Archive for the ‘Marketing’ Category

The Adsense Rules On Images Have Changed

Wednesday, December 20th, 2006

12/18/2006 - Adsense Blog

The rules on image placement for websites using Adsense ads has changed. Several of the techniques that Adsense gurus have been touting are now explicitly off limits.

The policy basically boils down to this: if you are using images to try and trick users into thinking that the ad and image are in some way connected - you broke the rules.

Two specific examples are given in the Adsense blog entry.

The first example gives the impression that the images next to the ads illustrate the products that the advertiser is offering for sale (if users click the ad and don’t find what they thought would be there, the advertiser is cheated when they click away.)

The second example involves blending the ad into a menu list in such a way that it looks like a menu option. The image is an icon the resembles the icons used for the rest of the menu options. If the user thinks he is navigating through the site, but ends up on an advertiser’s site (only to click away immediately because he hadn’t intended to click an ad) the advertiser is again cheated.

I saw a few people using this technique last summer. At the time, the Adsense rules did not clearly ban the practice.

The technique seems to have worked as a way to increase ad clicks. Soon, a major Adsense guru incorporated the technique into the templates included in a product being promoted to people creating Adsense sites. Before long, thousands of sites were using the technique and Google pulled the plug.

This all boils down to one thing, if you try to set up your ads in a way that tricks users into thinking they are not ads, Google will eventually catch up with you and officially ban the practice. It is their responsibility to protect their advertisers. It is in the best interest of the whole community to help them. If advertisers find themselves battling fraud instead of finding customers, they will stop using pay per click ads (and this source of income for site owners will disappear.)

Adsense is a great tool for generating revenue from a website. There are plenty of ways to optimize the click through rates and earnings per click on your site. Google rewards sites with valuable content and allows a great deal of latitude for you to creatively incorporate Adsense ads into your site. Leave the trick tactics to spammers and ‘black-hat’ outlaws and go build quality sites that users want to visit.

The Go-To Guy!

P.S. Don’t let me have the last word. Leave a comment and let us know what you think.

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Online Business Goal Number One Is Achieved

Saturday, December 2nd, 2006

Earn enough money through online marketing to pay for the month’s hosting fees.

That was my goal back in January of 2006 as I decided to try and find a way to earn a living through my own websites.

I had been working online for over 10 years at that point, but never ran my own online business. My income came from working on websites for other people and a full-time corporate gig.

I knew how to manage vendors and build websites and media components, but I had never built my own website with the intention of turning a profit or tried to create and sell a product - I thought about it a lot, but never did anything about it!

Setting a Small Goal

My hosting fees are pretty low (I use 1&1 Internet and my fees are roughly $25/month.) I decided my first threshold would be to make sure that my online activities didn’t cost me money - $25/month!

I set out creating a niche website and writing about it (and other things) on this blog. I read every book and website I could find about building traffic. I learned about Adsense, Adwords, and Search Engine Optimization (SEO). I ran tests and wrote up my results. I got indexed in the Google search engine and did some article marketing. I made a little money and spent a little money. But mostly, I learned a lot.

The big thing I learned was that the real steady traffic was coming to the articles on this blog - and not just the ones focused on marketing. My niche site gets a little traffic here and there, but currently ads very little revenue.

I also learned the value of focus. At first I tried a little of every legitimate technique I found. But, if you’ve ever tried to make a sandwich with a little bit of everything in the kitchen, you know that the results are usually disappointing.

In the last few months I have started to list all of the different things I want to try and then evaluate which ones will most effectively build on the work I’ve already done. The goal is to continually improve and support things that show promise and not chase around looking for a big overnight score. Sometimes the real value of a work takes time to develop.

A Tiny Seed Grows And Blooms

As the title of this article suggests, I achieved my earnings goal in November - actually I earned 3.5 times that amount! I earned over $20 from Adsense alone, and nearly every penny of that ad money came from visitors to one page on this site.

I wrote a small tutorial last spring that I posted on the site. It was based on a fun little side project I started and I didn’t think much would come from it. After a few months this article was getting low, but steady, traffic from natural search results. While I was busy working on other projects this traffic steadily grew. Other people started linking to the page and more traffic came. Then, one night, someone using the social promotion website www.stumbleupon.com recommended my site. The next day my traffic spiked. It wasn’t thousands of visitors, but much more than usual.

