What is Contextual Advertising?

November 22, 2009 by IBI · Leave a Comment 

We all know the importance of Internet as a media of Advertising. Now day’s internet is popular way for advertising. There are lots of ways of advertising your products but contextual advertising is very famous these days.

Gone are the days when advertisers randomly placed banner ads on related Web sites in hopes of finding and attracting consumers. Contextual advertising on a website targets to that individual who is using or viewing the website.

Contextual advertising ad system scans the web page for the keywords and tries to return ads to web page relevant to what viewer is watching on web page. There are normally three types of contextual advertising, first one is pop-up or pop-under ads, second one is in-text contextual advertising and third one is in-line contextual advertising. Pop-up ads are very familiar to everyone because they have been near by of everyone for quite sometime. In this advertising a window with relevant ad for some products opens when a user reads a web page.

Second one is in-text contextual advertising; ads appear relevant to web page content which used by user. This type of contextual advertising is very famous and gives good results.

Third one is in-line contextual advertising, they are ads that appear as special hyperlinks linking to actual contextual ads and are found throughout the entire article being read.

Contextual advertising benefits both Advertisers and publishers. For advertisers contextual advertising ensures highly targeted visitors at a very low price. While for publishers who have good PR sites could earn high revenue by publishing ads on their sites. Now you have to decide where you should go to join contextual advertising program to bring highly targeted traffic as well as to earn good amount of revenue. Because there are many companies in this field and which one is right one. So I would like to suggest a name for you this is http://www.xapads.com

Programs run by http://www.xapads.com are:

Advertisers: http://xapads.com/advertiser.html strives to provide quality visitors to your website to guarantee that your advertising budget is spent to its full value. We displays your ads at highly contextually targeted websites (that meets the content of your website) that guarantees that the visitors coming to your website after clicking are really the one’s who will make the sales.

Publishers: At http://xapads.com/publisher.html we have numerous campaigns running in for the publishers, the campaigns are CPC (Cost per Click), CPM (Cost Per Metrics) and CPA (Cost per Action) based, ensuring something for every publisher. Only Relevant ads will be published/displayed on your website which guarantees the highest CTR (Click through Rate).

To know more about contextual advertising visit Contextual Advertising Solution

Sachin aggarwal offering ideas about contextual advertising with the help of http://www.xapads.com

Why Do Web Publishers Suffer Because of Google Adsense

November 22, 2009 by IBI · Leave a Comment 

For three years tens of thousands of webmasters have been making incomes ranging from a few dollars a month to five figure sums per month with Google’s contextual advertising program   AdSense. Indeed many Internet Gurus have made substantial profits by telling people how to monetise their website traffic by putting  AdSense on it. AdSense revenues are shared between Google and the  AdSense Publisher   the website owner up to now a nice cosy and profitable arrangement. In the past there was one price for Adword keywords, whether they appeared in Google Search results or as  AdSense Ads on individual  AdSense Publishers websites that was fine as an  AdSense Publisher might get, say $4 from a click for a $6 Adword remember nobody knows exactly because Google will not tell!Google has always been cautious about revealing the ratio of payout to the publishers for  AdSense clicks compared to the amount that the advertiser pays for the Adwords   but the feeling among  AdSense Publishers is that the percentage has been dropping steadily over the past three years if you are a number cruncher, you may try to interpret the financial data from Google itself here.In the past there was one price for Adword keywords, whether they appeared in Google Search results or as  AdSense Ads on individual  AdSense Publishers websites that was fine as an  AdSense Publisher might get, say $4 from a click for a $6 Adword remember nobody knows exactly because Google will not tell! Individual websites that publish  AdSense are known as Google’s content network. Google has always been cautious about revealing the ratio of payout to the publishers for  AdSense clicks compared to the amount that the advertiser pays for the Adwords   but the feeling among  AdSense Publishers is that the percentage has been dropping steadily over the past three years if you are a number cruncher, you may try to interpret the financial data from Google itself here.On 22 November 2005 Google made a change to their Adwords advertising program – they allowed advertisers to bid different amounts for the Ads that would appear in Google Search results and for the Ads that would appear on individual  AdSense Publishers websites. So an advertiser might bid $5 for a click from Google and 5 cent for a click from an  AdSense Publisher in the content network   Ouch if you happen to be that  AdSense Publisher! Is it the end of the road for  AdSense Publishers? Is there life after  AdSense? What can  AdSense Publishers do to make up for the drop in revenues? On 22 November 2005 Google made a change to their Adwords advertising program – they allowed advertisers to bid different amounts for the Ads that would appear in Google Search results and for the Ads that would appear on individual  AdSense Publishers websites. So an advertiser might bid $5 for a click from Google and 5 cent for a click from an  AdSense Publisher in the content network   Ouch if you happen to be that  AdSense Publisher!Is it possible to make much more from your website than you were making with  AdSense maybe this was a blessing in disguise!

