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Friday, February 18, 2011

Interesting statistic on in-store food sampling

I was just reading the latest issue of Food Entrepreneur Magazine, and read a surprising statistic.

An independent study by research firm Knowledge Networks-PDI shows that in-store sampling substantially increases sales the day of sampling AND influences a 75% increase in sales even at 20 weeks after the sampling.

Wow! I wonder if we’ll start to see more in-store sampling. I know that when I’m at Costco, I’ve used the samples to try out new products. Many of those products are now in my freezer.


View the original article here

Guidelines to a Perfect Link Exchange Scam

Reciprocal link exchangeReciprocal link exchange still is an important strategy of link popularity building despite all the measures taken by the search engines to diminish its effect. Back in 1999-2001 obtaining a quality link exchange was not difficult, and webmasters used to respond more willingly to an e-mail request. But as more people became aware of this strategy so the reciprocal linking scam started to be a common practice.

Sometimes I check my old ‘link exchange’ e-mail account I used to build link popularity for my very first website. There are lots of people contacting me daily with exchange proposals. Well, not actually people – they are mostly bots.

Probably one of the reasons I still maintain that e-mail is that those requests are a source of a persistent amusement for me. One example: a request in pink letters with images of dancing puppies and bouncing hearts written by a ‘blond chick’ (picture attached) asking me to link to her pharmacy site! Or maybe I just enjoy reading the admiring comments on the outlook and content of my site that precede every exchange proposal?

Link exchange scam is an interesting theme for a study per se and still awaits its researchers. But in the meanwhile the SEO community is being successful in summarizing the guidelines for the most perfect link exchange scam.

Send an automated e-mail request or use a bot to submit it via an online contact form. Combining the both methods is preferred whenever possible.Use a free e-mail account such as Gmail, or better yet, some foreign free e-mail service to send your message. Sending a duplicate request from your company account is also beneficial.Do send follow up e-mails. Sooner or later your victim will give up and read one of them.Send minimum 100-300 automated requests every day. Push your mail server’s spam detection to the limits.Make sure that the website you are trying to contact is absolutely unrelated to your field.Send your request to every e-mail address you can find on the target site. Let the sales or customer support guys forward them to the webmaster.Address properly. No names required. Best thing is to use the website’s title or at least the URL: “Dear Blue Cheap Online Widgets”, or “Hello www.bluewidgets.com”Kiss ass. Tell your victims how much you adore their websites. Do use superlatives.Inform. Let your recipients know how important PageRank and incoming links are. Go in depth with the mysteries and magnificence of the PageRank and how the high PageRank will ensure them the first positions in Google.Scare. Notify them that their link popularity is low, and their positions in search engines are threatened.Share a secret. Tell them that the three-way linking is more effective, since search engines detect and ignore two-way links.Threaten. Notify them that their link will be removed from your high quality directory if they do not provide a link back in the specified number of days.Show your scale. Make your message easily detectable as a bulk sending by setting a different font size and color for the recipient’s address and site name.Be unofficial. Use the Internet argot in your e-mail. Like ‘u r’ instead of ‘you are’. This is the Internet – formalism is unacceptable.Threaten them again. With hundreds of reminder e-mails.Use a girl’s name. Most webmasters are male and should not resist a lady asking for a favor.Your link page must have at least 100 outgoing links, preferably uncategorized. Make sure that minimum 50% point to pharmacy and gambling websites.Your proposed links page has to be deeply buried in a keyword-rich URL like: http://www.yoursite.com/widgets/cheap-widgets/amazingly-cheap-widgets/widgets-links/Make sure the links page URL contains at least one poison keyword like ‘links’, ‘partners’, ‘directory’, or ‘exchanges’.Alternatively provide a dynamic URL with a minimum of 100 characters of meaningless parameter values.Choose links pages that are in Google’s supplementary index.The PageRank for your page has to be between 0 and 3 with 0 being the best.Make your page look more credible by putting AdSense ads on it. “Well, if Google approves this page, then it is worth having a link from it”.Disguise your low PR links pages by opening them in a high PR frame.Orphan pages are the best.Link to your partners using one of the following options: ‘nofollow’ attributejavascript links302 ‘Found’ redirectsEdit robots.txt to restrict spiders from indexing your links pages.Double protect your links pages from indexing by adding meta ‘noindex,nofollow’ tags.

