7 Worst Things (bad) Seo Clients Do

October 27, 2009 by nesrray torino  
Filed under Blog

There are clients SEOs love to have and then there are those other kind. Every SEO has them and very few SEOs can be so selective as to weed out every client that isn’t the “perfect client” (and those that do generally work only for themselves.)

Being the perfect client may not be attainable, but you can certainly avoid being the bad client nobody wants. Here are seven things bad SEO clients do:

Unreasonable expectations It’s not always the client’s fault when there are unreasonable expectations. Sometimes the SEOs propagate misinformation in order to get the sale. Other times once they get involved in the site things look far different than they originally appeared. It is the responsibility of the client to ensure their expectations are in check with reality, despite any claims of the SEO. This is especially true when it comes to overall expectations vs. monetary investment. There is only so much that can be done with the time and money allotted.

Expectations should be closely guarded with plenty of room for moving the goalpost, depending on the situation. Bad SEO clients expect results outside the bounds of what is likely and refuse to temper those as things change.

Don’t return calls or emails There is nothing worse than an SEO campaign being slowed down or halted by lack of client communication. If your SEO is asking for feedback, there is a reason for it. If they are waiting on you to provide information it’s possible that your campaign will remain at a standstill until they get it. Make it a point to answer all communications from your SEO as quickly as possible. The only person that suffers from holding things up is you!

Clients need to be engaged with the marketing process. Bad SEO clients can often be their own worst enemy and can impair the marketing efforts by not returning calls and emails to the SEO.

Forwarding SEO spam emails Why is it that SEO clients often have trouble with recommendations proposed by their SEO but whenever they get a spam email they forward it asking, “why aren’t you doing this?” This is the ultimate example of not trusting the SEO. You’re putting your faith in a complete stranger who’s spamming every site they can rather than trusting that your SEO knows what they are doing. If your site can’t be found, did you ever wonder how the spammers found you?

Clients need to be involved in the campaign development process, but bad SEO clients forward every SEO spam email they get. This forces the SEO to take time away from actual SEO work to explain why the email is wrong, why things aren’t as the email says they are, and to defend their work. That’s hours of wasted time.

Overwriting SEO’s work This is a personal pet peeve. SEOs go though a lot of research and effort before making any changes to a client’s site. Whether the changes are a major reworking of a page, or a few minor edits to a title tag, they all have reason and merit. The quickest way to keep an SEO from being successful with your optimization campaign is to overwrite their changes with your own. Fortunately, the CodeMonitor tool will notify the SEOs within 24 hours any time a monitored page changes (we monitor all our client’s optimized pages.) However it’s still up to the client to ensure such overwriting doesn’t happen.

To be successful the SEOs work must remain in tact. Bad SEO client’s don’t take the time to ensure they or their team work only from the live SEOd version of the site.

Argue every recommendation I once had a client that went item by item arguing every recommendation we made. Calls to action? Too lowbrow for his audience. Using keywords? Too pedantic. It’s important for the client to seek to understand the reasoning behind the changes, but you can’t expect the SEO to improve your website’s exposure if you are tying their hands in their efforts. If you don’t agree with what the SEO is doing, give them the rope to hang themselves. Track the results, if conversions drop then undo it. But at least give it a chance to perform.

Clients need to understand the value of what the SEO is doing. Bad SEO clients question every change forcing the SEO to exhaust hours of time explaining and defending every decision.

Try to out SEO the SEO I’m a strong proponent of the client being involved and having an understanding of the overall SEO campaign. However there comes a point where the client has to let the SEO do their job. The SEO was hired because they have a skill set and area of expertise, presumably one the client themselves don’t have. The client can’t assume they know more about SEO than the SEO does and must give the SEO freedom to implement SEO their way.

Working with the SEO with brainstorming and strategy development is a good thing. Bad SEO clients push for every SEO tactic they learn about or supplement their own SEO knowledge into the campaign.

