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Browsing Posts tagged link-building

A couple of weeks ago, I wrote about link building and the importance of your Deep Link Ratio. That post explained that backlinks built to your site – including your deep link ratio, the anchor text used in the links, and the speed at which those links are acquired – should always appear “natural” to the search engines. Taking this one step further, the “natural approach” should apply to your entire link profile (incoming and outgoing).

So, what does this mean to your inbound link building efforts?

First, a healthy mix is necessary. And not every link needs to be perfectly optimized. Although this might seem contrary to what you have learned about SEO practices, even some no-follow and links without anchor text are desirable to ensure the right “mix.”

Second, it means spending some time analyzing and understanding not only your own link profile, but also that of your competitors. Learn what they are doing, leverage it, and do just a little bit better. Just don’t overdo it – that’s not natural either!

Remember, every site has “good” and “not so good” links. As long as you stay within the “average” of other sites in your industry, your link profile should appear “natural.”

Here’s a few Link Building Tools that can help:

Excerpted from:
Is Your Link Profile Natural?

Building backlinks (links from other websites) to your website is a common tactic in most search engine optimization campaigns. Knowing how many backlinks your website has and monitoring the growth is an important aspect of assessing the success of your linkbuilding campaign. If you don’t know how to determine the number of backlinks your website has, here is a simple command to give you an idea.

In Yahoo search, use the following query:
linkdomain:www.yourdomain.com -site:www.yourdomain.com

Of course you will substitute “yourdomain” with your actual domain name. For example, if you wanted to know how many webpages link to the www.tengoldenrules.com website, the Yahoo query would look like this:

linkdomain:www.tengoldenrules.com -site:www.tengoldenrules.com

This will provide you a good estimate of how many backlinks your website has.

Excerpt from:
How Many Backlinks Does Your Website Have?


Digg has now decided to add nofollow tags to external links on their website, which is unfortunate for those who use Digg as part of their linkbuilding strategy. This does not, however, count Digg out for building links. They are not adding the nofollow tag to all links, but rather just the ones they are not too sure about because they don’t just want to vouch for a website.

In order to get a do follow link on Digg, a story has to look real to them. Popularity is a good indicator to Digg that a story is real. For the linkbuilder, it is now more important than ever to publish relevant, valuable content on Digg that people will actually want to read and join the conversation. This is how the story will reach a threshold of popularity that Digg finds acceptable to give out do follow links.

View post:
New Linkbuilding Challenges on Digg

When building links for search engine optimization purposes, the best thing you can do is to make your links look natural. Especially if you are buying links, you want to make these links look like people just decided to link to your website because it has good content. Since search engines increase your rankings for having natural links while they can penalize you if you are buying/selling links, it is important to cover your tracks.

One of the most common mistakes when building links unnaturally is to use exactly the same anchor text, for example a keyword phrase you are targeting, for a large number of links. If your links are natural, there is a very slim chance that everyone that links to you will use identical anchor text, and the search engines know this. If you use variations in your anchor text, your links will look more natural. For example, if you are targeting the phrase “internet marketing consultant”, when choosing anchor text for new links, sometimes use “internet marketing consulting” or “consulting for internet marketing” and other variations.

Another issue is your link growth. If your site has never generated more than five links in a month, then all of a sudden it generates 200 links in a month, this can look very unnatural to the search engines. If you are starting a linkbuilding campaign, start slow. Each month, try to get a few more backlinks than the previous month.

The key to a successful linkbuilding campaign is making the links appear to be natural. If you can accomplish this, you will see much better ranking results.

See the original post:
Building Natural Looking Links

A common misconception that can be a crutch to people running a search engine optimization campaign is that getting as many links as possible is the ultimate way to reach those high search results. Yes, having loads of backlinks will generally help improve organic rank, but the quality of those links is what will make the real difference. Several basic factors should be considered about a site when requesting a link from it:

  • Relevance to your site
  • Neighborhood it builds
  • Backlinks to that site

Relevance – What keywords are you targeting? Are those keywords on the page you are requesting a backlink from? These are the questions you should be asking in order to build a quality link. The more relevant the page is to your site, the more a link from it will be worth to you.