As the traffic to that page kept growing I focused my energy on trying to find ways to revise the page to encourage affiliate sales and ad clicks. I played with the layout and added some resource links and product recommendations. I wrote a few related articles and added links to them too. No major breakthroughs, but traffic keeps coming and I keep getting a few ad clicks here and there.

In the middle of November the page was recommended again at www.StumbleUpon.com and even more traffic has been coming. Those referrals are now the biggest source of traffic to my site, and the other sources are still sending traffic too. The ad money started building and then, in one day, I sold 2 e-books through an affiliate link. This pushed me way past my goal.

Quit Driving Traffic And Start Building Relationships

At the same time that my site traffic was growing, I stopped chasing after visitors and started building relationships with them.

My primary strategy so far has been building a newsletter subscriber list. I’ve got several hundred people on my first list and I email them about once every week or two.

I let my subscribers know about relevant new articles I have placed on this blog and I can see an increase in traffic every time I send out a newsletter. I also recommend new products that I have tried and that accounts for two more of my affiliate sales this month.

It is amazing to be able to send out a email and see people respond directly to what you have to say.

What Is Next?

Will I make my earnings goal again this month? That remains to be seen, but I am building on the foundation I created. I’m learning more about the people on my mailing list and exploring ways to provide them with the information and resources they need.

I’m planning a project to get to know the people coming to that one super popular page on my site and considering whether to spin that off into a new niche site.

I’m also still exploring new things and writing about them - you never know where that next popular article will come from or where it will lead you.

Oh! I almost forgot - I’m also raising my monthly income target a little higher. I want this business to grow.

The Go-To Guy!

P.S. Don’t let me get the last word. Leave a comment and let us know what you think!

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Starting Up The Synchronicity Engine

Tuesday, November 14th, 2006

Today I decided to fire up my synchronicity engine and see what it would do for my online business efforts. I made a post on Russell Brunson’s Conquer Your Niche Forum in the Joint Ventures and Special Offers section. The gist of the message was this - I’ve got lots of skills and need to work with other people to create products and businesses using these skills.

Within 5 minutes of posting my message I had 3 people checking out my resume online and inside of 30 minutes 2 more. There may be some emails in my inbox when I get home too!

The point of this post isn’t the traffic that the forum post generated, but that the action of announcing my intentions in a public forum has begun a chain of events that has the potential to change my life. Every time you expose yourself to this type of public discussion a new branch of possibilities opens up in your life.

The prospect of people looking over my resume and work and judging me is a little un-nerving, but the possibilities of what ‘could happen’ far outweigh the fears of rejection.

I’m planning to do this again in other forums to try and find people I can work with. There is no telling where it might take me.

The Go-To Guy!

P.S. Have you started a similar chain of events in your life? Leave a comment and let us know what happened.

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Make Easy Money Online - The Siren Call Of Internet Marketing

Tuesday, November 7th, 2006

“Make Easy Money Online!” “3 Easy Steps To Internet Riches!” “The Secret Money Making System That Google Doesn’t Want You To Know About!”

In Greek mythology the seductive song of the Sirens lured sailors to their doom. Orpheus played his lyre so loud that it drown out the sound and his ship passed on safely. Odysseys had his men stuff their ears with wax to avoid the sound and had them tie him to the mast of the ship so that he could hear their song and resist temptation.

Wading through the world of Internet marketing you sometimes need the strength and cunning of these mythic Greeks to avoid being seduced by the promises of instant wealth.

Yesterday I received an email for a website that promised to show me first hand a money-making site being built and promoted. (they also promised I could make a bunch of money by trying to convince you to watch the videos as well.) A series of videos promised to show me everything step-by step from the keyword research, to building the site, promoting the site, tracking the traffic and profits, and then refining the site for improved performance.

How could I resist such a promise? I look at the stats from my own sites and the slow trickle of income from ads and affiliate sales, and I want to find a new trick that will unlock the secrets of wealth - I watched the videos until 3am.

