SEO Tutorail - Part 4 - Keywords Research

February 25th, 2010 by admin No comments »

As first step in SEO you need to find the right keywords(also you can check keywords in domain names) to target for your site.

Very important: DO NOT skip this step because the rest of your SEO efforts depend on it.

There are a number of very good free keyword research tools available to help you with this part of your SEO efforts. You can also quickly compare the popularity of up to 5 keywords at once using Google Trends.

Keyword Research is Not Just About Search Volume - It is BASIC STEP IN SEO

Search volume must be weighed carefully against the competitiveness of your keywords - the number of sites already ranking for those terms. The balance between high volume and low competition is the ideal selection.

Keyword research is one of the most fundamental SEO (define) activities, but it’s also one of the least talked about. Yes, personalized search, social media, and SEO for Flash are all very exciting, but without the right keywords, SEO efforts will go astray.

Two helpful and free tools are:

  • Google’s Adwords Keyword Tool provides a long list of related terms and indicates search volume based on a five-point ranking.
  • Yahoo’s Keyword Selection Tool provides actual keyword volume for the most recent month it has data both for the term you type in and for related terms.
  • But you should not rely only on these tools, they don’t provide competitive data - you may have to manually search the engines for each keyword to see how many search results are returned, potentially a time-consuming and tedious task.

    In next article we will show you how to analyze and to choose the right keywords!

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    SEO Tutorial - PART 3

    February 20th, 2010 by admin No comments »

    Which are main steps in SEO?

    10 DIY Quick Tips for SEO

    Here are ten basic SEO tips included in the search engine optimization tutorial you might consider doing yourself to get better search rankings and increased site traffic:

    • DIY SEO Tip 1 - Select the right keywords
    • DIY SEO Tip 2 - Select the right domain name
    • DIY SEO Tip 3 - Use keywords in file names and folders
    • DIY SEO Tip 4 - Use your keywords in your page titles
    • DIY SEO Tip 5 - Use keyword text in your navigation
    • DIY SEO Tip 6 - Create useful keyword content - repeat often
    • DIY SEO Tip 7 - Make keywords part of your META Description
    • DIY SEO Tip 8 - Secure high quality incoming links
    • DIY SEO Tip 9 - Use keyword text (not “click here”) in your links
    • DIY SEO Tip 10 - Create a site map

    While there are other techniques an ethical SEO professional will use to boost your rankings, these 10 DIY SEO tips that form the basis for the search engine optimization tutorial will get you on the right track, even with a severely limited budget. Even eCommerce and other sites that are controlled by a content management system, which can create its own SEO challenges, can benefit by following these suggestions. And, if your keywords are highly competitive, you may not ever be able to rank in the top 10 search results, but you will move up in the rankings and you should find traffic to your site on the rise.

    Patience and Persistence are SEO Virtues

    Keep in mind that SEO takes time. You won’t see improvements by following the tips in this tutorial overnight, so don’t be discouraged if your traffic doesn’t jump through the roof right away. And, don’t expect to use this search engine optimization tutorial tips once and then forget about them. Make it a practice to keep these SEO tips in mind whenever you update your website, go through a redesign, or plan a new site. Also, keyword popularity and competitiveness changes over time, so revisit your targeted keywords periodically to see if they still draw traffic.

    View SEO Tutorial - Part 2

    View SEO Tutorial - Part 1

    SEO Tutorial - PART 2

    February 18th, 2010 by admin No comments »

    Organic SEO is Both an Art and a Science

    Organic SEO of your website for improved search results is an art and at the same time a science.

    • The science part of SEO lies largely in understanding the algorithms, or formulas, used by the search engines to determine where sites rank and making decisions on which keywords - terms or phrases people use to conduct a search - to target.
    • The “art” portion of SEO is how you go about implementing techniques for search engines to find you.

    Unfortunately, search engine algorithms change constantly and the search engines do what they can to keep their algorithms and techniques secret. While understanding the factors that are used for search rankings is akin to cracking a code, there is a wealth of information available on the web - some of it reliable and some of it not-so-reliable. The purpose of this search engine optimization tutorial is to provide you with the important basics of SEO in the form of ten tips you can do yourself.

    One of the basic step in SEO is Keyword research! It  is the process of understanding what search terms or phrases your targeted site visitors might use to find you, and then selecting the right balance between keyword popularity - the number of times the word or phrase is used in a search - and competitiveness - the number of other websites that are trying to rank highly for those keywords, measured by the results returned by the search engine for the keyword phrase used. Finding frequently used keywords that relatively few sites are targeting is the challenge. It is the foundation for all SEO efforts and cannot be overlooked.