Neighborhood – What other sites is the page linking to? Ideally, other links on the page from which you are requesting a link would be to sites exactly like yours. This will help put you in the right neighborhood as far as Google is concerned. If a page links to sites that resemble your site, Google will consider these sites to be related to yours and that is a good thing. If a page links to your site and a bunch of porn and gambling sites, Google will consider your site to be related to porn and gambling, which can have a dire effect on your results.

Backlinks to the page – How powerful is a page that you are looking for a link from? A page that has no backlinks is not near as powerful as a page that has hundreds of backlinks. If a page that has hundreds of backlinks links to your site, the power of those hundreds of links is also shared with you.

These are just a few basic things that should be observed when building links. More will be shared in later posts. Keep reading!

Excerpt from:
Linkbuilding for SEO – Quality Over Quantity

Link building. To some, these two words represent a confusing, time-consuming, never-ending process yet to produce any tangible results. And understandably so; after all, link building can be all of these things–especially if you’re making some common mistakes.  Take a look at the list below to see if any of these mistakes are hampering your link building campaign.

•    Linking Only to Your Home Page- One of the most common mistakes I see when examining back links is finding every link pointing to the same page. Most of the time, these links are always to the home page, but this rule applies to any single page. You don’t want every inbound link aimed at the same page. Why? There are several reasons. Most importantly, it doesn’t look natural to the search engines. Second, it doesn’t help you improve your rankings for the long-tail keywords, the bread and butter of search traffic, on the deeper pages of your site. Third, it’s terrible for usability. People want to go directly to the information they need. Making them land on your home page before finding what they want will lead to a high bounce rate.

•    Not Getting Links Consistently Over Time- This happens a lot with new websites. They get a ton of links right off the bat, and then they never get another. Again, this doesn’t look natural to the search engines. Link building isn’t a one-time process; it’s something that takes a long-term commitment. The best way to consistently get inbound links over time is to focus on publishing quality content that begs to be linked to. They don’t say “content is king” for nothing.

•    Not Linking Out- It’s one of my pet peeves—the idea that you can’t risk losing any of your “link juice” by linking out to another website. Or even worse, that if you link out to another website, your visitors won’t come back. Both of these notions are flat out ridiculous. Linking out is important because it helps you build relationships with others since blogs typically ping the webmaster when there’s a new inbound link, it enhances the user experience by assuming the link is relevant and adds insight, and it establishes your blog as a leading resource when you put all the info people need in one place. And if you provide great content, you don’t have to worry about your readers coming back.

•    Always Using the Same Anchor Text- Occasionally, situations will arise where you will have control over what anchor text you want in your back link. Obviously, you want the anchor text to include relevant keywords for search engine placement purposes. However, don’t fall into the trap of using the same anchor text every time. Quite simply, it doesn’t look natural if every link pointing to your website says the same thing word for word. Don’t give the search engines any reason to suspect you’re involved in shady link building practices.

•    Completely Ignoring Reciprocal Links- Every so-called SEO Guru out there preaches against getting reciprocal links for your website. The reason for this is that reciprocal links essentially cancel each other out in the eyes of the search engines. But if these “gurus” could stop worrying about pleasing the search engines for a second, they’d see there are benefits to occasionally engaging in reciprocal linking. It can generate highly relevant traffic to your website, and it helps you build a relationship with the other linker that could prove profitable down the line with guest blogging opportunities, referrals, etc. Plus, it improves the user-experience, assuming the link is to a relevant site.) Remember, it’s not always about the search engines; humans count too.

•    Trying to Push Every Post to the Front Page of Digg- If you’ve read any of my posts, you know I’m all for social media marketing. I think it’s a great way to build links, to engage with your target audience, and to generate traffic to your website. However, you need to realize that not every post you write is worthy of the front page of Digg or of any other social media site for that matter. If you’re constantly pushing every single post on these social networking sites people will begin to ignore you. Even worse, you could end up getting banned.

•    Not Knowing Your Competitor’s Back Links- If you don’t know what your competition is up to, how can you expect to pass them in the SERPs? Take a look at their back links by entering the link: www.yourcompetitorssite.com (example url) into the Yahoo search bar. Not only will this help you understand what you need to do to outrank them, but it could also provide a great starting point for your link building campaign. You may be able to get inbound links from the same sites that link to your competition.

