Archive for the 'The Blogosphere' Category

Splogging - How Not to Promote Your Site

Splogging is the creation of spam blogs, either automatically or manually. Spam is spam regardless of how it’s done. The main idea behind splogging is to create as many websites as possible and fill them with links to a particular site that sells some product. As I was reading this description, I thought that this is what many people are doing with their blogs, site promotion. The difference between a splog and a legitimate blog used for site promotion is that splogs have no real content, generally no articles are written by the author of the splog, and splogs are created en masse. This means you will find the same content on several blogs if not hundreds to thousands of blogs. All of them filled with the same uninteresting useless content, but links and comments to the same sites. Their only purpose is to create backlinks. What they achieve is useless information in the search engines.

Sites like Blogger are aware of splogs and their use. Recently they have started deleting spam blogs in their system and have implemented ways to prevent automatic post submissions and comment submission for those sites that have splog properties. Since identifying splog properties on a blog is an automatic process, don’t worry if you are targeted. Blogger has implemented ways for legitimate sites to have their blog looked at by a real person in order to change the splog status. Other groups are actually going to the extent of having splogs and the websites they point to banned from search engines.

The best way not to get your blog banned is not to participate in splogging and be wary of the programs you participate in. If they sound too good to be true, they probably are and they will probably get your site and your blog banned without recourse. In addition, you may also have adsense or any other advertising program you participate in discontinued permanently.

The author runs the website Opinedmind.com writing articles on computing and financial issues.

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Blogging, Spamming, and Blog Spam

Email marketing once proved to be immensely effective, but the greedy and idiotic polluted the well by spamming the planet with everything from weight-loss products to sexual enhancement drugs and beyond. Because of the stench, filters and laws have been created to attempt to fix the problem, but still the Internet is polluted with more and more junk each day. So obviously, filters and legislation are not the solution, for consumers, publishers, or marketers.

Everyone has been left scratching their heads and asking… What do I do to avoid this crap and make the Internet mine again? How do I build my business and promote it without having to deal with email? After all, what’s the point in spending money on email advertising campaigns when there is no guarantee that the emails will even reach their destination?

Enter… RSS.
RSS is the perfect communication tool. It’s applications far outreach those of email for marketing, publishing and personal communications. RSS is the answer to our communication woes.

Using RSS to create blogs for communicating with customers, affiliates, partners and family is far and away more effective and reliable than email ever was. As a marketing tool, it really packs a punch that email never could. The reason being is that blogs are targets for search engine spiders. They are themselves, a web presence, whereas email never was and never will be.

Just like a web page, search engine spiders hit blog pages and rank them. The difference between the static web page and the RSS feed is that web pages seldom update their content, RSS feeds, by design, are created to be dynamic and provide regularly updated content, in theory, depending on the blog owner of course. This prompts the search engine spiders to revisit and rerank them more often.

For writers, publishers and and anyone else with something to say, RSS has been a godsend. It has provided the answer to the question of what to do now. Blogging has replaced email for those who have become frustrated with dealing with the problems of email publishing and marketing. Publishers can now get their message out to their subscribers without the headaches associated with sending email, or posting static pages to the web. Even publishing an ezine to the Internet as a web page required the sending of email to make readers aware of the newest issue.

As with anything, there is a right way and a wrong way to do things, and blog publishing is no exception. Now that RSS has become the rage for marketing purposes, several people have taken it upon themselves, in the name of the almighty dollar, to pollute this well too. The newest rash of ‘RSS tools’ have created some issues of ethics and and credibility. With perhaps the honest intention of being search engine optimization tools, or an automated system for fetching content, this batch of stuff has too much potential for misuse. The result of misuse of these types of programs can be devastating. Already some of these programs have been banned from places like Google and Blogharbour because of this potential.

Programs such as these in the hands of the inexperienced, will cause future problems for bloggers down the road. More and more pages generated using these programs will be banned, and getting banned, right out of the gate, for a newbie, would be a sad thing indeed.

The right way to use blogging to increase your search engine presence is to publish good content. Period. Provide useful information to those who are looking for it. Become someone’s trusted information provider, and you have a customer for life. Publish keyword rich articles that give the searcher what they are looking for… solutions for problems.

Publish your information regularly. Weekly is good, daily is better. Sending pings and things too often will get you blacklisted too.

And here is where networking comes in… Find content for your blog from article banks, where authors submit their work for reprint. List yourself in databases as one who accepts article submissions. Get to know other authors and publishers and share content with them. Syndicate your blogs in exchange with other bloggers. Watch your world explode with new opportunities.

Automation in business is a good thing, but it has its place. Nothing beats human communication when dealing with people and creating partnerships. Do you want to talk to an autoresponder? No, and I doubt anyone else does either.

