Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category
Link Building – Why You Need to Get the Best
Link building has become one of the most important tools to use in internet marketing. This is an incredibly effective and profitable way to provide good exposure for a website. This tool works on the simple principle of letting people know about your website and what it offers. But before you try this service out for your website, let us explain to you how link building works and benefits a website.
How can link building benefit your website?
Increase in Traffic: Link building creates a lot of doors through which your targeted traffic can enter your website. Links to your website are submitted to various websites whose content is related to the subject of yours. This way, you can naturally divert the traffic on those websites to your own.
Increase in Search Engine Rankings: Most search engines consider the number of links and amount of traffic on a website while determining its ranking. Hence, link building will almost certainly result in an increase in the search engine ranking of your website.
Better one way links: Traditional link building is two-way link building in which both websites display each other’s links on their web pages. One way links are links to websites whose links you don’t display on yours. One way links are great to improve a website’s image as they prove that the content on the website is so good that other websites agree to display its links without any reciprocation. A good link building service works hard to get as many one way links for your website as possible. One way links improve traffic to your website because the one way links look natural and not paid for.
Web Promotion: Most websites have different pages for the different things they offer. However, often some of the pages don’t get much traffic because the visitors don’t know about them. Link building popularizes different pages of your website. Unlike other marketing tools which focus on the entire website as one, link building works at a more detailed level. It promotes each and every page of your website in different venues.
More targeted audience: Link building naturally attracts a large number of the people who are looking for a website like yours. Since those people find links to your website on other websites related to your niche or industry, you will catch the attention of more people who are looking for the services or products you are offering on your website.
In order to have a successful link building campaign, you must keep the following things in mind.
• Ensure that you have site content that is relevant, easily understood and likely to be approved and appreciated by your readers.
• Ensure that your content has no grammatical or spelling errors.
• The site should have an accessible privacy policy and an “About Us” section that describes you and your company so that you present an image of credibility. Add your picture to add authenticity and personalization
How can our Link Building Service help you?
Now that you have in depth understanding of the process of link building and its benefits, let us explain how our Link Building Service will help your website improve its search engine rankings:
i. We will review your website pages and contact various websites in your niche and industry and ask them to display links to your website on those websites.
ii. Another method of building one way links is through the use of pay per click tools. This can be a great marketing technique, helping drive visitors to your site and increasing brand exposure as well.
iii. We can also syndicate an article at major article sites like EZINE. These sites are frequented by many people and so they normally rank higher. When your articles are listed in a place which is itself highly ranked, you are more likely to receive increased traffic to your own site.
iv. We can submit to news sites articles which include links to your website. We can also syndicate press releases both of which are other methods proven to improve one way link building. You can then track visitors who choose your articles and offer them unique exclusive content as well as relevant news.
v. If you have quality articles, we will try submitting them to paid directories.
ii. We can create affiliate programs on your website whereby your affiliates send their visitors back to your site.
Enlisting the help of a specialist, professional or an expert in the field of search engine optimization is one of the most important things you can do for your website and one of the best ways of ensuring your one way link building project becomes a success.
The writer of this article owns a website called “LinkBuildingSolutions.Com” which is a great place for One way links. If you are looking for quality One way link building service that gives you top class link building solution then this is the place for you. Your one stop shop for all your Link building needs.
The internet reacts to Digital Britain
Reaction on Twitter and blogs was fast and furious, quite literally, in some instances to the proposals coming out of the Digital Britain report.
I’ll be collecting reaction as it comes in live and highlighting different parts of the report, if you want to send a comment or a blog post along, feel free to send me a message on Twitter. I’m @kevglobal. This post will grow over time, and I’ll add things under the different headings as I go along.
After a while of watching the tweets flow in, the general impression I get is that the digitally savvy on Twitter were disappointed by the report. They thought it didn’t go far enough, that it focused on piracy and problems for media companies while lacking focus on internet users.
Mark Adams, the chair of Charity Citizens Online, wrote:
2mb is visionary, like a “Speaker of House of Commons” is visionary.
Rosena Angeline wrote:
the 50p a month levy per landline to pay for #digitalbritain is a tax — and did we get a vote on that? let me think … thanks #gordonbrown
Terence Eden sent me this message via Twitter:
Practically, the USO has to be low; but 2MB? University students for the last 10 years have got used to 100Mbps. 2MB is unambitious & feeble
Julian Kücklich, who works with video games here in London, said:
defines p2p file sharing as “a civil form of theft.” Why did they not just let the content industry write the whole thing?
He sent me this folllowup comment via Twitter:
Oh, wait, maybe they *did* let the content industry write the whole thing?
