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How Importance Is SEO?

Showing posts with label blog. Show all posts
Showing posts with label blog. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 2, 2014

Great seo Tools

SEO All Free Tool for Webmaster


1: Backlink Checking tool

2:  Keyword Density Checking Tool

3: Link Analyzer Tool

4: keyword Extracting Tool

5: Keyword Rich Domain Finding Tool

6: Link Popularity Checking Tool

7:  Keyword Suggestion Generation tool

8: Multiple Keyword Search Engine Position Checking Tool

9:  Multiple Backlink Checking Tool

10: Multiple Website Search Engine Position Checking tool

11: No-Follow Finding Tool

12: Search Engine Position Checking Tool

13: Reciprocal link checking tool

14:  keyword search 
http://goo.gl/oxc7C
http://goo.gl/9bDdS
http://goo.gl/wPTkF
http://goo.gl/zLZHk
http://goo.gl/6WJPR
http://goo.gl/2yVaQ
http://goo.gl/W5LgQ

15: Seo site checker:-
http://goo.gl/FqGEv

16: For error check of XHTML and CSS2 visit:-
http://goo.gl/DCjoe

17: XML sitemap

18: Regularly monitor performance of the website using
http://goo.gl/FWMPl
http://goo.gl/WX1zG

19:  WEB MASTER TOOLS
Google webmaster verification code
http://goo.gl/31ga9
Verify website on Alexa
http://goo.gl/nHLKD 
Verify website on MSN 
http://goo.gl/bc8gx

20: Google analytics code
http://goo.gl/fIp2H

21: share button to share on social networking websites
http://goo.gl/BtzxC

22:  page rank checker 
http://goo.gl/mq5PU
http://goo.gl/UR2yp
Visual page rank checker     
http://goo.gl/TBB6m

Authority Link Check Tools


A: .edu Backlink Checking Tool 

B: .gov Backlink Checking tool

C: Authority Link Checking Tool

D: DMOZ Backlink Checking Tool

E: Multiple .edu Backlink Checking Tool

F: Multiple .gov Backlink Checking Tool

G: Multiple Authority Link Checking Tool

H: Multiple DMOZ Backlink Checking Tool

I: Yahoo Directory Backlink Checking Tool
Online Search Engine Tool

A: Bing Indexed Pages Checking Tool

B: Google Indexing Pages Checking Tool

C: MSN Live Pages Checking Tool

D: Robots.txt Checking tool

E:  Search Engine Listing preview Tool

F: Search engine Saturation Checking Tool

G: Site Spider Viewing Tool

H: Spider Viewing Tool

I: Yahoo Indexing Pages Checking Tool

Domain Rank Checker

A: Alexa Traffic Rank Checking tool

B: Compete Ranking Checking tool

C: Compete Statistics Checking tool

D: Fake Rank Checking tool

E: PageHeat Checking Tool

F: PageRank Checking Tool

G: Site Rank Checking Tool

 Multi-Domain Rank Checker

A: Alexa Multiple Rank Checker tool


B: Alexa Traffic Rank Checking tool

C: Compete Ranking Checking tool

D: Multi Rank Checker - Page Rank and Alexa Tool

E: Compete Statistics Checking tool

F: Multiple Compete Rank Checking Tool

G: Fake Rank Checking tool

H: Multiple Compete Statistics Checking Tool

I: PageHeat Checking Tool

J: Multiple Fake PageRank Checker Tool

Header or Tag Tools

A: HTTP Header Extraction tool

B: HTTP Header viewing tool

C: Meta Tag Extraction Tool

D: Meta-Tag Generation Tool
  
Ip address specific tools
A: Multiple IP Address Checking Tool

B: Multiple Reverse IP Lookup Tool

C: Ping IP/Domain Tool

D: Reverse IP/Look-up Tool

Useful Webmasters Tools
  

A: Browser Details checking Tool

http://goo.gl/uwzwE

B: Convert Date to Timestamp tool

http://goo.gl/tAyl7

C: Convert UNIX Timestamp Tool

http://goo.gl/6Cq5D

D: Email to Image Converting tool

http://goo.gl/clUZf

E: Fast JavaScript Clock tool

http://goo.gl/R60Er

F: URL Shortening Tool

http://goo.gl/ewBrx

G: Website Status Checking Tool

http://goo.gl/GJHNv

Sites Source Code Tools

 