The system appeared to work. The author collected a series of free articles for content and then used an automated tool to wrap keyword rich material around it and plug in Google ads and affiliate ads. He used social bookmarking sites to bookmark the pages in his own site, and then used another automated system to generate a blog that would automatically add new keyword loaded content every day, ping the blog directories, and link to pages in his main site. Within 72 hours he was getting traffic from the bookmarking sites, Google, Yahoo!, and other search engines. He also made more ad money than I did all last month.

It was all so easy. He didn’t have to write a single piece of content - just plug in the keywords and a handful of free articles and push a button. Out popped hundreds of website pages targeting his list of keywords. I was tempted to buy the software tools immediately and sign-up for membership to his website. I knew I could have a site up within 24 hours and be making easy money online! But I started getting a sinking feeling in my gut. Something wasn’t right.

There is only one way to generate thousands of keyword targeted web pages from a handful of articles - it’s called content spam. Even though this website wasn’t full of keyword gibberish or content scraped from other sites using sleazy tools, it wasn’t adding any value to the web. It was just re-directing traffic and grabbing a little toll money along the way. There wasn’t much trickery involved (no bait and switch content, no site cloaking gimmicks) just another duplicate site that lured visitors in without giving them what they hoped for.

I want to find ways to make money online and build my own business. I don’t believe that you have to suffer for every penny to be a legitimate business person and make an honest living. But, I want to add value along the way. I want to point to the work that I’ve done and be proud of it. This type of ‘business’ just doesn’t feel right.

I’m trying to keep myself lashed to the mast so I don’t fall victim to the siren call of ‘Making Easy Money Online.’ But a part of me still argues that it won’t hurt anything just to give it a try. Nothing but my reputation, that is. Still, I’m straining against the ropes.

Thank goodness I’ve got a good day job. Otherwise the temptation might be to great and I wouldn’t take the time to learn a better way.

The Go-To Guy!

P.S. Don’t give me the last word on this subject - leave a comment and let us know what you think!

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Review: 5 Bucks a Day, by Dennis Becker

Thursday, November 2nd, 2006

UPDATE: In December 2006, Dennis Becker created a newly revised version of this book and also started a members forum for purchasers of 5 Bucks a Day*. But, Dennis didn’t stop there. He regularly purchases resale rights to products he thinks will be helpful to the forum members and gives them away. There are currently 16 products on the download page - several with master resale rights included. Several of the bonuses alone are worth the price of Dennis’ e-book and they are all included, along with new updates and membership to the forum! This has been a great investment for me! Dennis has also created a blog as well - visit the 5 Bucks a Day Blog to learn what’s new in the 5BaD world.
–End Update–

At this point in my online marketing career I do not think I need to learn another technique or system. I am familiar with article marketing, Adsense advertising, affiliate programs, membership sites, information product creation, viral e-books, squeeze pages and more. I make a few dollars every month, but I still have a day job.

So, what is it that I need?

5bucks.jpg
Click for more information.

Dennis Becker claims that what I need is a strategy for applying all of this knowledge and experience. After reading 5 Bucks a Day*, I am inclined to agree with him.

5 Bucks a Day* does not teach a technique or system for making money online. It lays out a strategy for applying what you know in a systematic way by breaking down your goals into manageable chunks. Instead of complex never-ending projects he encourages week-long projects designed to achieve small goals. The small goals, accomplished with regularity, build up to big results.

The title refers to the author’s focus on breaking up big goals. If you currently earn nothing every day, it is a big mental leap to visualize yourself making $10,000 a day. If you try to make a leap that big, often your subconscious mind will just decide that the task is impossible and start sabotaging your thoughts and efforts. It is a goal to far from your experience to comprehend with clarity. If you focus on a more realistic target of $5 a day, the goal seems possible. As you reach these small goals you raise target higher. Before long you will find yourself well beyond your initial ‘impossible’ goals.

5 Bucks a Day* is a well organized, well written and inspiring book. Becker offers specific examples from his own work and provides specific strategies and action steps to help you focus your efforts.