Some of the new programs designed for the automation of article collection have legal issues to consider. The biggest being copyright infringement. Not every author wants their work reprinted, or they require control over where their work is displayed. (Which is as it should be.) Without manually seeking your content, you could very well find yourself being served papers for publishing someone else’s work without permission.

Plagiarism is another issue. If you don’t follow certain rules for reprinting contributory work, you stand to be hounded for plagiarism. Yet another sticky issue.

Some of the new programs mock safelists, or resemble FFA sites. Before long, those types of blog pages will become banned as well. Search engines will figure out a way to block non-informational blog pages, those that carry nothing but links or classifieds. (Is your head sore from hitting that brick wall yet?)

Still, there are other programs designed to post spam to blogs using the comments feature. This is referred to as comment spam. The only solution thus far, to battle comment spam, is to disallow your readers the option of leaving comments. This is a bad thing, because allowing your readers to interact with you is supposed to be one of the benefits of using this form of communication.

The makers of these programs may have had good intentions to start with, but have ultimately created Frankenstein’s Monster. Many are stating that their programs are not spam, because they do not involve email. That is a cop out if I ever heard one. Spam is the transmission of unwanted stuff, whether it is sent to your inbox, or your blog, or even the search engines themselves. Search engines want relevant content, not pages of of keywords, or links. So feeding them page after page of nonsense is spam.

Everyone hates spam, except the spammers, so why be a part of something loathed by so many and embraced by a few? Bad business if you ask me.

The only real way to combat these issues is to simply not use the programs themselves. Do your due diligence and create a reputation as a trusted information provider, not a blog bomber, and your business will prosper. Using these programs will ultimately diminish your reputation and your livelihood.

Your customers are looking for information, a solution to a problem. Give that to them, not just endless pages of links. You will achieve your rightful spot in the ranks, and you stand a far better chance for longevity. There are good RSS tools available, you just need to look beneath the sales copy to find them. And if you are new to RSS and blogging, do some research. Find someone who knows, really knows what RSS is and how to use it, and ask some questions. Don’t go out and spend buckets of money on something you’re not sure how to use, because you could be doing yourself more harm than good.

A few good books to read some solid information on RSS and blogs…

RSS, Blogs and Syndication

RSS Advertising Secrets

Taming The eBeastie

Copyright © 2005

The Trii-Zine Ezine
http://www.ezines1.com

EzineArticles Expert Author Trina Schiller

Trina L.C. Schiller - http://www.trinaschiller.ws

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Make Money with Your Blog - Really

If you are interested in creating your own blog to make money then read on.

1.The first thing you need to do is to decide what you want to write about:
I write about making money online because I feel that I have some experience that will help others out. You can try and figure out what subject pays the most or you can write about what you know best. If you are curious to know what people are paying for particular keywords, you can find out here. Just make sure that you choose a subject that you know something about and can offer something of value for your readers.

2. Purchase a domain name and hosting:
You can get a domain name from mightydomains.com for $8.99/yr. You will also need to choose a hosting company (That is where your website will reside). You can get web hosting for $7.95/mo from ipowerweb.com. That is a good price as I have shopped around. You can probably get it for a little cheaper somewhere else but it will most likely not have the best customer service to help with problems quickly.

3. Download free blogging software:
You can download free blogging software from Wordpress which is awesome and is pretty easy to set up. I will be posting more later on how to setup and customize your Wordpress blog.

4. Choose which affiliates and Ads that you will display on your blog:
There are many affiliates to choose from but I would suggest going with a couple in the beginning that have been tested by the blogging community and pay promptly. Chitika pays well and is a good source of my income. You can also make decent money with Google Adsense if you set it up right. If you are really serious about finding out how to make the most from Adsense you can read this e-book. All you want to know about Adsense is in that book. There are a few other good affiliate programs but I would start out with those two so that you don’t get overwhelmed. Once you sign up for the programs you will need to put them in your blog template with the code they give you.

Kent Hamilton - founder of http://www.moneygenius.net

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Techniques to get More Traffic to your weblog

A)Blogging page no different from a website page. Many
Bloggers believe that posting blogs regularly is the best and
only way to get the blog promotion.While posting a blog entry
they forget that the resulting page will be no different than
the html and php webpages they used to create for their
website.The basic SEO rules for the blog page is same for a page
created in html or asp or any other language.It is therefore
necessary to give importance to tags and links while making a
blog entry.Example :
-Keep the title small.Make sure it
includes the keyword you think your users will use while make a
serach.
-Use and tags to your keyword in the page.
-Make
sure you use well anchored text with keyword and that no links
go to a 404 page not found.If a page is not available make sure
that the 404 goes to sitemap page or notifies user of the
problem.
-Make the content rich and big in size(do not keep
it small) and make sure that there is no keyword spam in the
blog entry.
-Use links to post on blogs on your website.Also
allow the search facility so that users can search the blog from
your website.

