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Best Damn Autoblogging Plugin for WordPress I’ve Seen

I have close to 300 domains … some of them crappy, but quite a few domains that are worthy of developing. In my experience, the quickest way to sell off my domains is to develop them. Quite a daunting task when you have a lot of domains. My problems are solved. I just purchased the unlimited version of Autoblogged, the best damn autoblogging plugin for WordPress I’ve seen, bar none. Check out this site I put up yesterday using it. TekPop.com. It has nearly 200 posts being pulled in from the top technology blogs on the web, all citing the sources, pulling in the images and saving a local copy, tagging and categorized. You just set this up and your domain is good to go … instant quality content on a regular schedule. Check it out below.

Posted in Plugins0 Comments

ToysRUs Buys Toys.com At Auction For $5.1 Million

In a heated bidding war, ToysRUs bought the domain name Toys.com at auction for $5.1 million. ToysRus really wanted the domain, for obvious reasons. Everyone except ToysRUs and domain holding company National A-1 (owner of domains such as free.com, boys.com, girls.com, and divorce.com) bowed out of the auction at $3 million. The last $2 million was just those two companies going back and forth for hours.

ToysRUs really didn’t have much choice. If it wants to be the first thing people associate with toys it really couldn’t afford to allow anyone else to own that domain, even in this economy. Who says real estate is dead?

Posted in domains2 Comments

Selling Domains When the Economy Sucks

With the current state of the economy here in the US some of you might wonder if domaining is still a viable means of online income.  Here’s my experience.  I have a lot of domain names just sitting parked right now, but one by one, I am developing them.  I choose the best, most interesting names, develop a site, get it indexed, get some traffic and sell them at a nice profit.  All this, of course, takes work.  So many people want to just buy a domain name and sell it at a huge profit without doing anything to it.  That works for some really high-powered domain names, but for the average portfolio, it doesn’t … at least not for me.

Even if you don’t want to develop, in order to get more than reseller profit from a domain name, it’s going to take work.  In order to make a real profit from a domain name, you need to sell it to an end-user rather than a reseller.  Finding and contacting those end users takes time and work.  I’ve done it both ways … finding end users and developing.  I enjoy developing more than cold calling (via email) end users.

There’s a trend to develop mini-sites rather than park a domain.  That’s a good start, or at least a better alternative to parking sites, but I develop full sites rather than mini-sites.  It’s all about the end user.  As an end user myself, someone who purchases sites, I never throw money at “made for Adsense” mini-sites.  Number one reason is that I could throw that up in no time myself.  Number two reason, I don’t find them fun or appealing in any way.  If they make you some money … good, but people pay pretty well, even in this economy, for a well-developed and designed site in a hot niche.

Here’s some sites I’ve sold recently:

Land of Shopportunity
Anime Zoo
Dot Com Mogul

Here’s some I have in development:

eMovieTrailer
Simple Yoga

That’s just a few of them. I have more in different stages of development. Once they are developed, I get them indexed and get traffic going to them. How do I do that? Simple. I own Firestorm Forum, a social bookmarking exchange community and when I exchange bookmarks, let’s say Stumbles (that works best for me), the site is indexed within 48 hrs .. usually 24 and has great traffic stats immediately (unless, of course, the site is a real dog). It works beautifully and having the site well-indexed in Google and traffic stats to show off adds a great deal of value to the site and gives you some selling points for listing.

Where to sell?

I have my best luck selling on Sitepoint. It costs money but has been well worth it for me. One tip for selling a site on Sitepoint is to make a great sales page. Be sure to mention all of the assets of the site … how many posts, how much traffic, revenue if any, site features, potential to make money (ie … do you already have Adsense and ads in place?). Here’s one of my listings to give you an example of listing the site’s selling points.

One thing about developing nice sites to sell … you can even flip a weak domain name if you have a great site established on it … not a really crappy domain name … just a bit weak. Of course, if the site is really great, it might even sell to someone who purchases a better domain name for it.

What kind of sites to develop?

I have two favorites … WordPress blogs and Joomla sites. Many people know how to set up a WordPress blog, so that is probably the easiest site to get established. Joomla sites are a bit more complex and often the best components to add features to your site are commercial, so you have to sink a little money into the site. To tell you the truth, 6 weeks ago I wouldn’t have been able to put a nice Joomla site together to save my life. Then I bought one really cheap and had to buckle down and get to know Joomla in order to add value to the site and fix some problems. It didn’t take long to become a Joomla enthusiast and all in all, it was a pretty short learning curve.