A: CSS Validator tool

http://goo.gl/39eFD

B: Domain Whois Retrieveing tool

http://goo.gl/gvkax

C: HTML Encrypting tool

http://goo.gl/ioEsU

D: HTML Markup Validation tool

http://goo.gl/GpbDH

E: HTML Optimization tool

http://goo.gl/qPtew

F: MD5 Encryption Tool

http://goo.gl/FjNw1

G: Source Code Viewing Tool

http://goo.gl/ccenz

H: Webpage Size Checking Tool

http://goo.gl/d6GZA

I: Website Speed Testing Tool

http://goo.gl/Sng8S

Social Media Web Tools

 

A: Delicious Link Checking tool

http://goo.gl/xL16j

B: Digg Links checking tool

http://goo.gl/OTlp6

C: Multiple Delicious Link Checking Tool

http://goo.gl/1Esr6

D: Multiple Digg Links Checking Tool

http://goo.gl/jt1oO

E: Twitter Links Finding Tool

http://goo.gl/xHgE6

 

 

  1. website copy paste content checker tool :
    1: http://plagiarisma.net/ 
    2: http://copyscape.com/ 
    3: http://www.plagium.com/
    4: http://www.duplichecker.com/
    5: http://www.freearticlespinner.com/
    seo site checkup tools 

    1: http://www.rankingtoday.com/seo/site-checkup.php


related to google penguin

Google introduced Penguin algorithm getting links only from one source can be very dangerous, because Google recognize it as a manipulation.

Monday, January 7, 2013

New Seo Era 2013

The search industry is booming. Competition for keywords – organic or paid – has never been higher. All forms of digital content multiply and prosper.
Underneath it all, however, tectonic plates are shifting. Slowly but surely, almost everything that used to constitute search engine optimization (SEO) has become ineffective, risky, or inappropriate for most brands.
SEO tactics are being taken off the table and a gap has begun to arise between what is needed – digital visibility – and the tactics, tools, and business processes needed to achieve it. Brands that learn how to evolve their approach to SEO and content to fit this new world will emerge on top.
Brands facing this challenge would do well to focus attention on the means and the ends. Brands want SEO as a means to achieve the ends of building a conversation, engaging customers, and driving sales.
Thinking with the ends in mind, it’s easier to step back and look at SEO as just one way that content can impact your business. The other ways?
  • RSS
  • Social media/Web 2.0 sites
  • Blogs
  • Plain old web pages
  • Guest posts
  • Syndication
  • PR
  • Whitepapers
  • Case studies
  • Sharable presentation
  • Infographics
  • Videos
  • Conference presentations
And the list goes on.
The idea is to take an SEO perspective on content and merge it with content strategy, editorial, distribution, and planning. Sounds good in principle, but how does it work?

Know Your Keywords

The first step is to build a master keyword list – a large set of keywords that defines your strategic keyword universe. This list will change over time. Update it whenever you see a need for new content or you move into a new sector or business.
Build your list, be comprehensive, and don’t limit yourself to what’s currently out there and to the existing language of the customer. Think about what language you want to define and own.
You will be creating content, so you have a chance to shape the discussion and create new ideas (and potential keywords). Some of the best thought leadership and strategy firms have been using this approach successfully for years – they come up with a new concept or phrase, publicize it with original content, become the expert and own the discussion – at least for a while.

Check Your Current State and Competitive Position

Take the list, get your baseline rankings, and compare it against a broad set of competitors in the search engine results pages (SERPs). Now you know what keywords you care about, how well you're doing on them, and what competitors and ranking content looks like for each phrase.
So far, so good – traditional search keyword research. But what happens next is new.