Now that you know some link building pitfalls to avoid, you can kick your campaign into overdrive. And remember, quality trumps quantity every time.

What link building mistakes have you made? Share them with us in the replies!

View original post here:
When Link Building Goes Wrong

Wow, what an Affiliate Summit last week.  With over 3200 attendees, this event in Las Vegas was the most well attended Affiliate Summit yet.  Congratulations to the summit team.  Overall I felt a wonderful job was done again and I definitely got a lot out of this trip, at least as much as the last few summits.  If you are in this industry and haven’t gone, make sure you make the next one.

I had one heck of a time getting home from Vegas, as I always seem to, so I need to apologize for this recap, and a few to follow, for taking so long to get published.  I noticed that a lot of people took a few days to recover from the event, I’m still going through emails.

On Monday I attended the White Hat Link Building Strategies: Beginner to Advanced session with Wil Reynolds, associate at Seer Interactive.  I always enjoy Wil’s presentations as he is engaging, entertaining and always seems to give more information than you thought you would get.  I always leave his presentations with a list of things I need to be doing, today, to make a difference for both my sites and my clients’.  This session was no different.  Keep him coming back Affiliate Summit.

Wil emphasized what many of us already know, and that is that links do matter as he walked us through many of the processes he uses to build links for his clients.  He emphasized one important factor to remember in all your link building activities and that is “everything in moderation”.  Whatever you link building plan is, be sure to not go overboard in any one direction, that is what tends to get you in trouble.

Wil started off by sharing a story of two companies’ search results and link building methods.  One was purchasing links for link building and had wonderful rankings, #1 for their terms.  But it was mostly through purchasing links, not building links through a more organic means.  The other company embarked on a white hat link building project, with Seer, building links right and organically, not buying links.  Everything was above board.  It took time, I think he said about 6 months, but the client soon gained top 5 search results for the same term while the “link buyer” dropped to page 50.  The change was dramatic.  Google rewareded the white hat methods and figured out the link buyer’s method and changed the results accordingly.  “If you are tryig to game the system, you’ll have to keep doing that over and over again.  You’ll get into trouble time and time again”, Wil stated at the end of the story.

That was sort of a theme I have seen, and wanted to see more of, through various sessions and conferences over the years.  It goes to all our marketing efforts.  Build it right.  If you are trying to game the system, get around the system or just make a quick buck, you aren’t building something substantial that will weather the search engines’ changes and evolutions.  The top 5 ranking was harder to get and took longer, but it has stayed in those top rankings for much longer with very little work needed, Wil emphasized.  It pays to do it right.

Here are some other nuggest he shared:

  • Directory listings still work, don’t ignore them
  • Search for your industry specific directory links and sort them by PageRank to determine where to start
  • Search for your industry and words such as “add url”, “submit release”, “news”, “directory”, “blogs”, “list” and “guest posts”.  These results will help you find places you can submit articles and other items that usually offer a link back when you do
  • SoloSEO has a great tool at http://soloseo.com/tools/linksearch.html (Wil, would love to hear from you where you saw the benefits of this tool being.  I can’t read my notes ) )
  • DO EGO SEARCHES! It’s not vanity.  You need to know when people are talking about you so that you can engage them.
  • Check out Yahoo Pipes it’s a great tool
  • Google Alerts -these are also great tools for link building
  • Yahoo Answers – another great tool
  • Twitter Search - another great tool
  • Rule of thumb – Industry links are more valuable than generic links
  • Use Twitter to fix people’s problems.  You can set up searches within tools like TweetDeck to notify you of certain terms.  Terms like “care overheated” would be great for a company that fixes those problems.  You monitor for those terms and then help people.  They’ll check out who you are and may blog or otherwise share online your generosity and maybe a link.
  • Del.icio.us is a great tool for link buidling and also a topic that is worthy of a blog post in of itself
  • Some other tools for link building include:  Linkscape, Alexa, Technorati, Open Directory and Aiderss

Overall it was a great session and Wil shared so much information that I think I could write 4 or 5 blogs, and I may do just that.  The Affiliate Summit crew has made the presentations available, view White Hat Link Buildling to see the whole presentation.