If you are full-up with marketing information and still not making much money, get a copy of 5 Bucks a Day*, by Dennis Becker - and make sure you join the forum. There is a wealth of great advice and helpful people there and you will also get access to thousands worth of additional resources that Dennis has purchased for the community.

The Go-To Guy!

* Denotes affiliate links.

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The Unforgivable Internet Advertising Sin

Monday, October 23rd, 2006

There are many advertising sins you can commit online - you can focus on features instead of benefits, you can try to promote too many things at the same time and diffuse your message. But, there is one sin that is unforgivable.

Before I start, I must make a confession. I have committed this sin. I am guilty. But I am doing my best to “Go forth and sin no more!”

So, what is this horrible sin?

Failing to Capture Email Addresses

When the first thoughts of Internet profits dance in your mind, people (like me anyway) rush out and start trying to drive traffic to affiliate sites or their latest Adsense niche sight. In all of the excitement about starting a new venture, new marketers often miss one of the first truths of marketing:

Attracting a new customer is the most expensive and least profitable portion of your business.

Attracting New Customers

Think back to the days of the first Internet boom. Companies were spending thousands and millions of dollars trying to get their names “out there.” In many places you could not buy ad space. I remember seeing signs posted along highways (like political campaign posters) and taped or tied to every imaginable surface. Getting your name “out there” takes time, money, creativity or all three.

People who are new to marketing often get focused on the advertising side of things. There is a lot to think about and you can spend months and years studying and practicing the art and science of advertising. But, to get the best results from your advertising you must know why you are doing it.

The Primary Purpose of Advertising

The primary purpose of advertising is not to sell products, it is to acquire customers.

The customers you are acquiring may not buy from you initially, but they will give you permission to contact them again directly. Eventually, many will buy your products or services and you can send follow-up messages that build on each other and lead people through the buying process.

Most purchases are made after the sixth or seventh time a person is exposed to an advertising message. Repetition is key. The first time they see your message, you are a stranger. By the sixth or seventh time, you are familiar. If you have provided trustworthy and valuable information inside every one of those messages, you may even be a trusted friend.

Of course, you need to sell products and your products will attract customers. But, you must remain focused on customer acquisition so you do not waste your efforts and money.

To acquire customers, every advertising effort should include at least one way for a potential customer to subscribe to a newsletter or email course. If they are not willing to give you money, but are intrigued by your advertising copy, there is a good chance they will give you their email address and name in exchange for a sample of your product.

How to Build a Mailing List

A common way to build mailing lists is to give away a free course or e-book as a thank you for joining your list. I used this technique to begin my own marketing and e-business mailing list.

Another approach I used was to include a sign-up check box on an email form. One site where I used this technique had an “Ask an Expert” feature where people could get personalized answers to their questions. They had already agreed that the site’s authors were experts by taking the time to write, and it wasn’t a big leap to request more information. The plus side of this approach was that the newsletter subscribers were “pre-screened” which resulted in a very low un-subscribe rate on future mailings.

Information marketing expert Fred Gleek uses something he calls a “bounce-back” with everything he does. He creates a sign-up system that only requires a person to send a blank email to one of his email accounts which adds them to his list. He then forwards them a special gift of some kind. He includes text that says, “For free gift on [subject] worth $35 send a blank email to [email@address.com].”

That line goes on every item Fred Gleek publishes and is included in every joint venture project he participates in. I bought two of his books, sent in an email (the “bounce-back” was printed at the bottom of every page) and hear from Fred on a regular basis.

Go Forth and Sin No More

If you do not have a mailing list, stop everything and set one up. There are a number of online services like *Intellicontact, Aweber, and *Get Response that will provide mailing list management for a nominal fee.

There are other software solutions that you can use on your desktop, or server to do the same. *My Autoresponder Pro, *SendStudio, and *Follow-Up Mailing List Processor are just a few of the commercial applications available. Infinite Responder! and PHP List are free mailing list managers that run on your server. PHP List is very feature rich and Inifinite Responder is a simple program for managing auto-responders.

Managing a mail server is a big job (it takes a lot of work to ensure that marketing emails do not get filtered out before they reach your subscribers.) Plus, most of the hosted services, to protect against spam accusations, will not allow you to upload a list of addresses to your account. So if you use a do-it-yourself solution and change later, you will have to ask your subscribers to re-subscribe (and you WILL lose subscribers in the transition.)

