Wednesday, December 30, 2009

Directory submissions Tips

Tips to get approvals via directory submissions

Hi Friends,

In this article, you will find some useful tips to get more approvals via directory submissions you do. Most of my friends doing directory submissions do not know what they are doing, how much it will help them getting more approvals, and how will it affect the website. As everyone is aware of getting one way links through directory submissions but do you know how can you improve number of one way links you get via directory submissions. Following are some useful tips that can help you while doing directory submissions for your website:

1. Category Selection : Very first step to directory submission is to pick your targeted keyword and search in Dmoz.org. It will help you in selecting right category for your website. Dmoz.org will show you related categories to your website but only go with deepest one that is closely related to your website theme. Follow it with all the directories to which you submit your website. As much as your category selection is right, your chances of links approval are more.

2. Meta Tags Writing : Title should have one keyword to which you are targeting and Description of your website should have less keywords means only priority based keywords. Description should be grammatical correct, meaningful and should describe your website not business. The length of Title and Description should be according to Google. Keep your Title up to 70 characters and description up to 200 characters only.

3. Use an unique email address : Avoid using free email ids like Gmail, Yahoomail, Hotmail etc. Use unique email ids. If possible, use an email id containing your domain name. It helps webmasters of directories to rely on you that you are not a spammer.

4. Manual Directory Submission : Submit your website manually to directories. Do not use any software or automated techniques. Using automated techniques your website may ban or may consider as spam. If you are considered as spam, Not only your chances of link approvals will decrease day by day but also the ranking of your website, so avoid such things.

I hope above mentioned information will help you getting more quality one way links to your website. If you are not doing in the same way, start it from now on. I hope you will get better results. Enjoy reading my Blog and Don’t forget to send me your suggestions, queries via mail or commenting on my articles.

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

"Find" Your "Website In Google" How...................//?

"Find" Your "Website In Google"

Part of the "Royallinkinfo" free "seo tips" offering is "free search engine submission". "Search engine submissions" are designed to optimize the time spent on a section of your "SEO campaign", guaranteeing a "successful submission" to "the search engines". "Finding your website" in a "search engine" after the "submission process" can take between 2 - 8 weeks.
So, what does a "search engine submission" involve?
1. You need to locate the "search engine" – often this is relatively simple, to ensure you're getting "maximum exposure" "best find" both large and "small search engines" (So no, not just Google).
2. Once you have located the "search engine" you then need to "track down" where the engine keeps the "submit URL" page. Generally this is a relatively quick task, though can be time consuming.
3. You have now located the page and begin entering in your "contact details" and details of your website (another 2 – 5 minute job)
4. Click the submit button
5. Finally, receive the confirmation email, confirm your submission (yes, many engines ask you to confirm the submission details etc)
So, a five step process, sure, for one or two engines not such a big deal, BUT, there are over 300 known search engines on the internet – this figure is growing rapidly.
The Addme search engine submission programs have been designed to do all the boring work for you, finding the engines, the add URL pages and then submitting your details to the engines.
Once the submission has been completed you then wait for "inclusion".
Search Engine Inclusion
Inclusion into a search engine generally involves the search engine reading through your submission, crawling your website then including your site into the search engine index. Inclusion into a search engine can take hours, days, weeks or months.
The quickest and easiest way to check if your website is included into a search engine is simply search for the domain name; in this case I would search for addme.com. You can try by searching for a keyword you want to be found under though if your site has not been optimized correctly for that keyword you may not show up.
So, the search engine submission service's offered on www.addme.com are clearly a time saver, the free search engine submission tool submits to 20+ engines. Our professional search engine submission service submits to over 300 search engines and directories, saving you hours of search engine submission time – giving you more time to spend optimizing your website, ensuring that you can be found for the popular keywords and search phrases.
Like many Addme readers we're all trying to keep abreast of the engines and stay on top of the search results page, submitting your site to the engines and directories combined with some quality search engine optimization will boost your traffic and keep your site buzzing with clicks.

Pay-Per-Click advertisements (PPC)

Pay-Per-Click advertisements (PPC)

Advertisers specify the words that should trigger their ads and the maximum amount they are willing to pay per click. When a user searches Google's search engine on www.google.com or the relevant local/national google server (e.g. www.google.co.uk for The United Kingdom), ads (also known as creatives by Google) for relevant words are shown as "sponsored links" on the right side of the screen, and sometimes above the main search results.

The ordering of the paid-for listings depends on other advertisers' bids (PPC) and the "quality score" of all ads shown for a given search. The quality score is calculated by historical click-through rates, relevance of an advertiser's ad text and keywords, an advertiser's account history, and other relevance factors as determined by Google. The quality score is also used by Google to set the minimum bids for an advertiser's keywords[1]. The minimum bid takes into consideration the quality of the landing page as well, which includes the relevancy and originality of content, navigability, and transparency into the nature of the business [2]. Though Google has released a list of full guidelines for sites [3], the precise formula and meaning of relevance and its definition is in part secret to Google and the parameters used can change dynamically.

The auction mechanism that determines the order of the ads has been described as a Generalized second-price auction. [4][5] This is claimed to have the property that the participants do not necessarily fare best when they truthfully reveal any private information asked for by the auction mechanism (in this case, the value of the keyword to them, in the form of a "truthful" bid).

Google AdWords

AdWords


AdWords is Google's flagship advertising product and main source of revenue. Google's total advertising revenues were USD$21 billion in 2008[1]. AdWords offers pay-per-click (PPC) advertising, and site-targeted advertising for both text and banner ads. The AdWords program includes local, national, and international distribution. Google's text advertisements are short, consisting of one title line and two content text lines. Image ads can be one of several different Interactive Advertising Bureau (IAB) standard sizes.

Sales and Support for Google's AdWords division is based in Ann Arbor, Michigan[2], the company's third-largest US facility behind its Mountain View, California, headquarters and New York City office.[3]Engineering for AdWords is based in Mountain View, California.