The above guidelines are compiled from my own experience and the hilarious thread ‘SEO Link Exchange’ from the WebMasterWorld forum.

The list can be continued. Any suggestions?

reddit_url='http://www.seoresearcher.com/guidelines-to-a-perfect-link-exchange-scam.htm'

View the original article here

Guidelines to a Perfect Link Exchange Scam

Reciprocal link exchangeReciprocal link exchange still is an important strategy of link popularity building despite all the measures taken by the search engines to diminish its effect. Back in 1999-2001 obtaining a quality link exchange was not difficult, and webmasters used to respond more willingly to an e-mail request. But as more people became aware of this strategy so the reciprocal linking scam started to be a common practice.

Sometimes I check my old ‘link exchange’ e-mail account I used to build link popularity for my very first website. There are lots of people contacting me daily with exchange proposals. Well, not actually people – they are mostly bots.

Probably one of the reasons I still maintain that e-mail is that those requests are a source of a persistent amusement for me. One example: a request in pink letters with images of dancing puppies and bouncing hearts written by a ‘blond chick’ (picture attached) asking me to link to her pharmacy site! Or maybe I just enjoy reading the admiring comments on the outlook and content of my site that precede every exchange proposal?

Link exchange scam is an interesting theme for a study per se and still awaits its researchers. But in the meanwhile the SEO community is being successful in summarizing the guidelines for the most perfect link exchange scam.

Send an automated e-mail request or use a bot to submit it via an online contact form. Combining the both methods is preferred whenever possible.Use a free e-mail account such as Gmail, or better yet, some foreign free e-mail service to send your message. Sending a duplicate request from your company account is also beneficial.Do send follow up e-mails. Sooner or later your victim will give up and read one of them.Send minimum 100-300 automated requests every day. Push your mail server’s spam detection to the limits.Make sure that the website you are trying to contact is absolutely unrelated to your field.Send your request to every e-mail address you can find on the target site. Let the sales or customer support guys forward them to the webmaster.Address properly. No names required. Best thing is to use the website’s title or at least the URL: “Dear Blue Cheap Online Widgets”, or “Hello www.bluewidgets.com”Kiss ass. Tell your victims how much you adore their websites. Do use superlatives.Inform. Let your recipients know how important PageRank and incoming links are. Go in depth with the mysteries and magnificence of the PageRank and how the high PageRank will ensure them the first positions in Google.Scare. Notify them that their link popularity is low, and their positions in search engines are threatened.Share a secret. Tell them that the three-way linking is more effective, since search engines detect and ignore two-way links.Threaten. Notify them that their link will be removed from your high quality directory if they do not provide a link back in the specified number of days.Show your scale. Make your message easily detectable as a bulk sending by setting a different font size and color for the recipient’s address and site name.Be unofficial. Use the Internet argot in your e-mail. Like ‘u r’ instead of ‘you are’. This is the Internet – formalism is unacceptable.Threaten them again. With hundreds of reminder e-mails.Use a girl’s name. Most webmasters are male and should not resist a lady asking for a favor.Your link page must have at least 100 outgoing links, preferably uncategorized. Make sure that minimum 50% point to pharmacy and gambling websites.Your proposed links page has to be deeply buried in a keyword-rich URL like: http://www.yoursite.com/widgets/cheap-widgets/amazingly-cheap-widgets/widgets-links/Make sure the links page URL contains at least one poison keyword like ‘links’, ‘partners’, ‘directory’, or ‘exchanges’.Alternatively provide a dynamic URL with a minimum of 100 characters of meaningless parameter values.Choose links pages that are in Google’s supplementary index.The PageRank for your page has to be between 0 and 3 with 0 being the best.Make your page look more credible by putting AdSense ads on it. “Well, if Google approves this page, then it is worth having a link from it”.Disguise your low PR links pages by opening them in a high PR frame.Orphan pages are the best.Link to your partners using one of the following options: ‘nofollow’ attributejavascript links302 ‘Found’ redirectsEdit robots.txt to restrict spiders from indexing your links pages.Double protect your links pages from indexing by adding meta ‘noindex,nofollow’ tags.