So that’s it …my advice for selling domains in a bad economy. Works well for me. Hope it does for you as well.

Posted in domain flipping, website flipping3 Comments

How to Advertise Your Business on Facebook for Free

With more than 64 million active users and around 250,000 new users joining every day, you can tap into the social networking revolution with a free page on Facebook for your blog or business … yes, I said free.

Previously you had to be BIG business with a BIG marketing budget to create a corporate or company Facebook account. Blockbuster Inc., CBS Corp., The Coca-Cola Co., Sony Pictures Entertainment Inc. and Verizon Communications Inc., are examples of well known companies that have a corporate presence on Facebook. Facebook members could then become “fans” by adding your company as a friend.

Now, this option is open to any business. Businesses can add any content they want, including photos, videos and music. Facebook users can share information about a business directly with the company by adding reviews or other information to that business’ page. Small businesses now have the advantage that only Fortune 500 companies could afford previously. It’s simple: here’s how you do it:

Creating A Facebook Business Page

1. Visit this URL

2. Choose the best category for your business.

3. Just enter your business name and then click “Create Page”.

4. Now you can add a description of your business and a website address. You can also add a photo or logo. There are sections to add more photos, video

5. Then click on your hyperlinked business name in the top left corner and click “publish this page.”

6. Finally, from your new profile page, become a fan of your business. This is important as all of your “friends” will now be able to see your page when they visit your profile and it will be shown in the news feed that “Suzanne is a fan of Dot Com Mogul”. With some social networking, some of your Facebook friends will also add your business as a friend and then their friends will see a message… and on and on.

To the left is a screenshot of your admin panel. You can send updates to fans of the business and there’s a link to Promote Page with an Ad. You can also use the pages’ discussion board to start topics, list events, or write on “the wall”. I’ve just added a page for my blog, Dot Com Mogul. You can see it here. (While you’re there, add it as a friend :) I plan to add more interesting info and a video to it, but this is the beginning page with minimal information. If you’re wondering why you should do this, just check out the Facebook statistics below, and did I mention …. it’s free.
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Posted in Advertising64 Comments

US and International Affiliate Networks

I made a list of CPA Affiliate Networks in an earlier post. This is a list of US and International Affiliate Networks that you get commission for selling products, rather than generating leads. I’m a member of Commission Junction (CJ), Linkshare (LS), Affiliate Future US, ClickBank, PayDotCom.com, ShareASale (SAS) and MarketHealth, with MarketHealth being my best performing now, but PayDotCom.com the best in the past. Hope you’ll find this list useful when searching for products to promote. If you run an affiliate program that is not listed, leave a comment and I will add it. More information needed to choose the best networks can be found in my newest Dot Com Mogul article: Is the Cookie Monster Eating Your Commissions?

The Largest Affiliate Networks

AMWSO – Affiliate Management Consulting firm lead by Chris Sanderson, manages 20 affiliate programs from leading merchants such as Western Union, Panda Software, Shopster, GoodTimes Entertainment, Gaiam, South Beach Diet and Forzieri.

Commission Junction (CJ) – a ValueClick company, delivers performance-based online marketing solutions. Network access to the USA, UK, Germany and France.

Linkshare (LS) – LinkShare pioneered online affiliate marketing, and today runs one of the largest pay for performance affiliate marketing network on the Internet. Network access to the USA, UK, Canada and Japan.

Microsoft adCenter Affiliate Program – If your site is focused on Internet marketing, search marketing, web development or business you have the opportunity to generate revenue by referring new advertisers to MSN adCenter, via the Microsoft® Affiliate Network.

PartnerCentric – manages 40 top affiliate programs including well known brands like National Geographic, BriteSmile, Medifast, 21st Century Insurance, The Company Store, Lamps Plus, Domestications & Quicken Loans.

Performics – Now owned by DoubleClick, provides performance-based online marketing services and technologies for leading multi-channel marketers. Clients benefit from Performics´ custom approach to affiliate marketing, search engine marketing and lead generation programs.
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Posted in Affiliate Marketing4 Comments

CPA Networks and Monetizing Your Blogs or Websites

One of the top ways of monetizing websites is lead generation. Here’s how it works. Becoming a CPA affiliate is fairly simple. You sign up with numerous CPA Networks, drive traffic to the custom landing pages they provide or make your own landing pages, and get paid whenever a site visitor fills out and submits a form. One of the best ways to drive traffic to your CPA Offers is through PPC program like Adwords or Yahoo.CPA networks are clearinghouses bringing advertisers and publishers together. The advertisers provide custom landing pages and forms, pays the network commission for making it available to affiliates, and affiliates are paid for driving traffic and generating signups.