    Soon HOST-ED.NET team will offer our customers new service -  SEO

    SEO Tutorial - PART 1

    February 17th, 2010 by admin No comments »

    This search engine optimization tutorial is designed to give you some basic advices and knowledgebase for improving your rankings in search engines that you may be able to do yourself.
    Search engine optimization (SEO) is the process of taking steps to assure that your site is placed higher in search engine results than your competitors’ websites. Google, MSN and Yahoo have a hold on the vast majority of daily searches performed on the Internet. Indeed most peope use Google as main search engine so most tips and tricks will get from them

    Two Types of Search Engine Results
    There are two basic types of search engine results -

    • organic or natural
    • paid

    Getting listed on the first page of results is pretty much critical and it should be your target because most people who search the Web won’t bother to look any farther than the first page of search engine results to find you.

    You can pay for such high placement through Pay Per Click (PPC) advertising campaigns, such as Google AdWords or Yahoo Sponsored Search or Microsoft’s adCenter. If you outbid your competitors your website can get placed on the first page of search results.

    Organic search results are where your website ranks on its own - without ad payments. Getting your website placed in the top 10 search results for your targeted keywords can result in increased traffic to your website and consequently, increased sales for your home business. Organic search engine optimization, then focuses on improvements in your organic search rankings.

    … to be continued.

    HOST-ED.NET team will show main steps in these articles:

    osCommerce - Your Online Shop E-commerce Solution

    February 16th, 2010 by admin No comments »

    osCommerceosCommerce is an online shop e-commerce solution under on going development by the open source community. It is easy to install but at the same time is powerfull tool for online business!
    osCommerce combines open source solutions to provide a free and open e-commerce platform, which includes the powerful PHP web scripting language, the stable Apache web server, and the fast MySQL database server. You can order now host-ed.net web hosting solution and will get Zacky Tools which installs for you quickly and easy stable release of osCommerce!

    With no restrictions or special requirements, osCommerce is able to run on any PHP enabled web server, on any environment that PHP and MySQL supports, which includes Linux, Solaris, BSD, Mac OS X, and Microsoft Windows environments.

    osCommerce was started in March 2000 and has since matured to a solution that is currently powering thousands of live shops around the world.

    Today, osCommerce has been taken to the next level, moving towards an e-commerce framework solution that not only remains easy to setup and maintain, but also making it easier for store administrators to present their stores to their customers with their own unique requirements.

    Order now HOST-ED.NET paid plan and you get absolutely FREE web system installator - which installs you for you quick and easy osCommerce, WordPress, Joomla, phpBB and many other great web systems!

    How to write good content

    February 15th, 2010 by admin No comments »

    Search engines were built to index copy that is valuable to visitors, but was added by people who maybe don’t know all the ins and outs of building a website the most appropriate way. Some SEOs will tell you that if you don’t have your title tags , keyword tags, or description tags arranged a certain way that your site doesn’t stand a chance of being indexed. Don’t listen to them. While having all your T’s crossed and I’s dotted is the icing on the cake, and can help boost your rankings ever so slightly… most search engines don’t have much of a sweet tooth, and will put comparatively little if any emphasis on the little stuff.

    One of the most impartan thing is to have enough content on a page to build up credibility. Generally, you want to have enough content on a site to entice the search engines to look around and index as much of your site as possible, but you don’t want so much content that people get overwhelmed and jump out before they’ve read what you have to say. The technique will differ from site to site, for example, a site that summarizes the life and works of Shakespeare will obviously have more long paragraphs getting into more detail, than a website that talks about a vacuum.

    Our advice is to have at the very least 300 words of content on your page (even if it is about vacuums) but try not to go over 700 words. If your page or article needs to go more than 700 words, then you might consider splitting the article up between multiple pages(for instance - PART 1, PART 2, etc).

    As a conclusion - use text with 300-700 words(no more) and make it interesting and unique!

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    Domain Privacy Protection - Do I need it?

    January 28th, 2010 by admin No comments »

    domain-privacy-protectionEvery domain name has a publicly accessible record that includes the owner’s personal information. It’s called a WhoIs record and lists the registrant and contacts for the domain. By default it will be listed on the WhoIs record for your domain:

    Your name, address, city, state, zip, country, phone number, email address!