The above guidelines are compiled from my own experience and the hilarious thread ‘SEO Link Exchange’ from the WebMasterWorld forum.

The list can be continued. Any suggestions?

reddit_url='http://www.seoresearcher.com/guidelines-to-a-perfect-link-exchange-scam.htm'

View the original article here

Emerging SEM Markets: Portugal

Recently I was approached by a colleauge from Portugal who offered me the following article on SEO and online advertising market in his country. I am gladly publishing this report by Nuno Hipólito here.

Portuguese online advertising in 2005According to SEMPO, the Search Engine Marketing Professionals Organization, the investment in SEM in the US will reach $11 billion in 2011.

Let’s face it. When it comes to new technologies and adjusting to new technology, no one can bet the US. It’s a very big market and there is an infrastructure built to progress new ideas and specially investment in new industries.

The “start up” never works that well outside the US, and most of the time it’s not even because of financial matters. Americans think “future”, always, even if when they vote conservatively.

So SEM seemed a logical thing when search engines gained importance in the sales process. People research things online – people will shop more and more online or at least will make decisions based on web research.

But that’s easy.

Let’s talk SEM in emerging markets.

When should one begin to think about SEO and PPC? Does it really pay to advertise online, when most of the country you are targeting does not use the Internet for shopping? Or when parents there are hesitant to discover the online world, because they still look at the tv remote with suspicion?

When you talk about the UK, France or Germany the problem isn’t the same. But let’s consider much smaller and underdeveloped markets: Portugal, Greece, etc…

I can speak about the Portuguese market because our company is Portuguese. We are considering other markets, but for now we have to stay within the confines of Portugal.

When we have a meeting with a potential client, imagine a hotel manager, we try to make him realize the benefits of investing online. He can attract costumers at a very low cost, his website should work 24/7 in that task and he should be proactive in influencing people’s minds when they search for hotels near his.

He immediately looks at us and asks the killer question: “do people search for hotels online?”.

We nod yes with a nervous smile. Sure they do.

Maybe not a lot of them, but some do. We can even tell you roughly how many. And you can think about attracting foreign costumers at a low cost. And we can provide estimates; promise certain results, concrete objectives. Do other marketing campaigns give you that? As a cool side effect, your brand image will get a makeover.

Hum… he looks interested, but unconvinced.

To give you an idea, the online advertising investment in Portugal was a mere 30 million euros in 2005 (23 million dollars). 5 million euros (3.8 million dollars) in PPC ads.

No wonder the hotel manager is reluctant. No one invests in online marketing!

So why should he?

Two words: “Low, Low cost”. Ok, three words. Sure, our market is small, but that means you can have a dominant position with a smaller investment. And if you look forward, the market will grow, and your company will be prepared. If you play your online cards right, you will be a leader.

The risk is very small too. PPC can be done with very low budgets, as low as 1 euro a day (3.8 dollars). Yes, that’s for the entire daily budget, not just a keyword. That’s emergent markets for you…

Low cost = big results. That’s our pitch.

And even if the costs are low, we, as an SEM company will make sure they will get even lower. And that the right keywords are researched, contents created, new costumers attracted.

In 2006 the growth of online adverting in Portugal will be 26%. That’s massive. Above European average.

Did he know that people that research for the keyword “holidays in Lisbon” could be interested in hotels? He didn’t. But they are. We recommend a landing page with info about the city, interesting tourist routes, where to eat, what shows to see…

He likes the idea.

