Archive for the ‘Search Engine Optimization’ Category

Malcolm
Search Intent, Analytics and the Multi-Competent Web
Posted by Malcolm on Thu (06/12/08) at 10:01 AM

Long before I started working in SEO I was an educator for an organization that taught computer skills to total neophytes. You learn a lot from working with completely fresh users. It makes you realize how much of your ability comes from deeply ingrained basic assumptions and how these can work for or against you.

Malcolm
Guest Article: Five Tips to Make Your Blog More Sociable
Posted by Malcolm on Thu (06/05/08) at 08:08 AM

Thanks to Rosalind Gardner, we’ve had the opportunity to post a guest article that explains GILL Media’s blogging philosophy. Check it out!

Malcolm
iStar Web Solutions, LLC Becomes a GILL Media Partner
Posted by Malcolm on Tue (05/27/08) at 12:26 PM

Company brings internet solutions to the Atlanta, North Georgia and East Tennessee regions

Atlanta, GA: iStar Web Solutions, LLC announced its status as an iGSM-certified GILL Media Partner today. This confirms its ability to bring quality internet marketing services, website design and more to clients in the Southeastern US.

iStar Web Solutions head Keith Mangum pursued a partnership to conform to a uniformly high standard of service delivery. “I want to introduce small and medium sized businesses to effective online marketing and commerce,” he said.

Malcolm
The SEO Process
Posted by Malcolm on Wed (05/21/08) at 08:17 AM

SEO. Search engine optimization. SEM. Internet marketing. Keyword research! You’ve heard the buzzwords and seen the effects on the Web. Maybe you want to know why Uncle Bob’s Widget-Wrangling Emporium uses the same phrases to describe its wares over and over again, or why an errant Google search dumped you into a wasteland of nonsense text and wacky links. Our blog has some answers (we’ve written a lot of material for beginners), but it’s high time we tackled the big question behind it all: How do people start an Internet marketing campaign?

Adam
Silly Marketer, No Cookie
Posted by Adam on Thu (05/08/08) at 13:15 PM

A would-be marketing consultant sent me a pretty silly email today. I want to share it with you because it’s a perfect examples of what to avoid when you’re looking for marketing help. I edited out repetitive dumbness (you can only mock someone using bad grammar to offer content services so many times), and removed the lime green text color, but the rest is straight from the original, awful email.

Malcolm
Domains - Part Two: TLDs Worldwide
Posted by Malcolm on Fri (05/02/08) at 10:07 AM

Last time around we chewed on some food for thought about domain registration. We explored the “big three” top level domains (TLDs): dot-com, dot-net and dot-org, along with cousins dot-biz and dot-info. This time, we’re going to explore a few more TLD strategies. It’s a bit of a trip, because more than anything else, TLDs help the Web live up to its “world wide” moniker.

Malcolm
Another Guest Article!
Posted by Malcolm on Tue (04/29/08) at 08:11 AM

This time around, read about the merits of and methods behind ghostblogging at Search Engine Journal. Thanks goes out to them for the opportunity. Check it out!

Malcolm
Domains - Part One: Smart Names and Top Level Domains
Posted by Malcolm on Tue (04/22/08) at 14:48 PM

Domain names are weird. In the wild and woolly days of the early Web, users picked domains based on a quirky sense of humor or raw, boring functionality. A domain name was nothing more than an address, and unless you picked a strange one, it was about as significant to you as your street number: important, but hardly representative of who you are.

Unregistered
Optimize Your Titles, Part One: Branding and Style
Posted by Gene on Fri (04/04/08) at 16:41 PM

Tag, you’re it! Or, you may well be “it” when you make the best use of your page title tags for Search Engine Optimization (SEO) purposes. Aside from writing quality content, a well-constructed title is the best thing you can do for your web page. A title doesn’t look important when you’re actually viewing the page, but to a search engine those words in the top right are your page’s main topic and gateway. When you search, every result is a page title - and “untitled” stinks. Google usually shuffles them to the back. Even when it doesn’t, untitled pages look kind of dodgy, like an unlicensed hot dog cart with a dirty sign. Sure, it might give you something tasty - and it might give you worms, too.

Malcolm
PPC Advertising Part Three: Optimizing Quality
Posted by Malcolm on Mon (03/24/08) at 15:39 PM

In our last episode in this series we talked about quality scores and how they can make or break your PPC campaign. When it comes to managing your advertising budget, quality is king. If your quality score is low in relation to a coveted keyword (remember that your score changes per word, per campaign and for your business as a whole) you’ll pay through the nose - and your high-quality competitors can beat your bid by spending a fraction of what you’d pay. Quality scores ensure that PPC providers get their money’s worth. People won’t click on bad ads as often, so the search engines want more money per low-quality click.