So, I would be careful before making that assumption.
But then again…who the hell am I!
Check out my new SEO shirt….
]]>So, Google says it doesn’t play favorites, yet, some of their “clients” get treated as if they have all the keywords and popularity no matter what terms you search for. – How is this? I understand some of what they are doing, but it is seemingly extremely difficult to break into the general keyword results.
I think I have some understanding of search engine placement, but then sometimes I feel like a novice. I don’t like tricks, gimicks or spam to get proper placement but I’m starting to think maybe I should start looking into it. It’s just unreal!
]]>Back in Google for some of our latest updates…we feel we have finally done the right thing. Let’s hope it keeps going.
]]>A well written piece on using Adwords and succeeding.
]]>“Basically what they do is query Google a half a million times a day on all kinds of different keywords, and they grab the different advertisors that appear under those keywords and stick them all in a database. If you are in the top 8 they grab your ad as well, although their data isn’t that complete. It will take them longer to do enough queries to grab ALL the data (there are at least 200,000 advertisors on millions of keywords) but for only being active for a few days the volume of intelligence already gathered is enormous.
You can also search a keyword, and find the top 25 advertisors who also advertising on that term, then you can click on one of them to also see what other keywords that competitor is are advertising on.
-Steve”
http://marketingnewsblog.adwordstraining.org/node/19
A quote from a new friend has stimulated some new thoughts.
“I think you will be much more successful if you try to target 5 really focused keyword phrases that you know users search on instead of a large set of really broad single words”
I really like this line of thought, it seems simple and logical .. so, why wouldn’t we try it out.
I have just redone my approach to focus on some other keywords and it has improved the rankings…but, I’m still not satisfied. So, I plan on giving it a shot.
Thanks Michael….BTW-nice website!
]]>Well, I’m not sure. I’ve looked on numerouse sites and have nothing to post as of yet. But if you actually read my post…and have an answer…I’d love to hear it.
I have a feeling they have multiple cache servers…and purposely keep them unsync’d for purposes of getting different data results back for searches…which seems awful elementary. But what the heck do I know.
thanks in advance…
]]>The one thing I can share is this:
Remember this is your web too. Don’t Pollute or Dilute, Hoot! Hoot!….Hoot!
Here’s just some of the guidelines which I agree with and promote to my clients. I received this within an email campaign and it coincides with my beliefs, so I thought I’d post it. But, Credit for these tidbits go to:
Jennifer Horowitz the Director of Marketing for SearchEngineWebPromotion.com
“The Do’s and Dont’s of SEO for 2006…
Don’t:
Have hidden text on your web pages
Have paid links or other links that are not within Google’s quality guidelines
Overuse internal links or anchor text
Steal other people’s copy (like this)
Optimize your site yourself unless you are sure you are 100% clear on all steps and guidelines, and have a lot of time
Panic if you aren’t in the engines yet, it’s not too late to get in the game.
Do:
Follow best practices – stay within the engines’ guidelines
Avoid Overkill – keep the “nature theory” in mind
Add relevant keyword rich content. The creation of original and quality content is where it’s at
Hire a professional – SEO is a team effort.”
Thanks, Jennifer
]]>