Build a Search-Informed Content Plan

Review and prioritize your keywords and map each keyword to a content type, distribution channel (Facebook post, blog post, YouTube, etc.) and content type (video, article, etc.). Plot it out into a rough schedule to build the online of a keyword-driven content plan.
Now it’s time to get creative.
Take each of your keywords and turn them into the title of an article, video, or blog post that people might care about.
It isn't enough to write a post about the "best computer mouse". Instead, write about the "best computer mouse for shooters" or "best computer mouse for lefties".
Make your content interesting, at least to somebody, no matter how niche the audience. Why? So that they will talk about, link to the content, or drop a citation on their blog, Twitter, or Facebook.
For most brands attracting users isn't an aim in and of itself. The point is to drive users toward some desired action. Hence, for each piece on content on the editorial plan assign a destination URL – this is the page that will convert the traffic into your desired business outcome – be it a product page, a lead capture form, a registration form, or campaign messaging. Where possible include a link to the destination URL in the final content using appropriate anchor text.
This is an excerpt of a search-informed content plan for a computer retailer that includes target keyphrases, content types, destination URLs, anchor text, and promotion:
creating-a-content-marketing-plan

Creation, Publishing and Content Distribution

At this point, you start creating or repurposing content that aligns to your larger keyword strategy. Make the infographics, shoot the video, and start posting to Facebook.
Now traditional SEO comes back into play as you:
  • Make sure that each piece of content has an optimized title tag, keyword-focused copy, strong meta description, and optimized inbound links from related content.
  • Cross-link and cross promote each piece of content using the target keyword in anchor text on each platform and distribution network.
  • Tweet and post a link on Facebook to your guest blog post.
  • Include it in your RSS feed.
  • Share the infographic and images on the web 2.0 sites like Slideshare, Good.is, and others.
  • Reach out to relevant bloggers and let them know about your content.

Content Metrics, Reporting, and SEO

Assuming smooth sailing, you're on your way to becoming a keyword-driven, search-aware digital content powerhouse.
  • You're shooting videos, writing interesting blog posts, and publishing content that is optimized, keyword-focused, and well-linked.
  • Your Facebook page links directly to keyword-rich URLs with great anchor text.
  • Your content is easily sharable to the usual properties and your press releases and guest posts link back to relevant deep content our your primary digital presence.
It’s a lot of work. It costs money and time. But where are the results?
How do you value, measure ROI, and focus on the best performing content strategies? Now we're at the nexus of web analytics and content marketing – call it content metrics.
A good analytics package will allow you to track referrals for each content piece. Couple this report with time-on-site metrics, pages viewed, and a traditional SEO ranking analysis that shows keywords and ranking URLs. If you can, track conversions and new customers that are generated from organic search landing pages.
If you see a piece of content that’s a winner – celebrate it! Give recognition to team members that create winning content and reward collaboration around keywords and SEO.
Once you have metrics flowing in, you can go back to your editorial plan and start dropping in performance numbers for each piece. If you really want to get fancy, include the number of inbound links to the content (it’s easy to get this from services like Majestic SEO and SEOmoz).
If a specific piece underperformed, try to find out why. If it really worked – gained citations, referrals, and generated page views – try to learn from what worked and apply it across the board.

No Longer Necessary to Staple Keyword Lists to People’s Heads

The great thing about this approach to content marketing is that it ensures automatically that content is search-aware and aligned directly to driving business needs. It’s not a matter of trying to force diverse stakeholders to get on the SEO bandwagon because the content and editorial plan is built from the ground up for search.
As content moves to center stage, it’s imperative that brands become master of this new art.
Consider this the final step in the evolution of search. SEO started as a bolt-on – something you paid for to get your site into the results. Over time it because a new business process or an internal stakeholder. Many firms seem to be stuck at this phase, getting better and better at traditional SEO just as it’s losing relevance.
What’s needed now is to make search and keywords a foundational part of an integrated content marketing strategy. It’s survival of the fittest in the search results, and only the strongest – and keyword-driven and link-worthy – content will survive.

Sunday, January 6, 2013

12 Blogging Mistakes for blog ?

It can happen, you know.


One day, you’re enthralled with a new idea for a post, so you whip it up and publish it to your blog, sure it’s going to get people buzzing all around the blogosphere.

But that’s not what happens. Instead, your world explodes in an inferno of criticism.

Angry comments. Hate email. Losing hundreds of friends on Facebook or Twitter.

Or even worse?

People just write you off. They see your post and think, “This person is an idiot,” and they resolve to ignore anything you say until the day you die.

Of course, that’ll never happen to you, right?

Well, you might be surprised. Here are 12 warning signs to watch for, just to make sure you never get blindsided:

1. Holding back the good stuff


Ever feel like some of your ideas are just too valuable to give away for free on your blog? You’d rather package them up into an e-book or audio course and transform them into your flagship product.

