Archive for the ‘SEO’ Category

Keyword Winner Make Money Blogging

Keyword Winner Make Money Blogging – Are you a blogger and struggling to make money online, are you spending hours researching keywords for your headlines for each blog post you do? It is known that if your headlines have the right keywords you can rank your pages to the top of Google in literally hours.

Keyword Winner Make Money Blogging allows you to have full easy control right inside your blog dashboard to get all the right stats and information at once saving you time and headache and most of all giving you the keywords you need to get clicks and of course make money.

This tool has seriously revolutionized the way we do SEO today. With this tool you can type in a keyword right in your blog post dashboard as what you normally would do and right under your fingertips you will have results displayed telling you what has low competition and a continued high search trend over the months and what the overall search percentage is over the current month.

Less then 1 minute to find keywords for your headlines.

To have all this information there you are now able to get highly searched non competitive keywords for your headlines skyrocketing your pages to the 1st page in no time.

Here is an overview of what Keyword Winner has to offer:

1. Competition, Insights, Search Trends and Backlink Analysis

Once you type a headline in your blog post, you can click “get suggestions” making it easy to get instant stats so that you can choose the best headline based on its overall searches per month, competitive nature and search trend! (1. Google Insights 2. Google Competition 3.Google Trends 4. Bing Backlinks) You can even add tags as well!

2. Keyword Suggestions for Low Competition Headlines

Keyword suggestions are there at your finger tips making it easier to target the right headlines and rank to the 1st page easily.

3. Colors Highlighted to Target Specific Search Terms

Less competitive phrases are highlighted green, orange for average competing keywords and more competitive phrases are highlighted red! You can drill down on any suggested keyword until you get a low competition keyword.

4. Page Competition Rank Checker

Bloggers can quickly view the competition rank in admin area of their old blog posts and easily edit and improve page competition.

5. Awesome Bloggers SEO Tool

Bloggers can now write reviews by targeting specific keywords on affiliate products to get to the top of Google and convert pages into sales.

Price is as follows: $47 – 1 site license $97 – Unlimited site license

When Keyword Winner Make Money Blogging first launched Pro bloggers and Top Internet marketers could not wait to get their hands on Keyword Winner, pros such as John Chow, Zac Johnson, Jonathan Volk, Tyler Cruz, Kelly Felix, Ian Fernando, Zubin Kutar and many more are using keyword winner and absolutely love it! Wait no longer… So I do not think I need to go on and explain any more, as I think it is very clear how this program can benefit you and your online business.

But one thing we already know is time is money and money is time, let get the ball rolling and start making money today, the longer you wait the longer you will lose out, take action get the results your online business needs and purchase this plugin at the one time price with no ongoing fees and unlimited support and updates.

So what are you waiting for, act quick..

Get your copy of Keyword Keyword Winner Make Money Blogging today!

How to create a Sitemap ???

Map of the website contents are similar to the book. On the website they have a point of interest in them at the following link instead of a point, saving time and the right to certain parts of the sitemap is important because it guides web surfers.

Sitemap search engine also if someone will look to find a specific keyword or phrase. If you have the map on this site can search the most probable.
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SEO Sitemaps Give a boost to your website…is that true???

Map of the site a lot of web pages to improve their performance would be useful. SEO search engine optimization “for” him to create or modify a website so that it can not find a better search engine means that the process is aimed at. The purpose of SEO campaigns is that if you have a website or a list of the top search engines appear on the first page of search results.
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10 Search Engine Strategies

While I’m not breaking any new ground here, I’ve tried to summarize some of the most important techniques.

10 Search Engine Strategies

Perhaps the most important — and inexpensive — strategy is to rank high for your preferred keywords on the main search engines in “organic” or “natural” searches (as opposed to paid ads). Search engines send robot “spiders” to index the content of your webpage, so let’s begin with steps to prepare your webpages for optimal indexing. The idea here is not to trick the search engines, but to leave them abundant clues as to what your webpage is about. This approach is called “search engine optimization,” abbreviated as SEO.

1. Write a Keyword-Rich Page Title. Write a descriptive title for each page — rich in keywords you want people to find you with — using 5 to 8 words. Remove as many “filler” words from the title (such as “the,” “and,” etc.) as possible, while still making it readable. This page title will appear hyperlinked on the search engines when your page is found. Entice searchers to click on the title by making it a bit provocative. Place this at the top of the webpage between the tags, in this format: Web Marketing Checklist — 37  Ways to Promote Your Website. (It also shows on the blue bar at the top of your web browser.)

Plan to use some descriptive keywords along with your business name on your home page. If you specialize in silver bullets and that’s what people will be searching for, don’t just use your company name “Acme Ammunition, Inc.,” use “Silver and Platinum Bullets — Acme Ammunition, Inc.” The words people are most likely to search on should appear first in the title (called “keyword prominence”). Remember, this title is your identity on the search engines. The more people see that interests them in the blue hyperlinked words on the search engine, the more likely they are to click on the link.

2. Write a Description META Tag. Some search engines include this description below your hyperlinked title in the search results. The description should be a sentence or two describing the content of the webpage, using the main keywords and keyphrases on this page. Don’t include keywords that don’t appear on the webpage. Place the Description META Tag at the top of the webpage, between the tags, in this format:

The maximum number of characters should be about 255; just be aware that only the first 60 or so are visible on Google, though more may be indexed.

When I prepare a webpage, I write the article first, then develop a keyword-rich title (#1 above). Then I write a description of the content in that article in a sentence or two, using each of the important keywords and keyphrases included in the article. This goes into the description META tag.

