CHEAPEST Minisite Design On Earth!
Posted: 3/30/2009 - 0 comment(s) [ Comment ] - 0 trackback(s) [ Trackback ]

When Paypal's official Web site no longer ranked #1 in Google on a search for "paypal," it was obvious that Google had become more aggressive in penalizing sites with "unnatural" backlink anchor text. Although the high-profile Paypal example has since been rectified, thousands of webmasters are suffering the consequences of not ranking for even their official company name, let alone their top keywords. It is important for search engine optimizers to understand both how anchor text penalties are being applied and how LSI ensures that anchor text variance will not dilute a link popularity building campaign.


Anchor Text Penalties

In the past year, webmasters have found that the aggressive link popularity building tactics that work well in search engines such as Yahoo! do not fare well in Google. Google has implemented several features to filter out sites that appear to have an unnatural backlink structure; one of these features seems to be specifically penalizing sites with unnatural backlink anchor text.

It has always been an SEO best practice to use descriptive anchor text in both external and internal links. But search engine optimizers have often focused on a single keyword phrase when choosing anchor text, especially if their topic has one keyword that receives vastly more traffic than any secondary keywords. Since good links are hard to come by, they do not want to "waste" any of those backlinks with anchor text that does not contain their main keyword.

The drawback to this approach is that it can be interpreted as unnatural by a search engine. A site with organic, passively-obtained backlinks will have a wide variety of backlink anchor text variations such as: "official site title," "keyword," "keyword synonym," "www.thesite.com" and even "click here." If the vast majority of a site's backlink anchor text is simply "keyword," it is obvious to an algorithm that the link popularity was not obtained organically.

Latent Semantic Indexing (LSI) Basics

Let's now touch upon the myth I mentioned before, that if a backlink's anchor text does not contain your Web site's main keyword, its power is wasted. The concept of latent semantic indexing, which may be more fully implemented by major search engines in the near future, will prove this myth to be false.

Latent semantic indexing can help overcome the "vocabulary mismatch" problem when a human uses a search engine. Individual words do not always provide reliable evidence about the conceptual meaning of a document. For instance, a Web page that is highly relevant to the term "laptop" may never use the term "notebook," however it is clear to a human being that "notebook" is often used as a synonym for "laptop."

While it is beyond the scope of this article to discuss the mathematics behind LSI, its implications for search algorithms are simple. LSI can use statistical techniques to create a semantic analysis for any given query topic. In practice, this means that a page can be considered relevant for a particular keyword, even if it does not contain that keyword. For instance, a page that is considered relevant for "laptop" can also be considered relevant for "notebook" even if it does not contain the word "notebook," if LSI determines that "notebook" is semantically related to "laptop."

 


The principle can be applied to backlinks as well. Backlinks with anchor text that do not contain your Web site's main keyword, but instead contain a synonym or related word, may still be giving your site a bonus for the main keyword.

Link Popularity Building Best Practice: Vary Your Anchor Text

The recent increase in penalties given to sites with unnatural backlink anchor text, along with the possible implementation of LSI, should give webmasters motivation to vary their backlink anchor text heavily. Rather than seeking to only obtain links using their main keyword, webmasters should include synonyms, variations and related words. Certainly no single keyword variation should be used the majority of the time; rather, the text of all links should vary widely, just as they would if the links were obtained passively. This will ensure a site's improvement in the SERPs, without drawing a penalty flag.



 

alt About the Author

Andy Hagans is a search engine optimization consultant who specializes in link popularity building and risk management. Visit http://www.andyhagans.com for more information. See http://www.andyhagans.com/link-building.php for more information on Mr. Hagans' link building services.

Posted: 3/29/2009 - 0 comment(s) [ Comment ] - 0 trackback(s) [ Trackback ]
Category: Win Prizes

EntreCardBloghology Social Network is holding an Entrecard Competition. Entrecard is currently seen on some of the internets best sites, such as John Chow, Problogger, Adii, Tyler Cruz and more. With these credits you can advertise your Blog on Bloghology Social Network and you can start connecting with your audience and drive targeted traffic to your Blogs.

 

 

Whats on offer:

  • 250,000 Credits for Entrecard Bloggers that will be split into 50 winners all winners will be choosen via Random.org. 5,000 each. All 50 winners will get a banner on Bloghology Social Network worth 5.000 EC credits a month (Run on Site over 15.000 pages and over 50,000 pageviews a day).

How to Enter:

Competition Ends:

  • 30th April at Midnight GMT

Winners Announced:

  • There will be a winners post here on Bloghology Social Network a few days after the 1st May, and all winners will get contacted by our admin team.

Thats it! How easy is that. Enjoy

PS. You may Drop a card on our Home page and we will follow your Drop

PPS. If you havent heard of Entrecard before you can subscribe with them and take your blog Viral at http://entrecard.com

Posted: 3/28/2009 - 0 comment(s) [ Comment ] - 0 trackback(s) [ Trackback ]
Category: Email Marketing

When most people think of email marketing these days, they are more likely to think about the latest “Appendage Enlargement” advertisement or other piece of SPAM cluttering your inbox. Email marketing is taking its lumps now.

