BecomeABlogger.com Re-Opens With a $1 Trial

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Posted on 7th February 2010 by admin in blogging

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become-a-blogger-1Yaro Starak and Gideon Shalwick are re-opening their Become A Blogger coaching program today. And the cool thing is that they are offering a $1 trial offer, so read on if you are interested.

Become A Blogger is step-by-step video coaching program that will teach you all you need to know to build a successful blog. Here are the 8 modules covered:

  1. Get Your Blog Up And Running Fast And FREE
  2. How To Optimize Your Blog For Maximum Search Engine Performance
  3. How To Create Powerful Content For Your Blog, Consistently and Without Fail
  4. How To Use Images On Your Blog To Make You Stand Out From The Crowd
  5. How To Create A Different Dimension To Your Blog By Adding Audio
  6. How To Breathe Life Into Your Blog Using Online Video
  7. How To Create Multiple Streams of High Quality Traffic To Your Blog
  8. How To Make Money From Your Blog

If you already have a blog and is happy with the results you are getting, then this program is obviously not for you. If you are just getting started, however, this is probably the best coaching program you’ll find on the market. I have been working with Gideon and Yaro for a long time, and I always get surprised with the quality of the products they release.

But facts speak louder than words, right? You can try the program for yourself by spending just $1. Take a look around, see if you like the content, and then decide. Even if you decide to stay as a member you are covered by a 60-day money back guarantee.

The trial offer expires in 5 days, so head over to the sign-up page to check all the details.


Original Post: BecomeABlogger.com Re-Opens With a $1 Trial

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An Interesting Blog SEO Technique

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Posted on 7th February 2010 by admin in SEO

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Bummer that I missed PubCon this week but I have just been traveling way too much lately. Speaking of traveling, I was in Indianapolis last week visiting the offices of Compendium Blogware. I got a demo of their hosted blog platform — including a look under the hood — and it’s pretty slick. There were features and functionality I had never seen before in blog software. One of the key differentiators, and the reason for the company’s name, is the “compending” capability that their solution does.

A compended blog is comprised of a collection of posts from other blogs, but all from within the same company. A company can have many employees blogging — customer service reps, salespeople, product developers etc. If a manufacturer, then dealers/distributors/retailers could join in on the fun too.

The appeal for companies who want to encourage employee blogging is that it’s dead simple to use, which is critical if you want wide adoption across the company. Here’s how it works: say that Bob from a Ford dealership blogs about the new Ford Mustang after he takes it for his first test drive. There are compended blogs for Mustangs, for sports cars, for pickups, etc. Without Bob having to think about it, his blog post gets compended automatically (using sophisticated content analysis algorithms) to the “Mustangs” and the “Sports Cars” blogs, but not the “Pickups” blog.

Blog posts that have been compended still maintain a canonical URL on the main blog, and that one canonical URL (of the permalink post page) is referenced consistently across all compended blogs on permalink post pages via a canonical link element (i.e. canonical tag). That eliminates duplicate copies of the permalink post page. The content of the post is nonetheless included on the compended blogs — in a fashion not dissimilar to post content being included on category pages, tag pages and date-based archives on WordPress blogs.

Here’s an example of two compended blogs (#1 and #2) and a post that is contained on both.

When considering duplicate content as it relates to SEO, bear in mind it’s not a penalty, but a filter, and that filter works query-time to favor the most relevant and authoritative result for the query entered. Given that, a particular compended blog will be most appropriate to the query, e.g. the query “2010 mustang sports car” would be most relevant to the Sports Cars blog. Note also the compended blogs are in subdirectories, not subdomains. The typical company will have a handful or perhaps dozens of compended blogs, large enterprises may have hundreds. It wouldn’t be unusual that a new post published on a WordPress blog and is in a couple categories and in a dozen tags would be duplicated (16 times including the date-based archives and home page, to be exact) more than a post on a typical Compendium network.

SEO 101 – Part 6: Everything You Need to Know About Search Engine Friendly URLs & Broken Links

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Posted on 7th February 2010 by admin in SEO

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by Stoney deGeyter

The following series is pulled from a presentation I gave to a group of beauty bloggers hosted by L’Oreal in New York. Most of the presentation is geared toward how to make a blog more search engine and user-friendly, however I will expand many of the concepts here to include tips and strategies for sites selling products or services across all industries.

Search Engine Friendly URLs

Search Engine Friendly URLs

When developing a website, you can save yourself a lot of problems down the road by planning ahead before moving full speed into the site development process. One of the first site architectural issues to consider is how your URLs will read. This is especially important for e-commerce websites that quite often have long complicated URLs. But having good URL structure is still no less important for static websites.