CPA stands for “cost per action.” The action is the site visitor filling out the form. Compared to traditional affiliate marketing, it is often a much easier and more lucrative way to monetize a website.

Traditional affiliates have a tougher job. They have to get the traffic, presell the product, and send visitors to the vendor through an affiliate link, hoping to generate something like 1% to 5% sales. Conversions are highly dependent on the vendor’s sales letter and product. If the vendor does a poor job of selling, or has an overpriced or poorly received product, the affiliate has spent a lot of time, and perhaps money, for very little return. Continue Reading

Posted in Affiliate Marketing2 Comments

Conversation Marketing: Can We Talk?


The latest buzz word in marketing is “Conversation Marketing.” Without ever hearing about conversation marketing until recently, this is the way that I prefer to get a message out about something that I’m endorsing or yes … if you want to hear the dirty word … selling. The phrase that really stood out in my mind was “All marketing is a conversation.”

“The awful truth about marketing is that it broadcasts messages to people who don’t want to listen…. much of business communication is written in contrived and artificial language, supposedly designed to impress, but actually signaling just how impersonal the firm and its professionals are.”

I see so many of the long, hypey big red lettered sales letters and still wonder how that type of marketing can be successful. I know that many “gurus” use them and make money, but in my opinion, you aren’t reaching a large part of the market through this method of communication. Basically, you’re reaching an audience who is looking for a “dream in a box” solution and willing to believe anything that promises that.

To me … and maybe it’s just me, I find those type of sales letters to be more annoying than persuasive. It’s packaged marketing, spoken in a fake voice and often uses scare tactics and unfounded promises to reel their customers in. Many marketers see marketing as a one-sided dialogue … nothing more than a propaganda campaign. This type of marketing rarely answers any questions I might have about the product.

The marketer that is able to reach his market in a real voice and engage his audience in a two-way dialogue is the marketer who is going to be able to build trust and relationships that convert into sales. In the offline world of marketing, where you meet your prospective clients, you have a greater opportunity to employ Conversational Marketing. Instead of giving yet another boring presentation, you can have a question and answer session. In a personal one-on-one presentation, you can give your prospects a handout and then instead of launching into a one-way dialogue of your capabilities and contract issues, see if you can engage your prospect in a conversation to determine what his problems and needs are. Continue Reading

Posted in conversation marketing0 Comments

Article Marketing: Marketing in Real Time

The secret’s out!

What would you say if I told you how to get free publicity, targeted traffic and more sales for your online endeavors? It’s instant, easy and affordable.

How? With well-written articles, distributed to content-hungry web publishers for reprint. Your article’s “About the Author” box builds your expertise in the field, and builds backlinks to your website.

The viral effect of distrituting your content across cyberspace is unparalleled in the field of internet marketing.

An Adaptive Marketing Plan

The advantage of article marketing is that a marketing campaign can be implemented on the fly. It’s as simple as writing a new article. And with an unlimited subscription to an article distribution service such as Article Marketer, there is no further cost. Let me repeat that — no further cost to target an entirely new market niche.

By going with the flow of the market, a affiliate is in a better position to exploit these unexpected marketing opportunities. Identify a trend, write an article, and capture that moment of perfect relevance. This kind of “in real time” marketing can enhance your current article marketing plans perfectly. Experts recommend submitting two articles per category per week for the most impact and greatest benefit. Keep a close ear to the heartbeat of popular trends in your specific industry, and be able to spot trends and identify potential changes at a moment’s notice. My article on Cashing in Google’s Hot Trends is perfect example of “going with the flow” of market trends.

If you see a new niche for your business, begin a new article marketing campaign. Always keep an open mind when it comes to your article marketing plan. The market can be volatile, constantly changing, and full of surprises. This is what makes affiliate marketing so exciting! And, it’s what makes article marketing such an efficient, and affordable, way to keep on top of the market.

I just launched a new Article Directory … Article Buzz … specializing in high quality free content for your website, ezine or newsletter.

Writers

WE NEED ARTICLES! Brand new and just opened the doors today.

Share your knowledge and expertise and promote yourself, products or services at the same time. Simply register and then submit your articles. We’ll promote your free articles to all of our Publishers and Webmasters.

