Internet Marketing

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sam barns

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Dec 8, 2006, 2:27:40 AM12/8/06
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If you have spent hours in the gym, toiling and sweating to build yourself a great set of abs, don’t you think it would be unusually stupid not to show it off? The same goes with websites. You have great products or service and a sleek website. But what use is the website if no one is visiting it? Without marketing your website, no one will know about it. If you don’t have traffic to your website, then it might as well remain unpublished. That’s because, the name of the game is to get people to your website and to profit from it.

Only now have Entrepreneurs come to realize that Internet Marketing (Search Engine Optimization /Marketing) is more than a simple "add-on" to the marketing mix. It actually complements the communication mix and is an excellent tool to generate leads, get registrations or drive sales, rather than simply generating Brand Awareness.

Early, Google was started by two PhD students at Stanford University, Sergey Brin and Larry Page, and brought a new concept to evaluating web pages. This concept, called PageRank, has been from the start important to the Google algorithm. PageRank relies heavily on incoming links and uses the logic that each link to a page is a vote for that page's value. The more incoming links a page had the more "worthy" it is. The value of each incoming link itself varies directly based on the PageRank of the page it comes from and inversely on the number of outgoing links on that page.

With help from PageRank, Google proved to be very good at serving relevant results. Google became the most popular and successful search engine. Because PageRank measured an off-site factor, Google felt it would be more difficult to manipulate than on-page factors.

It was time for Google—and other search engines—to look at a wider range of off-site factors. There were other reasons to develop more intelligent algorithms. The Internet was reaching a vast population of non-technical users who were often unable to use advanced querying techniques to reach the information they were seeking and the sheer volume and complexity of the indexed data was vastly different from that of the early days. Search engines had to develop predictive, semantic, linguistic and heuristic algorithms.
Search engine operators became interested in the SEO community in the late 1990s. A number of high profile SEO community leaders established contractual relationships with search engines for advertising and consulting purposes. These early contacts led to an amelioration of some hostile feelings between the search optimization and search engineering communities.

In early 2000, search engines and SEO firms attempted to establish an unofficial "truce." There are several tiers of SEO firms, and the more reputable companies employ content-based optimizations which meet with the search engines' (reluctant) approval. These techniques include improvements to site navigation and copywriting, designed to make websites more intelligible to search engine algorithms.

New sites do not need to be "submitted" to search engines to be listed. A simple link from an established site will get the search engines to visit the new site and spider its contents. It is rarely more than a few days from the acquisition of the link to all the main search engine spiders visiting and indexing the new site.
Once the search engine has found the new site, it will generally visit and index all the pages on the site, as long as all the pages are linked to with standard <a href> hyperlinks. Pages which are accessible only through Flash or Javascript links may not be findable by the spiders.

Webmasters can instruct spiders to not index certain files or directories through the standard robots.txt file in the root directory of the domain. Standard practice requires a search engine to check this file upon visiting the domain. The web developer can use this feature to prevent pages such as shopping carts or other dynamic, user-specific content from appearing in search engine results.
For those search engines who have their own paid submission (like Yahoo), it may save some time to pay a nominal fee for submission.


Sam Barns is the developer is an expert in Free Internet Traffic Generation. For more infoimation, please visit his website at www.blastarticles.com

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