For more useful tips & hints, please browse for more information at our website:-
http://www.yourAdSenseprofits.com
http://www. AdSense.reprintarticlesite.com

The Five Different Levels of the Adsense Publisher Spectrum

November 20, 2009 by IBI · 1 Comment 

The Google Adsense program pays out hundreds of millions of dollars to its publishers every single month, and there is a very wide and differing variety of all the webmasters and bloggers that currently make use of this contextual advertising system. Each of the publishers follows different rules and methods when it comes to using Adsense, and the members of each group all earn a different amount of money.
I have been a participant in the Adsense program for a few years now, and a significant chunk of my monthly income comes from this program. I have talked with dozens of different webmasters and publishers and seen thousands of different Adsense sites, and from my own experience I have found that there are really five different levels that Adsense publishers fall on. I will describe each of these levels, and if you yourself are an Adsense publisher then it may be fun to find out where you fall on the spectrum.
First Level of the Adsense Spectrum: Monetizers
The first group is what I call the ‘monetizers.’ These are the guys that really do not know too much about web design or search engine optimization, they would never imagine worrying about keywords or ad relevancy, and for them just finding that they can copy this super-fabulous amazingly cool javascript code to their website that will actually *earn them money* (!) is just the neatest gosh darn thing they have ever seen. There are a great deal of publishers that fall into this category, and rarely do they ever earn over $150 per month. These are usually the non-profit websites or the mom-and-pop type sites, and they will usually use their Adsense revenue to pay for their hosting costs.
Not to over-generalize, but older people that have trouble using Windows make up alot of this category. I find that some of these types of people remind me alot of my mother: very kindhearted with good intentions but they type at 10 WPM and they do not have a clue about computers. And they are happier than a kid on Christmas when they log into their Adsense account and see a whopping $0.23 for their daily earnings.
Second Level of the Adsense Spectrum: Wannabes
The second group is the ‘adsense wannabes.’ I actually feel a bit sorry for this group because they usually end of failing miserably at being an Adsense publisher (that is if they can ever get accepted into the program!) and they accomplish nothing except lowering their already low self-esteem. I can deeply empathize with this group of folks because this is actually where I started out. They approach the Adsense program with a type of ‘get rich quick’ mentality, sometimes due to the exaggerations of an ebook writer and sometimes because once they begin to learn about the Adsense program their brain has trouble accepting the fact that this is an actual business.
I mean come on, a business is where you work 60 hours per week to make somebody else rich, right? There is no way that you could build up a high 4-figure monthly income from this crazy Adsense thing, is there? Well I hope you know better, and this is the level of thought that these people are stuck at. These are the opportunity seekers, the people that will sign up for a new network marketing ‘business opportunity’ once per quarter and then whore themselves out to their family and friends because they have failed at everything else and are always jumping back and forth so that they never succeed at anything.
But I do not want to be overly critical, because like I said this is the level at which I started out. These are the people who have been convinced that this is the next big thing and that once they set up a single website they will make enough money to retire. Most of these types will fail to generate any real income and will move on to the next ‘big thing.’ But those who do start off at this level and stay at it long enough will move up to the third level.
Third Level of the Adsense Spectrum: Noobs
Statistically speaking, if you are reading this then there is a chance that you are an Adsense Noob (short for newbie). It is by far the largest category of Adsense publishers. This is not something to feel bad about, and in fact I consider it to be something to be proud of because you have demonstrated your devotion to learning this new business and actually making a decent residual income with it. If you were not devoted then you would still be at the penniless level of the wannabe, so take heed noob for you are on the path to success.
I define an Adsense Noob as someone who makes less then $300 dollars per month. They are probably pretty intelligent people and are very web-savvy, and they probably read tons of material and ebooks related to Adsense and internet marketing, but they simply cannot seem to get past this invisible threshold that is keeping them from higher profits.
I was stuck at this level for longer then I care to remember, and if you are at this level then please allow me to offer some humble advice that may allow you to advance to either level 4 or 5 depending on your personal preference. If you are really trying hard to make your Adsense earnings high enough to live off of and make a big change in your life (maybe quitting your job) and you are frustrated because you simply cannot figure out what you can possibly do to earn more money, then please for the love of all things good and sacred in this world pick a single website and stick with it!! This was my biggest mistake that kept me at the level of a noob for far too long, because I would pick a new topic and make a new website, and then a few weeks later I would do the same thing to the point that it felt like I was running in place.
