Archive for January, 2008

Top 10 Search Engines, Submission URLs

Monday, January 28th, 2008

From current statistics and testing, here are the current top search engines delivering organic traffic. In addition, below, I’ve supplied submission URLs.

Remember, when submitting to search engines, make sure:

  • Have a valid email address. The better known and trusted the email provider, the better.
  • Only submit your home page URL once you want your website to be crawled by a search engine spider. It may take minutes or weeks for your website to be crawled.
  • Be patient, and do not resubmit in efforts to trick search engines. Only resubmit if you haven’t been listed and it has been two months that you have waited.
  • Remember you will not appear at the top of search engines instantly. You need to prove your website over time to websites and people. There are a huge number of relevant items you can do to increase the chances of your website moving up on the Internet. These items all will improve rankings, conversion rate, and stickiness. To learn more, visit this website every few days as I will post helpful information twice per week.

Top search engines and submission URLs

  1. Google
    http://www.google.com/addurl/
  2. Yahoo
    http://submit.search.yahoo.com/
  3. Ask
    http://about.ask.com/en/docs/about/webmasters.shtml#18
  4. AOL
    http://www.dmoz.org/add.html (results from DMOZ are pulled into AOL and others)
  5. MSN
    http://search.msn.com.sg/docs/submit.aspx
  6. Live
    same as #5
  7. Alexa
    http://www.alexa.com/site/help/webmasters
  8. Netscape
    http://wp.netscape.com/escapes/search/addsite.html (leads to DMOZ)
  9. AlltheWeb
    http://www.alltheweb.com/help/webmaster/submit_site
  10. AltaVista
    http://addurl.altavista.com/addurl/default (leads to Yahoo)

Important to Note

  • There are thousands of search engines. The top ten listed above will include the majority of searches, but many other search engines are worth submissions.
  • Submitting to search engines doesn’t do a lot. It only makes sure that if you have a good website, you have more chances of being indexed and found if you have a well done website.
  • Once you are indexed on a search engine, you may be on page 100 of listings where you are not found by people often. To move up to the top of page one of search engine listings, you need to consistently market and build up your website. There are thousands of ways to do this.

Click here to learn about Jordan’s experience

When to Use Blogs and Forums

Tuesday, January 22nd, 2008

Blogs and forums are both good platforms to generate content centrally online. Posts are easily sorted by category and date as well as searched. These can be used as part of your website or instead of your website. Read more to learn all about blogs, forums, and when to use each one.

Blogs

A Blog (also known as web log) is usually either an often updated online journal or platform to provide news or commentary on a subject. Blogs are usually hosted by a third party. Entries are displayed by date, and can contain images, text, and links to other websites. Many blogs allow comments to be added to entries by readers. Types of blogs include textual, photoblogs, sketchblogs, vlogs, MP3 blogs, and micro-blogs.

Spam can be a problem on blogs. Anonymous users will post comments just to get links back to their websites. Those links are not relevant to the blog. Comments can be set up to be approved only by the blog owner. You’ll only see comments approved on this blog which are not spam, and are relevant.

An example of a blog is this website you are on now.

Another example is here:
http://orchidcaretips.imagine123.com/orchidsblog/

Forums

A forum is a web application usually set up for discussion of topic/s on a website. Forums are for posting user generated information. They allow groups or individuals to communicate online easily. Usually no extra software is needed other than a web browser. Information is stored centrally. They have much in common with mailing lists, message boards, discussion boards, discussion groups, discussion forums, bulletin boards, and newsgroups. Posts can be replied to and easily searched. Messages in forums are displayed either in chronological order or as threaded discussions. Often a pleasant sense of virtual community develops on forums. Many forums have regular users. A discussion board is built of forums.

Spam can be annoying on forums. There is usually a moderator or group of moderators who pull spam posts from the forum. Members of forums often look out for spammers and can help get their posts removed, or call them on their actions.