Publishers

Do you need quality free content for your ezines and blogs. You’ll find it here. All free articles are reviewed and approved by our Quality Control Editors before you ever see it. You can be sure that the free content and articles you get will meet your high standards of acceptance. All free articles are available in Text or HTML format.

Webmasters

Need good quality free articles to build or add on to your website? No problem at all. We off quality free articles and Free Article RSS Feeds so you can do less work and still provide great free content for your visitors. Visit Article Buzz today.


Posted in Marketing3 Comments

These WordPress Plugins are the Schizzle

Here’s a list of my favorite WordPress plugins … a couple of these are worth mentioning, but I no longer use them. I noted the ones I’m not using and why. If you have any to add, just comment.

From Unwords … Definition of schizzle :.
(sh?t-z?l’)
1. (n.) A non-profane version of shit

Adsense-Deluxe 0.8
Place Google AdSense ads in your WordPress Posts. Requires WordPress 1.5 or higer by Acme Technologies. I love this plugin. I don’t use Adsense on this blog, but you can use this plugin for easy insertion of other scripts and codes into your posts. Instead of placing the Adsense code in the configuration blocks, place your other code (I have several Chitika Mini Mall scripts configured in mine) there and adding the script to a post is as simple as adding <!–adsense#ShopCloud–> or <!–adsense–> to your posts where you want the script to be placed. You can configure as many of these scripts as you want or need and change them in all of your posts at the same time just by editing the script in the plugin screen. Continue Reading

Posted in Advertising9 Comments

Want to Catch a Buzz?

You probably already know some good methods for getting a lot of traffic to your site(s), but in my opinion, buzz marketing ranks at the top, and the best part — it’s Free! If you aren’t using buzz marketing, you are missing out on an avalanche of links, swarms of traffic, and yes — even fame and fortune!

What is Buzz marketing?

Buzz marketing is the art of creating a “buzz” or generating excitement and making your audience hungry for more. With buzz marketing you can be featured on some of the major sites and go viral, without buying a paid review or link, resulting in a swarm of visitors to your site. How would being on the main page of Digg, Propeller or Reddit impact your business? Your traffic would skyrocket and people would link to you creating even more traffic (you might even get so much traffic that your server will go down) Continue Reading

Posted in Marketing, SEO5 Comments

DL Guard: Sales and Download Security

If you are looking for a secure method to offer products, I highly recommend DL Guard: Not just a download page protector, DL Guard is a full sales and customer management system and can help you protect, streamline, and grow your online business!

DLGUARD FEATURE OVERVIEW:

  • Secure single product sales
  • Built-in shopping cart
  • Create Membership sites
  • Expiring download links
  • Limit download attempts
  • Offer promotional coupons
  • Calculates sales conversion rates automatically
  • Template based for easy customisation
  • Automatic mailing list sign-up
  • Integrated with all major payment systems

See the Video Here
Add to any service

Posted in Marketing3 Comments

How To Make A Killer List Of Keywords for FREE

Latent Semantic Indexing. All of the Search Engines have invested in this technology and if they are not using it now, they will be soon.

The definition for LSI is as follows:

Latent semantic analysis (LSA) is a technique in natural language processing, in particular in vectorial semantics, patented in 1988 [1] by Scott Deerwester, Susan Dumais, George Furnas, Richard Harshman, Thomas Landauer, Karen Lochbaum and Lynn Streeter. In the context of its application to information retrieval, it is sometimes called latent semantic indexing (LSI) – http://www.cs.utk.edu/~lsi/

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Posted in Affiliate Marketing, SEO11 Comments

SEO

I build a lot of websites and use bum marketing techniques to get traffic to my websites as well as search engine optimization to get good rankings in the search engines . The search engine industry changes every year, and some search engines change many times every month. For that reason it’s hard to go through the entire publishing process and still have a relevant and current information about search engine optimization. Aaron Wall’s book on SEO provides the most comprehensive and current information available.

The SEO Book takes you right through the vast spectrum of techniques, tools, theories and history of Search marketing. While some chapters are lighter than others, every one is packed with detail, with an interactive section at the end of each for quick reference to tools and sites mentioned.

For experienced Search marketers, it may not be quite what you think. I presumed it would be very much aimed at the newbie market, and whereas it will certainly benefit those new to Search, for the more experienced marketer it proves an invaluable reference, and refresher on each facet of the game.

The best part, for me, is the fact that it’s an eBook, and is being contantly updated and revised. At the time of writing im reading another paper book on PPC, and that one, whilst enjoyable, and only just published, is already woefully out of date. The SEO Book is not.

