Archive for September, 2009

Getting Started In Internet Marketing

Written by admin on Wednesday, September 30th, 2009 in Social Media.

When you hear the term “internet marketing“, what do you think of?

For many, that term conjures thoughts of websites or spamming or search engines like Google, Yahoo and Bing. For others, it’s all about graphical design, writing fancy code or even affiliate programs. All of those answers correct, but the essence of internet marketing is much simpler.

At its core, internet marketing is about these things:

* Understanding the target market to which the product/service/cause you’re marketing will appeal
* Determining exactly how your target market interacts with the internet
* Positioning your content on the internet to attract the attention of your target market
* Collecting information about your target market (also known as “leads”) for follow-up and conversion into sales
* Design of offers or incentives to induce the desired actions from your leads

Since there is insufficient space in this article to give all of these topics adequate attention, let’s focus on just one specific topic with the realm of internet marketing: Email Marketing.

My best payoff has always come by focusing on permission-based email marketing. Permission-based email marketing refers to the practice of collecting information (including email addresses) from website visitors and communicating with them via e-mail with their direct consent. The “permission” aspect of permission-based email marketing is what separates legitimate email marketers from the spammers that everyone despises.

My love of email marketing is strong for one reason: It works very well. Email marketing has been much like a never-ending goldmine: It enables us to produce income on demand simply by sending a good offer to our list. When you have thousands of loyal subscribers – as we do – and you put a strong and compatible offer in front of them, income becomes nearly automatic.

However, the key to successful email marketing is the development of a legitimate trust relationship with your subscribers. If you opt to send your subscribers a request for purchases every single day, they will likely tire of your badgering and cease reading your emails altogether.

Alternatively, if you take the time to provide good content to your readers on a regular and frequent basis, you’ll discover that your readers take all of your emails far more seriously, and as a result your emails will be opened, read and acted upon with greater frequency. Essentially, email marketing is really an exercise in trust.

Even though there are more sides to internet marketing than just email marketing (permission based), email has been the foundation that our business sits on.

The Most Important Part of Internet Marketing

Written by admin on Wednesday, September 30th, 2009 in Social Media.

When you hear the term “internet marketing“, what do you think of?

For many, that term conjures thoughts of websites or spamming or search engines like Google, Yahoo and Bing. For others, it’s all about graphical design, writing fancy code or even affiliate programs. All of those answers correct, but the essence of internet marketing is much simpler.

At its core, internet marketing is about these things:

* Understanding the target market to which the product/service/cause you’re marketing will appeal
* Determining exactly how your target market interacts with the internet
* Positioning your content on the internet to attract the attention of your target market
* Collecting information about your target market (also known as “leads”) for follow-up and conversion into sales
* Design of offers or incentives to induce the desired actions from your leads

Since there is insufficient space in this article to give all of these topics adequate attention, let’s focus on just one specific topic with the realm of internet marketing: Email Marketing.

My best payoff has always come by focusing on permission-based email marketing. Permission-based email marketing refers to the practice of collecting information (including email addresses) from website visitors and communicating with them via e-mail with their direct consent. The “permission” aspect of permission-based email marketing is what separates legitimate email marketers from the spammers that everyone despises.

My love of email marketing is strong for one reason: It works very well. Email marketing has been much like a never-ending goldmine: It enables us to produce income on demand simply by sending a good offer to our list. When you have thousands of loyal subscribers – as we do – and you put a strong and compatible offer in front of them, income becomes nearly automatic.

However, the key to successful email marketing is the development of a legitimate trust relationship with your subscribers. If you opt to send your subscribers a request for purchases every single day, they will likely tire of your badgering and cease reading your emails altogether.

Alternatively, if you take the time to provide good content to your readers on a regular and frequent basis, you’ll discover that your readers take all of your emails far more seriously, and as a result your emails will be opened, read and acted upon with greater frequency. Essentially, email marketing is really an exercise in trust.

While there are many more aspects to internet marketing than just permission-based email marketing, email has definitely been the cornerstone on which our business is built.