Finally, some hosting providers (like the one I use for this site - *1and1.com) also provide a newsletter tool as part of your service package.

However you decide to manage your mailing lists and newsletters, make sure you include a sign-up method in every advertising campaign you create. Always find something valuable to offer to people who are interested in your product but not ready to place an order. And then, follow-up and build relationships.

Happy Marketing,

The Go-To Guy!

P.S. Would you like to gain free access to a large and growing collection of e-books that you can use as bonuses for your mailing list subscribers? Sign-up for Platinum Access to the Go-To Library today!

* Denotes affiliate links.

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Social Proof, Feeding Frenzy, Or The Mysterious X Factor

Sunday, October 8th, 2006

If you have spent more than 5 minutes exploring the world of Internet marketing someone has told you how important your ‘list’ is. This ‘list,’ of course, is your list of email addresses for people who have opted-in and given permission for you to send them emails.

You may also have heard that the majority of sales come from the 6th or 7th email you send to someone. It can be difficult, expensive, and nearly impossible to get someone to visit your site 7 times but, if you have their email, it is easy to send follow-up emails.

This article is not about email marketing strategies. (I have several e-books on the subject that you can download for free by signing up for my newsletter mailing list.) This article is about my recent experience trying to get people to sign-up for my list.

I Can’t Even Give Away Free E-Books!

I spend a lot of time and energy hunting down useful resources on the web. I have built up a collection of e-books that I think have valuable information in them and also give me resale/giveaway rights. All of the ‘Build Your List’ gurus tell you to create a squeeze page (a webpage whose sole purpose is to get visitors to give you their email address and sign-up for your mailing list.) They encourage giving away a free gift (like an e-book) as a thank-you for signing up. It is essentially a legal bribe! I decided to put my collection to work.
My squeeze page promised more than just one e-book, I opened the vault and gave access to everything I had. (See my sign-up page.) I promoted it through a Pay-Per-Click campaign and also through some traffic exchanges and other sources. The results, 1 sign-up - not very encouraging.

I tweaked the page, updating the copy and polishing up the graphics. I took advice from a couple of the advertising and copywriting e-books in my library and revised the body copy before trying another promotional run. Results - 3 sign-ups.

20 New Sign-ups In Less Than 7 Days

After a couple attempts, I let this whole idea slide for a while. And then I came across a promotion for the Viral Marketing Giveaway 2. The concept is simple, you sign-up as a Joint Venture partner and offer a free giveaway item to the effort. All of the partners then promote the giveaway and, as new members join and download the freebies, you get to gather new people for your mailing list. They land on your squeeze page and then sign-up. I joined the fun and sent people to exact same old squeeze page to get my freebies. There are over 35 pages of offers in the giveaway and mine landed near the end.

Within days I had added 20 new names to my list. Same squeeze page, but now they were signing up (and they had probably signed up for dozens of other offers before getting to mine.)

These giveaways seem to be popular right now. I have received invitations for 3 more in the past week:

I signed up for all of them and connected to the same squeeze page. The first went public last week (the other two are still gathering JV Partners as I write this.) My list has added more than 30 new subscribers.

Why All The New Mailing List Subscribers?

My offer, and the content of the squeeze page, has not changed. Why are people signing up now? I have a couple of guesses why this is happening.

Trusted Referrers - The giveaways are promoted by all of the JV partners sending messages to their lists. A known person is making the recommendation and essentially endorsing the whole thing. This kind of social proof that the operation is legitimate puts visitors in a trusting frame of mind before they get to my page. The copy on my site does not have to convince them to trust me, only that I have content they want.

Momentum - Once visitors start getting some free stuff they get into a feeding frenzy. They start siging up and downloading everything - my stuff is just in the pile with all of the others and the giveaway has created the momentum.

The X-Factor - Maybe there is some other factor that is motivating folks to sign up. If you have other ideas why people are more willing to sign up when my squeeze page is promoted through one of these giveaway sites, leave a comment with your ideas.

What Is The Quality Of The List?