If you attended, I would love to hear what you found to be the most important piece of info.  I really liked the demonstration of how they use Del.icio.us, definitely check that part out.

Originally posted here:
White Hat Link Building – Affiliate Summit West 2009

Wow, what an Affiliate Summit last week.  With over 3200 attendees, this event in Las Vegas was the most well attended Affiliate Summit yet.  Congratulations to the summit team.  Overall I felt a wonderful job was done again and I definitely got a lot out of this trip, at least as much as the last few summits.  If you are in this industry and haven’t gone, make sure you make the next one.

I had one heck of a time getting home from Vegas, as I always seem to, so I need to apologize for this recap, and a few to follow, for taking so long to get published.  I noticed that a lot of people took a few days to recover from the event, I’m still going through emails.

On Monday I attended the White Hat Link Building Strategies: Beginner to Advanced session with Wil Reynolds, associate at Seer Interactive.  I always enjoy Wil’s presentations as he is engaging, entertaining and always seems to give more information than you thought you would get.  I always leave his presentations with a list of things I need to be doing, today, to make a difference for both my sites and my clients’.  This session was no different.  Keep him coming back Affiliate Summit.

Wil emphasized what many of us already know, and that is that links do matter as he walked us through many of the processes he uses to build links for his clients.  He emphasized one important factor to remember in all your link building activities and that is “everything in moderation”.  Whatever you link building plan is, be sure to not go overboard in any one direction, that is what tends to get you in trouble.

Wil started off by sharing a story of two companies’ search results and link building methods.  One was purchasing links for link building and had wonderful rankings, #1 for their terms.  But it was mostly through purchasing links, not building links through a more organic means.  The other company embarked on a white hat link building project, with Seer, building links right and organically, not buying links.  Everything was above board.  It took time, I think he said about 6 months, but the client soon gained top 5 search results for the same term while the “link buyer” dropped to page 50.  The change was dramatic.  Google rewareded the white hat methods and figured out the link buyer’s method and changed the results accordingly.  “If you are tryig to game the system, you’ll have to keep doing that over and over again.  You’ll get into trouble time and time again”, Wil stated at the end of the story.

That was sort of a theme I have seen, and wanted to see more of, through various sessions and conferences over the years.  It goes to all our marketing efforts.  Build it right.  If you are trying to game the system, get around the system or just make a quick buck, you aren’t building something substantial that will weather the search engines’ changes and evolutions.  The top 5 ranking was harder to get and took longer, but it has stayed in those top rankings for much longer with very little work needed, Wil emphasized.  It pays to do it right.

Here are some other nuggest he shared:

  • Directory listings still work, don’t ignore them
  • Search for your industry specific directory links and sort them by PageRank to determine where to start
  • Search for your industry and words such as “add url”, “submit release”, “news”, “directory”, “blogs”, “list” and “guest posts”.  These results will help you find places you can submit articles and other items that usually offer a link back when you do
  • SoloSEO has a great tool at http://soloseo.com/tools/linksearch.html (Wil, would love to hear from you where you saw the benefits of this tool being.  I can’t read my notes ) )
  • DO EGO SEARCHES! It’s not vanity.  You need to know when people are talking about you so that you can engage them.
  • Check out Yahoo Pipes it’s a great tool
  • Google Alerts -these are also great tools for link building
  • Yahoo Answers – another great tool
  • Twitter Search - another great tool
  • Rule of thumb – Industry links are more valuable than generic links
  • Use Twitter to fix people’s problems.  You can set up searches within tools like TweetDeck to notify you of certain terms.  Terms like “care overheated” would be great for a company that fixes those problems.  You monitor for those terms and then help people.  They’ll check out who you are and may blog or otherwise share online your generosity and maybe a link.
  • Del.icio.us is a great tool for link buidling and also a topic that is worthy of a blog post in of itself
  • Some other tools for link building include:  Linkscape, Alexa, Technorati, Open Directory and Aiderss

Overall it was a great session and Wil shared so much information that I think I could write 4 or 5 blogs, and I may do just that.  The Affiliate Summit crew has made the presentations available, view White Hat Link Buildling to see the whole presentation.

If you attended, I would love to hear what you found to be the most important piece of info.  I really liked the demonstration of how they use Del.icio.us, definitely check that part out.