Call/email all the time Communication is essential to a well-oiled optimization machine, but too much of anything is a bad thing. Clients who call the SEO up on a regular bases because they want to talk about this, that or the other, are not doing themselves any favors. Whether they want to talk strategy, success, implementation or whatever, these communications must be done in an orderly fashion. The SEO should not be expected to field regular unwarranted calls from the client that suck up the time they would otherwise be investing in that client’s SEO campaign.

Clients should be interested in their campaign but not at the expense of the campaign itself. Bad SEO clients spend more time talking to the SEO than the SEO has available, preventing them from doing the job they were hired for.

SEOs love to work with good clients. Consequently, good SEO clients get better results than bad SEO clients. Bad SEO clients suck up the SEO’s time, create distractions from the campaign and prevent the SEO from doing the things that get the results the client ultimately wants. Ensuring that you are not a bad SEO client also ensures that the SEO can focus on your success.

Fero Alenc know most of the best SEO tips, because he has been practising SEO for six years. For more information check Fero Alenc’s great SEO tips.

Insecure Firefox Plugins

October 25, 2009 by Arhur Monderos  
Filed under Blog

Mozilla has introduced a service that checks Firefox browser plugins to make sure they don’t have known security vulnerabilities or incompatibilities.

The service debuted on Tuesday with this page, which checks 15 plugins to make sure they’re the most recent versions. Over time, Mozilla developers plan to scan additional addons, and they also plan to embed a feature into version 3.6 of the open-source browser that will automatically indicate which plugins used on a current page are out of date.

The offering builds on a feature Mozilla rolled out last month that warned Firefox users when they had an out-of-date version of Adobe’s Flash media player installed. In its first week, Mozilla statistics showed more than half of those who installed the latest Firefox release were running an insecure version of the frequently attacked plugin.

Not that the service has necessarily gotten off to as good a start as one might hope. Our tests failed to detect the use of Adobe Reader, another application widely abused by criminals. And other plugins, such as Google Picasa and the iTunes Application Detector were also left out in the cold.

But as Mozilla makes clear here, the page is only the beginning. Eventually, the organization plans to “create a self-service panel for vendors to update their plugin info as new releases come out.”

It’s initiatives such as these that demonstrate Mozilla’s dedication to the security of its users, and for that it deserves props. When legions of end users keep internet-facing software updated, we all win.

“We strongly recommend that add-on developers require SSL for updates to prevent the attack described above,” Window Snyder, chief security officer for Mozilla, stated in a post to the group’s developer blog.

The Mozilla Foundation released on Wednesday a patch for both version 1.5 and version 2.0 of the browser, fixing a critical memory corruption flaw.

Arhur Monderos is working in a company as antivirus software specialist and he runs his cool blog where he helps you to choose best antivirus software for you computer.

10 Seo Questions

October 23, 2009 by John Driuers  
Filed under Blog

I wrote a comment yesterday in response to a couple of blog posts that attacked SEO and the SEO industry, attempting to illustrate to the author of the rants that search engine optimization brings a specialized skill set and a core group of knowledge that can help others, from small businesses with great ideas, to larger organizations that can benefit from an independent voice that has experience and knowledge about search engines.

Unfortunately, my comment went unpublished for whatever reason.

One of the underlying assertions of the post I responded to was that in the hands of a competent web developer, a site should rank well in search engines as long as the people behind the site created something great and beautiful, and told a couple of friends. Another of the underpinnings behind the rants against SEO was that search engine optimization wasn’t a legitimate form of marketing. A third postulated that SEOs were the force behind such things as the botnets, blog spam, and scraped and autogenerated content that appears on the Web.

With the exception of striving to build something great, I couldn’t disagree more strongly.

The practice of SEO isn’t web development, though it sometimes requires that development problems on a site be addressed. Successful search engine optimization starts with a number of questions, such as:

Who is your audience? Who are your competitors? What makes you stand out from your competitors?

