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Tuesday, June 29, 2010

What is Web Marketing?


What is Web Marketing?

Web marketing is the general term for marketing done on the Internet. It's basically a computer-based version of traditional marketing objectives that involve a product, price, packaging, promotion and place. Marketing is ultimately about propelling a product or service through the proper channels and web marketing uses the Internet as that channel. The umbrella term of web marketing covers a comprehensive range of business activities such as generating sales leads, selling products or services and supporting other business through affiliate marketing.

What is Internet Marketing?

Depending on whom you ask, the term Internet marketing can mean a variety of things. At one time, Internet marketing consisted mostly of having a website or placing banner ads on other websites. On the other end of the spectrum, there are loads of companies telling you that you can make a fortune overnight on the Internet and who try to sell you some form of "Internet marketing program".

Affiliate Marketing:

Affiliate Marketing is a revenue sharing venture between a website owner and an online merchant. The website owner will place advertisements on his websites to either help sell the merchant's products or to send potential customers to the merchant's website, all in exchange for a share of the profits.
There are three ways to earn money through affiliate marketing:
Pay Per ClickEvery time a potential customer leaves the affiliate website by "clicking" on the link leading to the merchant's website, a certain amount of money is deposited in the affiliate's account. This amount can be pennies or dollars depending on the product and amount of the commission.
Pay Per SaleEvery time a sale is made as a result of advertising on the affiliate's website, a percentage, or commission, is deposited into the affiliate's account.
Pay Per LeadEvery time a potential client registers at the merchant's website as a result of the advertisement on the affiliate's account, a previously determined amount is deposited into the affiliate's account.
For many website owners, this is a great way to earn some extra money without actually having to "do" anything. All it involves is placing an ad on the affiliate's website. There's no selling or promotion of any kind. The affiliate can just sit back and wait for the profits to roll in.




What Is an Online Merchant?
An online merchant is a person who accepts payment, usually in the form of credit cards, in exchange for goods or services over the Internet. Special accounts, called merchant accounts, are often created with credit card processing companies, to enable the merchant to accept online payments. Sellers generally pay a fee to the processing company for this service.
In the early 1990s, the Internet became accessible to the general public. The web, email, chat rooms, and other online tools swept across the world. In the midst of this new technological frenzy, businesses saw the huge potential that the Internet had for marketing and sales. Small businesses began cropping up all over the web, giving rise to dot-com businesses.

Internet Marketing Components
Setting up a website
Search Engine Marketing (SEM)
Email marketing
Banner advertising
Online press releases,
Blog marketing
Article marketing,


Friday, June 25, 2010

Keyword Analysis to advantage your website



7 tips to use Keyword Analytics to Your Advantage to Website

1.       Trend to inside the minds of searchers
Often we as marketers think we know a lot about how people search. The truth is, there are a lot of different ways to search and it varies by industry and from one individual to another. By analyzing the keywords and phrases that are driving traffic and sales to your website, you can find out how your customers search to find your site. What adjectives or other modifiers do potential customers search on? What order do they search?

2.       Which keyword are  working for organic search
If your site is showing up on the first page for some of those keywords, how much traffic are you getting from those organic listings? More importantly, how many leads or sales are you getting from those keywords? You will sometimes be surprised at which keywords drive the most traffic. Often it’s not the keywords you think will be best, and that’s why you have to watch your keyword referral reports to see which keywords are working.

3.       Calculate  which keywords are not driving users
If you’re on the first page of Google and you get zero clicks, it’s time to find some new keywords. Stick with the keywords that drive sales and ditch the keywords that don’t work. There is a huge difference in click through rates depending on the position your site is listed in, but if your site is anywhere on the first page of Google, you should expect some level of traffic, or you’re not targeting the right keyword.

4.       Searching  keywords which works in PPC that can be used for SEO
The nice thing about PPC search advertising is that you can choose exactly which keywords your ad shows up for. The thing that sucks about PPC is that you have to pay for every click. So why not take what you’ve learned from your PPC campaign and make sure you’re focusing your SEO efforts on the right keywords? You’ll usually find that a first page organic listing for the same keyword will send a lot more traffic than a paid listing for the same phrase, and the price per click is way better.

5.       Searching keywords which works  for SEO that can be used for PPC lunching

The same idea for taking PPC keywords into your SEO campaign works the other way, too. Organic search listings will bring people to your site for all kinds of different keywords–including tons of keyword combinations that you never would have thought to include in your PPC campaign. If you notice a particular phrase that drives a lot of sales from a unique organic search keyword, you should try it out in your PPC ads. You’ll usually see a similar conversion rate, or maybe even better conversion from PPC on the same keyword!
6.       Select  keywords to insert  as negative matches
Negative matching with PPC campaigns is when you tell the search engines to not show your ad when certain words are included in the search query. This can come in handy when you’re doing broad matching on keywords that have multiple meanings or connotations. They can also help you eliminate keywords that are driving a lot of traffic without resulting in sales. By watching your conversion metrics on a keyword level, you can identify keywords that drive traffic without sales and add those keywords to your campaigns as negative matches. You can even save yourself some money by looking at irrelevant, under-performing keywords from your organic search that should be excluded from your PPC campaigns before you even spend a penny on PPC ads.

