5 Things We Can Learn From A Spammer – Madhav Tripathy

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Posted on 31st October 2010 by Krishna Gupta in Blog

As our scientists say, in the world there is nothing useless, anything we can take in use if we know but spam comments are more than useless. Spam comments come from spammers. Actually I hate spam and I can’t see one comment or email in spam box so I delete any spam at once. Every time when I delete any spam I think something and I found there is some creativity, we can learn something from them.

So what we can learn form spammers? Well! I have found 5 things.
(1) Be Regular

This is the first thing we can learn from any spammer. There is a proverb “Practice makes a man perfect” so if we do not do something regular that is not practice, if we practice something we can learn that easily and quickly. Practice has so much importance in our life as we know net practices.
(2) Be Creative

Spammers seem me creative doesn’t matter they are or not, they innovate ideas and find new ways to complete the job. Imagine for one sec without innovation where would be the world. Your creativity presents things in a new way to make a difference.

(3) Be Optimistic

Spammers seem me optimistic because they do their work without caring success or failure and they do not lose their courage in any condition. In the world many people do their work and survive life and accept what comes on the way.
(4) Be Honest

Spammers seem me honest as I never interact with them, never try to contact them and they do their job honestly without shy or any hesitation. As we have listen “honesty is the best policy” or “honesty comes from the heart” but one thing is sure if you will honest you will pay.

(5) Live Your Life

I listen almost everyday Rihanna’s song “live your life” that,s best fitting here, they are living their life.

This article is written by Madhav Tripathy from TechShali.

Real Time SEO by Rand Fishkin presentation

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Posted on 30th October 2010 by Krishna Gupta in SEO

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Real Time SEO

SEO: Metrics That Matter by STEPHAN SPENCER

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Posted on 29th October 2010 by Krishna Gupta in SEO

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Out with the old, in with the new. In terms of SEO, what’s falling by the wayside?

Obsessively watching indexation numbers and rankings on “trophy” keywords (like the one you know the CEO always checks first thing in the morning).

Worrying yourself sick over “duplicate content penalties.”

Relying on Sitemap XML files to fix your indexation problems (News flash: Your rankings will still stink!).

Exchanging links.

What’s Hot in SEO?

Truly understanding and leveraging the power of “long tail” dynamics.
Becoming a trusted contributor within Wikipedia, Digg, StumbleUpon, Netscape and Reddit.
Building your network in MySpace, Flickr, LinkedIn, YouTube, Bebo, MyBlogRoll and the blogosphere in general, and then reaping the rewards of “network effects.”
Building custom search engines and rallying your community to help improve it.

Link baiting.
So how do you measure the impact of this sort of stuff? A new generation of SEO metrics, that’s how. Gauging your success on your positions in the search engine results pages is so last century.

New SEO paradigms, such as the “long tail” and personalized search, call for new key performance indicators (KPIs). In addressing “long tail” SEO specifically, some of my Netconcepts’ colleagues cleverly came up with the following KPIs:

Brand-To-Nonbrand Ratio

This is the percentage of your natural search traffic that comes from brand keywords versus nonbrand keywords.

If the ratio is high and most of your traffic is coming from searches for your brand, this signals your SEO is fundamentally broken. The lower the ratio, the more of the “long tail” of natural search you are likely capturing. This metric is an excellent gauge of the success of your optimization initiatives.

Unique Pages

This is the number of unique (non-duplicate) web pages crawled by search engine spiders such as Googlebot.

Your website is like your “virtual sales force,” bringing in prospects from the search engines. Think of each unique page as one of your virtual salespeople. The more unique pages you have, the more opportunities you have to sell through the search engines.

Page Yield

This is the percentage of unique pages that yield search-delivered traffic in a given month.

This ratio essentially is a key driver of the length of your “long tail” of natural search. The more pages that yield traffic from search engines, the healthier your SEO program. If you have only a small portion of your website delivering searchers to your door, then most of your pages, your virtual salespeople, are warming the bench instead of working hard for you. My colleague Brian Klais has a name for the webpages that aren’t driving any search traffic — freeloaders.

Keyword Yield

This is the average number of keywords each page (minus the freeloaders) yields in a given month. Put another way, it’s the ratio of keywords to pages yielding search traffic.

The higher your keyword yield, the more of the “long tail” of natural search your site will capture. In other words, the more keywords each yielding page attracts or targets, the longer your tail. So an average of eight search terms per page indicates pages with much broader appeal to the engines than, say, three search terms per page. The average merchant in our study had 2.4 keywords per page.

Visitors Per Keyword

This is the ratio of search engine delivered visitors to search terms.

