What should you be doing while you are waiting for your SEO to kick in? Learn what to do and how it can help your SEO efforts.
Joe is an SEO consultant. His SEO/SEM firm has helped many companies increase there organic placement. He also writes SEO articles and creates a weekly podcast on SEO.
Link building is a big part of SEO. Unfortunately, many new site owners seem to either not fully understand what goes into link building or they have old, outdated information. In either case, not knowing what you are doing can have its drawbacks. It can cause you not to rank well and in extreme cases, it can get you banned.
Linkbaiting is a big topic for discussion lately. Everyone wants and needs links. We can ask for links, buy links or create articles and submit them for one way links. Linkbaiting is about getting links without doing any of these. Linkbaiting is essentially baiting people in by creating something they want to link to. So, what could we use to bait people into linking to you?
Content, content, content. That’s all I hear…probably because that’s what I am always saying. Content! I think people don’t fully understand me when I tell them let their content do the work work for them.
There is so much information available on SEO and SEM. Everywhere you turn there is another article on SEO. One thing I often notice is many people suffer from information overload. They try to read everything they can find and in many situations, they try everything they read. Some of that information is either outdated or ineffective. Some of these self SEO’ers simply don’t use what they read effectively. I have taken some of the most common mistakes and will explain them for you here. Hopefully, this will help you correct any problems on your site.
This article is to help people better understand how dmoz works and will hopefully give you a better idea of how to submit properly. None of this article is speculation. This has all come from my conversations with the editors themselves, either from their message board or via email.
I had to ask myself this question a few days ago. I’m always working on a project or two, sometimes ten. One thing that concerns me is not how much money is being made on the Internet, but even more importantly, how much is being lost.
Google has certainly taken a bite out of how web site owners market their sites. Google recently stated how important it is that sites find others worth linking to.
Donald Trump recently launched a travel site located at www.gotrump.com. Trump, like many new website owners, built a site without first considering the unique nature of online marketing and promotion.
There has always been a long standing debate over whether or not to use a subdomain. Questions I commonly receive are… What is a subdomain? Is it hard for a sub-domain to rank well? When should a use a subdomain? What are the SEO benefits? What are the alternatives to a subdomain?
SEO is big business these days. All too often, there is little supply to meet the current demand. With increases in the costs associated with other forms of web marketing, it has become almost a necessity for businesses to incorporate SEO in to their marketing plan. Unfortunately many companies know very little about SEO and assume it will be cheaper for them in the long run to hire someone “in-house”. In some cases, it may very well be. For most, however, overlooking the benefits of outsourcing SEO can be costly.