Note that the only advantage of a Blog over a simple page is
that the blog will get indexed faster.

B)Blogging and pinging. To get the best out of your blog
you need to blog regularly.Make a schedule and try to stick to
it.It is best to Blog everyday with fresh and rich content to
get visitors rushing to your site.Although it is best adviced to
blog on a daily basis it should be noted that blogging stale 5
line content will not help you in any way.It is therefore better
that you are Blogging 2-3 time a week with new and rich content
with properly formatted html. If you are using a script like
Blogger.com for blogging make sure that you are pinging
sites.This will tell them that your blog has been updated. You
may also ping sites manually.Below are the list of sites you can
ping : http://api.feedster.com/ping

http://api.moreover.com/RPC2

http://api.moreover.com/ping

http://api.my.yahoo.com/RPC2

http://api.my.yahoo.com/rss/ping

http://www.bitacoles.net/ping.php

http://www.blogdigger.com/RPC2

http://blogmatcher.com/u.php

http://www.blogoole.com/ping/

http://www.blogoon.net/ping/

http://www.blogpeople.net/servlet/weblogUpdates

http://www.blogroots.com/tb_populi.blog?id=1

http://www.blogshares.com/rpc.php

http://www.blogsnow.com/ping

http://www.blogstreet.com/xrbin/xmlrpc.cgi

http://bulkfeeds.net/rpc
http://coreblog.org/ping/

http://www.lasermemory.com/lsrpc/

http://www.newsisfree.com/xmlrpctest.php

http://ping.amagle.com/
http://ping.bitacoras.com

http://ping.blo.gs/
http://ping.feedburner.com

http://ping.rootblog.com/rpc.php

http://ping.syndic8.com/xmlrpc.php

http://ping.weblogalot.com/rpc.php

http://www.popdex.com/addsite.php

http://rcs.datashed.net/RPC2/

http://rpc.blogrolling.com/pinger/

http://rpc.pingomatic.com/

http://rpc.technorati.com/rpc/ping

http://rpc.weblogs.com/RPC2
http://www.snipsnap.org/RPC2

http://topicexchange.com/RPC2

http://www.weblogues.com/RPC/

http://xping.pubsub.com/ping/

Note : If you are also
using Pingomatic then make sure that you dont use the same sites
already pinged through pingomatic. It is best adviced to use
auto pinging service(On each post) rather than manually pinging
each and every site.

C)Auto discovery This meta tag will help the viewer’s
feed reader to auto discover the RSS feed URL and make it easier
for him to add your feed. This will result in greater exposure
to your feed. link rel=”alternate” type=”application/rss+xml”
title=”RSS 2.0″
href=”http://www.YourRssUrlHERE.com/abc2.php” / Make sure to put
this in head tag.If you are using Advanced script like WordPress
then this is automatically created for you.

An example : link rel=”alternate” type=”application/rss+xml”
title=”RSS Feed” href=”http://www.YourDomain.com/rssfile.xml” /
You can replace the RSS file (rssfile.xml) with your blog’s rss
file.Example if your Wordpress blog is at www.xyz.com/blog then
your RSS would be www.xyz.com/blog/wp-rss2.php and hence the
Auto discovery file would be : link rel=”alternate”
type=”application/rss+xml” title=”RSS Feed”
href=”http://www.xyz.com/blog/wp-rss2.php” / Make sure this
particular meta tag is in between your head tag of your blog.

Note : You may also added it to your Non blog page which is
displaying the RSS content.Utility available for this in
software package.

D)Articles You can gain lot of hits and link popularity
with this method.Some sites where you can submit your articles
are mentioned below :
www.ezinearticles.com

www.webpronews.com
www.ideamarketers.com

www.certificate.net
www.goarticles.com

www.netterweb.com
www.articlecentral.com

www.webmomz.com
www.OpportunityUpdate.com

www.marketing-of-training.com
www.articlefinders.com

www.web-source.net
www.biz-whiz.com
www.xongoo.com

www.websitefuel.com
www.zinos.com
www.addme.com

www.hamazines.com
www.warriorforum.com

www.internethomebusinessarticles.com
www.linksnoop.com

www.submityourarticle.com
www.business-opportunity.biz

www.website-traffic.info
www.work-at-home-jobs-iowa.com

www.website-promotion-ranking-services.com

www.uniterra.com/submit-article.htm
www.womans-net.com

www.MakingProfit.com
www.articlecentral.com

www.articlecity.com

E)AutoLink post content.
Uses your Wordpress Links to create automatic links from key
phrases in your posts to other sites,posts, or anything else
that can have a URI.

F)Submit to DMOZ Visit
http://dmoz.org/Computers/Internet/On_the_Web/Weblogs/ and
submit your website directly or to a category which suits your
site best.

