Archive for the ‘Web Promotion’ Category

How to Add Your Business to Google Maps

I was reading the book, Google Maps Hacks by Rich Gibson & Schuyler Erle, thinking that I might want to mashup one of my site which offers listings online to business. I was at hack #2 and realized that there might be an easier way.

Yes, the easy way is to go Google Local Business Center and add your business.

http://www.google.com/local/add

Log in using your Google account, if you do not have a Google account yet then you can register at the URL above.

It was pretty straight forward and you just need to follow the step-by-step instructions to enter information about your business e.g. business name, location, telephone and URL to your web site. You will be prompted to validate your business listing via telephone or SMS. So you may want to do this at your office.

Here’s an example how it looks like when you search for Cold Storage, Singapore:

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PHP Script to Target Ads to Your First Time Visitors

Wow, I thought this is a brilliant idea - “Display Advertising Without Annoying Your Regular Readers” by Dan of TheWrongAdvices.com. It is a simple script.

<?php
$referer = $_SERVER[’HTTP_REFERER’];
$url = strtolower(urldecode($referer));
if ( eregi(”www\.google((\.[a-z]{2,3}){1,2})[/\]search”,$url) )
{ ?>
INSERT YOUR AD CODE HERE
<?php } ?>

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The Secret to Massive Traffic Generation

Traffic Manuscript ThumbupYes. I bought Kelvin Hui’s Traffic Manuscript. I want to know how he generates 2,500,000 visitors to his website every month. And I think I’ve got the answer.

It’s commonsense. Yes, this is what Kelvin said in his new ebook. Of course, he said more than that. He said you must start small; you have to experiment; you must fail cheaply and recover quickly. So what has all these to do with massive traffic generation.

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What Happened to My Alexa Ranking

Rise in Alexa traffic ranking

Alexa Ranking Jan 2007Surprise! Surprise! My Alexa traffic ranking keeps improving - I mean the Alexa ranking of this site has improved tremendously, from over 5 million to under 280k! [Jan 23 - It’s now ranked at 229,003]

And I want to know where does the traffic come from…

I have been tracking the visitors using MyBlogLog and also my server’s AWstat. But, there is not really such a big jump in the numbers - not so many unique visitors. So it must be repeated visitors and very likely from Kian Ann’s Blog Marketing blog. And this is a good thing. Thank you Kian Ann.

Blog With Wordpress

I believe my switch from Blogger.com to Wordpress is instrumental to this rise in traffic ranking. The trackback and comment features enable me to put my URL when I cited other’s blogs and commented on them. If you have not been using Wordpress, please install it now. It is quite easy. However, if you really need help, consider getting the Wordpress Complete book, click at the picture of the book for more information.

Tracking Articles Published for Distribution

Recently, I started publishing articles for distribution aka article submission to build inbound links for my main website. My favorite article submission site is EzineArticles.com. So the question is: after you submitted your article, how do you know if it was being picked up and published by other websites.

One of the easiest way to track your article is to search for it with exact search option. For example, I would search for the title of my article - “How Companies Can Optimise Their Web Pages for Search Engines” - to track who used it on their website.

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Coolest Baby on the Planet

That is what Andy want to rank top in Google, Yahoo and MSN! He thinks Amelia is the coolest baby on the planet and he even got a domain for her daughter, AmeliaHun.com.

Here’s the screenshot of Andy’s masterpiece.
coolest baby on the planet

It is a simple web page. However, it was created on-stage in front of a live audience - I could imagine the sort of pressure he was experiencing. And if you look at the source HTML codes, you will see that the page is indeed optimized for the desire keywords: coolest, baby, planet. (The search engines usually ignore words such as on, the, it, a, and so on.)

I did a quick research on the Zippy.co.uk - a new SEO Meta Search Engine - to analyze the competition that Andy is up against. The number 1 in Google, Yahoo and Ask is actually about the coolest baby stuff and not the coolest baby on the planet. It is PR4 and Google reported more than 100 backlinks, Yahoo’s 700 backlinks and MSN’s more than 2,800. The website has more than 4,000 pages indexed by Google and more than 6,000 by Yahoo. So it will not be easy to top this website for the keywords coolest, baby and planet with the one page created by Andy at AmeliaHun.com.

So beside more aggressive on-page optimization and build more baby related pages, Andy has to get a lot of backlinks with the keyphrase “coolest baby on the planet”.

Unintended SEO Ranking Results
November 26, 2006
This blog is currently ranked 3rd for the keywords - coolest baby on the planet and number 1 for Singapore’s coolest baby in Google.

Ranked Number 1 Singapore SEO Specialist

What a pleasant surprise! I was googling for “singapore seo specialist” last week and discovered that ShiHengCheong.com was ranked Number One. So I thought it was fluke and the ranking would drop after some time. However, it is still No. 1 on Google after 10 days. I think it will stay until some other SEO specialist optimized their web page to claim this position.

singapore seo specialist

Top Problem Faced by Content Website Publisher

After about 1 year of publishing content website, I can tell you the top problem I have is getting enough articles - good article to be exact.

I started with writing content articles by myself. It was quite time consuming and honestly I am not a writer. So I started hiring writers at Rentacoder and Elance. It costs somewhere around $5 to $20 per article depending on the length.

Now, I have 2 writers based in Singapore doing articles for me on demand. And I can tell you, this is burning a big hole in my pocket.

Here’s why. I will have to spend hundreds of dollars every month to get enough articles to keep my existing websites “fresh” and also for publising new websites. I can only expect a return on the investment I put in for the articles to come 3 to 6 months later.

However, there may be a cheap and quick fix to my problem. Buying “shared” articles - i.e. you subscribe to those services that give you rebrand rights articles. You will get a number of articles every month. These are not “unique” articles as they are shared by a number of subscribers to the service. However, you can modify the article, you can rewrite them to make them “unique”.