Some other important steps can include learning about the strengths, weaknesses, opportunities,and threats to a business, defining business goals, collaborating on defining metrics to measure success, and developing an SEO strategy to optimize a site for search engines and for visibility in other places on the Web.

The practice of SEO isn’t spamming the Web, with the creation and use of spyware, viruses, and scrapers that autogenerate web spam. Instead, it’s helping people make intelligent and creative decisions that help them reach an audience that is interested in what they have to offer.

In my response, I included 10 questions involving SEO and search engines which might be issues that search engine optimizers might come across, that I wouldn’t expect most developers to have spent much time thinking about. I’ve written about most of these here, and I thought it might be fun to share them.

1. What impacts might Microsoft’s VIPS, Yahoo’s Template Extraction, and Google’s Segmentation of Visual Gaps have upon a search engine’s weighing of links, document representation, shingles based duplicate content detection, and categorization of topics on a page, and how might a search engine determine which segment is the most important?

2. What steps should one take to try to get a site to rank well for a query in Google Maps, and how might something like location prominence and location sensitivity of that query term impact the range and rankings of sites that appear in a Google Maps listing?

3. What are some of the potential flaws that a search engineer might make when using a discounted cumulative gain approach to evaluating the relevancy of search results at different positions?

4. How might image size, image resolution, image contrast, inclusion of a face in an image, use of images across multiple pages of a site, internal links on a site to images, and external links on a site to images impact the possible rankings of images in search results?

5. What should be contained in a video XML sitemap to make it more likely that the videos included are crawled and indexed by Google?

6. How might Google customize search results for a searcher based upon language and country preferences and past browsing history, even when a searcher isn’t even logged into their Google account and seeing personalized results?

7. What types of user behavior data might the search engines be using to reorder search results besides simple clickthrough rates, and how might those kinds of signals be used in determining sitelinks or quicklinks that Google, Yahoo, and Bing may show in search results?

8. How might a search engine determine which kinds of results besides web pages to blend into search results, and how might that approach change when named entities are involved?

9. What kinds of ranking signals might make it more likely that a news source ranks well in Google’s news search, and why might the search engine choose one article over others when the stories are substantially similar?

10. How are search suggestions (query refinements) chosen by a search engine to include in search results, and why might a search engine show one type of search suggestion at the top of search results, and another type at the bottom of the results.

Fero Alenc know most of the best SEO tips, because he has been practising SEO for six years. For more information check Fero Alenc’s great SEO tips.

Earn Money With Your Blog

October 18, 2009 by Jason Myers  
Filed under Blog

The last number of years has witnessed an exponentially growing trend of people beginning their own blogs on various pastimes and interests.

A number of people treat blogs as online journals, others to communicate with their friends and families, yet others to create new relationships, increase their horizons and get to a wide listeners that they otherwise would not be able to. A lot of these bloggers have noticed in appropriate time that – whether they initially intended it or not – they began to obtain a solid following of readers from all over the world. And they noticed the amount of blog enthusiasts rising. This is not an extraordinary phenomenon. If you write motivating blogs, if you write on a regular basis and on issues that create interest for others as well, people will become aware of your blog and will begin following it.

They will subscribe to your blog to keep up with what you post. However now the question for all the blogging enthusiasts is: can I create money from blogging? The reply is: Yes, you can.

And the fact is: but it’s not that simple as creating blogs regarding your passion, someone noticing you and obtaining the next Hollywood contract. So for the rest of us, not so fortunate with Hollywood contracts, how can we earn money from blogging?

There are several methods an individual can make money with blogging, counting affiliate advertising, with Google AdSense program, by selling banner ads, by writing articles for other webmasters, and sure enough also by selling your own information products and selling it with the use of your blog. A couple of the very familiar methods to make money are affiliate marketing and Google AdSense program. Each one requires a different approach: if you’re excellent at writing, you should go with the affiliate marketing process, where you need to advise and soon market items and/or services to your viewers. AdSense alternatively requires many viewers, for the reason that you’ll obtain about $5 per 100 viewers and to earn a living from this you should get at least 1000 visitors every day to your website!