G)Auto Blog Ok.Not everyone has the time to href="http://www.jvwinc.com/article-extractor.html" rel="nofollow">find
content on the web and post it to the blog.It also requires
lot of effort on the party of the blogger to do that on a daily
basis.Best in such a situation is to auto blog or semi autoblog.
Find article -> Copy paste the article -> Make a post to blog
->Ping sites and wait for comments and trackbacks. Or do the
entire process by using a tool that does that automatically.

Example : href="http://www.jvwinc.com/article-extractor.html" rel="nofollow">Article
extractor

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7 Reasons You Need To Blog For Your Business

If you are not blogging for your business then you should be. While many people simply dismiss blogging because of its description as a web diary they are missing a lot of traffic and revenue generating opportunities every day. Are you one of those missing out?

In truth blogs are much more than a simple web diary. They are actually a content management system and/or an easy web site template. Blogging software allows you to begin posting your content to the internet in minutes and when you harness that ability with an RSS feed you have a powerful traffic magnet.

I have come up with 7 reasons why every business should have a blog and RSS feed.

1. Publishing a regularly updated blog helps you keep in touch with your existing audience and/or customer base. You can publish updates, news, or thoughts in your blog as well as answer questions.

2. A blog can help you attract new customers. Your blog entries (posts or articles) will become fodder for the search engines and will attract new visitors. If your blog answers the visitors question or attracts their interest you have just found another qualified lead.

3. Blogs and RSS feeds often rank higher in search engines than traditional web sites. Search engines love blogs and RSS feeds. If you design your blog properly then every time you update it the search engines are notified. Even if you don’t regularly ping most search engines will revisit blogs more frequently. Plus the very organization of a blog lends itself to spidering and good search engine ranking.

4. Blogs can help you establish or build your reputation in a particular field. As your blog grows you will demonstrate your knowledge in your chosen niche.

5. Blogs and RSS feeds are good revenue streams. You can add pay-per-click ads, affiliate ads, or sell ad space on your blogs. In fact, many PPC companies also provide the ability to add PPC to your RSS feeds.

6. Blogs are great ways to generate leads. Even if you don’t want to put any advertising on your blog you can use it to promote or capture leads for your own programs. These are great leads as the fact that they came from your blog means they are already interested in your topic and predisposed to your individual message.

7. Creating your own blog is the easiest way to establish a presence on the internet and creating an RSS feed is even easier. In fact, it is also the cheapest way to get started on the internet as there are a number of free blogging sites out there. I started out with blogger.com and usually recommend them but have heard others point to several other top blogging sites as well. The blogging software that I now use is WordPress and also happens to be free. In fact, most web hosts now offer WordPress (or other free blogging software) as a free site add-on through Fantastico. Installing WordPress from scratch is quick and easy but Fantastico makes it even easier. Blogs created at Blogger have an RSS feed created for them and WordPress also creates feeds in several variations automatically.

As you can see there are several benefits to starting your own blog and RSS feed. If you can count that many benefits from an internet marketing technique that is also free and easy then you are foolish not to begin using it for yourself.

Deanna Mascle - EzineArticles Expert Author

Deanna Mascle publishes the Establish Your Epresence newsletter which offers helpful tips and advice about internet marketing. Learn more at Epresence at http://Epresence.biz

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Using Blogs as Internal Business Communication Tools

The majority of business-related reporting on blogs has focused on marketing efforts, using blogs as a more human way to interact with their customers. I’d like to discuss using blogs as internal communication tools and give you some practical scenarios in which this would be appropriate.

The blogs most of us are familiar with involve celebrity gossip, self-obsessed internet junkies, or alternative news sources. Let’s take a step back from what is written and focus on how blogs handle what’s written.

When a new blog post is created, it is displayed on the front page with other recent posts. Readers can then comment on that post. Those comments can be threaded to help visually clarify when comments are being commented upon rather than the original message. This is much like the interaction that happens when an e-mail is sent and others send replies. The difference is that all those emails are now in one place, replies are organized, and are easily searchable.

The front page of a blog displays recent posts. If you want to see the discussion on that post, click the title and you’ll be brought to a page containing only that entry and any replies made to it. You can also choose to view posts only from a particular category or sub-category.

Blogs are great for project-related communications because they facilitate and organize discussions in an easier-to-follow format than email does. Categories that posts are assigned to can be tailored to create a hierarchical structure that correlates with different areas of a project, teams, or anything else that suits your organizational fancy. All content is archived in a central location which makes it handy for managers and team members to stay in the loop and can help make project post-mortems more productive.

Blogs are an excellent way for teams to brainstorm and share ideas effectively. It’s easy to maintain discussions on multiple topics because of the way content on blogs is organized. It’s much easier to get a clear picture of what’s going on without having to wade through a sea of emails. Mind you, no one is suggesting you abandon email, but rather divide the labor where it makes sense.