So far the emails and names I have gathered seem okay. Very few people are giving obviously junkmail addresses and bogus names (there have been a few - ‘Pho Nee.’) I’ll have to make a few mailings to the list before I can determine how responsive it is, but my list is growing.

This list is made up of folks looking for online business and marketing opportunities. My current plans are to use it to recruit affiliates for some of the info products I am developing.

The GoTo Guy!

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Is Adsense The Best Way To Monetize A Blog?

Tuesday, October 3rd, 2006

I don’t blog just for fun. This site isn’t a public diary of my life. My goals for AndrewSeltz.com are to share my knowledge and experience with more people than my friends, family, and co-workers and to collect that knowledge in a form that can be reused to create products and services I can sell - help and make money.

I have used a combination of Adsense, affiliate ads, and Amazon affiliate links to try and generate income. I’ve made a few bucks, but not even the minimum required for them to cut me a check.

A few months ago I found a site that promised I could make money by doing nothing but writing on my blog. The company, PayPerPost.com, pays bloggers to write about specific topics that their advertisers want to create a buzz about. You write an article, include a few links, and post it to your blog. After a preset time period (usually 90 days) they send a payment to your PayPal account. You don’t have to get anyone to click on anything and there is no guesswork - write about what they ask you to write about and they pay what they promise to pay.

There are limits to how often you can post per day, but you could easily grab a quick $10, $20, or $30 a day. I have yet to make enough in a month from Adsense to cover my Internet expenses, but 4 or 5 sponsored posts a month would do the trick.

I just received my first payment today for a post I wrote. The system works.

Consider adding PayPerPost.com to your revenue mix. It gives legit advertisers a venue for building buzz for their products and services and gives a measure of control to bloggers about what they promote for money on their blogs.

If you’ve had experience with this company, or made money with a similar strategy, leave a comment and let me know about it.

The Go-To Guy!

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Search Engine Optimization, Carnival Barkers, and You!

Tuesday, October 3rd, 2006
“Step Right Up and See the Snake-Girl!”

Every year there is a state fair near where I live. They have a good old fashioned midway. Huge colorful signs and a fast talking man with bad teeth promise to show you amazing wonders and human oddities if only you will pay a little money and step inside the tent.

I’ve paid once or twice to see inside the tent and it is usually not amazing or wonderful. It is usually just a gimmick - a fake. The Carny Folk conned me out of a little money.

You wouldn’t trust these people to help you with anything important and if you came across a business in your town using similar advertising it would probably make you suspicious.

There are a lot of people on the Internet who would say or do anything to get you to ’step inside their tent.’ They don’t really care what you think about what you see inside. Their sites are full of keyword loaded gibberish and articles that have been duplicated a thousand times on a thousand websites. They use software that automatically generates hundreds and thousands of these useless webpages and then litter the Internet with them.

They just hope to get a lot of folks to step inside and maybe a few will click on an ad or one of their affiliate links - a nickle here and a dollar there.

What Do Search Engines Want?

Google, Yahoo, MSN, and other search engines are in a constant struggle to weed these sideshow sites out of their results and push the most relevant results to the top of the list. Your goal with search engine optimization (SEO) is to get to the top of the results for the keywords that are relevant to your site and not get swept away with the Carny Folk.

Your primary focus should be on making your content relevant to other human beings. Then, use the tools and techniques of SEO to help the search engines better understand what your pages are about.

You don’t have to resort to trickery to improve the search engine placement of your site’s pages. If you keep the topic of each page of your focussed and use good basic SEO techniques, your search engine rankings will improve and you won’t have to worry about being mistaken for Carnie Folk the next time Google upgrades its filtering algorithms!

SEO Basics

Keyword Focused Pages: Each page on your website should be focussed on a small set of keywords. Don’t try to cover everything on one page. Break up your topic into focussed sub-topics and then create seperate pages for each one.

Create Internal Links: When you break your website up into keyword focussed pages, there will be natural overlaps in the subject matter on each page. Readers will be interested in these other pages too. When appropriate, direct readers to these relevant pages and use keywords in the links. This has the effect of encouraging users (and, by extension, search engine spiders) to explore all of your content.

