Posts Tagged ‘visible’

What is Search enging optimization?

Thursday, July 24th, 2008

SEO stands for Search Engine Optimization and is defined as (in my own words):

“The process of finding out the best keywords for a web site and by the use of optimizing the web site along with other off-page work making that web site attain a higher position in the search engine result pages (SERPs) for those selected words.”

Although the exact calculations used by the search engines are kept secret, there is lot of knowledge and observations in this field from thousands of webmasters worldwide.

It could be said to be a branch of online marketing. In general terms you can say that it means to make a web site more visible and make it look important in the eyes of search engines.

Not being familiar with SEO and not applying it compared to actually doing the right things can make a huge difference in terms of visitors to your web site.

Yahoo’s Conversion Tips: Optimize, Navigate and Track

Monday, July 14th, 2008

Over at Yahoo’s Search Marketing blog, Marketing Communications Manager Roger Park is offering up tips on converting your search ads. He breaks down a bunch of best practices principles to three main steps: Optimize, Navigate and Track.

Optimize

Optimizing your landing pages is crucial to a profitable search marketing campaign. Park advises:

* Have a “deep link” to a product on your site
* Offer several contact methods
* Online shopping carts should be secure and easily visible
* Remove broken links
* Have good server availability

Navigate

Park encourages site owners and developers to put themselves in the shoes of their web site visitors. I personally have found that many of my clients have a difficult time being able to do this. They’re just too close to their business. So, it was nice that Park also served up some tangible tips:

* Create an obvious pathway to the product that the visitor searched for
* Don’t have too many layers between the landing page and the end goal - no more than 2 clicks
* If the end goal is sale, move non-commercial content below the fold

Track

Successful marketing campaigns are built on solid data. Consistently evaluate your data and tweak your paid search campaigns accordingly. Yahoo’s conversion-only analytics tool can help you do that. The tool can help you analyze keywords, tweak landing pages, and improve under-performing ads.

Highlighting HTML Web Page Links

Monday, July 14th, 2008

You can display your HTML web page  links in the color of your choice by adding the STYLE attribute to your HTML code.

Copy and paste the following code into the HTML portion of your web page where you would like the link to appear:

<A HREF=”http://www.yourdomain.com/” STYLE=”background:yellow; color:black” TARGET=”blank”>http://www.yourdomain.com/</A>

You can change the colors to whatever you’d like, but keep in mind, the text must be visible through the background color.

Highlighting HTML Web Page Text

Monday, July 14th, 2008

You can highlight your HTML web page text in the color of your choice by adding the STYLE attribute to your HTML code.

Example: Example of highlighted text

Copy and paste the following code into the HTML portion of your web page where you would like the text to appear:

<SPAN style=”BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffff00″>Example of highlighted text</SPAN>

You can change the colors to whatever you’d like, but keep in mind, the text must be visible through the background color.

Starting A Web Hosting Company

Thursday, June 26th, 2008

Rather than use the services of a web hosting company to host your web site you could start your own web hosting company. If your business is successful this could provide secondary income and lower the hosting costs for your own site(s).

Basically, there are two ways to start selling web hosting. The first way involves leasing business space, buying equipment, setting up servers, leasing T1 or T3 lines to connect to the Internet, finding clients, and hiring staff to provide 24 hour support. Quite complicated and not recommended for anyone without the technical know-how.

The second way is to become a re-seller for an established host. For a monthly fee you can have an allotment of disk space and bandwidth which can be used to sell to other people. Re-selling is usually anonymous – there is no visible connection to the parent host and you are free to set your own prices and develop your own ‘brand’.

All that is needed to become a re-seller is the ability to pay the monthly fee. All the technical details are handled by the parent company. The re-seller package usually includes everything – even name servers under your own name. All you have to do is to sign up customers and watch the money roll in. Easy – right?

Signing up customers, though, may not be as easy as you imagine. There are literally thousands of hosting companies competing for customers, and making your web hosting business stand out from the crowd is no mean feat. Just think about the process you went through in choosing your own web host. You probably visited several hosting web sites, maybe asked for personal references from your friends or business acquaintances, and then after narrowing down your choices, perhaps did more in-depth research on each of the companies. Or perhaps you just signed up with the first host you saw.

So, in order for your own hosting company to be successful it has to build up a good reputation or be easy to find.  Advertising can make your company more visible, but advertising is expensive – especially in a competitive market like web hosting.

A re-seller account, however, may be ideal for certain situations. If you already have several websites of your own, your monthly costs may be similar to a re-selling account.  For the same amount of money you could switch all your accounts to your own hosting company. Sign up a few friends or associates and you are ahead of the game.

If this sounds attractive, make sure you are going with a reputable hosting company. You will be entirely dependent on them for technical support. This relieves you of many of the headaches of running a hosting company but you are still responsible to your clients if their sites go down.

There are many types of re-seller packages. Some require you to operate under the name of the hosting company while others allow you to set up a shop under your own business name. Pay attention to the billing aspect of the package. Some re-seller accounts have everything you need to get started immediately, while others require you to set up your own billing gateway.