Jason Myers is a professional writer and he writes mostly about blogging secrets news. He’s also interested in giving blogging tips.

Do Blogging For Profit

October 16, 2009 by Keith Stone  
Filed under Blog

People that dream of blogging for profit will discover this goal is well within reach as long as they are of at least average intelligence, have a willingness to put in the tough work and with at least a minimal grasp of the use of blogging software. There are not very numerous individuals, nevertheless, who actually make as much money as they’d like from blogging. There are 2 main reasons why many individuals fail to make money from their weblogs. Most of the times bloggers have the expectation that their readers will expand allowing them to make money fast, in the end they normally end up disappointed. The demise of many bloggers is that they fail to think ahead. To be a successful blogger one must set out a plan and follow it.

A large readership should be your main aim when attempting to make success profits off blogging. The way to get advertizers to pay you more, is to bring in more traffic. Getting return readers that you need to make a profit won’t be simple. As the number of blogs increase every day, an excellent writing style or a great idea isn’t enough to have your weblog acknowledged. You must to be able to market your weblog effectively.

Too numerous bloggers spend the bulk of their time writing posts and almost no time advertizing their project. When returning site readers see your regular updates on weblog search engines like Technorati, they will come back over and again to maintain high numbers of blogrolls to your internet site.

You will need to draw in new visitants to your blogging website, so instead of keeping up with adding new posts, go find others wanting to read your site, sort of make your dreams of profiting a reality for you. This can be established by exchanging links with other bloggers, getting hold of others in the blogging community, and using other verified methods of winning traffic.

Even the greatest marketing minds, with the best possible ideas, don’t become wildly successful over night. If you are blogging for profit it takes time to establish a following and you shouldn’t expect much of a profit for some time. While in the early stage of this hard time, don’t falter on your dedication to your blogging project. So that you will not get downhearted, set your plan of action like the regularity of updating, the number of readers you want to attract, and then compensate yourself for adhering with your plan.

If you’ve enjoyed all the exciting information you read here about great Blogging for Profit, you’ll love everything else you find at Blogging for Profit

Internet Marketing For Beginners

October 15, 2009 by Doc Schmyz  
Filed under Blog

If you are new to internet marketing, do not believe the lies of easy money. If you want to succeed at internet marketing you will need to learn the basics and be prepared to work at it. There is a lot to do if you want to succeed, but it is worth the effort.

You will need to:

Learn how to build a website, or know enough to make sure that your web designer builds an effective website for you. (and doesn’t rip you off)

Understand the basics of search engine optimization so that people can actually find your site, as well as letting the search engines “crawl” it.

Invest in an auto responder service and learn how to use it effectively. Automated email delivery is a must.

In order to succeed online, you need to learn the basics. Before you begin building a web presence, you need to do keyword research on your topic or niche. Then you need to research your target market and discover what they actually want and need. This is a very important step, don’t produce something and then try to find a target market, that is a recipe for failure.

It sounds like a ton of extra work…but its not as bad as you think. you can search on line for step by step instructions.

Fight the urge to jump in the deep end of this at first. Learn the little steps and then take your time. It will all come together in time.

You can start online marketing in a million different ways. You will also get tons of offers telling you that you need various products in order to make money online…this is not true.

If you are in a hurry to get started, you could use tools like Squidoo and Hubpages while you are getting your website ready. Squidoo and Hubpages both enable you to create simple focused web pages around a single topic. They are free and very easy to use.

You can easily add products to these pages and weave in affiliate links. It is an effective no cost way to get started with earning money online while you are learning. They are probably the simplest way to get started on online if you are a beginner.

These are the steps again:

Focus

Do keyword research

Find your niche

Market research

Try your ideas on a free forum such as Hubpages/Squidoo

Learn basic internet marketing skills

Learn basic SEO skills

Build an effective web site

Anyone can make money at internet marketing as long as you understand the basic steps. Just remember that it is a job just like any other job…it takes work and focus. Money won’t show up just cause you are now “on the web”.

