostly FREE to use!

You can get FREE Publicity writing Articles and Press Releases.
Here you have to design a public relations campaign instead of an advertising campaign. There are relatively easy ways to design a public relations campaign.

Most businesses around the world use these two powerful marketing strategies frequently. They are:

1. Sending informative articles to print media.

2. Sending Press Releases to both print media and to TV and radio stations.

However, you should definitely know that articles and press releases are not advertisements. They are not advertising materials. If you try to directly promote your business in your articles and press releases, they most probably would not get published.

You should know how to write an article and a press release abiding by certain rules, if you want to get publicity.
We provide information on how to write an article and a press release in the right way to catch the attention of the editors and journalists first.

There is an important difference between articles and press releases.

Articles must provide information on certain subjects that the target audience would benefit from.

You should remember to avoid starting paragraphs and/or listings with numbers in your article. Instead prefer to use bullets when necessary.

Press Releases must have a news value. A news that reporters would love to write about.

Press Releases must be written in a special news story format.
Keep in mind that good articles and press releases, with one or more attractive color images when necessary, would attract the attention of the visitors, and help increase traffic to your websites.

There are hundreds of thousands of media outlets which would accept your press releases at no cost. If your press release has a news value, especially a news general public would love to read, editors will love to write about your news, and media will gladly publish and broadcast it for free. You will get absolutely free publicity.

Therefore, don't be shy to write articles and press releases and send them to online and offline media, regularly. If you don't have time to write and send your articles and press releases to media outlets yourself, or don't know how and where to send them, you can submit them to a PR company, or to an article and press release distribution service provider.

If you cannot write your press releases and articles yourself for any reason, you can easily find freelance writers who will gladly write beautiful articles and press releases professionally for you. Press release and article distribution service providers can help you find the best writers.

There are many websites on the Internet where excellent press release or article distribution services are offered at affordable prices or even at no cost.

They will send your writings to tens of thousands of media outlets, including daily and non-daily newspapers, magazines, TV and radio stations, talk shows, online media, e-zines, newsletters, news portals, syndicates, free content providers, independent editors, journalists, columnists, and relevant websites.

You or the distribution companies you choose can turn your articles and press releases into RSS feeds too, and send them to hundreds of thousands of syndicates and websites which distribute and publish free or fee based content. You can reach millions of more targeted recipients sending out RSS feeds.

When your article published in a popular publication you can reach all its readers and subscribers, people will start to see you as an expert in your field. You will gain more respect, more credibility which are extremely important factors to grow your business.

Think about what your business will gain when your article(s) are published in many publications.

Can you imagine what you will gain when your press release gets publicity in popular newspapers and magazines, or when your news broadcast on TV and radios?

You will reach multi-millions of target audience in the most powerful way. Those multi-millions of target audience would not only hear your news, but they would believe it! Because people believe what media says in news much more than very expensive advertising campaigns.

Therefore, getting free or low cost publicity in media through your articles and press releases, which are announced as news on TV and radios, and published in print media, or discussed in a talk show, are extremely valuable marketing strategies providing you and your business with great benefits, substantially increasing your sales, revenues, profits and ROI, which you cannot achieve with extremely expensive advertising campaigns.

Smart business owners know the importance of getting publicity, so they constantly use these most powerful marketing methods sending out several articles, RSS feeds and press releases almost weekly..

Of course, business owners should do everything they can to get publicity in media through their articles, RSS feeds and press releases if they really want to succeed in their legitimate, decent ventures. Repeated publicity will definitely help them build fortunes, grow their businesses fast, and keep growing forever!

About the Author: Sevim OR, the owner and operator of several websites since 1997, providing clients with ultimate marketing programs to substantially increase sales, revenues & ROI, offering no cost affiliate programs to earn big profits, at:
http://www.aall-dreamlands.com/

http://www.aaa-advertise.com/

http://www.aaa-newswire.com/

Crazy Ads? Maybe You're Just Out of The Demo!

Crazy Ads? Maybe You're Just Out of The Demo!

Writen by Hal Eisenberg

My father called me to complain, again. He’s 82 and he’s angry. “Son, I know you’re
in advertising and all that”, he usually starts off, “but the ads I see today I wouldn’t
give you two cents for. They’re stupid and they don’t even tell you what they’re
selling!”

I explained it to him as best as I could. “Dad, it’s OK, you’re just out of the demo.”
“I’m out of the what?” “The demographics Dad, The key target audience for who
they’re trying to reach.” “Well then who in the heck are they trying to reach?” He
yells. “Must be boneheads cause those ads make no sense to any sane person.”

Whether it’s a beer commercial trying too hard to be funny, or like a recent FedEX
commercial where Burt Reynolds sparred with a grizzly bear, I gotta admit that
sometimes, Dad is right. I’ve been in the ad business for quite awhile now and know
that in today’s world, it takes a lot to get a business noticed. However I can’t help
laughing to myself when watching these ads, imagining the initial pitch to the client.