Huge mistake.

If you don’t offer real value from the get go, no one will ever talk about your blog, and it’ll never grow. You’ll be holding onto those ideas forever.

The better approach?

Pretend like everyone is paying you to write, and make every blog post worth at least $100. Make it so astonishingly valuable they can’t help but talk about it.

And then think up something else to sell later.



2. All you’re thinking about is money


Just as the predator cartoon character visualizes its cute, furry prey as a piece of steak, you see your reader as a source of money.

Your blog is nothing more than an ongoing pitch fest. You want to sell your “great” content, not give it away for free. And you’re constantly pitching your latest e-course or e-book.

Not a good idea! Here’s why:

Selling anything, online or offline, is about trust. If all you’re doing is pitching stuff, people won’t trust you, and they’ll write you off as just another sleazy Internet marketer.

First offer advice, insight and solutions. Make a difference. Entertain.

People will want to buy from you later, without you having to do much selling.

3. Making empty promises


Is your blog post promising to help the reader make an extra $5,000? Lose 50 pounds? Reignite the passion with their spouse?

Well, you better back it up. Not just with a story and a few platitudes, but a real step-by-step guide to making it happen.

During the early days of the Internet you might have gotten away with providing cotton candy content. Now though, people expect real meat and potatoes.

So, be careful of what you promise. If you make a big promise, back it up with advice people can take action on immediately.

Otherwise, people will just unsubscribe from your blog. They might even stop by your comments section and leave you a few choice words.

4. Not being worthy of the crowd


Imagine you’re about to deliver your next post in person to a packed conference hall of 5,000 people.

You wait nervously behind the massive, heavy curtains with the stage manager whispering last-minute instructions in your ear. Your palms are sweaty, your heart is pounding and your mouth is dry.

Your name is announced and you step out from the curtains, like a scared rabbit, into the bright lights to rousing music and deafening applause.

The crowd falls silent as you stand behind the microphone, center-stage.

Everyone’s watching you. Expectant.

If this was your arena — if you were no longer invisible — how much more effort would you put in? How much harder would you prepare, research, write and edit your posts? What would you do to craft the sentence structure, punctuation and pauses to get the right tone, flow, rhythm and emotion?

That’s what you should be doing now with every post you write. Then you’ll get the results you so desperately crave.

5. Being bored


If you’re bored with your writing, your audience will be bored by it too.

If you no longer feel passionate and excited about your topic, you might be running low on creative energy. And the only way to fix that is to allow that energy to recharge.

You have to take a break.

Yes, I know you want to get to the finish line early. But you need to take a break to get excited again. Otherwise your readers will sense your boredom, and be bored too.

And we can’t be having that now, can we?

6. Waffling on and on and on and on…


Why say something in 10 words when you can impress with 50?

You love the sound of your own voice and so you end up repeating yourself by saying pretty much the same thing, over and over, but in a slightly different way. You add unnecessary details into your writing.

You lose focus and don’t take enough time, care and attention to really trim your writing down to the essential message.

Be economical. Trim the fat. Make your writing lean and powerful.

Enough said?

7. The Ego has landed


Don’t fall into the trap of making your posts all about you.

I hate to break it to you, but it’s not about you at all.

Your readers aren’t interested in you! They’re interested in helpful, timely advice, innovative solutions and entertaining stories… with some extra inspiration and motivation for good measure.

Your blog doesn’t exist so you can share pointless, personal stories about your cat.

You had pasta for dinner? Who cares?

You’ve had a migraine all week and your partner/kid/mom is driving you crazy. Whatever…

If your story doesn’t have a point directly related to the message you are trying to deliver, please save us the detail.

Cater for your readers, or you won’t have any.

Work hard to understand them. Know them. Know what keeps them awake at night. Now go and write for them…

8. Not infusing your personality into the content


There’s a flip side to the advice in the previous point…

You can’t remove all of your personality from your posts, or it will be bland. It still needs some relevant stories, funny remarks, and other personal touches.



So, sprinkle it in. Talk about what your audience is interested in, but do it your way.

Yes, there’s a fine balance, since it can’t be all about you, but don’t disappear completely. You can share your stories and experiences while still focusing thoroughly on your readers’ needs.