About the Author:

3 Reasons Why You Should Use Link Building Software

September 18, 2009 by Boshi Chan  
Filed under Blog

The software generates a listing of thousands of blog types by the selected page rank within a few minutes after you key in your keyword search terms. Simply clicking each link takes you to the page listed to do your blog comment posting. Just imagine the hours of time you actually gained back to really focus on your small home business.

Software can be used to post to your own blog. You can feed the software the entries that you want to be seen, and you can sit back effortlessly while the software is doing the work for you. Pages will be updated without you having to spend precious time doing it. Just set aside a specific day for making up a blog series, and fee it into the software to be posted.

Blog commenting is considered one of the easiest ways to get free one way links to your website. All that is required of you is simply leave a comment on related business blogs and include some anchor text linking back to your site. While we do recognize that link building is important to your business, you will need to exercise good time management as there are also other equally important tasks demanded of you from your work at home business.

Then, there is free blog posting software that is known as Post2Blog. This software allows you to easily and effortlessly edit posts from your computer’s desktop. This editor makes your blog posts appear very professional. It works for Wordpress, Typepad, LiveJournal, Drupal blogs, MovableType, and many other blog platforms. It has a clean interface as well as many other features that will help to enhance your blogging experience. It used to cost around thirty dollars: however, it is now freeware.

When you have software that makes the job simple, you’ll more than likely see in increase in profits, traffic, and reader loyalty. You’ll look forward to blogging as it will no longer be the long and boring task that takes hours of your time on a daily basis. All you’ll need to do now is, set aside some to create simple but interesting blog posts or comments as well as edit them to give them a professional appearance, blogging will be more exciting than ever before!

Finding the best information about great Link building software can be overwhelming at times. One of the best places we found online to get the straight facts is Link building software

Blog Hosting

September 2, 2009 by Jose Ramierez  
Filed under Blog

Today, there are so many different blog hosting companies that are super easy to use and that appear to be very appealing to many internet users, especially mommy bloggers. The majority of these sites tend to offer user friendly interfaces that are super easy to learn and use on a regular basis. On the other hand, there are also a lot of drawbacks that come from these free blog hosting services.

One of the biggest issues that comes with putting your blog on one of these free sites is that your content is not secure and protected. The blog hosting companies can change their policies and terms of use in as little as a few seconds. There have been issues in the past where companies would take over the users content causing a great issue with the owners of the content.

Second is that you can never be guaranteed with how long such free blog hosting sites will last. What would you do if one day you find it gone just because it crashed or it just simply decided to? This is a harsh reality for bloggers who go for the affordable sites compared to the assurance that you will get if you hold a self-hosted blog.

Another major issue is the flexibility to do what you want to your blog. They offer major advertising all over your blog and this could greatly hinder your chance of earning some of your own money through ads of your own.

If you are hosting your blog with a free blog hosting provider, you might just miss an opportunity to work with big sponsors. Your blog might be getting hundreds of thousands of visitors but you can’t do anything with it because someone else owns your blog.

Large corporations and media giants also do not trust such free blog hosting sites since they carry the perception that it may not be around for long. They are not in to take that big risk of partnering with a site that will not give them enough assurance of its uptime.

Bloggers can acquire more revenue by getting large sponsorships from reliable corporations. If what you have is a self-hosted blog, then it gives the client the impression that you have also invested on something that would assure you of a professional and credible look, along with stability and what others would see it.

Keep these pieces of information in mind when you choose a blog hosting service for your site. Be sure to do your research thoroughly so that you are not disappointed with your services. Blogging can be a great experience, and with the proper marketing, you have the potential to earn revenue as well. Try it, chances are, you will find it a rewarding experience.

Hey… Are you actively trying to find inexpensive blog hosting to begin and grow your blog on? Finding the right blog platform and hosting company is easy as long as you find the right web hosting company.

Next Page »