We have experience doing SEO and PPC in the Portuguese market. We even do Spanish PPC. So rest assure – we tell him – we’ll deliver you results, measurable results in a short time and we have a long term plan for your online future.

He finally looks convinced and smiles.

The nervous smile comes off our faces and we shake hands. It’s difficult to get clients for SEM in Portugal, but it will only get easier in the future.

As for all emergent markets, the difficulty local SEM companies go through are not that different. First educate your potential costumer and he will understand your pitch. He should, because you give added value to his business, that’s your role.

At the end of the day, he will have a smile on his face.

Slowly he will gain more costumers online. And when the market is mature, he will think in disbelief how he didn’t see how important online adverting would become.
Nuno Hipólito
SEO consultant.
www.searchmarketing.pt

If you speak Portuguese, check out this site about SEO: http://esquilloseocontest.home.sapo.pt/


View the original article here

Making Money From Your Blog’s RSS Feed

RSS FeedvertisingSome blog for fun, some blog for money, some blog for both. There are numerous options to monetize a blog. AdSense ads, affiliate links, paid reviews, links to your products – you name it. If your blog receives enough visitors you can start making living online. To make the most of your visitors you must keep in mind where do they come from. Those who arrive to your blog from search engine results or directed to you by links from other websites can see your pages fully. But your revenue-generating ads and links are hidden for those who read your RSS feeds. This means that your online money-machine loses click from a substantial portion of your most loyal visitors. Is there a way to make money in RSS feeds? Yes, try ‘feedvertising’

Feedvertising is a technology that enables bloggers to run text ads in their RSS feeds. One service I discovered lately that provides such technology is Text Links Ads. If you have a Wordpress blog you can join the network, which already features such popular blogs as TechCrunch or Problogger. See an example of feedvertising: this is how an affiliate link looks like in Problogger’s RSS:

feedverising screenshot

Feedvertising is very flexible. You can choose your advertisers (your affiliate links, your own products or advertisers suggested by Text Link Ads), provide your own custom prefix to the ad, such as ‘sponsored by’, ‘thanks to our sponsor’ or whatever you like, you can write your own text after the link to express your opinion about the advertised product or service. You can also let Text Links Ads to run paid links not only in your RSS but also across your entire blog.Text Links Ads provides you with a plugin customized to your blog which is easily installed and managed just as any other WordPress plugin. Unfortunately this also means that if you have a Blogger account you are not able to use this service.

Feedvertising is not a contextual ads provider so you can keep running your AdSense ads without violating the TOS. Your payouts depend on the popularity of your blog, which is measured as a combination of Technorati and Alexa rankings, and can be up to $250 per month per link for the top publishers or $40-70 for moderately popular blogs.

For more information on creating an account in Feedvertising as well as the instruction on setting up the plugin please refer to the excellent video by TubeTutorial.

Check this out: .


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Avoiding Keyword Stuffing Ban

When deciding upon keyword placement we all try to get the most out of our target keywords saturation. In the same time no one wants to get penalized by accidentally inserting too many keywords in the page copy, or by including too many words between H1 tags. Since search engines would never publish the exact numbers for maximally alowed keyword frequency or keyword prominence, all we can do is just study top pages in SEPRs and make more or less informed guesses. Or we can conduct an experiment, and calculate the average numbers for top pages in the results of the major search engines: Google, Yahoo! and MSN. For the tables below I used data provided by WebPosition software, which calculates the average scores of the top 5 positions for dozens of keyword searches conducted by WebTrends Inc.

Of course aligning your parameters to the top averages will not guarantee you the high rankings, but it can ensure that your keyword saturation stays within the allowed boundaries.

Partial matching enabled, Non-Exact Search, Non-Case Sensitive

.

MSN Averages: Partial matching disabled, Non-Exact Search, Non-Case Sensitive.

.

Partial matching disabled, Non-Exact Search, Non-Case Sensitive.

