Archive for June, 2010

Blogging Espionage Review: Blog Monetization on Steroid

Webmasters and site owners: Are you fed up doing SEO/link building and content writing to get your blogs rank well and make you good amount of money? Well, you should take a break and start to think “greyhat” money making online for a chance.

Playing honest with whitehat methods can be tiring, because those methods champion long-term efforts. In the other hand, playing dirty with blackhat methods can be depressing, because you always wonder whether you will get caught by Google and the likes or not.

Well, here’s a solution for you: try this greyhat methods in site building and make money online – courtesy of Rob Benwell’s Blogging Espionage.

Of course, I have purchased the ebook with a hope that I can increase my income and decrease my effort in site building; I have to say that I’m impressed.

Rob Benwell – one of the top product launchers – claims that he will give you $100 plus a refund of the ebook purchase price of $47 if you have heard this money making techniques before. Never-heard-of guarantee, and I thought, he must have something to offer here with such strong claim; so I did buy the ebook.

Reading through the 40-page ebook is like having a revelation – sure, I’ve implemented part of the techniques before, but I never think about some of the techniques. This is silly because the loopholes are there under my nose, but I can’t simply hit that “Eureka!” moment, until I read Blogging Espionage.

Loopholes?

Yes – Blogging Espionage shows you greyhat ways to monetize your blogs through loopholes found inside the systems, in such a way that your blogs can make the most money for you. The interesting thing is, the loopholes are not obscure – they are there for you and I to discover; no Easter eggs here.

Rob guarantees that you’ll get $1000 in the first week after implementing the techniques, and all I can say is: he speaks truth. I’ve done it, and it worked (and will continue to work in the future.)

So, if you are dying to learn how to make way much more money from your blogs, I genuinely recommend Blogging Espionage for you.

Click here to get Blogging Espionage now!

5 Link Building Tips Coming Directly from Google Team

While browsing for SEO tips I encountered an interesting article about quality link building tactics coming directly from the Google Team.

The article is actually on Google Webmaster blog’s recent article about their views on earning quality links to your site.

Here are some points I found interesting and most useful for you who are wondering whether you are doing SEO and link building the right way:

1. Get involved in a community

Joining and being active in online communities, such as Facebook and Twitter, allows you to build credibility that will help you in getting links – people will link to interesting, trusted sites, won’t they?

2. Create content that solve problems

Creating tutorials, tools, surveys, etc. will help readers and site visitors to solve their problems. Due to this, people are more than willing to link out to your site and to recommend your content via various sharing methods, like Retweet, Facebook “Like”, etc. to the others – this will lead to more back links to your sites!

3. Focus on long-term link building, not short-term

Link-baiting methods, directory submissions, link exchanges, buy links and such are good ways to build links, but they are considered as short-term fixes.

Now read this well and clear:

Buying PageRank-passing links or randomly exchanging links are the worst ways of attempting to gather links and they’re likely to have no positive impact on your site’s performance over time.

Yikes!

Here’s another one:

Mass submissions (to directories, social bookmarking sites, etc. – ed.), which are sometimes offered as a quick work-around SEO method, are mostly useless and not likely to serve your purposes.

Argh!

4. Learn what the top ranking sites are doing

Those top ranked sites are there for a reason – analyze those sites and learn from them; better yet, copy their methods. Of course, be sensible – copying what big companies due is rather impossible, unless you have thousands of dollars to spend on link building campaigns. Try to look for those small guys who quietly rank at the top of the Search Engine Result Pages (SERPs) without any involvement in PPC campaigns (e.g. Google AdWords.)

5. Make it easy for people to share your content

Related to #2 above, you need to expose your “share” buttons and links well. Position the Retweet, Facebook “Like,” and other buttons/links in location that has a great visibility. Those tools can be responsible to make your content go viral, which means two-fold benefits for you: more inbound links and traffic.

Well, I don’t know how about you, but no matter how I hate Google so much, big G is important in your and my sites’ presence, especially if you are making money online.

Is SEO Real? or a Figment of Google’s Imagination

Is SEO Real, or Simply a Figment of Big G’s Imagination?