This metric indicates how much traffic each keyword drives and is a function of your rankings in the search engine result pages. Put another way, this metric determines the height or thickness of your “long tail.”

The average merchant in our study obtained 1.9 visitors per keyword.

Index-To-Crawl Ratio

This is the ratio of pages indexed to unique crawled pages. If a page gets crawled by Googlebot, that doesn’t guarantee it will show up in Google’s index. A low ratio can mean your site doesn’t carry much weight in Google’s eyes.

Engine Yield

Calculated for each search engine separately, this is how much traffic the engine delivers for every page it crawls.

Each search engine has a different audience size. This metric helps you fairly compare the referral traffic you get from each. In the Netconcepts study, we found that MSN and Yahoo! tend to crawl significantly more pages, but the yield per crawled page from Google is typically significantly higher.

As you optimize your site through multiple iterations, watch the above-mentioned KPIs to ensure you’re heading in the right direction. Those not privy to these metrics will have a much harder time capturing the “long tail” of SEO.

This article is written by STEPHAN SPENCER from PractialeCommerce Insights.

Content guidelines for your website by Bing

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Posted on 28th October 2010 by Krishna Gupta in SEO

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The best way to attract people to your website, and keep them coming back, is to fill your webpages with valuable content in which your target audience is interested. The following guidelines can help you create a more effective and popular webpage:

In the visible webpage text, include words users might choose as search query terms to find the information on your website.

Limit all webpages to a reasonable size. Bing recommends covering one topic per webpage.

An HTML webpage with no images should be under 150 KB.

Make sure that each webpage is accessible by at least one static text link.

Don’t put the text that you want indexed within images. For example, if you want your company name or address to be indexed, make sure it isn’t displayed only inside an image of your company logo.

Add a Sitemap, which helps MSNBot to find all of your webpages. Links that are embedded in menus, list boxes, and similar elements aren’t accessible to web crawlers unless they appear in your Sitemap.

Keep your website hierarchy fairly flat. That is, each webpage should only be from one to three clicks away from the default webpage.

Techniques that might prevent your website from appearing in Bing results
The following techniques aren’t appropriate in terms of attempting to gain higher ranking with the Bing index. Use of these techniques might actually adversely affect how your website is ranked within Bing, and might even cause your website to be removed from the index.

Attempting to increase a webpage’s keyword density by add lots of irrelevant words. This includes stuffing ALT tags that users are unlikely to view.

Using hidden text or links. Only use text and links that are visible to users.

Using techniques, such as link farms, to artificially increase the number of links to your webpage.

These are the official content guidelines given to web masters by Microsoft’s Bing.

Yahoo! Search Content Quality Guidelines

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Posted on 27th October 2010 by Krishna Gupta in SEO

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Yahoo! strives to provide the best search experience on the Web by directing you to high-quality and relevant web content in response to your search query.

Pages Yahoo! Wants Included In Its Index:

Original and unique content of genuine value.

Pages designed primarily for humans, with search engine considerations a secondary concern.

Hyperlinks intended to help people find interesting, related content, when applicable.

Metadata (including title and description) that accurately describes the contents of a web page.

Good web design in general.

Unfortunately, not all web pages contain information that is valuable to a user. Some pages are created deliberately to trick the search engine into offering inappropriate, redundant or poor-quality search results. This is often called “spam.” Yahoo! does not want these pages in the index.

What Yahoo! Considers Unwanted:

Some, but not all, examples of the types of content that Yahoo! does not want include:

Pages that harm the accuracy, diversity or relevance of search results.

Pages dedicated to redirecting the user to another page (doorway pages).

Multiple sites or pages offering substantially the same content.

Sites with numerous, unnecessary virtual hostnames.

Pages produced in great quantities, which have been automatically generated or which are of little value (cookie cutter pages).

Pages using methods to artificially inflate search engine ranking.

The use of text or links that are hidden from the user.

Pages that give the search engine different content than what the end user sees (cloaking).

Sites excessively cross linked with other sites to inflate a site’s apparent popularity (link schemes).

Pages built primarily for the search engines or pages with excessive or off-topic keywords.
Misuse of competitor names.

Multiple sites offering the same content.

Sites that use excessive pop-ups which interfere with user navigation.

Pages that seem deceptive, fraudulent, or provide a poor user experience.

Yahoo! Search Content Quality Guidelines are designed to ensure that poor-quality pages do not degrade the user experience in any way. As with other Yahoo! guidelines, Yahoo! reserves the right, at its sole discretion, to take any and all action it deems appropriate to ensure the quality of its search index.

These quality guidelines are given officially by Yahoo!