If you are like me, sticking with a single website or blog as opposed to trying to build up many different ones simultaneously will be a real turning point for you. Think of it like this: when you go out of your way to focus all your attention like a laser on one single project, you will be building this one website up to a 5 instead of building 5 websites up to a 1. Not only that, but you are literally building up an asset because if your website was making you $2,000 per month on a fairly reliable basis, there is a good chance that you could sell it for 8-14 months of revenue.
Another factor that goes into graduating from the noob level is having all of the information you have been reading about Adsense, traffic generation and internet marketing to sink in on a subconscious level. This can take a while, because you need to read or hear something at least seven times before it will really sink in. But once you keep reading and absorbing information for a long time then it will eventually become habit and you will find that you are able to build highly optimized pages intuitively, and it is at this point that you should be able to move on to level 4 or 5 if you wish.
Fourth Level of the Adsense Spectrum: Empire Builders
Empire builders are the people that approach being an Adsense publisher from the perspective of building a business. They do not mess around, and they spend a decent portion of their mental energy focusing on the cold, hard numbers. The empire builder has many websites, and he/she focuses on things such as finding profitable keywords, improving CTR, discovering which websites topics tend to be the most profitable, testing page configurations and traffic generation methods, and so on. If this does not sound like fun to you, it certainly isn’t, and that is what separates the empire builder from the noob.
But just because focusing on improving CTR and split testing page layouts is not exactly fun does not mean that it is hard, and the potential payoff can seriously be worth the inconvenience of taking the time to do it right. There is an important paradigm shift that needs to take place in your awareness if you want to be a successful empire builder: you must realize that your profession is literally to connect advertisers with people who are interested in what they are promoting.
By creating content sites around a certain topic, you are drawing in people who are interested in that topic, and then you are ‘giving’ those visitors away to other websites that may not be as good at marketing as you are. The main thing to be aware of here is that even though you are building up a base of website visitors with the intention of having them leave your website by clicking on relevant ads, they will be leaving some money in your virtual tip jar as they go! If you are an empire builder, it is important that you do not get too attached to your websites and spend most of your attention focusing on how you can connect your visitors with relevant advertisers.
Fifth Level of the Adsense Spectrum: Adsense Whores
By my choice of words you may think this is a bad thing, but it’s not and it can potentially be extremely profitable to be an Adsense whore. The business model of the Adsense whore is to have one single website and have ads appearing on potentially millions of pages on the site. The key distinction here is that most of the time the single website that this person focuses on will be a community site or a networking site, and there will be thousands of members that effectively create unique content each and every day. And with all of the unique pages that your member base is creating, you can place your code on nearly every singe one of them.
A forum or a social networking website are great examples of websites that can make a killing using this type of business model. Many sites that are powered by user-generated content will employ an ad rotating script so that their adsense ads are rotated continually with other types of visual ads, so that the visitors do not become ‘banner blind’ and ignore the ads completely.
When you have a popular website and a member base numbering in the thousands or the tens of thousands, a 6-figure monthly income is not out of the question when you are able to monetize the vast number of pages that are being perpetually created. This level is out of reach for most people because it usually requires an extensive knowledge of web application programming and you will usually have to hire skilled programmers to work on the back end of the site and make sure that it is secure. This can be costly, and there is a chance that you will also need to hire people to moderate the content that users are creating. It is a full-on business, and it pays accordingly.
As you can see, Adsense publishers come in all types and sizes, and I hope this has been an enlightening aside on your journey towards higher profits.

http://www.GoogleAdsenseDecoded.com

Learn profitable Adsense tips and how you can boost your earnings up to the 5-figures per month level at the http://www.GoogleAdsenseDecoded.com site.