      It also shows when you registered your domain, when it will expire, where your website is hosted, and other technical details. You can view the record for your domain by going to domaintools.com and putting your domain in the box labeled “WhoIs Lookup” then clicking the “Search” button. These records are available anytime to anyone who does a search.

      Why is the WhoIs record public info?

      ICANN (Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers) requires domain registrars to make your contact information available. It is used for some legitimate purposes such as verifying ownership of a domain name in a transfer request. Law enforcement agencies may use it when investigating illegal activity on the internet. Companies or individuals may also use these records to contact domain holders who are violating copyrights or other property rights.

      So, what’s exactly could be danger for you?

      Your domain record may also be used in ways that aren’t legitimate or desirable. Since anyone can look up a WhoIs record, spammers, hackers, identity thieves and stalkers may access your personal information! Unethical companies check domain expiration dates then send official looking “renewal” notices in an attempt to get the domain owners to transfer domains to their company, or send “invoices” that are service solicitations for search engine submissions and other questionable services. Both email and snail mail spammers use the WhoIs databases to contact domain owners with solicitations as well.

      What can you do to protect your privacy?

      Many domain registrars now offer a service called privacy protection. When you choose privacy protection, your personal information will not be listed on the WhoIs record. Instead, the information of the registrar’s privacy service will appear. You still own your domain.

      What are the benefits of domain privacy protection?

      Once you’ve activated privacy protection on your domain and your personal information is no longer public, spammers can’t use it to find your email address or send you those deceptive domain renewal notices from other companies.

      Link Building - Effective SEO practice

      December 18th, 2009 by admin No comments »

      Search Engine Optimisation has two distinct area’s the first being On-page optimisation and the second, off-page optimisation.

      On-page optimisation is what you can actually do to your website that will affect your ranking on the search engines. This includes changing your title tags, H1 Tags etc. Search Engine Optimisation (SEO) like anything else adheres to the 80/20 rule, whereby on-page optimisation accounts for 20% of search engine rankings. The other 80% comes from link building, which is by far the hardest part when it comes to SEO. Link building is getting other sites to link back to your own website. Like everything else in the world, links have varying degrees of quality, you get really poor quality links which can actually harm your website or you can get excellent links which will help your rankings tremendously.

      Good LINKS:

      Obviously, the best quality links are the hardest to obtain. One of the best kind of links to get, are links that come from Universities or Government websites. Search Engines love these links and if you do manage to get one your website will almost certainly help get your website on to the first page within a couple of months.

      Bad LINKS:

      The worst types of links are backlinks that come from Porn Sites, Pharma Sites or Gambling Sites.

      Here are ways in which a person can obtain links for their website.

      1) Buy Links – The better the link, the more expensive they are.

      2) Ask For Links – Either via Phone or Email.

      3) Link Exchanges – Swap Links with other webmasters.

      4) Register with Directories – Register your site with a number of directories.

      5) Write Articles – Submit your articles to article directories like Ezine.

      6) Write Press Releases – Submit to sites like PRweb.

      7) Use Viral marketing techniques – Use sites like pay per post (link baiting).

      I would suggest doing all of the above when you first start trying to do SEO on your own site. A good mix of links is always good, try not to buy too many “cheap & cheerful” links as these will not do your site much good.

      Configure WordPress Permalinks - SEO advices - Part 2

      December 12th, 2009 by admin No comments »

      In the first part we have talk about how bad and dangerous could be configuring permalinks in WordPress blog. In this article we will show you solution for best configuring permalinks!

      So What is the Solution?
      The solution is to use a permalink structure that does not start with a text based variable.  By doing this you will drastically reduce your risk of the problems listed above.  Here is a list of variables you can use that are not text based:

      • %year% – The year of the post, four digits, for example 2004
      • %monthnum% – Month of the year, for example 05
      • %day% – Day of the month, for example 28
      • %hour% – Hour of the day, for example 15
      • %minute% – Minute of the hour, for example 43
      • %second% – Second of the minute, for example 33
      • %post_id% – The unique ID # of the post, for example 423

      Now that doesn’t mean you can’t have text based variables in your permalink structures, you just need to make sure the first variable is not text based.  One good solution we recommend “/%year%/%monthnum%/%postname%”.