Here are a few things you can do to give yourself search engine friendly URLs:

Keep it short

Jut like your domain name, you want your URLs to be short. We’re not talking three letter short, or even three word short, but short enough that it can easily be typed in the the browser’s address bar.

A lot of ecommerce systems create long-complicated URLs that couldn’t be retyped in the address bar without error if they were being dictated to you one letter, symbol and number at a time. Use words, directories and sub-directories strategically.

Use keywords

Again, just like your domain name, you want to use your keywords in the URL structure. If your site is organized properly, this shouldn’t be a problem. Use your categories and sub-categories for your URL directories and sub-directories.

These two tips will go along way to giving your URLs more context and assisting (however small) with the optimization efforts.

Canonical URLs

Canonical URLsThe web is rife with duplicate content. Much of duplication is deliberate, done by screen scrapers and other nefarious means. When another site steals and duplicates your content you can submit a DMCA complaint to Google to try to get them to remove it. There are other legal remedies as well that I won’t go into here.

But many sites are their own worst enemy when it comes to duplicate content problems. It is created by developers building systems that reproduce content across multiple URLs on the same site. When building your URL structure it is important to ensure you work in solutions to prevent potential duplicate content issues before they become a problem.

The home page is one that is the most often producing duplicate content to the search engines. Unchecked, your home page content can be indexed in the search engines with four different URLs creating a duplicated home page three times over.

  1. www.site.com
  2. www.site.com/index.html
  3. site.com
  4. site.com/index.html

There are some simple steps you can take to correct these problems so that all of the above URLs will redirect the visitor to www.site.com.

These types of issues are not found only on the home page but can raise their ugly heads all through the site. Consider these duplicate URLs:

  • www.site.com/directory/
  • www.site.com/directory/index.html
  • www.site.com/directory2/
  • www.site.com/directory2/index.html

Of the four URLs above, only two provide unique content. But the search engines see four pages.

Products pages also suffer from extreme duplication when they can be found through multiple navigation paths, each creating a different URL for the same product. While the best solution is to ensure that each product simply have no more than one URL to access it, there is a less absolute solution that can be implemented: The Canonical Tag.

Canonical Tag

<link rel=”canonical” href=”http://www.example.com/canonical-page.html”/>

Adding the canonical tag into the tags of any page that creates duplicate content tells the search engine which page is the “proper” one to be indexed. While the search engines use this as a guideline rather than a hard and fast rule, it’s a decent band-aid measure you can easily implement until you get a more permanent fix in place.

There is great value in the permanent fix. The search engines have to index a page before they can read the canonical tag. All this extra indexing doesn’t do you any good, slows down the spidering and dilutes the PageRank of the proper pages. Fixing these issues can greatly improve your overall site performance.

Broken Links

Broken Links

Broken links are more than just a nuisance to your visitors, it’s a sure way to lose potential customers. Anytime someone comes across a broken link on or to your site, its an opportunity for them to leave. And they often take it.

The easiest way to find and correct broken links is to run monthly broken link checks with a program like Xenu Link Sleuth. Xenu will spider each and every link on your site to make sure it works. The report tells you of any links that don’t work, whether they are internal (within your site) or external (points to other site’s).

Running a Xenu report once per month ensures that over the course of any changes made to your site, all the links continue to lead where they should, and that links off-site are also still going to valid pages.

Sites with dead links have a tendency to perform less spectacularly in the search results as its a sign of lack of care and maintenance performed on the site.

404 Redirect

404 RedirectYou not only want to be aware of broken links on your site but you want to know about links on other sites that lead to old or non-existent pages on your site. You can do this by keeping an eye on your logs and looking for those coming in getting page not found errors. With this you can do three things:

1) Find out what pages are attempted to be accessed the most. If people are coming to a recently deleted page you either want to put something back up in its place or implement a 301 redirect from that page to the page that is the closest match.

2) Find out where the traffic is coming from. If other sites have links to you that don’t work sometimes you can get that corrected by simply asking them to fix the link. They linked to you for a reason and it likely is in their audience’s best interest to make sure the link works.

3) Implement a custom 404-redirect page. You won’t be able to fix or redirect every broken link coming to your site but you can make sure that anybody coming to your site from a bad link gets more than the generic white “page not found” screen. By creating a customized page visitors can be redirected to relevant content on your site, you will keep more visitors and have an opportunity to convert them. You can read a longer tutorial on 404-redirects here.

Missed a part of this series?
Part 1: Everything You Need To Know About SEO
Part 2: Everything You Need To Know About Title Tags
Part 3: Everything You Need To Know About Meta Description and Keyword Tags
Part 4: Everything You Need To Know About Heading Tags and Alt Attributes
Part 5: Everything You Need To Know About Domain Names
Part 6: Everything You Need To Know About Search Engine Friendly URLs & Broken Links

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