See the Adsense Decoded step-by-step video tutorials to learn how to maximize your earnings, improve CTR, and prevent the smartpricing penalty.

Contextual Advertising Network – Xapads Contextual Advertising Network Offering Contextual Advertising Solution

November 19, 2009 by IBI · Leave a Comment 

Choosing the Right contextual advertising network or contextual advertising company is such a task which is never easy. There are plenty of contextual advertising networks but it’s very hard to select one which meets to anyone advertising requirements. Every advertiser looks for a contextual advertising network who knows what a advertiser need? How a advertiser could get targeted traffic? How a advertiser could get maximum revenue? How a advertiser could explore his/her business in particular country? A advertising network with good customer support at 24×7 Hrs. A advertising Network with latest and advanced softwares.

 

I know that it’s very tough to get such a kind advertising network but you have to give chance to anyone atleast. So why you not try XapAds? Because XapAds never do promise, it works and shows result. XapAds is a best contextual advertising in the market but we never say these words. These are the words of our Happy and Cheering Advertisers those know what we do and how we do? XapAds has brought smiles on many advertisers those were very upset from their business sales and profit but now everything has changed for them. Now every of our Advertiser earning more from their business and exploring it more and more.

 

I know you want to know how XapAds does it? So this is my duty to give some idea how Xapads works? Actually many contextual advertising networks don’t know the meaning of Contextual Advertising but XapAds knows it very well and always try to Publish your ads on sites those are highly relevant to your sites’s content, products and services. Xapads is a contextual advertising network with numerous advertising campaigns including Contextual text Ads, Contextual Banner Ads, Contextual Pop Ads, Contextual Pop Under Ads, Contextual PPC Advertising, contextual keyword advertising and Contextual Video Advertising.

 

 

XapAds has Best Advertising Software, Best Advertising Management, Best Advertising Strategies and Best Advertising Resources to fulfill your Advertising requirements and to generate leads in any condition for you. And main thing everyone could join XapAds as Advertiser whatever he/she is a business tycoon, small business man, showroom or shop owner or any small company. Because your advertising cost with XapAds almost negligible as compared to other Advertising Networks.

 

In the advertising industry might be XapAds is a new name but we are getting popularity day be day. Around 250 new Publishers join XapAds everyday which makes you ensure that your Ads would get maximum exposure and would display on sites those are highly relevant to your sites’s content, products and services. By this you get surety that you get maximum sales and earn much profit than earlier.

 

Still you are thinking then visit our site to wash out all of your doubts about XapAds at: http://www.XAPADS.com

 

 

 

sachin aggarwal offering ideas about Contextual advertising with the help of http://www.xapads.com

How to Make Easy Money Online Through Advertising Programs?

November 12, 2009 by IBI · Leave a Comment 

Making money online isn’t too much difficult, but many people who are new to making money online put their efforts in the wrong direction initially, end up failing, and then eventually quit. In this article, I’m going to discuss some easy ways to make money on the Internet. There are some really easy ways to make money online, but there are also a lot of scams.

One of the easiest ways to make money online is to create a blog. A blog is easy to set up and you don’t require any technical skills. There are many online tutorials on how to start a blog. The best blogging platform right now is wordpress. Once you begin publishing content to your blog, you can monetize it through lots of advertising services. I have listed out some of the best advertising programs that will help you to make money online.

Firstly I would like to discuss about Google AdSense in brief. It is a contextual advertising program for which publishers simply have to add a piece of code to their websites that helps Google analyze what your page is about so they can serve Ads on that topic. You can also earn money by using Google Search on your site that will display relevant Ads when visitors search on your site. It also has a referral program that allows you to earn by recommending various products like Firefox toolbar, AdSense, Adwords, etc.

Yahoo Publisher Network (YPN) also displays ads that are relevant to the content of your site. They are also CPC similar to AdSense.