Read the rest here:
White Hat Link Building – Affiliate Summit West 2009 Session Report

There’s no denying that link building is a time consuming and repetitive process. However, there are ways to speed up the process and keep it relatively painless:

1.
2. PageRank – Look for quality directories with a Google PageRank of 3 or better.
3. Update Your List – Constantly update your list of directories. This includes deleting old directories and updating changes in PageRank.
4. Comments – Create a comment column on your list of directories where you can note specific information about the directory. This is useful for niche or regional directories.
5. Save the Date – When you submit to a directory, record the date submitted. Knowing when you submitted lets you know when you can expect to be included. Most free directories have a waiting period of a few months.

Originally posted here:
Five Link Building Tips

For small businesses and retail establishments, local search can have a favorable impact. Marketing to customers in your neighborhood used to be as easy as putting up a sign or advertising in the local newspaper. But today’s web-savvy consumers shop for products and services locally on the Internet using local search.

Using a local search engine, marketers can target customers in a specific area while maximizing their marketing investment. They can use specific targeting, using the right keywords and search phrases to pull customers to their site and front door.

Local search offers low cost, relevant advertising dynamics, an audit trail to measure results and opportunities to increase revenues and profit. The key is partnering with a local search company that provides relevant search results, so your customers can find you easily. They should provide high-quality location data, geo-targeted advertising and efficient search algorithms.

Here are five reasons you should use local search:

It is on the rise The local search marketplace is expanding. Local search is estimated to grow to a $6.2 billion market opportunity by 2010. (Kelsey Group). According to Com­Score, 47% of local searchers contacted or visited a local merchant as a result of their online search.

There’s money to be made It’s been proven that “local” searchers convert into buyers.

According to industry analysts, approximately 80% of an indi­vidual’s income is spent within about 50 miles of their home. With 95% of the potential local search advertising market today remaining untouched, this is a huge opportunity for businesses.

Online advertising just makes (dollars and) sense

In today’s economy, more local companies are turning to online advertising as a new way to capture greater local customer revenue. At the same time, many Internet players are refocusing on local search as a method of increasing revenue and profit. (Mike Dobson, president of TeleMapics).

Local search costs less and delivers more

One of the reasons that local search attracts new advertising customers is that it offers relatively precise targeting capabilities, at one of the lowest costs per lead offered by any advertising medium (29 cents,according to Piper Jaffray & Co.). It also offers an audit trail.

Your customers can find you faster

Traffic has declined for traditional print publishers, as it is easier and quicker to research a buying opportunity online than to search print media. In the Yellow Pages arena, the market has fragmented because of increased competition between publishers, diluting the effective­ness of Yellow Pages advertising that many small businesses once relied upon.

If you haven’t considered local search as an important part of your marketing program, now is the time to do so. You’d be surprised at what an impact you can make!

Jennifer Black is VP of marketing for Local.com.

See the rest here:
Local Search: What You Need to Know

Have you Googled your name recently? Today, more than ever, individuals are turning to the web to learn more about people they meet, interview, and simply want to know more about. With information being so pervasive, managing your reputation is more important than ever.

How to Manage Your Reputation Online

Fortunately, managing your reputation online isn’t all that difficult, but it does take work. Here are 7 basic steps you can take to ensure that your reputation doesn’t become negatively impacted by what’s being said about you online.

1. See where you stand. Start your reputation management initiative by Googling your name. Try it with quotes and with out (first and last name together). Look through each of your results on page one and page two of Google. Are there any there are are negative or you wish to remove?

2. Set up a Google alert. Visit Google and set up an alert for your name. After setting up the alert Google will send you and email to confirm that you wish to receive the updates. Accept the alert and each time your name is published to the Web, you’ll know about it.

3. Contact website owners for name removal. If there are sites that include your name and commentary that is less than desireable, contact the appropriate websites requesting that the information be removed. More often than not, website owners will agree to remove your name and/or inappropriate information.

4. Purchase a domain with your name. Add sites and webpages associated with your name and watch negative search results get pushed lower on Google rankings. Visit GoDaddy or another provider of website URLs and hosting, and purchase a domain that contains your name. Even if your name is rather common, experiment with variations until your name can be established in the form of a dot com. Once you own a domain, publish a webpage with your personal profile.