My business partner and I use a blog to communicate our ideas and plans on nearly 10 projects. We live just over 1,000 miles from one another and have found our blog to be a very effective tool. It’s improved our communication and productivity and we feel like our actions are being documented in a more useful way than clogging up our inboxes.

Each category in our blog equates to a project and we have sub-categories under each to separate things like technical and marketing issues. Posts can be assigned multiple categories, of course. On our main page, we’ve also added an area that displays the most recently commented upon posts to help us see which need attention. Since it’s all web based, you can easily cross-reference another discussion by linking to it. If that sounds scary, there are WYSIWYG blog editors (Wordpress includes one) available that make creating complexly formatted posts effortless. You can also attach or link to files easily.

Most blogging software support multiple authors and roles. Roles allow you to grant or deny users access to particular functions of the software. Using roles, you could make sure people can’t alter the site configuration or add new users by limiting their . You can also control whether a particular user must have his post reviewed prior to publishing and being viewed on the site.

While all the hype surrounding blogs might be hard to break through, it’s definitely worth a shot. They are flexible, easy to implement tools that can easily be customized to suit a myriad of applications. They are advantageous for certain types of communications, but overkill for others. The trick is finding the best implemetation to realize the benefits.

If you’d like to discuss how blogs might help your organization, please contact the author.

Darrel Farris is Co-Founder of FND Enterprises, a online community creation and hosting services company. Darrel has 10 years of experience working in technology and enjoys making things easier for people. He can be reached at darrel@fndent.com.This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivs 2.5 License.

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The Power of a Blog Style Website

I know I may be considered crazy for even thinking up such an article but in all honesty blogs are the wave of the future. Everybody is either blogging or has blogged or will blog at some time in their life. If they don’t fall into those three categories then they’re probably the ones that read blogs.

Blogs have become a very recognized layout for the people of the world wide web. People who surf around on the net basically look for four things.

The first would be information. That’s what the web is all about and blogs are built to deliver just that. A solid blog-like layout coupled with RSS(really simple syndication) can make waves. Search engines are really just starting to purposelly hunt down blogs and RSS feeds so you score major points by just being a relevant, information packed website with new, fresh content. In short, alot like what a blog is supposed to be.

The second would be to buy things of course. I believe a blog like site is almost perfect for those Adsense or Yahoo ads or even for links to pages containing services you provide or information about your local business and contact numbers. If your articles and other content are good then people will come back. This will build a familiarity with your services and a trust in your potential customer. They’ve read many articles by you or others from your company. They like your site and they know you know what you’re talking about. Great!

Another reason some people surf the web is to make money. This is actually my favorite reason. The internet is just oozing limitless potential. If you don’t have a web site get one. You can do so for free or get decent hosting for around $80/year. If you invest a bit of time into your web site consistently then down the road there will begin to be a payoff. It may take awhile or it may happen almost immediately. That depends on you, what you’re trying to do, how much you know, and how much you’re willing to spend.

The final reason in my humble opinion would be for entertainment. Chat rooms, forums, blogs, videos, music, e-books, and on and on and on. The web can be a great place to hang out or stimulate your brain. As I mentioned before, many just read blogs. Blogs are becoming a popular source of both entertainment and information. A good blog draws traffic. Great!

Now don’t get me wrong. I’m not saying that you should replace a professional company website with a blog and a picture of your dog spike. What I’m saying is that it is possible for the small business to have a professional website that is modeled after the common blog. What I envision is a front page with up to date articles or article summaries with links to the articles. Fresh content for the search engines for sure. The articles would also occupy a single page apiece and the site would have a list of links to all of the articles. This insures that with every good, quality article you write your web site grows by one page.

You can do whatever else you want with that page because it has just become a piece of internet real estate. Down the road that particular page may begin to pull search engine traffic at which point it becomes invaluable to you. Optimize it and put ads on it. Adsense would work just great.

All the articles should also go out via RSS. This is a no brainer and will get the pages indexed sooner by the search engines. Get your RSS feed to load on both My Yahoo and My MSN. Get it up and running on your Google custom page too. Make sure the articles all link back to your site then search for RSS directories in Google. Get busy submitting your feed!

One more thing that can be done. With every new article added to your site you’re not only adding a potentially valuable piece of real estate, but also creating a very effective way to acquire one way links from other sites. This will score you some more points with the search engines. If you write an article that you think is useful make sure to submit it to as many article directories as you can find. People that like your article will post it on their site along with a link to your site. Cool huh?

If you don’t believe me on this or just can’t despite really trying to believe me than give it a try. My whole point is that search engines and people both like blogs. This is just too much to possibly pass up. In my humble opinion of course.

