Meta Description
September 25, 2009 by admin
Filed under Google SEO, Keywords
Use of the Meta Description tag in your page headers is a very important role in ranking. The descriptions are what show up in search engines which give you a short brief 2 sentence description under your site title/url.
A good trick when optimizing your description is to use a couple keywords that you are trying to rank for. If you will look below you will see that google scopes through these descriptions as well as titles and brings them up in bold within the search. See below.
Now another trick to increase hits is to make your description catchy. Don’t just stuff it with a bunch of keywords and nonsense for it will look spammy or just not to relevant to what the user is searching for. Spice it up a bit while using your keywords within it and you will beat all other competition.
Now another factor that plays in this, as discuss in the page meta titles and body titles lesson is that in some cases, the first couple of lines in your body will show up in place for the page description. So when starting your article body off, spice it up and use keywords with in it. The search engine will list about 2 lines or 140-160 characters. use it to your benefit.
Creating Unique Content
September 25, 2009 by admin
Filed under Google SEO, Website Structure
A lot of people out there are always asking and looking for article rewriting scripts and programs. I do not condone to this type of thing but, we do have an article rewriter on here for download.
Having unique content is something that search engines like. If you are just writing about something that a couple million other websites already covered, it is just old news. If you have something new and fresh, search engines and visitors alike will eat it up like a fat kid bum rushing the cake on his birthday. Hehe.
Also never, NEVER, plaigiarize content and steal from other people. You will get penalized or even banned from search engines for this. In some cases you could even have a lawsuit filed against you! Would it really be so hard to spend 10 minutes on an article? People come to your website for YOUR opinion and what YOU have to offer. So keep it real, don’t steal.
If you don’t think someone wont find you, wrong! That is what copyscape is for.
Sometimes, or in most cases, webmasters and authors are afraid to speak their mind and their opinions because of the bad feedback they think they might get. Even if you do get bad feedback, it is still good feedback. It is your website and you are speaking your opinion so let it be heard. There are always going to be critics whether you like it or not, learn to embrace it.
Top Paying Adsense SEO Keywords
September 15, 2009 by admin
Filed under Google SEO, Keywords
What I have for you today is a list of the top paying keywords for Google Adsense that you can make with seo,web dev related websites. These are for Google Adsense of course.
If you do not have an account simply shoot on over to Google.com and sign up for Google Adsense.
When Is The Next Google Update
September 9, 2009 by admin
Filed under Google SEO
The Next Google Update
I would venture to guess that one of the most common questions on any webmaster forum involves someone asking, “When is the next Google update?” Although they are probably asking about visible PageRank updates in the Google toolbar, the answer involves a bit more than that.
Visible PageRank is what you see in your Google toolbar. At this point, that has been updating an average of every three months or so.
HOWEVER, real PageRank is continually updated and continually factored into how the search results are determined. By the time you see a change in the toolbar, any effects of that change have already long since been included in the search results.
Google updates its index data, including backlinks and PageRank, continually and continuously. We only export new backlinks, PageRank, or directory data every three months or so though. (We started doing that last year when too many SEOs were suffering from “B.O.”, short for backlink obsession.) When new backlinks/PageRank appear, we’ve already factored that into our rankings quite a while ago. What Is An Update by Google Engineer, Matt Cutts
For a few years now people have been confused as to what the cache date on page actually indicates. It used to be that if there were no changes on the page since the last cache date, then often Google would only change the cached version of the page about once or twice a month. If there had been changes, people would see the cached page updated much sooner.
Google has now changed the cache date to reveal the last date the page was accessed by Google. (Updated September 6, 2006)
“We’ve recently changed the date we show for the cached page to reflect when Googlebot last accessed it (whether the page had changed or not). This should make it easier for you to determine the most recent date Googlebot visited the page.” Google Webmaster
How often a page is crawled is determined by the number of links that are out there bringing the robots back to your website again.
Search engine spiders crawl the web on a continual basis by following links. The more links that are pointed to your site, the more often your pages will be crawled.
This means that websites with very few links pointed to them, will notice it taking longer for Google to find and index their new pages.
Websites with a large number of links pointed to them will likely see their new and updated pages added to the index quite rapidly.
The search engine result pages update continually. As Google finds new information, it is added to the index. The goal of the search engines is to display the results in the exact order of relevance to the search query. The more relevant your page is to the search query, the higher your page should show in the results.
Since the information going into that determination is continually changing, so are the results you see in search engine results. When you combine all that with occasional changes in how Google factors page relevance (algorithm) to the search query, you end up with results that are continually fluctuating.
In the end, all of this should mean very little to you as a site owner. The more time you spend focused on what Google is up to, the less time you are spending on building a website filled with quality content for your visitors.
If you follow the basic guidelines and develop a quality site that invites incoming links naturally, you can focus on your results over time, rather than day to day search engine fluctuations.