5. Start a blog under your name. Blogger is a great tool for setting up your own blog which can be used to publish information about yourself. Popular blog sites are often picked up by Google and you can control the content. Be sure to sign up for Technorati after your blog has been published. Submit your blog for review and its popularity will increase, improving search rankings and continuing to push down negative search results.

6. Free press release. Use free-press-release.com or a similar free press release site to publish favorable information about your and your reputation. This form of reputation management is easy and costs nothing. Be sure to use your name throughout the release and in the release title.

7. Author articles in your field. Publish article relative to a particular topic or area in which you’ve done some work or have experience. Use article distribution serivces to build online references to your content. Make sure your articles contain an about the author section that links back to your main website.

There are a variety of strategies you can use to manage online references about you, your family, or others that need to manage their reputation online. Other online sites like Facebook, MySpace, Flickr, YouTube, and Squidoo, offer ample opportunity to deliver favorable search results that can push unfavorable results down in search engine rankings. The key is to start today – proactively manage your reputation and put yourself in a favorable light.

Post by Michael Fleischner, Internet marketing and Online Reputation Management Expert who has been helping individuals improve their reputations online for more than four years. To learn how Michael can help you improve your reputation – contact him at support@marketingscoop.com or simply Google “Michael Fleischner” to learn more.

Go here to read the rest:
Reputation Management Made Easy: 7 Effective Ways For Managing Your Reputation Online

Here’s another example of a damaging admission, taken from one of my own products: ‘If you’re determined to find a catch, there is one major flaw that you should know about. This programm won’t pick up the phone and make the calls for you! You’ll still have to pick up the phone and dial!’

What stops most people from making the ‘damaging admission’ is that they’re afraid that by showing a weakness they’ll lose the sale. In actual fact, the reverse is true. You’re far more likely to win your customers’ trust and respect if you admit the flaws of what you are offering.

Post by Bernadette Doyle who publishes her free, weekly Client Magnets newsletter for trainers, speakers, coaches, consultants, complementary therapists and solo professionals. If you want to get clients calling you instead of you calling them then sign up for the Client Magnets newsletter at http://www.ClientMagnets.com today!

Continued here:
Marketing Through Admission

Search marketing is a great way to generate revenue and grow your business. However, many marketers fail at search and don’t know it. The basic performance reports available from providers like Google can lead an advertiser to believe that his or her campaign is generating plenty of qualified interest, when the truth might be precisely the opposite.

Clicks, click-through rate and cost-per-click are the measuring sticks of most search campaigns, because they’re the statistics most easily gleaned from online reports. Judging a campaign’s performance by these standards is not only misleading, it can cause an advertiser to waste significant investment.

Why? Because a click is only one action — it doesn’t measure what that prospect did when he or she clicked on your ad (that is, did he or she become a lead or buy your product) or even how qualified he or she is. Our experience tells us there are many advertisers who are content to generate thousands of clicks at considerable cost, but discover on further analysis that the vast majority of those clicks are completely worthless.

The perfect search campaign is one that:

■ generates a cost per acquisition (CPA) — whether your acquisi­tion is a lead, download, registration or sale — competitive with other advertising vehicles

■ generates predictable CPA results at projected spend levels

■ is sufficiently expansive to cover every keyword or phase, and every variation that a qualified prospect could search on

■ delivers relevant ad copy for every keyword (to drive clicks) and maps to relevant landing pages (to drive conversions)

■ is designed in such a way that specific terms, groups of terms and campaigns are all optimized separately, with separate bud­gets, ad copy, geo-targeting and day-parting

■ is tracked through use of a back-end database or CRM system that measures ROI on a keyword-by-keyword basis.

Don’t have all these metrics in place? No one does. The sce­nario above is the ideal program, and a hypothetical ideal at that. But you should use these standards as goals and benchmarks.

Know what you want to achieve. Are you trying to generate downloads, registra­tions, page views, sales leads, qualified leads or sales? How are you defining that goal — is someone filling out a registra­tion form, hitting a particular page or meeting certain qualifi­cation criteria?

Your search campaign should measure how many of those desired actions are taking place; how much each desired action is costing in the aggregate; and, which keywords generate those actions at the lowest cost.