Head – words between HEAD tags, this includes TITLE

Body – words between BODY tags including:

Headings – words in H1, H2 and H3 tagsLink Text – anchor text of outgoing linksHyperlink URL – words in URL of the outgoing linksBody Text – words in your page copy , excluding the content of ALT and COMMENT tags

When defining keyword/key-phrase frequency we distinguish between exact, non-exact and partial matching. Exact matching means looking for the exact matches of a key-phrase. Exact matching is possible when user performs a search with quotation marks around the search terms. For example if the content of an H1 tag is “Bahamian Paradise. Bahamas Islands: All inclusive Atlantis Bahamas Deals” then the frequency of “Atlantis Bahamas” by exact match is 1 (one occurence). By non-exact matching the frequency for the same phrase is 1.5: 1 for one occurrence of ‘Atlantis’, plus 2 for two occurrences of ‘Bahamas’ divided by 2 – the number of words in the search phrase. Partial matching or keyword stemming also considers keyword modifications as matches. In this case the frequency for “Atlantis Bahamas” will be 2 – word ‘Bahamian’ is considered as a match to ‘Bahamas’.

This is simply the total number of words in the analyzed area. Be careful not to put too many words between H1 or H2 tags, or in link text, since it might be considered as spam.

This parameter determines the degree to which a specific keyword or phrase dominates in any given area. This parameter is calculated by multiplying number of words in the key-phrase by its frequency and dividing it by the total number of words in the area.

This parameter shows how close are your keyword or phrase to the start of the area. Most of the search algorithms assign more weight to more prominent keywords, and therefore it is beneficial to have your targeted keywords in the top of the page or in the beginning of the page copy. However in order to avoid spam penalties the keyword distribution must be as natural as possible, and you might find it necessary to put a keyword in the middle or at the end of your page. Prominence calculation is:

If a keyword appears at the beginning of an area, its prominence will be 100%.If a keyword appears in the middle of an area, its prominence will be around 50%.If the keyword appears at the beginning of the area, then another repetition appears at the end of the area, the prominence would be 50%.If the keyword appears at the end of the area, prominence would be 0%.If the area consists of multiple parts (like having 3 heading tags on the page) then all three areas are treated as a single contiguous area when prominence is calculated.reddit_url='http://www.seoresearcher.com/average-keyword-saturation-google-msn-yahoo.htm'

View the original article here

How to Make a WordPress Blog Duplicate Content Safe

Supplementary indexIn one of my recent posts I wrote about the duplicate content issue. This topic is especially important to me since my blog uses the WordPress content management system which, when used with the default configuration, is not duplicate content proof. In fact this CMS is capable to render almost 100% of your content duplicate. As usual the fault of the system has roots in its advantages. WordPress has many features facilitating blogging and linking, such as RSS feeds to posts and comments, trackback URLs, monthly archives and so on. In the same time this variety of URLs returning similar or identical pages represents a clear case of duplicate content.

The first evidences of duplicate content produced by your WordPress CMS can be found in your sidebar. They are category pages and monthly/daily archives. Category pages store your articles posted under the same topic – a category. Such pages have no unique content; they are just a collection of your previous posts. Monthly and daily archives also simply group your previous articles by the date of posting. Sometimes when you have only one post in a given day, the archive page for the date and your post are totally identical.

The next case of duplicate content is even more prominent. It can be your home page itself. If it contains not excerpts but the full text of your posts, then it duplicates your post pages. This also applies to the ‘next/previous entries’ pages – those accessible via /page/2, /3, /4 etc.

Feeds. Search engine spiders crawl all the content they can reach and of course this includes RSS feeds too. The additional problem with them is that Google may choose to display your RSS URL in the search results over the link to the original post. In this case the user who clicks this result will see an XML formatted page which is not ‘human-friendly’.

Trackback URLs. Many WordPress templates add trackback links after posts. This links enable authors to track who links to their posts. Usually, if your post URL looks like ‘www.yoursite.com/2006-11-30/yourpost/’ its trackback URL will be ‘www.yoursite.com/2006-11-30/yourpost/trackback/’.