      Why Would The SEO Experts Recommend The Wrong Structure?
      The reason SEO experts recommend the “/%postname%” or “/%category%/%postname%” structure is simple.  It makes the URLs easy to remember and it introduces keywords into the URL string that should match the content of your post.  Typically in SEO the shorter the URL the better as its easier for the users to remember.  The reason some SEOs recommend adding %category% to it is because categories normally include common keywords in the name that match the contents of the posts in that category.  Are these extra 2-3 keywords from %category% worth it?  Not in my opinion.

      A better question would be why aren’t SEO experts recommending the permalink structure of “/%year%/%monthnum%/%postname%”?  A simple answer to that one would be because they think the URL might be too long or they are unaware of the issues I am writing about today.  After all some of these problems were not introduced until Wordpress 2.7 was released.  Hopefully some of the SEO experts will read this article and change their recommendations to their customers.

      Why Blame the SEO Experts For This?
      SEO experts are the ones who always are trying to optimize their pages to get the best search rankings possible.  They are likely the reason that these options even exist for the permalink structures.  Always wanting to get a extra 2-3 keywords in the URL out of the %category% tag or wanting to shorten the URL to just “/%postname%”.  It’s just insanity.

      Of course there is always the fact that they are the only ones I see recommending this to people because of the optimization boost that it can give you.  If it wasn’t for SEO, there would be no reason to use one of those permalink structures except to make things look pretty.

      How Do I Know This is Real and Not Just Your Crazy Opinion?
      That is a very good question.  Unlike the SEO experts opinions, I happen to have the official Wordpress documentation on my side.  The Wordpress Codex page for Permalinks specifically states the following:

      For performance reasons, it is not a good idea to start your permalink structure with the category, tag, author, or postname fields. The reason is that these are text fields, and using them at the beginning of your permalink structure it takes more time for WordPress to distinguish your Post URLs from Page URLs (which always use the text “page slug” as the URL), and to compensate, WordPress stores a lot of extra information in its database (so much that sites with lots of Pages have experienced difficulties). So, it is best to start your permalink structure with a numeric field, such as the year or post ID.

      Really who is going to argue with the official documentation?  Just in case you still think I might be making it up, here is a link to a discussion on the Wordpress Testers mailing list thread that discusses these very issues.

      Now as of the time of this writing there is a patch for part of the problem listed above.  A user has provided the Wordpress developers a patch via the Wordpress Trac site to make the generation of internal redirects faster when authors save a post or a page.  While I believe this is great, it still doesn’t solve the issue of those redirects needing to be there in the first place.  Even if you generate the redirects faster, you still have the problem of having to process them with every request from a user.  Seems like a band aid over a much bigger problem.

      Configure WordPress Permalinks - SEO advices - Part 1

      December 7th, 2009 by admin 1 comment »

      In this article HOST-ED.NET team has collected the best practices and advices from internet for configuring in the right way Permalinks. Because if you follow advices of some “SEO experts” your permalinks should be with simple and “good-looking” pattern. But this could be very bad and dangerous practice!

      Let us start by giving a nice big thanks to experts in the SEO community.  It’s likely because of them that there are literally thousands, possibly millions, of Wordpress installations that setup with less than optimal settings.  Many unsuspecting and uneducated users look to this group of experts for ideas and techniques to improve their search engine rankings and to gather more website traffic.  Little do these users know that even some of the most popular people in this group of experts are handing out bad advice regarding how to setup Wordpress systems.

      Bad Wordpress Permalinks Advice
      Most of the SEO experts on the net recommend that users setup their Wordpress permalinks in a very specific way.  Every article on the net I have seen written by an SEO expert regarding Wordpress permalinks suggests that users either use “/%postname%” or “/%category%/%postname%” for their permalink structure.  This is a bad idea for many reasons, which I will cover below, yet the SEO experts continue to promote it.

      Why Are Those Permalinks Structures Bad?
      Well to sum it up very simply it comes down to two things.  Speed and Reliability.  Thinking from the blog readers points of view these have to be the two of the three most important items that your blog can give them.  The third of course being content, but that’s not what we are here to talk about today.

      Let’s start off with reliability and how these permalink structures affect that.  Both of these permalink structures have the first variable in the structure as a text based keyword.  The variables I am talking about of course are %category% and %postname%.  Unfortunately by using a text based variable you can cause Wordpress to get confused when the system goes to process the request from your users.

      Let us start by giving a nice big thanks to experts in the SEO community.  It’s likely because of them that there are literally thousands, possibly millions, of Wordpress installations that setup with less than optimal settings.  Many unsuspecting and uneducated users look to this group of experts for ideas and techniques to improve their search engine rankings and to gather more website traffic.  Little do these users know that even some of the most popular people in this group of experts are handing out bad advice regarding how to setup Wordpress systems.