Budget Web Hosting
Windows Web Hosting
Oregon Coast Experience

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The Basics of Blogging and Web Site Creation - Part Two: Introduction To Keywords

Okay so now we know content is king. And of course since we are creating our own blogs, (remember blogs is short slang for Weblogs - which is what their “formal and official” name is), most of our information is going to be “unique” and “Original”. Yet every now and then, since we are only human, and since we simply cannot “create” more and more information, we will copy information from other web sites. That is cool. There is no problem with that, UNLESS, you decide that “copying” and/or “linking” is simply better and forego writing anything.

Now let me make this clear. If you are offering a service to people, where your main business is to offer out links to other places where people can get information, in other words you are a repository where people come to get links, because you already did all the research - that is fine. Because what you will loose in content, you will make up in “eyeballs” and “hits”. Remember the end result of good search engine listings is just that. MORE HITS - MORE EYEBALLS - MORE PEOPLE VISITING. And content is not the only parameter an Search Engine looks at. Not by a long shot.

This is a critical point to keep in mind. Everything we will talk about, every method, from content to email to lists to whatever, (hehe my most unfavorite word in the English language pops in - Whatever - see my post on that word in my blog), has but one goal in mind. To consistently and constantly increase and build your website “hits”. To make sure you have an ever-growing “fan” club “motivated” because of the service you are offering, to come back. So please differentiate between the end goal and the methods. Content (discussed in our first article) is a method towards the goal of getting listed in a good position on a search engine, and the goal is to have people use and come to your web site or blog, and create a “buzz” about it. (We will talk about this much later in our series.)

Let us go back to content for a moment. Here we are talking about something that all writers know about and are familiar with. Text, words, phrases. Original, unique text.

So in order to continue on our own fairly logical path, we will now concentrate on the “text” and what has to be in it. Which brings us to the subject of “keywords”. Before explaining just what these are and either their importance or total invalidity and worthlessness these days, (and this is up for debate) let us define keywords more carefully.

If you have a website selling hair beauty aids, you will want to sell your material writing content around what you are selling. Obviously if you write something about the difference between different models of dishwashers, this is not going to relate to the “subject matter” and content of your site. So you will write articles around your hair supplies. You will write articles on good hair care, on how to dye your hair, how to get rid of split-ends, how often to shampoo etc. etc.

Our magic hair website is called “Hair Is Not Forever”, and it is at www.hairisnotforever.com (I have no clue if such a site exists so please don’t try that link!) But this is our site for now and we will keep it as we go along. hairisnotforever also has a blog. This blog we will call “SilkyFairHair” and we will put it, for the sake of our example in blogger.com under the name of the proprietor who is aptly named Mr. Nor Hair. So now we have as follows:

1. Web Site - Hair Forever @ www.hairisnotforever.com (this URL is fictional)

2. Blog - SilkyFairHair @ http://norhair.bl.com (this URL is fictional)

These names ARE important and so are the URL’s. (URL stands for Universal Resource Locater). So keep them in mind as we go along through these articles especially when I get to the article on the importance of finding the right name.

So Mr. Nor Hair and his wife, Mrs. Purple Hair work together. They create the site, get all the necessary stuff to sell something on it, write a couple of articles about hair and sit back and wait for the people to come beating their “virtual” door down. Well as we say in Hebrew, “Boker Tov” (which literally means “Good Morning”), or as you say in English, “Knock. Knock. Good Morning! Anyone Home?”

Okay the Hair couple know about keywords. So they create articles in which EVERY sentence has the word hair in it (or balding). But hair is the name of the game. They make sure their content is original, and once they have written two HTML pages of hair articles, strategically placed by their cousin the graphic artist (who is bald) around the advertisements for hair products and now they think they are done!

Woah! Not by a LONG SHOT! And here is where it gets depressing for the uninitiated and non-dedicated people.

Let us deal with the “keyword” issue.
Keywords are like indices or if you wish, categories. A keyword is something that the search engine will look for and validate (in our day), to use as one of the parameters as to how to list your site.

The keywords we refer to are in two distinct and totally different places. The first in the page header of the site.
in what is known as the section for “meta” tags. We will deal with meta tags in a different article, however let us just say these are the keywords most search engine look for (with their “bots”) when visiting your site.
An example meta tag for keywords on our site may look like this:

< BLOCKQUOTE>< META NAME="keywords" CONTENT="hair, hair products, hair grooming, baldness, going bald, shampoo, conditioner, hair color, dying hair, split-ends, split ends, hair life, beautiful hair, luxurious hair">

Again in our article(s) on meta tags we will discuss these keywords, and meta tags, but for now take it as a given these are some of the keywords that will be in the meta tag.