Text Link Ads are also useful in making money online. By this you can sell simple text links on your site easily. The monthly link price will depend on factors like your Google Pagerank and Alexa rank.

Chitika eMiniMalls is a cost per click advertising program that is more suitable for product related sites.

BlogAds is also an easy money making program for blog sites. It lets you set the price and helps you find advertisers for your blog easily. For better performance with BlogAds, place it at a more prominent position on your blog.

Another popular program that offers you to money online is ReviewMe. It pays you to review products and services on your site. Here you control what you review.

In Pay Per Post program you have to write about web sites, products, services, and companies and earn cash for providing your opinion and valuable feedback to advertisers.

There are so many ways to earn money on the Internet that it is very difficult to list all of them. So if you are looking for the ways to make money online, then you need to do some searching. Hopefully this article has provided you with some easy ways to make money with a business on the Internet.

To keep yourself in touch with latest India IT and Internet news, visit http://www.webindiabuzz.com – One of the popular and newly growing site on latest news and views on online companies, new ventures, and technologies. Also checkout the Latest Sports News

Information On Blogging – Can You Earn Money From A Blog?

November 2, 2009 by IBI · Leave a Comment 

Blogging is very popular these days for a lot of different reasons. It’s fun to be able to write about something, or share information with people from all over the world. A blog on a topic that has a large number of interested readers has the potential to generate some extra income for you (If you know how to monetize these visitors). A very popular method for generating some money from your blog is to use Google Adsense.


Use Adsense Ads On Your Blog

One of the most popular methods for making some extra income from your blog is to put “adsense” on it. Adsense is Google’s contextual advertising system, which allows you to position ads on your blog which are relevant to the content of your blog. When a visitor to your blog clicks on one of these adsense ads you get a portion of the income generated.

The amount you receive will depend on the keywords that you use on your blog, which Google uses to ensure that the adsense ad matches the blog’s content.

You first need to sign up for an adsense account ,which is free. Enter “set up an adsense account” into your favourite search engine, and follow the simple instructions for creating an account. It is a good idea to have your blog already up and running, with some good content in place, before signing up to Google’s adsense program.


Blend Them In

Once you have signed up, you will recieve your adsense account. This account will allow you to login, and you can then generate an adsense ad. When you generate the adsense ad, you choose the ad format (i.e. whether the ad will be a ‘header’ at the top of your blog, or a ‘footer’ at the bottom, or a ’side-bar’ at the edge of your blog). Next you have to choose how your ad will look. Your adsense account gives you a lot of options for choosing the colour of the text, the background colour etc.

Once you have decided on the format of your ad, you then save this, and Google will give you an adsense block of html code that you then add to your blog.

It is highly recommended to try and match the text and colours you select in the adsense ad, to blend in with the ‘look and feel’ of your blog. The reason for this is you don’t want your adsense ads on your blog to look like ads – if you spend some time choosing the colour and format of your adsense blocks you should be able to blend them into your blog, making them look less like ads, and increasing the likelihood of your readers clicking on them.


Adsense And Blogger

The method that you use for adding the adsense ads to your blog will depend on the type of blog you have:

If you are using Blogger for your blog, then adding the adsense blocks to your blog is super simple.

You just login to your blogger account, and click on the ‘add a page element’ link, where you want your adsense ad to be located. Next a window will be displayed ‘choose a new page element’ – you simply select the ‘Adsense’ option and then click on the ‘add to blog’ button. You then choose the size and formatting for your adsense ad, and click on ’save changes’.

You should now see a adsense page element on your blog. There is a limit to the type and number of adsense ads you can add to a blog (make sure you read the Adsense terms of service, to ensure that you do not exceed this limit)


Adsense And Wordpress

If you are using Wordpress for your blog, then there are a number of different ways to add the adsense code. You can download a free adsense plugin, that allows you to add the adsense ad to your blog.

Alternatively, just use this simple method:

Log into your Google adsense account and generate the adsense ad (ensure you match the ad text and colours, so it will blend in with your blog). After you have done this your adsense account will generate the html code for the ad (which you will need to insert into your Wordpress blog).