Firstly I should point out that I am a proud “SEO’er”, spending 7 days a week (or more!) on Google. It is in this schedule I have had several years, which I have begun to question Google’s need, priorities and underlying meaning.

Before I start on my thoughts, I want you all to question what SEO really is. It’s said search engine optimisation is simply “the process of improving the volume or quality of traffic to a web site or a web page (such as a blog) from search engines via “natural” or un-paid (“organic” or “algorithmic”) search results, as opposed to other forms of search engine marketing (“SEM”) which may deal with paid inclusion”.

In my opinion, SEO is “identifying, researching and implementing whatever is needed, in order to gain the rankings your site/blog or company needs to deliver its online sales plan.”

So here’s My Angle…

The search engines themselves, ultimately decided SEO would be the description of gaining rankings through strategic changes to a website, in order to ultimately affect the way in which the site is viewed by the search engine. This leads me onto my first gripe…

Why would a search engine want to dictate the overall strategy behind manipulating its own algorithm?

You are Mr. Yahoo or Mr. Google and you want to display in your SERPs, the best results for each individual search, you judge this by using hundreds of algorithmic specifications that deem whether a website is worthy for each search. But, and it’s a big but, you have hundreds of thousands of people around the globe who’s prerogative it is to understand, interact and manipulate your specifications, in order to gain an advantage over their competition. What do you do? You can’t beat them, it’s a fact.

No matter how much Google changes its algorithm, its people or its process, people like you and me will always be able to gain some advantage by understanding how it works. It’s the same as a million other things in this world, you can’t cook Spaghetti Bolognese, so you watch Jamie Oliver cook up a storm, you read a recipe book and look online. Now you know how to cook spag bol, or at least you have a better understanding of how to do it.

This would be the same as telling a child they are not allowed to play computer games and giving them an Xbox.

Here’s why, in several of Google’s guidelines, you will see SEO good practice, good practice for page title tags, how to make best use of the “description” Meta tag. These go on and on, surely this is messed up? Google’s objective is to:

A. Make money by making it harder to rank naturally and so switching people onto AdWords.

B. Make AdWords more “clickable”, as we have seen by recent size, position and some colour changes.

C. And thirdly to deliver the best results possible for a single search by a single searcher.

Google’s Hidden Agenda

Fair play to Google, they are very clever, they have the market cornered and short of a huge push by Microsoft’s Bing, they will continue to the market leader for years to come.

But really, do you think all the “carrot dangling” is for our benefit? No. Big G has basically told us they will penalise anyone’s site that tries to optimise too much, this is stupid in the real world. It is common sense that people are going to try as hard as they can. Will people who try their best in the World Cup be substituted?

Unless your site is dabbling in the dark art of SEO you will be fine, though please do not try too hard, whatever too hard is!

Let’s look at the real point behind this.

G has us by the balls! With billions of searches every day worldwide and even more billions of results, I would guess 98% of these have been manipulated in some way by an SEO guy. We all use Google, we all search and most of us have Analytics, AdWords accounts, web master tools and Gmail. All of which, in my opinion, are Google’s armoury, a defence and a pro active means of understanding people who manipulate its SERPs. Who better is there? Google can make all the tweaks they like but in the end we will find a way, we are the real meaning of SEO, SEM or whatever it is called these days

So what should you think?

You should think whatever you like, after all this is only my opinion. But in my eyes Google has 2 options, stay exactly the same, but spend more time concentrating on the websites that show a blatant disregard to the visitor or are ultimately being naughty in SEO terms rather than penalising lots of sites on a daily basis simply because they change their title tag.

The second option would be to stop telling us how we should do SEO and then judge us when people try too hard; obviously I am only talking in an innocent manner.

Anything else?

Luckily for you guys I am not going to refer you to my SEO site for more information, I don’t even have a site, I don’t believe in wasting my time promoting how good I am at SEO and trying to rank for “SEO”. I believe in doing the best for my clients, spending all my time on their gains and preaching my opinions on SEO. But what I will do is leave you with a couple of links that you can use to find me if needed for any reason. Thanks.

dannychapmanseo@googlemail.com

New Venture – Accident at work Claims

Business – PPI Claims

Hobby – Carp Rigs

Original article: SEO Tactics

WordPress 3.0 “Thelonious” Has Been Released

After half a year of hard work and three release candidates, WordPress 3.0 is finally released. This is the 13th major WordPress release, and we are all (and should) know that WordPress as a blogging platform and CMS (Content Management System) is here to stay.