7.       More ideas to get for new content and products

You’ll start to notice that people find your site for all kinds of different, sometimes strange, keywords. Watch the keyword list for new ideas for topics you can write about on your blog or even a new product you can add to meet the needs of your customers. If you’re getting significant traffic on keywords that you don’t have content about, it’s a good indicator that traffic would flow to your site if you create content to match what people are looking for.



Thursday, June 24, 2010

Some Google Ranking Factors - SEO Checklist




1.    Positive ON-Page SEO Factors.
a.       Keyword in URL.
b.      Keyword in Domain name.
c.       Keyword in Title Tag.
d.      Keyword in H1, H2 and H3.

2.    Negative ON-Page SEO Factors.
a.       Text presented in graphics form only
No ACTUAL body text on the page

b.      Affiliate site:  The Florida update went after affiliates with a vengeance - flower and travel affiliates were hit hard - cookie-cutter sites with massive inter-linking, but little unique content. Subsequent updates have also targeted affiliates.


c.       Over optimization penalty (OOP): Penalty for over-compliance with well-established, accepted web optimization practices. Too high keyword repetition (keyword stuffing) may get you the OOP. Overuse of H1 tags has been mentioned. Meta-tag stuffing.

d.      Poison words: The word "Links" in a title tag has been suggested to be a bad idea. Here is my list of Poison Words for Adsense. This penalty has been loosened - many of these words now appear in normal context, with no problems. But watch your step.

e.      Excessive cross-linking: within the same C block (IP=xxx.xxx.CCC.xxx)
If you have many sites (>10, author's guess) with the same web host, prolific cross-linking can indicate more of a single entity, and less of democratic web voting. Easy to spot, easy to penalize.
"This does not apply to a small number of sites" .. (this author guesses the number 10, JAWG) . . . "Hosted on a local server". . Matt Cutts July 2006.

f.        Keyword stuffing threshold: In body, meta tags, alt text, etc. = demotion






3.    Positive OFF-Page SEO Factors.

a.       Page Rank: Based on the Number and Quality of links to you. Google link reporting continues to display just a SMALL fraction of your actual back links, and they are NOT just greater than PR4 - they are mixed.
b.      Anchor text of inbound link to you.
c.       Link from "Expert" site. Google patent - Big time boost (Hilltop Algorithm).Recently reported to give a big boost!
d.      Site listed in Yahoo Directory: Big boost - You can get in by paying $299 each year. Many swear it is worth it - many swear it isn't.
e.      Site Age - Old shows stability.

4.    Negative OFF-Page SEO Factors.
a.       Zero links to you: You MUST have at least 1 (one) incoming link (back link) from some website somewhere, that Google is aware of, to REMAIN in the index.
b.       Link-buying. (Very good IF you don't get caught, but don't do it -when caught, the penalty isn't worth it.)
c.       Cloaking: Google promises to Ban! (Presenting one webpage to the search engine spider, and another webpage to everybody else.)
d.      Penalties - resulting from. Domain Hijacking(work with Google to fix).



Wednesday, June 23, 2010

Error Handle using PHP code

form.php
<pre>
<html>
<head>
<title>Personal INFO</title>
</head>
<body>

<?php if($_REQUEST['err']) {?>
<br />
<div style="border:1px solid red;text-align:center;width:600px;margin:auto;color:red;">
    <?php
    echo $err=$_REQUEST['err'];
    ?>       
</div>   
<?php } ?>



<?php if($_REQUEST['succes']) {?>
<br />
    <div style="border:1px solid green; background:#00FFCC;text-align:center;width:800px;margin:auto;color:green;">
    <?php
    echo $succes=$_REQUEST['succes'];
    ?>       
    </div>
<?php } ?>


<br />
<form method="post" action="form-action.php">
<table  align="center" bgcolor="#CCCCCC";>

    <tr>
        <td>First Name:</td>
            <td><input type="text" size="12" maxlength="12" name="Fname">
           
            <td>Last Name:</td>
    <td><input type="text" size="12" maxlength="36" name="Lname">
            </td>
    </tr>
   
    <tr>

        <td><input type="hidden"  name="id"></td>
    </tr>
   
   
    <tr>
        <td>Gender:</td>
       
        <td><input type="radio" value="Male" name="gender">Male</td>
        <td><input type="radio" value="Female" name="gender">Female</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>