      Bad Wordpress Permalinks Advice
      Most of the SEO experts on the net recommend that users setup their Wordpress permalinks in a very specific way.  Every article on the net I have seen written by an SEO expert regarding Wordpress permalinks suggests that users either use “/%postname%” or “/%category%/%postname%” for their permalink structure.  This is a bad idea for many reasons.

      In fact I was at SearchFest, a Portland SEO & search marketing conference, in March and I watched an SEO expert use this as his suggested permalinks structure to an entire room of people during a Wordpress SEO session. Now I just feel bad for anyone who actually wrote down or took that advice.  There are much better ways of setting up your permalink structures.

      Why Are Those Permalinks Structures Bad?
      Well to sum it up very simply it comes down to two things.  Speed and Reliability.  Thinking from the blog readers points of view these have to be the two of the three most important items that your blog can give them.  The third of course being content, but that’s not what we are here to talk about today.

      1.SPEED

      Let’s start off with reliability and how these permalink structures affect that.  Both of these permalink structures have the first variable in the structure as a text based keyword.  The variables I am talking about of course are %category% and %postname%.  Unfortunately by using a text based variable you can cause Wordpress to get confused when the system goes to process the request from your users.  The reason for this is that there are just too many possible items it can match.

      When we look at a example URL of “/blah-blah-blah/”, Wordpress can run into problems when trying to match items to the request.  Does it match a category, a page name or a post name?  All of these text based variables use the same pattern matching so the system would have to run multiple database queries to figure out what the user is looking for. That’s not to mention the fact that the system also has to parse that request for attachments, tags, author pages and feeds which all use text based keywords as well.

      Even then the system could get confused if you have a page/sub page combination that matches the slug of a category/post combination.  Which one should the system load?  These combinations of random keywords could easily cause Wordpress to load the wrong page or post for a user which in turn makes your site less reliable in the user’s eyes.

      So now compound all of the above with the speed issues.  The most obvious of speed issues is that Wordpress has to run all of those database queries that I mentioned above.  Those are not lightweight and fast queries.  They take time and delay the loading of the page that the user is requesting.  How many times have you left a site because it loaded too slowly?

      Another speed issue is for the Wordpress author themselves. When using a permalinks structure with a text keyword as the first variable you end up causing Wordpress to generate internal redirects to try and fix the issues mentioned above.  These redirects are stored in the wp_options table in the database and are generated when authors add and edit posts or pages in the system.

      The system is semi smart and generates internal redirects for all the pages that are loaded into the system.  A simple page with a couple of attachments, whether they are displayed or not, can easily generate 11 internal redirects in the database.  This is because the system needs the redirects for the page, it’s attachments, the trackback URLs and feeds that go with it.  To make matters worse the system has to have a line for the redirect as it would show up in the request, the permalink for the item, and a line for how Wordpress is to understand that request.  So now we can double the number of lines in the database for that one post to 22 lines.

      So by using the permalinks structure with the first variable being a text based keyword the system now generates these redirects upon saving a post/page and causes delays for the author.  In fact there have been reports where users with 200 or so pages, with random attachments, in their Wordpress installations actually causing server time outs during the generation of these redirects.  This causes them not to be able to post to their Wordpress installations at all.

      Continuing with the speed problems, lets not give up on those internal redirects.  Those internal redirects also affect the users of the website and their page loading speeds.  With every page request the system has to load all of those extra redirects and process them.  That’s 22 extra lines of code per request that has to be processed before the page will load for the end user.  Imagine if you had a simple site with 10 pages, that’s an extra 220 lines of code.  That is of course is on top of the other 125 lines of code for internal redirects that Wordpress needs by default with no pages.

      I took a look at one of my customers blogs who has 24 pages and compared that to his internal redirect list.  His redirect list had a total of 773 lines of code that needed to be processed for every request to his blog.  As you can see that 22 lines of code is a lower end figure when compared to his total number of pages.  On our blog we have 22 pages and do not use one of the permalink structures above.

      Be advised that none of this touches on what kind of damage your doing to your server.  Since Wordpress is written in PHP and MySQL, all of the requests and code are processed on the server side rather then the user’s end of the connection.  By adding excess lines of code for redirects and increasing your number of database queries, you are also increasing the amount of work your web hosting server is having to do.  That also isn’t a good thing.

      To be continued….

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