Getting Started In Internet Marketing

Written by admin on Wednesday, September 30th, 2009 in Social Media.

When you hear the term “internet marketing“, what do you think of?

For many, that term conjures thoughts of websites or spamming or search engines like Google, Yahoo and Bing. For others, it’s all about graphical design, writing fancy code or even affiliate programs. All of those answers correct, but the essence of internet marketing is much simpler.

At its core, internet marketing is about these things:

* Understanding the target market to which the product/service/cause you’re marketing will appeal
* Determining exactly how your target market interacts with the internet
* Positioning your content on the internet to attract the attention of your target market
* Collecting information about your target market (also known as “leads”) for follow-up and conversion into sales
* Design of offers or incentives to induce the desired actions from your leads

Since there is insufficient space in this article to give all of these topics adequate attention, let’s focus on just one specific topic with the realm of internet marketing: Email Marketing.

My best payoff has always come by focusing on permission-based email marketing. Permission-based email marketing refers to the practice of collecting information (including email addresses) from website visitors and communicating with them via e-mail with their direct consent. The “permission” aspect of permission-based email marketing is what separates legitimate email marketers from the spammers that everyone despises.

My love of email marketing is strong for one reason: It works very well. Email marketing has been much like a never-ending goldmine: It enables us to produce income on demand simply by sending a good offer to our list. When you have thousands of loyal subscribers – as we do – and you put a strong and compatible offer in front of them, income becomes nearly automatic.

However, the key to successful email marketing is the development of a legitimate trust relationship with your subscribers. If you opt to send your subscribers a request for purchases every single day, they will likely tire of your badgering and cease reading your emails altogether.

Alternatively, if you take the time to provide good content to your readers on a regular and frequent basis, you’ll discover that your readers take all of your emails far more seriously, and as a result your emails will be opened, read and acted upon with greater frequency. Essentially, email marketing is really an exercise in trust.

Even though there are more sides to internet marketing than just email marketing (permission based), email has been the foundation that our business sits on.

The Most Important Part of Internet Marketing

Written by admin on Wednesday, September 30th, 2009 in Social Bookmarking.

When you hear the term “internet marketing“, what do you think of?

For many, that term conjures thoughts of websites or spamming or search engines like Google, Yahoo and Bing. For others, it’s all about graphical design, writing fancy code or even affiliate programs. All of those answers correct, but the essence of internet marketing is much simpler.

At its core, internet marketing is about these things:

* Understanding the target market to which the product/service/cause you’re marketing will appeal
* Determining exactly how your target market interacts with the internet
* Positioning your content on the internet to attract the attention of your target market
* Collecting information about your target market (also known as “leads”) for follow-up and conversion into sales
* Design of offers or incentives to induce the desired actions from your leads

Since there is insufficient space in this article to give all of these topics adequate attention, let’s focus on just one specific topic with the realm of internet marketing: Email Marketing.

My best payoff has always come by focusing on permission-based email marketing. Permission-based email marketing refers to the practice of collecting information (including email addresses) from website visitors and communicating with them via e-mail with their direct consent. The “permission” aspect of permission-based email marketing is what separates legitimate email marketers from the spammers that everyone despises.

My love of email marketing is strong for one reason: It works very well. Email marketing has been much like a never-ending goldmine: It enables us to produce income on demand simply by sending a good offer to our list. When you have thousands of loyal subscribers – as we do – and you put a strong and compatible offer in front of them, income becomes nearly automatic.

However, the key to successful email marketing is the development of a legitimate trust relationship with your subscribers. If you opt to send your subscribers a request for purchases every single day, they will likely tire of your badgering and cease reading your emails altogether.

Alternatively, if you take the time to provide good content to your readers on a regular and frequent basis, you’ll discover that your readers take all of your emails far more seriously, and as a result your emails will be opened, read and acted upon with greater frequency. Essentially, email marketing is really an exercise in trust.