Chapter Walk Through

Chapters 1 & 2: Why Search? – A Brief History of the Web

The first two chapters are introductory, well duh! They’re not entirely skipable though. There’s a basic introduction to Search which touches upon some concepts such as document frequency and inverse document frequency, which are explained in greater detail in a later chapter.

Search Spam is hit fairly early on in these early chapters and a good overview of the technical, consequential and ethical considerations is given without (too much) bias toward Aaron’s personal stance.

“Tying ethics to SEO techniques is a Marketing Scam. Either a technique is effective or it’s not”

The second chapter rounds of with an extensive run through of the issues to consider with domain names. It covers all you might expect including tld’s, dashed-domain and language considerations. Though flagged as “not needed” by most site builders, the section on niche network building is pretty cool too, though lacking in serious specifics.

Chapter 3: General Internet Topics

For those new to site building, this chapter gives an overview of some of the seo-centric considerations to take into account when building from the ground up. The point being, that SEO is more than just links, it’s built into everything you do, every decision you make. Such topics as CSS, templates, includes, and CMS software are covered in brief, with the only noticeable ommision being a good list of SEO friendly blog/cms program.

The copywriting section here was good, providing what looks to be an excellent list of recommended books and good tips on writing copy with an emphasis on sales copy.

Usability is also covered, with a large section on the evils of Flash based design and the virtues of CSS and small file sizes for Search engines.

An overview of revenue generation models concludes the chapter with talk of contextual advertising, affiliate programs, and a great piece on one of my favorite rant subjects: “It’s not about price, dammit!” – “Price and Value” is a good read in this section if you’re new to marketing in general, or just need to be reminded a little :)

The remainder of the chapter focuses on the bullet points of online business models, typically a long paragraph or two on each point.

Chapter 4: Writing for Search Engines

This is where the SEO Book, for me, really begins to take off. It depends on knowledge levels I guess, but this and the next chapter were the most interesting parts of the book as far as I’m concerned.

Keywords, keywords, keywords. Yep, it’s all about those keywords, and this chapters primary focus is just that. We start off with some general admonishments to focus on specifics, and leave generics well alone. Swiftly moving into targeted Search phrases, the book walks you through keyword conversions, the keyword pyramid, and keyword research — with a great list of keyword tools and services.

Keyword suggestion tools and discovery techniques are an essential part of any seo’s toolkit. There are good explanations of such tools as Wordtracker, Google Suggest, Overture Keyword Suggestion and Google Keyword Sandbox, aswell as a whole list of lesser known but powerful research tools.

Keyword competition was a great section for me, as many of the tools cited were known to me, but not necessarily bookmarked, and some of the techniques for judging the competitiveness of a keyword/phrase were very new, or long forgotten — This particular section i’ll most likely come back to time and time again, not to mention finally sorting out my outdated keyword tools bookmarks. Smashing stuff.

Meta tags, along with page title’s takes us right back to SEO 101, the take home here comes from the large section on page titles where the focus shifts to ROI.

Optimizing page copy as you would expect is de-emphasized as an important part of SEO in this next section. The focus instead, tunes to page structure and good use of headings, and other HTML elecments aswell as how to smoothly integrate keywords naturally into a page.

Content building concludes the chapter, with a strong statement on how junk content will only damage most websites. The list of ways to find quality free content however, is superb, with ideas for finding both cheap premade content, cheap custom written copy and more premium freelance hire.

Chapter 5: Interacting with Search Engines

This is where it all starts to get very interesting for Threadwatch regulars, it’s the meat of the book, and for me, the best chapter by a long shot.

After busting a few myths as an inroduction, we kick right into the contraversial topic of comment spam on blogs. It’s a contentious issue at best, and I think it’s handled very well, presenting a view that’s anti-automated script, pro-thoughtful commenting in order to attract both attention from peers in your niche, aswell as Search engines. It should be noted that this book isn’t an instruction manual in the black arts, it’s aimed at the ordinary to advanced site builder, not professional spammers.

Directories provide a strong topic for the next section, and it’s really where you start to see just how current the SEO Book really is. After listing some of the larger, better respected directories, the topic of junk directories is broached, with references to Trustrank graphically explained, aswell as techniques for determining the value of a directory link and places to find good ones. Current thinking on Google and directories is a damn good read in this section. From what i’ve seen around forums at the time of writing, many just don’t want to believe — If you’re ignorant of current Google trends in this regard, this short explanation will put you bang up to date.