Education
Leon Cych, who describes himself on Twitter as a “web designer, coder, teacher, poet, artist, broadcaster, journalist, educationalist”, paid particular attention to the details in the report about education and said that they were “still too top down”. He also said:
References to Digital Skills in the Digital Britain Report – 245 – references to Digital Literacy – zero -
Manchester “writer, bon vivant and grumpy old man” Frank Collins also felt the report was wrong to leave out digital literacy:
Digital literacy is the most important aspect of this not illegal P2P file sharing That’s for the rights holders to sort out
Piracy
Much attention was paid to the goal of requiring internet service providers to cut illegal filesharing by 70%.
Brighton record producer Simon Thornton said simply of the goal: “Well that’s not gonna happen. Next!”
Frank Collins said, “Arguments over file sharing are muddy. ISPs won’t want to cut their customers off no matter what they’re illegally sharing.” Piracy was for the “media giants” to sort out, he said, adding, “Much piracy is because they use outmoded distribution patterns for films & music”.
Peter Marcus, a “PR man” in London, noted it wasn’t the ISPs who would be responsible but rather Ofcom if the reduction targets were met. He wrote, “Ofcom to trigger blocking/capping of repeat offenders after a year if no. of illegal filesharers not reduced by 70%”.
Landline levy
There was a lot of scepticism about the levy on landlines to support the roll out of broadband to underserved areas.
Simon Thornton said:
so the govt to add surcharge to a private service to create new fibre nets that then those private services will charge us money to use?
Software architect Dominic Sparks asked:
Why charge Phone customers for broadband improvements? -They are unrelated -They as may well put a tax on Mars Bars to fund it.
A Twitter user called cyberdoyle, who describes herself as a “Twitterita in quest to get Fibre to my Farm”, was a keen reader of the sections of the report looking at expanding access, especially to rural areas. She remained unimpressed and felt that piracy and the concerns about the continued viability of the media were a “smokescreen”. She said:
the real issue is they r gonna patch up an obsolete network and charge us to do
In a running commentary in 140 characters, she repeatedly challenged the report:
is thr anything in the report that benefits net users or is it all abt regulation & 4 industry?
not impressed, 2meg will enable bt to patch up obsolete instead of building new infrastructure 4 #digitalbritainand in 2017 they will look at rural broadband?
The 50p digital levy doesn’t come in until 2010 – analysts expect the election b4 the budget so it may nevr C light of day
£150m from the digital levy equates to just 0.4% of the money put into Scottish banks
‘Stuff there to work with’
Technology journalist Bill Thompson said that the levy “might work”, and he seemed impressed with the final report, saying:
It is clear that the work done since the interim #digitalbritain report and this one has been substantial – there’s stuff here to work with.
Thompson has quickly written a very measured and largely positive response to the report on his blog. Unlike the comments on Twitter that saw an obsession with piracy, he thought the authors of the report resisted efforts from the music and movie industry to exert control over the internet. He had criticised the interim report but had praise for the final version:
The result, though far from perfect, offers a good basis for work on the detail of implementation and legislation, and there are clear signs that those who want to engage will be able to do so.
Thompson calls on those who already live in a fully networked world to help bring that to the rest of Britain:
There’s a glimpse of that world through the Digital Britain report, and it is one that those of us who already live a networked life need to clarify, share and work to build
No such thing as a free lunch
In Six Years in the Valley, The Economist describes how Silicon Valley is entering their second ‘nuclear winter’ of the 21st century. After the dotcom bust, we saw a revival centered on Web 2.0 services, typically provided free to the user, with the assumption that online advertising would eventually provide the revenue stream to ‘monetize’ the venture. Well it might have worked for Google, but now the recession is hitting hard, there’s nowhere near enough advertising revenue to go round. Silicon Valley stands on “ground that is as unstable, seismically and metaphorically, as it was in the earlier bust. The world economy is in crisis, advertising is collapsing and start-ups are once again vanishing into thin air.”
Typically, if something looks too good to be true, it probably is. Products and services can only be provided free of charge if someone other than the user is prepared to foot the bill. If advertising is not sought or is not available in sufficient quantities, it seems to me that there are only so many reasons why this situation might arise:
- The provider is the beneficiary of some form of grant, most likely through government, but perhaps from some charitable institution.
- The provider is treating the product as a ‘loss leader.’ They hope that a positive reaction to the product will boost their visibility and reputation, making it easier for them to sell other products and services.
- The provider offers an entry-level product, hoping to build an appetite for the product that can only be satisfied by a premium version or with the aid of add-on services, such as consultancy, support, training, hosting or adaptation of the product.
- The provider earns enough from other activities that they can afford to offer the product in question for free, perhaps simply because they believe in it. This argument also works at the level of those individuals who contribute their spare time freely, as a hobby or as a form of voluntary work.
We have got used to free content, free web 2.0 services and free software. We cannot assume that this situation will continue indefinitely and we may have to start dipping into our pockets to keep those services that we most value alive. After all, there’s no such thing as a free lunch.