Here is an example of a forum:
http://orchidcare.imagine123.com/discussion-forum/

When to use a Blog vs. When to Use a Forum

Use a blog when you want your message conveyed. You can choose on a blog if you want people to be able to comment to posts. Use a forum or message board when you want community members to chat on various topics. You will not need to spend as much time as you would on a blog since most content can be generated by users.

10 Out of My 300 Favorite Search Engine Related Websites

Wednesday, January 16th, 2008

I hope you enjoy the URLs below. I’ve got around 5000 favorite websites in various categories, all of which relate to online marketing. Of those, about 300 are closely related to search engines themselves and search engine information. There are many enjoyable search engine tools and information websites to reference, but it is often the most useful to test things oneself by hand. Remember, search engines do not want to be tricked or have things too automated.

It is very useful to look through search engines and see what they are doing live with their results. Addressed below, it is important to look at their new projects or URLs of interest. Enjoy!

  1. MSN Sandbox - testing, interesting things by MSN
    http://sandbox.msn.com/
  2. Google Labs - This is a great place to see new Google Beta Launches and more
    http://labs.google.com/
  3. Yahoo Next Projects Page - This is Yahoo’s beta and interesting items area
    http://next.yahoo.net/archives/category/projects
  4. Yahoo Live Search - it is what it sounds like
    http://search.yahoo.com/?ek=0
  5. Yahoo Audio Search - interesting idea
    http://audio.search.yahoo.com/audio
  6. Digg - Many interesting URLs of articles and websites can be found here on search engines
    http://digg.com/
  7. Google Blog - A wealth of information
    http://googleblog.blogspot.com/
  8. Google Press / News - I very much enjoy this area
    http://googlepress.blogspot.com/
  9. Yahoo Press Area - Enjoy the variety of endeavors by Yahoo
    http://yhoo.client.shareholder.com/press/releases.cfm
  10. MSN and Windows Live Newsroom - As MSN is one of my top favorite 3 search engines, this is a place I bookmark and refer
    http://www.microsoft.com/presspass/newsroom/msn/default.mspx

Click here to learn about Jordan’s experience

What is SEM? Learn About Search Engine Marketing from Jordan Hardy

Monday, January 14th, 2008

What is SEM?

SEM stands for Search Engine Marketing. SEO is part of SEM. SEM is often not as cheap as SEO, but can get more results overall.

A successful SEM program often includes:

  • SEO - Search Engine Optimization, where many factors are considered in making a website more search engine friendly so that it has a higher chance of ranking higher on search engines.
  • PPC / Paid Ads - PPC stands for Pay Per Click. There are many types of ads that can be paid for, whether per click, amunt of time live, etc. Some ads are text links, some are Flash, and some are images. Some ads are meant to fool users so that they have no idea they clicked on an ad. Ads can cost the advertiser anywhere between $.01 and $100 per click. For example, a common search query that has low value and not much competition, such as a tulip, may be $.01 to $.50 per click. On the other hand, a porn link or Mesothelioma click may cost $10-60 per click.
  • Social Bookmarking - Websites such as Delicious and Digg are ways to find interesting items other people have bookmarked on the web. If your website is bookmarked on any of these sites (there are many out there),this is a great technique of marketing you.
  • SMO / Social Media Optimization - There are many social websites out there that are valuable to be part of. An example of one of the many would be Stumbleupon.
  • Article Websites - There are many valuable article websites that are worth writing for or getting links from.

I would also include other items such as Wikis, email marketing, and reviews as related and affecting SEM. SEM is really about paid ads on search engines plus organic SEO, with the goal to increase visibility in search engines.

Click here to view Jordan’s resume

What is SEO? Learn About Search Engine Optimization from Jordan Hardy

Friday, January 11th, 2008

SEO is not just Technical Optimization

SEO is search engine optimization, focusing on “organic” techniques to help a website rise to the top of search engine listings. The goal is usually to get more traffic, higher rankings on search engines, increase conversion, target and bring the right visitors to the website, and to get return visitors.