To add this code to your Wordpress blog:

  • Login to your Wordpress blog as administrator.
  • Click on appearance.
  • Select Widgets.
  • Select the sidebar, header or footer where you would like the adsense ad to appear.
  • Click add text widget.
  • Click on edit widget.
  • Enter a caption (something of your own choice).
  • Paste your google adsense code (that you generated in your google adsense account) into the text area.
  • Click done, and save changes.

You should now be able to see ads from Google appearing in the adsense block where you added the code (i.e. the header, footer or sidebar)


Wait For Acceptance

Although adsense ads will start appearing on your blog, these will initially be public service ads that do not pay any revenue when clicked. You have to wait for your Google adsense application to be approved before Google will start serving up contextual ads in the adsense blocks on your blog, which will generate revenue for you when clicked on. This is why it is important to have set up your blog and have some good content in place before applying for a Google adsense account.

This is an excerpt from the Free Information On Blogging E-course. If you are serious about making money using blogging and would like more information on blogging visit http://www.internetninetofive.com/information-on-blogging

SEO Glossary

October 26, 2009 by IBI · Leave a Comment 

Absolute Link: a link that displays the full path of a website URL that is linked to.
Adsense: Google’s contextual advertising network.
Adwords: Google’s advertisement and link auction network.
Alt Attribute: the description text that is associated with an image.
Analytics: the statistics and metrics used to measure and analyze a website performance.
Anchor Text: the text that is clicked on to activate and follow a hyperlink to another web page.
Backlink: a link to a website.
Black Hat: a term used to describe any SEO techniques utilized to manipulate the search engines.
Blog: short for web log, a blog is a website that is typically used as a publicly accessible personal journal for an individual.
Click Through Rate (CTR): the number of clicks on a link, as a percentage of the number of views of the link.  (( # of clicks / # of views ) x 100)
Cloaking: a black-hat SEO technique that manipulates search engines by displaying specific content served up to the search engine spider that is different then what the normal surfer sees.
Conversion Rate: metric to evaluate the effectiveness of a conversion effort – the number of visitors who took the desired action divided by the total number of visitors in a given time period.
Cost Per Click (CPC): the amount an advertiser pays an ad host each time a visitor clicks on the advertiser’s link. (see Pay Per Click)
Cost Per Thousand (CPM): the cost per thousand people viewing an ad or listing.
Crawl: the action of search engines traversing through the Internet while updating their database of websites.
Delisting: the removal of a web page from a search engine’s results.
Description Meta Tag: a meta tag describing the content of the web page.
Directory: a search site whose index is compiled by human editors.
Domain Name Server (DNS): a computer that translates human-friendly URLs (words) into computer-friendly IP addresses.
External Link: a link from another website that links to yours.
Google: the most used search engine in the world today, also known as the Big G.
HTML: Hypertext Markup Language is the set of markup symbols inserted into a file intended for display on a World Wide Web browser page.
Index: a search engine’s database, consisting of all the web pages it has crawled and recorded.
Internal Link: a link that exists and links to other web pages within your website.
Keyword: the word(s) or phrase(s) a person types into a search box.
Keyword Density: a formula to determine the frequency a keyword is displayed on a web page. The formula is the total number of words in al keyword mentions divided by the total number of words on a page. Keywords should fall between 2 and 8 % density. (see keyword stuffing)
Keyword Meta Tag: a meta tag listing the main keywords and keyphrases that are contained on that web page.
Keyword Stuffing: a blackhat technique to manipulate search engines by overly displaying a keyword or keyphrase, unnecessarily.
Landing Page: the destination page a visitor arrives when clicking on a link.
Link Bait: a technique to acquire external links generated by creating a useful piece of content material that is worthy of linking back to your site.
Link Spamming: a black hat technique used to generate and acquire bogus external links to manipulate search engine rankings.
Long Tail: a term given for a group of keywords that is more targeted (example: dogs vs. brown male shih tzus)
M?Meta Tag: are html elements used to provide structured metadata about a web page.
One Way Link: an external link that does not require your website to link back to that site.
Outbound Link: a link from your website to an external website.
On-Page: relates to SEO factors that are internal to a web-page’s source code.
Off-Page: relates to SEO factors that are external to a web-page’s source code.
Organic Traffic: traffic generated as a result of being indexed within a search engine (vs. paid traffic).
PageRank: Google’s indicator of a particular page’s value.
Paid Traffic: traffic generated as a result of using paid advertisements (vs. organic traffic).
Pay Per Click (PPC): the amount an advertiser pays an ad host each time a visitor clicks on the advertiser’s link. (see Cost Per Click)
Rank: the position of a web page within a search engine.
Reciprocal Link: a link from a website that links back to your site, in exchange for linking to that website.
Robots File: A text file placed in a site’s root directory that instructs search engine spiders to ignore certain pages or directories. Some spiders respect these instructions, others disregard them.
Sandbox: a theory that refers to a time probationary period that a website must go through.
Search Engine: A site or software that allows Internet users to search a database of web pages, documents and other information on the web. The most popular search engines are Google, Yahoo, and Bing.
SEO: Search Engine Optimization – the planning and adjusting of the content of a web page in order to improve its position in natural, organic search results, including modifications to code and displayed content.
SEM: Search Engine Marketing – any marketing activity involving a search site, including advertising on search result pages, paying for placement.
SERP: Search Engine Result Page, the page that display the results of a search.
Sitemap: a file created in XML format that helps search engine spiders distinguish the structure of your website and instructs them how often to crawl certain pages on your website (not to be confused with an HTML sitemap).
SMO: Social Media Optimization
Spider: a piece of code (packet) that is sent out from a search engine to crawl the web to build and edit its search engine database.
URI: uniform resource indicator – refers to a link that is one deeper than the website’s home/index page. (example: http://www.seomomo.com/seo.html)
URL: universal resource locator – a general term referring to a website link.
White Hat: a term used to describe SEO techniques that adheres to proper and acceptable on-page and off-page optimization.