When the Search Engine technology first became popular and meta tags were implemented, the keywords tag was critical. Search Engines looked at the keywords in the meta tag and assumed that was what the site was about and listed the site under those keywords. This was caught on to immediately, and humans being the crafty devils they are, began listing keywords that had nothing to do with their sites in order to drive traffic to the site. (Remember - the end result is the oh-so-important one: Hits & Eyeballs)

So porn sites especially, adopting this as yet another “fool the engine” technique, would put keywords like “hair”, “technology” etc. into their meta tags, and give the site an innocuous name and voila, more traffic.

So in the never-ending battle Search Engines caught on, and did a few things. They deprecated the importance of the keywords in the meta tags according to their algorithms, UNLESS the content on the site actually did match the keywords. Of course, this was not enough as porn sites will put “real” content around their stuff. I will give you a REAL example which I find funny, but it is very serious.

In one of my posts on my blog, you can see my bio which is picked up by search engines. The other day I received an email from an old flame of mine saying “I freaked out. I googled you, under Ted Gross Writer, and you are connected with a site about tushy’s!” So I go and Google it, and sure enough in like the fifth position is this: “Ted Gross’s Unofficial Bio - The Real Version by Tushy” and of course I click and get led to another site (no url here as I do not want to publicize that site for obvious reasons) and I come to a porn site which ripped off, out of all the content on the internet, MY profile to place around their porn adverts. UGH! But you see that is how crafty people are!

(Here we are not going to talk about “splogs” - meaning “spam blogs” yet. But keep it in mind.)

Okay now what happens - not in theory but in practice.

Two scenarios:

1. You have keywords in your meta tag (and you should have them!) The little Search Engine “bot” (that is a software program whose job it is to travel around the Internet, never sleeps and never eats and gets into all those porn sites too!, and picks up information on ALL sites so the information can be categorized), comes to our site of hairisnotforever and reads the keywords on the page. Then this little bot makes a snapshot of the web page. Then the algorithms take over and match the keywords in the meta tags to the text and stuff on your site. (Remember Search Engines don’t “see”, they are NOT visual (males are visually oriented not Search Engines!) so graphics are not taken into account unless you use the alt tag.) The algorithms get more and more sophisticated as time goes on and they look for content, keywords, phrases etc. (Remember original content!)

2. You have no keywords in your meta tag so the engine just looks at your content.

So our happy couple figures okay lets put the word hair say, in every sentence at least three times. NO! Don’t do that. Overuse of a keyword is a red-flag to a Search Engine and you will be penalized for it! It should be used and used frequently, but NOT overused.

Now when you Google for hair products using the word “balding”, the Search Engine has the keyword, and based upon a million parameters decides what position for that specific keyword, hairisnotforever will have, and feeds it out.

So our couple figures what the hell. We will also sell mascara, and they put in a picture advert and the word mascara in their keywords, without having any content for it. Well then www.hairisnotforever.com will probably be listed as the last of the last of the last for anyone looking for “mascara”.
So for this lesson the formula is:

“Content+Keywords in the content+Keywords in Meta tag.”

Copyright 2006 Ted W. Gross. All rights reserved. (You may publish this article in its entirety with the following author’s information with live links only.)
Ted W. Gross’s very popular blog, Cobwebs Of The Mind contains daily updated posts and articles on technology and writing. He also owns Amor Enterprises which maintains Virgin Earth Article Submissions which is designed to accept articles about any country or place in the world. Ted Gross is also a published author and maintains a web site for his works.

Ted Gross - EzineArticles Expert Author

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Top Ten Reason to Publish an Ezine AND a Blog

Blogs are the hottest thing going these days when it comes to marketing on the Internet. A blog is a way of delivering your messages and article to clients. They are a like personal web sites, easy to create and far less expensive than traditional web sites.

Just when you thought you were mastering the tasks of ezines and newsletters, along comes blogging, and you have to ask yourself:

Do I really need a blog?

Isn’t an email ezine or newsletter doing the same thing?

Should I do both?

Are these two marketing tools going to eat up all my time, energy and money?

What’s the best way to spend my resources here so that I can get clients and results out of my marketing efforts?

Here are ten reasons why you should pay attention to this new blogging revolution and do both and ezine and a blog.

1. Because a blog is web based, it is published instantaneously every time you post. This allows you to be spontaneous and current with issues that affect your readers/clients. Blog posts are short, ezines can be longer. One can complement the other.

2. Because blog posts are spontaneous, they tend to be more informal, friendly, and conversational. Blog posts show your personality. Ezines show your knowledge. Your readers/clients need to know who you are before they will invest in your services. Providing both an ezine and a blog allows your readers to get to know you.

3. You can set up a subscription form on your blog and your subscribers will get a short notice in their inboxes each time you post something new. This is a great way around the spam filter problem which blocks so many ezines and legitimate messages from professionals.