Secretary: Boss, those ad agency guys are here.
Boss: What? Are they on the calendar? (disgusted) Oh all right, send them in.
Young ad guy #1: Hello sir, and how are you today? Wow! That tie is whacked!
Boss: It’s what? Never mind. What have you got for our new ad campaign?
Young ad guy #2: Oh this is so cool! Check out these story boards.
Boss: (looks at the story boards puzzled, eyebrows creased in confusion).
Young ad guy #1: OK there’s no voice over at all! You just see a guy waking up in
bed. Next, he rolls over and he realizes that he’s in bed with the Burger King!
Boss: He’s what??
Young ad guy #2: Yeah! And then the Burger King, who’s really this actor wearing
the Burger King costume and a big plastic face with a frozen smile, reaches around
and produces a Double Breakfast Crosandwich and hands it to the man who takes a
big bite of it.
Boss: (Now his eyebrows look like one unibrow as his cheeks glow red.)
Young ad guy #1: Then they both share a laugh, pat each other on the back, and we
fade to logo! Is that wild or what? It’s going to generate huge numbers man!
Boss: (Stunned then angry) I thought I told you guys to quit putting crack in the
water dispenser!

See the problem facing advertisers today is the pressure to relate to the 18-34,
25-44 demos they so desperately need to reach, so they try anything they think will
accomplish this and as a result, many people out of those key demos, don’t get it.
However, it dawned on me after my most recent birthday that sadly, I too have
joined those ranks. So now when I watch an ad that even from my experienced
perspective seems to make no sense at all, I just remind myself it’s nothing
personal. I’m just out of the demo.

Hal Eisenberg is an award winning copywriter, voice over talent and producer, as
well as owner of The Eisenberg Agency, a full service advertising agency specializing
in creative ads that get results. You can visit his web site
http://www.eisenbergagency.com/. Contact Hal at halacious@eisenbergagency.com.

Advertising is an art - Learn it

Advertising is an art - Learn it

Writen by Debbie Ducker

Whether you are a full time affiliate marketer or running a business, online or off. Your success is going to depend on the advertising you do.

All successful business owners will tell you a huge amount of their time and/or budget goes into advertising. So to keep from wasting your valued time or your hard earned money, it only makes sense to make wise choices when you advertise.

Fortunately for those advertising online there is a huge market of widely varied free promotion. Giving you much freedom to test which types, of ads as well as ad sites, work the best, before you have to pay anything out of pocket. Once you know what is working then you can make better choices in what you spend your money and time on to advertise your business.

By using the free options wisely you will find out very valuable data to help you with future promotions. Such as:

What type of free ad site works best - i.e. Safelists, Classified Ads, Free For All - FFA sites, Banner Exchanges, etc.

What ad titles and ad copy, or banners do best for each type of ad site.

What day of the week and the time of that day gets you the most traffic for your effort.

By comparing sign ups or sales on a particular day or per month, you will even be able to tell the conversion ratio per clicks.

To find out the above data you will need a good tracking program or software. Choose one that allows you to make separate campaigns which will create a unique URL for each. So you can have the freedom to create a campaign for specific ads such as an ad with a certain title, or for example where you are promoting, such as classifieds, ffa, safelists, etc. Then also at the very minimum you will need to be able to track unique hits, IP address, days/months/hours and of course Referral URL's - where your hits are coming from. I also highly recommend using a tracking system that does not put a ? in the tracking URL, it gives you to use, as this will cause problems with many of the free ad sites on-line. Many times everything you have after the ? will get cut off, rendering the URL useless as it will not take the person reading the ad to the right URL you set up in your tracking system.

Once you have the ability to track your ads you are ready to create some titles and copy. After creating them, then go to your tracking and create campaigns based on them. How you do this depends on what is easiest for you. You might simply create campaigns named ad1, ad2, and so on or as mentioned above you can base them on the type of ad site and possibly name them ffa, classads or sl for safelists. Save your ads in .txt files and put the unique tracking URL with each ad, for future comparison while analyzing the tracking results.

After you master how to track your ads you will then know what to spend your money on if you decide to pay for advertising. There are many options out there from safelist and ezine solo ads to whole packages which include multiple methods all in one. But for an example if you see that regular safelist promotions are working well for your ad, then that will tell you more then likely a paid solo ad will do even better. Or say you find a particular headline that does really well in the classifieds, this might be a good candidate for some paid text ads in ezines, safelists or on web sites that sell them. The same goes for banner ads. Try different ones out in the many free exchanges out there, tied to a tracking URL to let you know where, when and how you get clicks. If a certain banner does well, it will probably be worth putting it on some paid banner sites. And so on...

If you are like most of us out here, budgets are tight and time is even more limited, so don't waste another minute... Get started gathering the information you need to make wise advertising choices for your business promotions.

Sincerely, Debbie Ducker

------------ About the Author ------------

Debbie Ducker is the owner of: DuckerPromotion.com

And editor of the "Ducker Promotion Free Internet Marketing Ezine".

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