Next, I strip out the common words, leaving just the meaty keywords and phrases and insert those into the keywords META tag. It’s no longer used much for ranking, but I’m leaving it in anyway. I think it may have some minor value. So to summarize so far, every webpage in your site should have a distinct title and META description tag. If you implement these two points, you’re well on your way to better search engine ranking. But there’s more that will help your ranking….

3. Include Your Keywords in Headers (H1, H2, H3). Search engines consider keywords that appear in the page headline and sub heads to be important to the page, so make sure your desired keywords and phrases appear in one or two header tags. Don’t expect the search engine to parse your Cascading Style Sheet (CSS) to figure out which are the headlines — it won’t. Instead, use keywords in the H1, H2, and H3 tags to provide clues to the search engine. (Note: Some designers no longer use the H1, H2 tags. That’s a big mistake. Make sure your designer defines these tags in the CSS rather than creating headline tags with other names.)

4. Position Your Keywords in the First Paragraph of Your Body Text. Search engines expect that your first paragraph will contain the important keywords for the document — where most people write an introduction to the content of the page. You don’t want to just artificially stuff keywords here, however. More is not better. Google might expect a keyword density in the entire body text area of maybe 1.5% to 2% for a word that should rank high, so don’t overdo it.

5. Include Descriptive Keywords in the ALT Attribute of Image Tags. This helps your site be more accessible to site-impaired visitors(www.w3.org/WAI/WCAG20/glance/) and gives additional clues to the search engines. The ALT attributes do help get your images ranked higher for image search (see #12 below).

6. Use Keywords in Hyperlinks. Search engines are looking for clues to the focus of your webpage. When they see words hyperlinked in your body text, they consider these potentially important, so hyperlink your important keywords and keyphrases. To emphasize it even more, the webpage you are linking to could have a page name with the keyword or keyphrase, such as blue-widget.htm — another clue for the search engine.

7. Make Your Navigation System Search Engine Friendly. You want search engine robots to find all the pages in your site. JavaScript and Flash navigation menus that appear when you hover are great for humans, but search engines don’t read JavaScript and Flash very well. Therefore, supplement JavaScript and Flash menus with regular HTML links at the bottom of the page, ensuring that a chain of hyperlinks exists that take a search engine spider from your home page to every page in your site. Don’t set up your navigation system using HTML frames (an old, out-dated approach); they can cause severe indexing problems.

Some content management systems and e-commerce catalogs produce dynamic, made-on-the-fly webpages, often recognizable by question marks in the URLs followed by long strings of numbers or letters. Overworked search engines sometimes have trouble parsing long URLs and may stop at the question mark, refusing to go farther. If you find the search engines aren’t indexing your interior pages, you might consider URL rewriting, a site map, or commercial solutions.

8. Create a Site Map. A site map page with links to all your pages can help search engines (and visitors) find all your pages, particularly if you have a larger site. You can use a free tools, XML-Sitemaps.com(www.wilsonweb.com/afd/xml-sitemaps.htm) to create XML sitemaps that are used by the major search engines to index your webpages accurately. Upload your sitemap to your website. Then submit your XML sitemap to Google, Yahoo!, and Bing (formerly MSN), following instructions on their sites. By the way,  Google Webmaster Central(www.google.com/webmasters/) has lots of tools to help you get ranked higher. Be sure to set up a free account and explore what they have to offer.

9. Develop Webpages Focused on Each Your Target Keywords. SEO specialists no longer recommend using external doorway or gateway pages, since nearly duplicate webpages might get you penalized. Rather, develop several webpages on your site, each of which is focused on a target keyword or keyphrase for which you would like a high ranking. Let’s say you sell teddy bears. Use Google Insights for Search (www.google.com/insights/search/) or the free keyword suggestion tool on Wordtracker(www.wilsonweb.com/afd/wordtracker.htm) to find the related keywords people search on. In this case: write a separate webpage featuring the keyword “teddy bear,” “teddy bears,” “vermont teddy bears,” “vermont bears,” “the teddy bears,” teddy bears picnic,” “teddy bears pictures,” etc. You’ll write a completely different article on each topic. You can’t fully optimize all the webpages in your site, but for each of these focused-content webpages, spend lots of time tweaking to improve its ranking, as described in point #10.

10. Fine-tune with Careful Search Engine Optimization. Now fine-tune your focused-content pages and perhaps your home page, by making a series of minor adjustments to help them rank higher. Software such as WebPosition(www.wilsonweb.com/afd/webposition.htm) allows you to check your current ranking and compare your webpages against your top keyword competitors. I use it regularly. WebPosition’s Page Critic tool provides analysis of a search engine’s preferred statistics for each part of your webpage, with specific recommendations of what minor changes to make. The best set of SEO tools is Bruce Clay’s SEOToolSet(www.wilsonweb.com/afd/clay_seotoolset.htm). If you want more detailed information, consider purchasing my inexpensive book Guide to Search Engine Optimization (www.wilsonweb.com/ebooks/seo.htm). You can find links to many SEO articles (www.wilsonweb.com/seo/) on my site and even more in our Research Room(www.wilsonweb.com/search/cat.php?querytype=category&subcat=mp_Search).

Frankly, this kind of SEO fine-tuning is time-consuming, painstaking work that takes a lot of specialized knowledge. For this reason, many small and large businesses outsource search engine optimization.

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Yahoo And Google Sitemaps – May Be They Or Are Certainly Not They Lucrative Search Engine Ranking Tools?

Google has had a element out for some time which makes it possible for webmasters to produce a sitemap file to assist Google’s crawlers find and index content material.

It sounds like a wonderful notion. In the end, it is significantly less complicated to feed the crawler the content then hope it finds it on it’s very own.

But is often a The search engines sitemap worthwhile? Is it even necessary?

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