        <td>Please choose type of residence</td>

        <td><input type="checkbox" value="Burger" name="food[]">Burger</td>
        <td><input type="checkbox" value="Pizza" name="food[]">Pizza</td>
        <td><input type="checkbox" value="Chicken" name="food[]">Chicken</td>

    </tr>
   
    <tr>
        <td>Your comments:</td>
        <td><textarea rows="5" cols="20" name="quote"></textarea></td>
    </tr>
   
    <tr>
        <td>Select a Level of Education:</td>
   
        <td><select name="education">
        <option value="Jr.High">Jr.High</option>
        <option value="HighSchool">HighSchool</option>
        <option value="College">College</option></select></td>
    </tr>

    <tr>
    <td>Select your favorite time of day:</td>
    <td>
    <select name="TofD" size="3">
    <option value="Morning">Morning</option>
    <option value="Day">Day</option>
    <option value="Night">Night</option></select>
    </td>
    <tr>
    <tr>
<td><input style="margin-left:150px;"  type="submit" value="login" name="submit"></td></tr>
</tr>
</table>
</form>
</pre>

form-action.php
<pre>
<?php
mysql_connect("localhost","root","") or die (mysql_error());
mysql_select_db("formexample") or die (mysql_error());


if(isset($_REQUEST['submit']))
{
   
   
        $Fname = $_POST["Fname"];
        $Lname = $_POST["Lname"];
        $gender = $_POST["gender"];
        $food = $_POST["food"];
        $quote = $_POST["quote"];
        $education = $_POST["education"];
        $TofD = $_POST["TofD"];
       

        if(empty($Fname))
            {
                $error="First Name cannot be empty";   
           
            }
        else if    (empty($Lname))
        {
            $error="Last Name cannot be empty";   
       
        }
       
        else if    (empty($gender))
        {
            $error="Gender cannot be empty";   
       
        }
        else if    (empty($food))
        {
            $error="Food cannot be empty";   
       
        }
       
        else if    (empty($quote))
        {
            $error="Quote cannot be empty";   
       
        }
        else if    (empty($education))
        {
            $error="Education cannot be empty";   
       
        }
        else if    (empty($TofD))
        {
            $error="Favorite time cannot be empty";   
       
        }
       
   
        if($error==NULL)
        {       
            $data="";
            $data=implode(",",$food);
   
            $query="insert into form values('','$Fname','$Lname','$gender','$data','$quote','$education','$TofD')";
            $result=mysql_query($query);
            if($result)
            {
            $succes = "Succesfuly added your information";
            }
           
            ?>
            <body onLoad="document.myform.submit(); ">
            <form name="myform" method="post" action="form.php?&succes=<?php echo $succes; ?>"></form>
            </body>
           
            <?php
        }
        else
        {
        ?>
        <body onLoad="document.myform.submit(); ">
            <form name="myform" method="post" action="form.php?&err=<?php echo $error; ?>"></form>
        </body>
   
       
        <?php
        }
       
}

?>
</pre>

Friday, June 11, 2010

How to create Robot.text and htaccess file.

Use of  .htaccess file

The .htaccess file can be used on Apache servers running Linux or Unix to increase your web site security, and customize the way your web site behaves. The main uses of the .htaccess files are to redirect visitors to custom error pages, stop directory listings, ban robots gathering email addresses for spam, ban visitors from certain countries and IP addresses, block visitors from bad referring (warez) sites, protect your web site from hot linking images and bandwidth theft, redirect visitors from a requested page to a new web page, and to password protect directories. Use the information in this article as a starting point to optimize and protect your web site.
More details in htaccess


How to create  robots.txt File

The robots.txt file is a simple ASCII text file used to indicate web site files and directories that should not be indexed. Many webmasters choose not to revise their robots.txt file because they are uncertain how the changes could impact their rankings. However, a poorly written robots.txt file can cause your complete web site to be indexed, gathering information like passwords, email addresses, hidden links, membership areas, and confidential files. A poorly written robots.txt file could also cause portions of your web site to be ignored by the search engines.

More details in Robot.txt

Differences between robot.txt vs .htaccess

The robots.txt file consists of directives to search engine spiders (robots) as to what files and folders you want or do not want to be indexed. However, this will not necessarily prevent spiders from following links into those folders and there are some spiders that do not respect the robots.txt file (all of the major search engines do but there are still quite a few unscrupulous bots to worry about). Additionally, the use of robots.txt directives does not prevent human visitors from accessing those folders and directories if they know they are there (or if they're just hacking their way in via guesses, e.g., looking for index.html or index.php files).

Depending on how you set it up, the .htaccess file, in contrast, actually blocks access to certain files or folders. This applies to both human visitors and bots.

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