Howard Sewell is president of Connect Direct.

More:
Make Your Search Campaign Successful

In today’s world, people expect to pay for products and services online. After spending money to get someone interested in your product and to your website, focusing on the purchase process can have the greatest benefit to your business.

I was absolutely shocked when I checked out a new client’s website. He is an author who wants to sell more books. But he doesn’t have an online shopping cart! He expects people to call his 800 number and give him their credit card number over the phone. He also asks people to send checks to his post office box. While both calls to action might seem normal, they are so 1980! People expect to pay online and for the purchase process to be quick and easy.


Here Are 7 Reasons to Use a Professional Online Shopping Cart Instead of An 800#

1. People live in dozens of different time zones. Do you want to answer the phone at 2 a.m. your time because someone in England is having her first cup of coffee and wants to order your product?

2. People shop on weekends. I don’t know about you, but I’d rather be out in my kayak on a weekend than sitting by the phone waiting for a product order.

3. Telephone tag. Let’s say you just appeared on a talk radio show and people are calling to order your product or service. They will get a busy signal since you can talk to only one person at a time. You’ll find that you have to call back a dozen people. If this happens, you run the risk of playing telephone tag – and possibly never connecting with them.

4. Expensive phone charges. When you return phone calls, you risk paying long-distance rates including international phone calling rates. Your cost of taking the order just jumped through the roof.

5. Too much time, not enough money. When you take orders over the phone, you have to be nice. There’s nothing wrong with being nice, but you have to engage people in a conversation: How’s the weather? Where are you calling from? How long have you been interested in this topic? If you don’t ask questions like this, people will think you are rude and might not want to buy your product! This all takes time.

6. When you only take order over the phone, you have to sell the person, not just take the order. Many companies are not comfortable selling on the phone. Or they are bad at asking for the order. You could blow the sale.

7. Too many mistakes. It is all too easy to misspell the person’s name, mailing address or credit card number. I call this unintentional dyslexia. You think you typed in “54″ and you said “54″ to the client, but you really wrote “45.”

If you had an online shopping cart, you’d solve all these problems! Add an online shopping cart to your website today and you will sell more products and services while protecting your time and energy. And, it’s very easy to get started.

Just go to www.prleads.com/meos for a special report on how to choose a shopping cart. You’ll even find information on how to get started today! Author and Serial Internet business entrepreneur, Dan Janal has built multiple six-figure income businesses using MyEasyOnlineStore.com.

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Sell More Online With A Professional Shopping Cart Versus An 800#

Yesterday, it was announced that there is a new search engine on the block called Cuil, pronounced as “Cool”. This new search tool is developed by former Google employees Tom Costello and Anna Patterson. Cuil.com claims to have already indexed 120 billion web pages which is three times more than any other search engine.

The new engine claims to combine web index with content-based relevance methods with results organized by ideas and offering complete user privacy. Cuil uses innovative search techniques by going beyond the contemporary approach of link analysis and traffic ranking. Instead, it analyzes the context of each page and the concepts behind each query. The latest search engine then organizes similar search results into groups and sorts them by category.

Moreover Cuil offers users additional features including tabs to clarify subjects, images to identify topics and search refining suggestions.

Cuil, pronounced as “Cool”, is ran by Tom Costello, Anna Patterson and Russell Power, who expertise in search engine, search index and led a web page rankinghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PageRank . Costello researched and developed search engines at Stanford B-School-Isnt-What-It-Used-To-Be University and IBM; while Patterson and Power have worked with Google.

The Cuil search engine’s features include:

· Biggest Internet search engine—Cuil has indexed 120 billion Web pages, 3x more than any other search engine

· Organized results—Cuil’s magazine-style layout separates results by subject and allows further search by concept or category

· Different results—Unlike other search engines, Cuil ranks results by the content on each page, not its popularity

· Complete privacy protection—Cuil does not keep any personally identifiable information on users or their search histories

When it comes to search engines it’s not just the size of the index but also the relevancy of the search results. It still remains http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Still_Remains to be seen if Cuil.com can be successful in taking away a part of Google and Yahoo’s market share. One thing is for sure though, as long as there’s search, there will always be new search engines looking to defeat Goliath!

What’s New In The World Of Search?