4. Blogs link to other blogs and web sites, which helps you create a viral marketing system, increasing your exposure to search engines. Search engines love blogs because they are text based and key word rich. Your rankings go up when you publish a blog and use linking and posting on a frequent basis. You can also link to your own web site(s).

5. You have instant access to all your published articles on your blog. A blog automatically creates archives of previous posts. You see them in a side-bar for easy access. You put them into categories for easy finding. One clever person we know spent a day posting all her ezine articles to her blog, so that it would appear she has been blogging for a much longer time. Also, readers of her blog may not have had the opportunity to read all of her other ezine articles.

6. You can use your blog to become a trusted expert in your field by filtering content on the web for your subscribers. Readers don’t have time to surf and to collect information, but you can do it for them, thereby establishing yourself as a good resource.

7. You can set up links for ads, products, and for your affiliate programs in the blog side columns so you don’t have to include them in the body of your article. In an ezine, you have to be careful about promotional stuff in the article because it annoys people and causes them to unsubscribe. A blog is a non-intrusive way to do this, and an ezine can link to the blog where more information can be found.

8. Readers can comment on your blog postings, which creates rapport and with readers. You can ask questions, stimulate responses by being controversial, and survey readers. It is a great way to keep your finger on the pulse of what readers want.

9. You don’t have to mess with a web site, or pay a web designer to update your web site every time you have a new article or teleclass, or program or product. Blogs are user-friendly, and with a few instructions or tutorials, you can learn to use it yourself. It is less expensive than setting up your ezine in HTML.

10. Bottom line is this: using a blog and an ezine will help attract more visitors to your website, who become subscribers and who may eventually become clients.

Think of the World Wide Web as a big fishing pond. The more fishing lines in the pond, the more fish you are going to catch!

You have a web site, yet it is static like an online brochure.

You have an ezine, which you grow through subscription links everywhere.

And now, you should have a blog, where you can attract more readers to get to know you, where they can interact with you, and maybe take your bait!

Happy fishing!

Patsi Krakoff, Psy. D., CBC is publisher of Customized Newsletter Services, providing complete ezine services for coaches and consultants. Patsi is a psychologist and writer who has 8 years experience helping busy professionals build their client relationships through ezines, newsletters and blogs. Visit her web site and blogs to get helpful tips:
http://www.customizednewsletters.com

Denise Wakeman is Chief Implementor of Next Level Partnership, a company dedicated to partnering with you to take your business to the next level. Denise has nearly 20 years experience in small business administration and management. She has specific experience in leveraging Internet marketing systems to create awareness, build customer loyalty and increase the bottom line. Visit Denise’s blog at http://www.biztipsblog.com to get tips and tactics for taking your business to the next level.

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Blogging: How to Get Started

If you wish to start blogging, the process is probably
easier than you might have thought. I have helped a
number of people get started, and often they are very
intimidated and seem to let the slightest obstacle
upset them to the point where they almost give up. But
in reality, you can learn how to be a blogger in a
very short period of time, typically a few hours or
less depending on the level you wish to proceed at.
Your first step is deciding which kind of blog, or web
log, you wish to launch. You will generally want a
business, news or personal blog. If want the latter,
then one of the blog freebies’ services such as
blogger or myspace will be adequate.

In this case you simply sign up for a free account,
choose the name for your blog, choose a template (this
part is self explanatory. Generally you just point and
click your selection among several possible choices)
and perhaps choose a “skin” which is sort of like a
background or wallpaper.

Then you simply start posting. Although this is one of the easiest steps, some people have difficulty here because they cannot find the button. It is different on a lot of different blogs but it often is identified as ‘Creat Post’ or ‘Create Blog’ but it can occasionally be different. You will know you found it when a blank screen with a subject line pops up, much like an email form.

If you are starting a business web log, and you would like to use a free blog, you may want to go with Blogger because they are easily integrated with Google Adwords and you can post your blog entries directly to your website if you choose. They also allow for an unlimited number of posts. If you don’t mind spending a little bit of money for your business blog then I would probably recommend Moveable Type or Type Pad but there are several other good ones depending on your specific business needs. These services generally offer another level of flexibilty and sophistication, elements which are not always needed by the novice blogger.

If you are planning on starting a news blog, there are a number of free services which will probably be adequate for most beginners. http://www.blogeasy.com/ has many of the same flexible features offered by blogger, and I really like http://www.blogsome.com/ as well. Some of these and other free blog services will allow you to have newsfeeds connected to your blog while virtually all of them will allow you to publish your own RSS (Really Simple Syndication) Feed, which is the one essential ingredients for a news sites and for many business blogs as well.

Ryan Joseph is a writer of freebies, blogging and many other topics. More information is available at

The Free Samples, Freebies & Freestuff Directory

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