This has created a situation where any advertisements delivered via email are suspect. Even legitimate double opt-in solo emails have a problem. This is why we are slowly seeing the death of legitimate solo email marketing.

Solo emails that only say, "buy my stuff" are almost indistinguishable from SPAM advertisements. It is also the case that many ISPs treat these solo advertisements as SPAM. But how many people know there is another way to get the advertising message through email?

Email newsletters, also called e-zines or email publications may be the most effective advertising vehicle out there. Here, content is delivered and within this content advertisements are placed. This is like an ad inside the television show Friends... and a solo email advertisement would resemble infomercials.

This has the added advantage of rising through the ad clutter. Usually there are no more than two ads per newsletter. Because the best of this lot are all Opt-in and Confirmed and the content is what people subscribe to, there is NO confusing this with SPAM. Also, there is a rub off benefit of being inside content. It is called the “Halo Effect”.

But the real benefit of this type of media is that it is a much better communication vehicle. The content sets up the environment for interaction. Interactivity creates involvement. Involvement is what brands covet. Positioning is dependent on involvement. This is what good advertising is all about.

Advertising in newsletters allows for targeting toward psychographics or interests. Of course the old way of demographic targeting is also available, but now you know something significant about the people reading in addition to their gender and age. People reading Bass Matters is obviously interested in fishing.

If a newsletter or e-zine is delivering good quality content, a relationship is created. This relationship is what every advertiser needs to capitalize on. Over the years we have discovered that it is best for advertisers to create a relationship with readers. If one tries to only sell inside a newsletter, this will not be as successful as trying to use the ad space to have the reader give the advertiser information.

Once this happens, it is necessary to get permission to connect with them down the road. Hopefully the connection will be more significant than sending a solo email asking the reader to "buy my stuff." Advertising inside email newsletters eliminates SPAM complaints, offers content, gets through ISP filters, and is the fastest growing part of the industry.

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About the Author

Anisa Ali Co-founder PennMedia.com and GopherCentral.com

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Posted: 3/23/2009 - 0 comment(s) [ Comment ] - 0 trackback(s) [ Trackback ]

altWhen Gmail failed a few months ago, I tried using Google to find out what was going on. When that did not get me an answer, I tried Twitter and did find some answers. That alerted me to the power of real-time search in one specific usage case. It was a relatively minor problem for me. But what if I ran customer service for a SaaS firm that just had a major outage? How would I find and monitor the conversations going on out there? That is what today's announcement by Salesforce.com about Twitter integration is all about.

What Is It?

Salesforce.com has just announced this extension to its Service Cloud, a tool it released back in January. Service Cloud is built on Salesforce.com's Force platform and allows customer service people to monitor and manage conversations that are happening about their company on social media such as Facebook, LinkedIn, and Twitter.

When Gmail failed, the idea of calling Google's customer service never occurred to me. That is increasingly normal. We turn to online services because calling customer support call centers is too frustrating.

Salesforce.com announced that you can now search, monitor, and join conversations specifically on Twitter:

  • Search: find mentions on Twitter.
  • Monitor: track subsequent mentions and replies.
  • Join: become an active participant in the conversation.

These are all things you can already do on Twitter and countless Twitter-specific apps. Salesforce.com, though, thinks that you want to be able to do this from within your customer service system, and that Twitter is only one of many places where these conversations are happening.

What Does It Look Like?

The screenshot below shows the Service Cloud with the capability of tracking conversations across multiple social media venues:

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Why Is This Important?

There are two ways to look at this:

  1. Salesforce.com is recognizing that a lot of important conversations are happening on Twitter, and it needs to provide this information to its users.
  2. The media is hopelessly infatuated with Twitter, and Salesforce.com saw this as a good way to get some attention.

If the latter is true, then one point to Salesforce from this journalist! Our take, though, is that it's a bit of both. Salesforce.com presents this as a tool for customer service, but it is equally applicable to sales. Before contacting someone on an important call, a quick check on what is being said about them, about you or your firm, and/or about the subject of your call is simply good preparation.

Today's announcement is important because Twitter is where those conversations are most easily available, for two reasons:

  1. Twitter is up to the minute (unlike Google). This matters in customer service. You cannot say, "Sorry, Google's crawler hasn't yet found this," when speaking to an irate customer.
  2. Twitter's real-time information is more visible and accessible (compared to Facebook and LinkedIn). This is a testament to Twitter's openness. Facebook's March 5th redesign seems motivated, at least in part, by the need to make the real-time news feed more visible.
Posted: 3/23/2009 - 3 comment(s) [ Comment ] - 0 trackback(s) [ Trackback ]

Sign Up with Bloghology Social, Post a Comment below with your Twitter Link and a small description about you and get some Link Love via our Users.

About Bloghology Social Network

The new Blogging Community, or Social Network, is another important extension of Bloghology. However, it is significantly more interactive, to reflect the community nature of blogging and the softer, web2.0 style of marketing. It functions and looks similar in many ways, to today's popular social networking sites such as Facebook. However, the Bloghology Community Platform is unique in that it provides additional features and functions which are special to bloggers and blogging related issues. Sign Up Above!

Get your twitter mosaic here.

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