While there are many more aspects to internet marketing than just permission-based email marketing, email has definitely been the cornerstone on which our business is built.

Internet Marketing And Permission-Based Email Marketing

Written by admin on Wednesday, September 30th, 2009 in Site Promotion.

When you hear the term “internet marketing“, what do you think of?

For many, that term conjures thoughts of websites or spamming or search engines like Google, Yahoo and Bing. For others, it’s all about graphical design, writing fancy code or even affiliate programs. All of those answers correct, but the essence of internet marketing is much simpler.

At its core, internet marketing is about these things:

* Understanding the target market to which the product/service/cause you’re marketing will appeal
* Determining exactly how your target market interacts with the internet
* Positioning your content on the internet to attract the attention of your target market
* Collecting information about your target market (also known as “leads”) for follow-up and conversion into sales
* Design of offers or incentives to induce the desired actions from your leads

Since there is insufficient space in this article to give all of these topics adequate attention, let’s focus on just one specific topic with the realm of internet marketing: Email Marketing.

My best payoff has always come by focusing on permission-based email marketing. Permission-based email marketing refers to the practice of collecting information (including email addresses) from website visitors and communicating with them via e-mail with their direct consent. The “permission” aspect of permission-based email marketing is what separates legitimate email marketers from the spammers that everyone despises.

My love of email marketing is strong for one reason: It works very well. Email marketing has been much like a never-ending goldmine: It enables us to produce income on demand simply by sending a good offer to our list. When you have thousands of loyal subscribers – as we do – and you put a strong and compatible offer in front of them, income becomes nearly automatic.

However, the key to successful email marketing is the development of a legitimate trust relationship with your subscribers. If you opt to send your subscribers a request for purchases every single day, they will likely tire of your badgering and cease reading your emails altogether.

Alternatively, if you take the time to provide good content to your readers on a regular and frequent basis, you’ll discover that your readers take all of your emails far more seriously, and as a result your emails will be opened, read and acted upon with greater frequency. Essentially, email marketing is really an exercise in trust.

Even though there are more sides to internet marketing than just email marketing (permission based), email has been the foundation that our business sits on.

The Most Important Part of Internet Marketing

Written by admin on Wednesday, September 30th, 2009 in Site Promotion.

When you hear the term “internet marketing“, what do you think of?

For many, that term conjures thoughts of websites or spamming or search engines like Google, Yahoo and Bing. For others, it’s all about graphical design, writing fancy code or even affiliate programs. All of those answers correct, but the essence of internet marketing is much simpler.

At its core, internet marketing is about these things:

* Understanding the target market to which the product/service/cause you’re marketing will appeal
* Determining exactly how your target market interacts with the internet
* Positioning your content on the internet to attract the attention of your target market
* Collecting information about your target market (also known as “leads”) for follow-up and conversion into sales
* Design of offers or incentives to induce the desired actions from your leads

Since there is insufficient space in this article to give all of these topics adequate attention, let’s focus on just one specific topic with the realm of internet marketing: Email Marketing.

My best payoff has always come by focusing on permission-based email marketing. Permission-based email marketing refers to the practice of collecting information (including email addresses) from website visitors and communicating with them via e-mail with their direct consent. The “permission” aspect of permission-based email marketing is what separates legitimate email marketers from the spammers that everyone despises.

My love of email marketing is strong for one reason: It works very well. Email marketing has been much like a never-ending goldmine: It enables us to produce income on demand simply by sending a good offer to our list. When you have thousands of loyal subscribers – as we do – and you put a strong and compatible offer in front of them, income becomes nearly automatic.

However, the key to successful email marketing is the development of a legitimate trust relationship with your subscribers. If you opt to send your subscribers a request for purchases every single day, they will likely tire of your badgering and cease reading your emails altogether.

Alternatively, if you take the time to provide good content to your readers on a regular and frequent basis, you’ll discover that your readers take all of your emails far more seriously, and as a result your emails will be opened, read and acted upon with greater frequency. Essentially, email marketing is really an exercise in trust.