Use Keywords in Links: Search engines value links. They also look for keywords in the link text. Don’t use ‘Click Here’ as your link text. If you are recommending another article, link on the article’s title (or relevant keywords you use to describe the article - ‘Learn Search Engine Optimization’…)

Title Tags: Make sure that every page on your site has a unique title with relevant keywords at the beginning that relate to keywords in the content of the page. Your site ’s name should go at the end of the title because the words at the beginning are valued more than those at the end when the serch engines rank your page.

Use H1, H2, H3… Tags: These tags identify headlines and search engines expect headlines to describe content (so do humans.) Keywords here have higher weight. (make sure the same keywords are also present in the text that follows.)

Emphasize Important Words: Bold and Italicized words stand out to the search engines as well as your visitors.

Use Keywords in 1st Paragraph: Get to the point quickly when writing your content. Readers and search engines will make a lot of assumptions about your article in the first paragraph, so make sure you give a quick overview at the top that uses your keywords.

Image Alt Tags: Always include descriptive text in the alt tags for your images. This helps people who can’t see your images make sense out of why they are there, and they give more content to the search engines. Do not simply stuff the alt tags with keywords - this is a Carny Folk move and search engines are wary of it. But, use relevant keywords when describing your images.

Avoid Keyword Stuffing: Cramming keywords into every search engine hotspot is a surefire way to get the search engines to dump or devalue your site. Remember, a search engine’s primary goal is to get relevant results to customers. Trying to trick them into showing a site that isn’t relevant will eventually get you delisted or demoted.

Avoid Duplication: Another search engine no-no is repetition of the same keyword or phrase throughout a page. This sort of repetition tells the search engines that you are stuffing the page with keywords (or worse, the page was created by a program designed to stuff keywords into it) and that they are not a natural part of your page’s content. Use a little variety in your content to avoid repetition - your human visitors will appreciate it too!

Benefits of Honest SEO

Honest search engine optimization has the side effect of making your content more readable to human beings. Since the search engines’ primary goal is to deliver the most relevant results to the human beings who use them, anything you do that enhances the user experience will make them happy too. Stay focussed on providing quality content to your visitors and then optimize the way you present it so that the search engines can understand it too, your site will perform better in the rankings.

When you provide value, other website creators will send traffic to your site to give value to their visitors. The links they create to your site will add value to your site in the eyes of the search engines. They are voting for you every time they create a link.

These SEO techniques and strategies will get your pages high in the search rankings. From there it becomes a game of inches where you will focus your attention on your best performing pages and make subtle changes to try and push them closer and closer to the top. When you get to that level you will have left the Carny Folk far behind you.

The Go-To Guy!

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PayPerPost.com - A Legit Way To Advertise On Blogs

Tuesday, October 3rd, 2006

I’ve run this blog since January of 2006 and one thing I’ve become very familiar with is comment spam. Comment spam is bogus comment text, stuffed with promotional links that gets sent by auto submission programs. I’ve seen plenty of hyped up ads for “Blog Marketing Software” whose sole purpose is to generate this blog clogging mess. Web newbies and sleazy individuals, with dollar signs in their eyes, buy this stuff and unleash waves of spam to the blogosphere.

I personally have several barriers in place to block this junk and keep my site pollution free. The only ads are the ones I put there.

A new service called PayPerPost.com allows people an honest way to advertise on blogs. Bloggers, like me, can sign up with the service and earn money by blogging. Advertisers place offers for bloggers to write about specific topics and mention their products or websites. Bloggers can scan the available offers to find something that they are interested in writing about. The offer tells you how much you will earn and what type of post you will have to write.

It works (at least from the blogger’s end of things.) I know because I received my first payment today for an article I wrote a while back. It sure beats counting pennies from Adsense. The advertisers get a custom written article with a link back to their site. It’s a fair trade in my book.

If you are looking for ways to earn some money with your blog, give it a look. If you are a marketer wanting to leverage the power of blogs in your advertising, please do this and don’t try comment spam. Everyone will be a lot happier.
The Go-To Guy!

Did you enjoy reading this post? Buy me a nice cup of coffee to fuel my late night writing sessions and keep the content flowing!