The biggest sin on the Internet is to be boring. Don’t be guilty of this, or you’ll soon be forgotten!

9. Preaching from the pulpit


You’re clever right?

Maybe using complicated sentence structure and generally showing off your God-given writing talents makes you feel fabulously important and superior? You pompously deliver your 10 Commandments from on High to your lowly, unworthy followers.

Err… How can I put this…?

People hate that!

If you want your audience to like and trust you, you need to understand that you are the servant, not the master. Write with a little humility, and people will love you for it.

10. So you think you’re funny, eh?


Yep, and everyone needs to know about it!

But chances are your readers have a different sense of humor to yours. Or maybe they’re in a serious mood today… Maybe they’re even a little worried or anxious.

It takes a great writer to express sarcasm and wit. If you try too hard, you might just come across as insensitive or downright rude.

If you’re unsure, don’t use humor.

11. Ignoring the Opposite Sex


Are you speaking to both sexes?

My name’s Chris. Could be a guy. Could be a gal. Can you tell?

If you’re a guy, you might be coming across as a red-blooded, burger-eating, beer-swilling blogger.

Or you’re a gal and, when you write, boy do you love talking about your incredible multi-tasking skills, your darling, but time-consuming kids and your oh-so-busy-and-hardly-ever-there husband…

Chances are you’re alienating half your audience.

Be sure to accommodate all of your audience. Include, don’t exclude.

12. Getting defensive


You publish your latest post, and then it happens…

Some fool dares add her own thoughts and advice. And she doesn’t agree with what you wrote.

This makes you feel inadequate. You think…

“How dare she show me up in public?”

So you respond:

“Thanks for your great comments Sam. You clearly have a great point here, BUT…”

In reclaiming the high ground, you’ve you’ve made Sam feel silly. Even worse, now the rest of your audience is feeling sorry for her and looking at you like you’re a great, big meanie.

The better approach?

Before you write the word ‘but’… stop.

Be accommodating. Replace ‘but’ with ‘and’.

Or start a new sentence and add to their comments just as they added to your ideas.

Yes defend your thoughts and ideas, but don’t be rude and try scoring points. And don’t be so sensitive! Everyone’s entitled to an opinion.

When your readers offer help and advice, thank and encourage them.

This interaction will breathe new life and energy into your blog. And those watching will feel comfortable to come out of the shadows and make a contribution of their own.

Your great post now becomes even more memorable.

So… how do you plead?


And it’s best to be honest here.

If you’ve made a few of these mistakes, take responsibility. All is not lost.

Do you realize the beauty of the opportunity right in front of you? You can make the decision to start doing things differently, right here and now.

You have the opportunity to stop being mediocre.

You have the opportunity to finally build a successful blog.

You have the opportunity to turn your blog into a prolific online business that frees you from your day job, and allows you to work wherever you want, whenever you want, on your own terms.

But you have to want it bad enough… And too few bloggers do.

You have to be truly sick and tired of being mediocre!

Are you going to be just another half-asleep post reader today, or are you ready to commit to a brighter, bigger future? Are you ready to do what’s necessary to become truly independent?

Easy choice, right?

Start doing things differently today. Start approaching your blog and your audience as if the stakes are enormously high.

Because they are! And it’s your future that’s on the line here…

Monday, December 24, 2012

Why Blogs bring attention than Websites!!!

  • Some of those websites add your blog in their directory giving you a one way link.
  • Some of those websites list your blog in their recently updated blog list.
  • Search engines quickly come to your blog, index it and start sending traffic.
  • Blog search engines like Google Blog Search, Yahoo Search Blog, etc… also crawl and index your blog which in turn send additional traffic.
  • People visiting those blog directories see your blog there and come to your blog.
  • Blogrolling scripts like blogrolling.com and WordPress check update services to see if you’ve updated and then they reflect that on everyone’s site, usually by moving you to the top of people’s blogrolling list or putting a recently updated indicator by your link.
  • Services like Technorati (http://technorati.com) spider your links to tell who is linking to you and who you’re linking to, almost in real time. If you show up on someone’s Technorati link list for their site (often called an “egorati search”) they’re likely to visit your site to see what you said, increasing your exposure.
  • Other sites like weblogs.com and blo.gs list the most recently updated blogs and many people browse these to find something new when they’re bored.