Search engine specific SEO provides the focus for the next several sections, running through each engine in order of market share. Topics for each engine typically include:

  • Ranking algorithms
  • Specific tools and techniques
  • Perils and pitfalls
  • How to succeed in that engine

The section on Google as you might imagine, is particularly strong. Everything from topic sensitive pagerank, to latent semantic indexing, to Hilltop is covered with varying degrees of detail. If the section on Google was an eBook in itself, I’d buy it.

Really, this part of the book is so jam packed with information i couldn’t take it all in, i think it will take me three or four goes to for it to sink in properly.

After some advanced tips for Google, that includes some great techniques for finding link partners, the other engines are all given similar, but lesser treatment. That’s not to say that they’re lacking, just that the main emphasis is somewhat proportionate to Search engine market share.

Linking, as a general topic gives much food for thought, with topics such as varying anchor text, directory submission tips and the pros and cons of reciprocal linking.

Tools for link analysis are discussed in some depth, with references to such essentials as SEOElite and Optilink before touching on tips for link requests, both sending and receiving.

The hot topic of buying links bows us out of the chapter, with good sections on how to evaluate links for rent. Link brokers are touched upon, but the odd, and glaringly obvious ommision here is the lack of any kind of commentary, recommendation or even list, of link brokers. Instead, Aaron wants you to email him…?

Chapter 6: Pay Per Click

This section particulary interested me as at the time of writing, im anticipating my first foray into the murky waters of PPC.

After a brief introduction, we move right into the two main players: Yahoo! Search Marketing (which needs updating, as it still reads as Overture) and Google Adwords.Yahoo! Search Marketing, formerly Overture is something i know even less about than Adwords, so i’l confess to skimming a little here, as it just didn’t interest me as much as moving onto the Adwords section. It did seem to be a reasonable introduction to YSM though, with sections on SiteMatch and LocalMatch, a good overview of the YSM provided tools, third party tools and copy writing for this specific medium.

Google Adwords — Now this did interest me, and as again you might expect, being Google, it was a more comprehensive section to wade through.

Click Through Rate (CTR), is the first port of call as we navigate through the, what is to me at least, quite complex Adwords set of topics, features and considerations. CTR’s role in the Adwords algorithm is the topic of course, and well explained — we move onto cover ExactMatch, BroadMatch and PhraseMatch, which prior to reading, were all a bit of a mystery. If i can get it, anyone can.

Details on how to use the Keyword Sandbox aswell as negative keywords and dynamic keywording make for good reading also.

Look out for the bonus! “How to Slash Google Adwords Costs to Maximize Profits” was an eyeopener to a PPC newbie like me.

Syndication levels are explained in the next section, covering each in detail, with tips on how to maximize performance for each. This moves on to a large section on Adsense, and in particular, what it means to Adwords advertisers including some advanced advice on click fraud.

General tips conclude the chapter, with a range of information from simple to sophisticated.

Chapter 7: Monitoring Results

At this point, the book starts to wind down. After a brief note on the importance of constant monitoring of results, we move right into the juicey subject of SEO worst practices which outlines many techniques that no longer work, and may get your site penalized or removed from Search indexes. There are a few mentions of shady techniques that currently work, if done correctly also.

The chapter serves as somewhat of a miscellaneous section to the book, covering a range of tips and tricks to bear in mind, and although a little disjointed does contain some of the “good stuff”.

Chapters 8, 9 & 10: Buying and Selling SEO, Quick Start Tips

To be frank, the business of buying and selling SEO services holds little interest for me, so for now at least, i’ve just not read them.

The Quick start tips chapter is a nice roundup of the more important points raised throughout the book, and brings us to the end nicely.

And the Verdict is…

I loved it! I’ve wanted to read this book for over a year now, and can’t believe I’ve been without it all that time.

As both a tutorial, and a reference, it’s a wonderful piece of work, with an unrivaled depth of current, up to date information on an ever changing subject: Search Marketing.

As far as I’m concerned, SEOBook is a must read for anyone serious about web site development you need to read SEOBook.
For more tips on making money online, visit Million Dollar Dame

Posted in SEO0 Comments



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  • ExpressDialup.com
    sold for $4000
  • HappyTimeBooks.com
    sold for $320
  • EstatePlaner.com
    sold for $288
  • GreatUsedTrucks.com
    sold for $500
  • CreditScoreReview.com
    sold for $325
  • AntiquesHunter.com
    sold for $250

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