Even though there are more sides to internet marketing than just email marketing (permission based), email has been the foundation that our business sits on.

SEO and the Benefits

Written by admin on Wednesday, September 30th, 2009 in SEO.

There has forever been major discussions about how long it will take an SEO company to acquire rankings for a client or when they will see traffic improvements. A vast amount of people see SEO as a quick fix to their site, where they will invest a few hundred and then become a millionaire. This is just not the case and SEO should be more seen as a long term investment. Internet marketing is absolutley essential if you are starting an online venture, it is a bit like having a shop and closing the front door. So let us take a look at some of the more eagerly anticipated questions clients may well face when it comes to SEO.

 

How Long Will it Take

There is really not one strict answer, there are so many different things that need to be looked into. So let’s take a brief look.

 

Competition

If you are presently not ranking for any terms whatever then any SEO in the globe is not going to be able to make you step-up 1000 positions in a calendar week. There are many firms both big and small that have probably been doing SEO on their websites for almost a decade now, so the first call of action for a new site is to build up trust with the search engines.

 

Budget

Some people just do not have any money to throw at SEO and are expecting a miracle to happen to their site. SEO is an investment; if you have a low budget then it will take longer to see benefits merely because one of the primary factors with SEO is time. Without spending at least a few days a calendar month working on your website, you are most likely to little movements and progress.

 

In conclusion speak about goals and ROI with your SEO company before any work commences, if they promise you top 10 positions within a week then you acknowledge they will not deliver.

 

For some of the virtually outstanding web design

Link Wheel Srategy

Written by admin on Wednesday, September 30th, 2009 in SEO.

Link wheel is an effective SEO tool to create backlinks to your site and elevate your search rankings. With the right technique, your website can become popular with search engines. The strategy behind this is to add links to your articles that you post on web 2. sites such as Squidoo, Blogger, Wordpress, Twitter, Wikipedia, Digg and many more, and each one of them link to the next and also link back to your main site. The process works similar to a wheel in motion. In this case, your main website is the hub of the wheel. All the articles must be optimized on the keyword you want. This creates a powerful tool to build effective backlinks to your website. Once you link wheel is in motion you can watch a flood of traffic to your main website.

Here is a step by step look at how you can get your link wheel up and running.

To start with, write articles that are unique and have fresh content. So what you would need is one unique article for each of the web 2.0 sites you wish to post your articles to. Remember to add pictures and videos to each post if possible. Keywords are important so make sure you use them as anchor text inside all the articles on the wheel. Your articles need to be indexed properly, so an effective link building campaign will boost your wheel. Adding RSS feeds from each web 2.0 site and submitting them to RSS ping services will keep your link wheel updated. If you can use a backlink building software, it will build backlinks for each and every web 2.0 site. Building a subwheel, where you can make one of the web 2.0 sites the hub and then start another link wheel, will increase your search engine rankings dramatically.

It is important that your main website or ‘hub’ in the link wheel does not have the same content. Each link wheel needs to target one keyword and the titles and tags should be optimized accordingly with one keyword per link wheel. You will eventually have different accounts on different web 2.0 sites so make sure you organize the accounts well. Use software that can do that automatically for you, each time you need to build a link wheel. Don’t mix the accounts and stray outside your niche.

One rule that you need to make sure you follow is that the IP addresses of the sites linking to your main site are all unique. Search engines like Google penalize sites with similar IP addresses linking together to a main website. Another thing is to ensure that the content on all the sites are related to your main site. Moreover, do not link back to the site that links to you. Some sites such as Zimbio, have a ‘nofollow’ tag on the links you put there, so make sure to use sites that do not have the ‘nofollow’ tag, otherwise your links would be useless in terms of ranking.

Criteria You Should Look For In Professional SEO Firms

Written by admin on Wednesday, September 30th, 2009 in SEO.