There is a lot more art, or creative work to SEO than technical work. It is necessary to keep up to date on search engine and industry updates and news. It is also necessary to know how to code, design and build websites.

But, beyond the right fields within code (and framework), it takes creativity and research to bring in a strategy that works. That strategy can be any number of so many techniques that will work for SEO, but, it is the ideas behind the strategy that are so important. Why will people come to your website? How long will they stay? What is your end goal of the website? What paths do you plan most visitors will take as they navigate through your website? Do you need the visitor to convert? Do they fill out a form? Do you want the visitor to return or just refer friends?

When you code a page on a website, or whole website, is that page really about what you planned? Ideally, if you build it, they will come. In other words, it would be nice if you could build your page and search engines and people will just find your page. That does often happen to some extent on large websites that are already popular due to other people contributing. It also often happens on blogs. But often it doesn’t just happen.

How to Make the Search Engines Note, Index, and raise Your Site in Ranking Over Time

Establish that your website deserves to exist. Enjoy working on the website, and include other people when possible. This may mean they link to you or you link to them. It may mean they write for your website. Think, if I were a visitor, would I enjoy this website? Step back and be objective. Learn all you can about SEO, coding, and your subject matter for the website.

This is very important: If you build it, often they will not come. Or at least that is, right away. People need time to tell others about your website. They also need time to see if they really like it and want to return. Search engines need to see what happens on your website over time. They need to see and believe what your point is. All of this takes time, and therefore you cannot guess exactly when you will move up in ranking next. But, you’ll learn in future posts on this website there are SO many things you can do to increase your chances.

I personally do extensive testing to see what works. I read books, articles, and search engines themselves. I look in code on websites. I intuitively figure out what elements will help people and websites learn and crawl through (with search engine spiders / crawlers ) a website more easily and positively.

In other words, I create my own algorithm / methodology which not only updates daily with new factors I discover, but SEO also is never the same from one website to the next. Each website has unique marketing depending on their branding, location (online space or physical location), goals, and technology used.

Click here to learn about Jordan’s experience

To Have a Great SEO Program You’ve Got to be Good

Friday, January 11th, 2008

From my experience in the last ten years working on over 300 websites, to get SEO results you’ve got to be good. This means white hat, good stuff. It isn’t about being a nerd or being geeky when I say you’ve got to be good. It means search engines, people, and everyone else out there in the Internet Universe are looking for the information they need to find the right website.

Don’t Engage in Trickery

If your website tricks search engine spiders in the code by heavily weighting keywords or words not in your page, this can be easily obvious. If you try to trick search engines in your copy, by writing quite a lot about items to improve your keyword balance, that can help. Or usually it won’t and will hurt your results more. If you include code or copy on your website about items not related to or existing on your website, to different degrees that will be found by those visiting your website. Possibly some search engines may not notice, but others will. A person cruising through your website may not notice, but the next person may have a feeling something is off.

Give Credit

I like to give credit to search engines and people being excellent researchers. I know if I am working on a website, when any machine or person visits that website, they will only stay if it is valuable to them. I may be able to get the user to return to my website if I provide fresh compelling content (such as I will do on this new website).

What’s the Goal?

I recommend the goal of a website be to be great at what it is about. It may not be a website covering a wide range of topics, and that can work very well. If there is a niche topic, that can be a huge market.

Intentions

When you work on a website, make it clear what the website is there for. Include a mission statement on the home or about us page. Include blocks of content and articles on and related to your topic. Have the website coded well so that not only can search engines easily find their way through pages, but pages load fast for people and can be printed without problem.

Click here to learn about Jordan’s experience

Jordan Hardy Resume

Friday, January 11th, 2008

I have moved my resume here.






This is a free Wordpress template provided by Mathew Browne | Web Design | SEO