SEO MoMo, led by a SEO Consultant, helps businesses of all sizes with their SEO and SEM needs.

5 Top Blogging Tips for Freelancers

October 25, 2009 by IBI · Leave a Comment 

If you’re a freelancer who’s looking to get your business started, or a freelancer looking for more business, then blogging might just be for you.


Although blogging may not help you see business immediately, it can help you fill the gap in your income because while you’re promoting your business, you can also promote affiliate programs, as well as sell advertising. It’s also an easy way to make money with Google Adsense or some other contextual advertising. Just make sure your competitors aren’t showing up on your blog.


By offering other resources related to your your business, it gives you a more extensive product line, as well as more solutions you can offer your readers. You don’t want to be all things to all people; this will prevent you from targeting your market. However, you do want to offer as many solutions as possible for your readers so that you can better meet their specific needs.


Now, your first step in getting started blogging and earning extra money is that you want to select your blog platform. There are a wide variety of blog platforms available to you. When choosing your platform compare the features of the different blog platforms to see which suits your needs best.


Here are five tips for helping you get your message across, connect with your readers, and sell more of your services:


1. Check your presentation. Presentation is as much about how your blog looks as what it says. You want to make your blog as easy to read as possible. Although one background might look pretty cool, remember that you’re basically offering a business blog. Black type on a white background is easiest to read. This doesn’t mean that you can’t make your overall background something else. Just make the format easy to read.


2. Pay attention to your navigation. Make it clear, and make it consistent throughout your blog. You also want to make it easier for your readers to find what they’re looking for. Although it may seem boring to have the same menu throughout, it is easier for your readers to find what they want.


3. Check your links. This is related to the last tip, except that it deals with content. When adding links to your menu, make sure that the links you add are complementary, especially if you are linking to other blogs.


4. Create interesting content. The choices you have in creating content are almost limitless. As a freelancer, you should be an expert on your topic but honest enough to admit you don’t know everything. Include videos you’ve found, interesting news stories related to your industry, comment on other blogs, as well as writing your own articles and blog posts.


5. Proofread your entries. Let’s face it. We all make mistakes. You won’t get every post right every time. If you’re a freelancer though, especially a writer, you won’t establish much credibility if you can’t even handle the basics, like spelling and grammar.


Blogs are a great way for freelancers to get more business. You can do that by considering your reader. Make yourself different and offer your readers a reason to come back. You won’t have any trouble finding new customers.

Want more tips on how to make more money from your writing? Then check out Marketing for Writers and get your free course to help you earn more money from your writing Need more traffic to your blog? Then read Massive Blog Traffic.

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