The major highlight of this release is the merge of WordPress MU (WordPress for multi-user or blog network) and WordPress single user – now you can have one blog or one million blogs on one single installation – a convenience, indeed!

The Admin Panel itself is sporting a cleaner look and less cluttered – help texts can be found easily on every screen to ensure you can operate your WordPress blog easier.

Another less-significant-but-important-nonetheless addition to WordPress 3.0 is the addition of a new default WordPress theme, Twenty Ten – The clean, professional look of the theme can easily contend with those Premium WordPress Themes.

Check out the video tour on WordPress 3.0 from the official blog:

Check out the official update regarding the release from WordPress.org official blog.

The Best Whitehat One-Way Backlink Builder Tool: SEOLinkVine vs. LinkVana

For you who have manually SEO and build links your sites, you might find that SEO and link building take loads of your time and money. If you own a site, this might not be a major problem for you. But what if you run a network of websites? SEO and link building are headaches.

The most common alternative you want to do go is to hire SEO specialists and link builders. The problem is, this alternative is expensive, ranging from hundreds of dollars to thousands of dollars on monthly basis. Alternatively, you can use tools to help you do SEO and link building semi-manually to leverage your time and money.

You could hire freelancers on webmaster forums, but despite the services seem affordable, if not cheap, the quality is rarely in the “good enough” zone. Moreover, hiring freelancers to run SEO and link building campaigns on large number of sites can be expensive, eventually.

Directory submissions, RSS Feed submissions, paid reviews, text link ads, banner ads, etc. – all whitehat one-way backlinking methods can wear you out and burn you down, eventually.

However, there’s a great solution: Self-service or semi-automated SEO and link building services, available usually for directory submissions and article marketing activities.

Many consider article marketing as the most effective way of building links to get your sites to rank better on search engine result pages. For you who fave article marketing above all other SEO and link building strategies, you might want to consider these white-hat SEO services: SEOLinkVine and LinkVana.

I have got my hands dirty with both and here are my reviews:

SEOLinkVine

seolinkvineSEOLinkVine is basically an online system that allowing you to post your articles to the system and let the system handles your article distribution. Unlike many article submission tools available today, your articles will be posted on quality blogs. So yes, SEOLinkVine is essentially an article marketing system.

The blogs to where the system posts your articles to are not actually owned by SEOLinkVine. Those blogs are submitted into the system, and will need to meet a certain criteria (e.g. no splogs or spam blogs) to ensure the quality of the network.

The above means that if you are not interested in article marketing but are interested in getting your blogs filled with quality, unique content instead, you can join the network for free. The articles will be posted to your blog via XML-RPC – so yes, your blogs should be XML-RPC-ready (WordPress blogs are XML-RPC-ready.) It’s a win-win situation, really.

Pros:

  • You can use markings, i.e. { variation 1 | variation 2 | variation 3 }, to make an article to have many unique variations (a.k.a. “spinnable”) – you only need to submit one article with markings and the system will take care the distribution.
  • Your links are of course “dofollow”, with a big upside – the anchor texts are “spinnable.”
  • Analytics to monitor the progress of your sites ranking on search engines on your targeted keywords.
  • Affordable pricing of $50 / month.

Cons:

  • Despite being monitored, members’ blogs quality can be less than what you expect.
  • You can’t really control backlink quality – you could get links from blogs with PageRank 0 or with the same IP address, resulting in reduced link values.
  • Limited customization allowed in article posting frequencies and such.

I can get on average 10 published article variations for each article – quite good, could be definitely more if I outsource the article writing to good writers. If I submit 50 unique articles/month (with 2 outbound links each,) along with many variations for each article to the systems, I could get about 50 x 2 x 10 = 1,000 back links – not bad at all for few hours of work.