Acquiring the services of a respectable and professional SEO company is sometimes a mind-boggling and challenging episode. The market is filled with many developers and experts, and each search engine optimization company or SEO firm utilizes and implements different methods and follow-up patterns to chart the direction of their SEO services. At the end of all SEO forms, it is virtually the same, stating that the best method in optimizing your web site is to get higher ranking. It is vital to check into the following details when you decide to sign up the services of an SEO company. Parameters In Choosing A Professional SEO Company – Track Record And Roster Of Clients. One of the first aspects you can verify into is the project experience, or track record of an SEO firm. Whether or not the SEO firm that you are considering for your web site optimization, has sufficient experience, you need to find out how long the SEO entity has been in business. The most potent way to choose a quality SEO firm is to check out their present clients and acquire the feedback from the references. – Do They Employ Ethical SEO Strategies. In choosing a credible SEO firm, you need to look at its methods and working strategies. Verify what methodology a search engine optimization company is employing, as you need to avoid SEO firms that practice unethical methods and procedures. This may in turn ruin the reputation of your web site. A list of unethical SEO firm practices include unnecessary stuffing of keywords, page swapping technique, copy-write violation, utilizing irrelevant keywords, putting similar content in all web pages, using invisible text and overuse of flash & graphic design. These unethical practices may pose a dangerous threat to your web site. While you choose an SEO expert, you need to identify whether it is an ethical SEO firm or not, based on the parameters mentioned above. If you want to know more about search engine optimization, read through the following articles: The Distinction Between SEO Writers and Content Providers, Separating SEO Facts From The Widespread Fallacies, Leprechaun Repellent and Guaranteed SEO Companies – The Disturbing Link .

DIY SEO and Why Your Don’t Need To Pay For It

Written by admin on Wednesday, September 30th, 2009 in SEO.

It seems these days everyone is an SEO expert. What they don’t tell you is they’re self-proclaimed experts in SEO with very little technical background and no credentials to back them up. Trying to find a quality SEO expert (a true expert) is becoming a frustrating task for webmasters. It’s rare to come across a webmaster who’s employed the services of an SEO firm and didn’t get burned in one way or another. SEO experts promise the world and more often than not under-deliver. In order to save money and frustration, many webmasters have branched off and tried to apply SEO on their own. Are these webmasters heading down the wrong path or have they figured out that SEO isn’t as difficult as the SEO experts lead people to believe? Promising The Moon and The Stars, Delivering a box of Lucky Charms. Many SEO companies you come across are going to promise you a top-10 ranking. That’s a top-10 ranking as-in showing up between 1 and 10 of the search engines results pages (SERPs). Research has shown that close to 90% of all internet users do not browse past the first page of SERPs. If you’re not in the top 30 you can forget about getting ANY traffic from search engines. A guaranteed top-10 placement is a very bold promise, one that probably sounds too good to be true. In fact, it isn’t! Almost any SEO firm can guarantee they’ll place your website in the top-10 of SERPs within a month and deliver 100% on what they promised! Now… what EXACTLY did they promise? They promised a top-10 ranking, that much is fact. Beyond that, no specific details were provided. Here’s the problem. Top-10 ranking only means something if your website is placed in the top-10 of highly targeted and relevant keywords or keyword phrases that users are actually searching on. Most of these SEO firms are simply targeting very niche keywords that have little to no competition. By doing so they are delivering on their promise of top-10 rankings. The problem is the keywords with little to no competition most likely have little to no searches against them by real users. It sure does look good for an SEO expert to type in “Chartreuse Colored Keyboards” and have your keyboard website come up 1st in the results set. How many REAL users are going to be conducting a search under the specific keywords “Chartreuse Colored Keyboards”? If you’re lucky, maybe a half-dozen in a year. One thing to be careful of with any SEO company is a promise that seems too good to be true. Vagueness is the ally for SEO’s as they can make deliver on what they promise, which is often just an illusion of what you expect. If you want to know more about search engine optimization, read through the following articles: 10 Reasons For You To Use Search Engine Optimization, Search Engine Optimization Tips, Black Hat, White Hat and Gray Hat SEO .



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