Identical meta-description. By default WordPress doesn’t provide a tool to add unique meta description tags to your posts, and they either have none or share a single site-wide description. Having no meta description at all is a disadvantage, as a properly written one can make your snippet stand out in a SERP. Having an identical description for all your pages is a threat, as Google might get them filtered out as too similar. (see a thread here)

Because of the duplicate content Google search can return less desired URLs (such as feeds or archives instead of original posts); your pages can be moved out of their index, or placed into the supplemental results, which are rarely displayed to users.

What can you do to avoid this problem? You can tell the search engines what URL to index by using ‘noindex, follow’ meta tag, robots.txt exclusions or 301 redirects. Let’s say you want Google to index your front page, posts, single pages and category pages and forbid the spiders from crawling the content of archives, feeds and ‘next entries’ pages – page/2, /3, … To do this you have to add to your header.php the following code:

if((is_home() && ($paged < 2 )) || is_single() || is_page() || is_category()){echo '';} else {echo '';}

For those not familiar with editing templates in WordPress: in your dashboard click Presentation menu item and after the new page is opened – click Theme Editor. In the Theme Editor choose ‘header.php’ and then paste the above code into the editor form. This code has to be inserted anywhere between head tags .

Here the tag is added to the home page but not the ‘next entries’ page (is_home() and ($paged<2)), to your posts (is_single()); to solo pages, like ‘About me’, if you created any (is_page()); and to category pages (is_category()). If you don’t want your categories to be indexed just delete || is_category(). All the other pages will get . They will not be indexed, but this will not prevent crawlers from following their outgoing links.

For this purpose I use Head Meta Description plugin. This plugin can be configured to use an excerpt of your post as a meta description – this is especially useful if you have to add this tag to hundreds of existing pages. Or you can add your own manually as a custom field, which is my personal preference.

By using this tag you tell WordPress to display only the first few lines of your post. This greatly reduces the similarity of home page and your articles. If you have too many existing posts to edit, you can use an ‘excerpt’ plugin, such as this one from Semiologic

You should edit your .htaccess file to perform 301 redirects. Non-www addresses like yoursite.com should be redirected to www.yoursite.com. URL without trailing slashes like www.yoursite.com/category should be rewritten to include it: www.yoursite.com/category/ This can be done by inserting the following code into your .htaccess file:


RewriteEngine On
RewriteCond %{HTTP_HOST} !^www\.yoursite\.com$ [NC]
RewriteRule ^(.*)$ http://www.yoursite.com/$1 [R,L]
RewriteBase /
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-f
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-d
RewriteRule . /index.php [L]

For more details I advise you to read this: the process or rewriting the URL layout.

For this purpose you should edit your robots.txt file by inserting the following code

User-agent: *
Disallow: /wp-
Disallow: /search
Disallow: /feed
Disallow: /comments/feed
Disallow: /feed/$
Disallow: /*/feed/$
Disallow: /*/feed/rss/$
Disallow: /*/trackback/$
Disallow: /*/*/feed/$
Disallow: /*/*/feed/rss/$
Disallow: /*/*/trackback/$
Disallow: /*/*/*/feed/$
Disallow: /*/*/*/feed/rss/$
Disallow: /*/*/*/trackback/$

Some people find it useful to restrict the number of posts displayed in your home page to 4-5, as less posts are duplicated.

A great article on customizing the more tag in Wordpress.

To avoid the duplicate content issue in WordPress include you should do:Add ‘noindex, follow’ meta tag to your monthly/weekly/daily archives, ‘next entries’, and if necessary, category pagesEnsure that all your pages have unique meta-description tagsSet up 301 redirects for your non-www URL and URLs without trailing slashesRestrict search engine crawlers from indexing your feeds and trackbacksUse more tag to show excerpts in your home page instead of full postsRestrict the number of posts displayed in your home pagereddit_url='http://www.seoresearcher.com/how-to-make-your-wordpress-blog-duplicate-content-safe.htm'

View the original article here