LinkVana

LinkVanaSimilar to SEOLinkVine, LinkVana is an article marketing system that publishes your articles to quality blogs. So not much to mention differently here, except one major difference: The blogs to which your article is posted is LinkVana’s – so, your backlink quality can be assured.

Unlike SEOLinkVine’s “spinnable” articles, LinkVana takes snippets from each of your unique content automatically – so no markings needed.

Pros:

  • All blogs are LinkVana-owned and guaranteed to have PageRank 2 to PageRank 5, aged and have 1000s of inbound links on each – so quality is out of question.
  • Huge blog network that grows 50-100 blogs each month.
  • You are guaranteed to get backlinks from different class C IP address.
  • You can control posting frequency and other options.

Cons:

  • Pricing is a bit turn-off: $147 / month (25% discount of $197 /month for the first 300 members.)
  • The system uses snippets, not markings – so if you want more variations on a single article, you might need a help of quality article rewriter tool, such as Magic Article Rewriter.

And the winner is…

For me: SEOLinkVine! $50 a month for unlimited submissions of articles and article variations are just the best fit to my budget. Also, I do need the analytic feature they offer.

Click here to see what SEOLinkVine can do »

However, if quality is your number one concern, you should go to LinkVana, instead – incoming backlinks are of higher quality, and for the long term, this is probably better; $147 / month is well worth it!

Click here to see what LinkVana can offer you »

Traffic Generation Tips: What Can You Learn from Adult Internet Business

It’s no secret that the adult internet businesses are pioneers of most of the Internet business advances. Did you know that the first affiliate program was created by an adult webmaster? What’s more, many of the traffic generating and marketing techniques used by major mainstream websites were first developed on and for adult web sites.

You see, adult webmasters are a few steps ahead of the webmasters from other industries – often months, even years ahead. One of the area they have mastered is traffic generation.

Do you remember the toplist sites (they are pretty much obsolete today)? Yeah, those were pioneered and perfected in the adult industry.

Another example: Remember the struggling Entrecard? Yup – it was the concept developed in the adult industry.

Here’s another one: MySpace – it took the idea for friend’s pages from the adult world and incorporated them into their MySpace page layout.

One last example: Have you visited those landing pages (e.g. Clickbank’s products) that pop up sales messages even if you hit the back button or about to close your browser tab? Yup – it’s pioneered and perfected in the adult industry. And much, much more examples.

A question – why adult webmasters are more advanced (and proactive) compared to the mainstream (non-adult) webmasters? One answer: Adult webmasters share traffics (a.k.a. traffic exchange) and share traffic generation secrets among them way, way much more than their mainstream counterparts. Maybe it is time for us mainstream webmasters to stop competing and start sharing traffic and traffic secrets!

And here’s a myth-buster: Successful adult webmasters use white hat methods of traffic generation, and even though they incorporate SEO and link building, both are NOT their number one priority. Again, the priority is on traffic generation.

One of the traffic generation methods born and perfected in the adult industry is PPV or pay per view marketing.

The much touted PPV marketing today is, indeed, developed and perfected by the adult webmasters. Guides to PPV have been very popular these days, and it’s clearly NOT born yesterday – it’s been around for years in – guess where – the adult industry. PPV is said the most effective way to rake in 80% of total Internet traffic (the rest 20% traffic is from all search engines, including Google.)

PPV ads are usually pop-unders, and are displayed when you visit participated PPV sites. The right sites to display the ads and a strong call-to-action are the keys in getting the most clicks of your ads – this done wrong will leave you with no or minimal clicks; this done right will leave you with $$$ and an astonishing return on your investment and a reason to forget Google AdWords and the likes.

What to do next?

You can start learning more about PPV and looking for the right PPV ad network to join.

As PPV guide, I recommend you this guide: Rapid Mass Traffic. You’ll learn from the guide on how to get massive amount of traffic without Google and SEO – even without a website (spoiler: It’s all about PPV!) – click here to peep what’s inside Rapid Mass Traffic.

One of the largest PPV ad networks is Clicksor. Signing up is free, and you can start to advertise on targeted sites or display PPV ads on your sites right away – click here to sign up as Clicksor publisher.

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