I am going to use such a service to publish content on to blogs. Reason being blog posts get picked up by search engine robots quickly than conventional website. So now I am going to buy some cheap bullets and starting posting 10 articles daily to my blogs!

Niche Marketing and Web Site Promotion

Yahoo Small Business is offering great discount on their domain name registration. I took the opportunity and reserved a domain name relating to niche marketing for my web promotion and search marketing service - MyNicheMarketing.com. After 2 days, I visited my new domain just to make sure that it was ready. What I saw gave me an idea.

Yahoo provides free domain parking and I saw “This site is under construction”. This is not exactly pretty but it tells the truth. And there is a list of topics which you can click and go to the respective sponsored listing powered by Overture.

It was this list of topics that caught my attention. These are keywords related to my domain name which consists of the keyword “niche marketing”. Apparently, some smart engineers wrote a software which extracted the meaning from the domain name and established a list of related keywords. This is the hint to how I should be organising the topics of my new Web site. My website content should also have topics like: web site promotion, marketing online, direct marketing, e-mail marketing, market research and so on.

Now, I can tailor my website to exactly how Yahoo would like to see. Logically, Google and MSN should like the same.

It’s a great lesson and it costed me just $2.99! So hurry, register a domain for your niche market and let Yahoo tells you what content to put in your website.

New Front Opened in the Search Wars

Google’s AdSense programme is finally going to get some competition. What does Yahoo’s move into lower-traffic site advertising mean for the Web?

Yahoo is poised to launch an ad network for small Web publishers styled on a similar offering from Google, sources familiar with the plan told ZDNet UK sister site CNET News.com, a move that promises to sharpen competition between the search giants.

While Yahoo and Google already go head-to-head for major search advertising partners such as America Online, Google has largely enjoyed a monopoly serving its signature text-only ads to smaller Web sites, including blogs.

Now Yahoo plans to launch its own advertising option for small publishers, a source familiar with the plan said. Like Google’s service, Yahoo’s self-serve product will display text ads deemed relevant to the content of specific Web pages. Advertisers pay only when a reader clicks on their ad. Yahoo and publishers will split the fees.

UBS Warburg this week upgraded Yahoo on expectations that the company will enter this new arena. In a further sign that a launch may be imminent, text ads have recently been spotted on some Yahoo employee blogs.

Dan Boberg, director of business partnerships for Yahoo subsidiary Overture Services, confirmed in an interview last week that Yahoo is interested in the market, although he declined to discuss details. “We’re headed in that direction,” he said.

Yahoo’s push to expand its advertising reach comes as the market for search advertising is taking off, fuelling record revenue and profits at the Web portal. At the same time, Yahoo is busy looking for new revenue sources as it seeks to transform itself into an online media conglomerate and beat Google in the Web search game.

Tapping small publishers offers a promising growth path, given Google’s earlier efforts in this niche.

In June 2003, Google expanded its ad services for large publishers, dubbed AdSense, adding a self-serve, automated product specifically aimed at small sites. As opposed to search-related ads, which are triggered by keywords entered into its search engine query bar, AdSense ads are targeted to the content of a page and its meaning. For example, a news story about a soccer match might display a sponsored link for soccer gear.

Google does not break out AdSense sales but includes them in a broader category that encompasses all syndicated search revenue. Collectively, those businesses made up 48 percent of Google’s $3.1bn in revenue in 2004.

Bringing ads to small publishers would expand Yahoo’s current advertising portfolio, which caters to its search engine and larger Web sites.

Yahoo’s Overture subsidiary, which will be renamed Yahoo Search Marketing next month, has served ads to publisher Web pages since 2003, in a program called Content Match. The service is designed for large publishers, such as The Financial Times, and requires a vetting process to ensure quality when it comes to matching pages with ads.

Courting small publishers
Yahoo has shown increasing interest in courting small publishers of late. Speaking at the Search Engine Strategies show in New York last week, Yahoo co-founder Jerry Yang hinted that the company would do more to cater to the small content owners. Yahoo also recently released Y!Q, code that analyzes the text of a Web page and shows search results based on its content. Publishers can add the code to their Web pages to automatically generate a list of related links.

Yahoo also recently launched a publisher alert service to notify publishers of new publishing and advertising tools.

Web publishers responded positively to news that Yahoo plans to compete with Google, given Google’s unchallenged pricing power to date. Many publishers and industry watchers have also criticised Google for its rigid partnership contracts, which prevent publishers from having visibility into the total money generated from AdSense on their sites and disallow customers from talking about their paychecks.

“Great! More competition should force AdSense and others to give the publishers a bigger piece of the pie,” one publisher wrote on the Webmasterworld.com forum.

Yahoo will face several sticky issues by entering the self-service, automated side of the business. Matching content-targeted ads can also be tricky, and by opening up the service more broadly in an automated fashion, Overture could run into problems.

Google’s AdSense, for example, in the past matched a Fox News article, “Deep Fried Turkey Can Be Dangerous,” with ads to buy a deep fryer at Amazon.com.

In another problem for the industry, fraudulent Web site operators have been known to erect phony sites to bilk money from Google’s self-service ad program a strategy known as click fraud. A click thief might create a Web site featuring legal information and tips, based on the fact that legal ads often fetch high fees per click. It would then sign up with Google’s self-service program to display legal ads, and then unleash an automated bot to click on the ads. If the fraud goes undetected, Google would send a check to the site owner.

Yahoo already employs algorithms and detection methods to fend off click fraud. The company is likely to use some oversight in allowing new publishing partners, according to a source.

Original article published on Entire newsletter March. 15, ISSUE #109.