May 05 2008

Home shopping network url

admin| Category: Niche | 0 Comments

What would you bid for a home shopping network URL, and the rights to use the brand?

Right now, all goods, camera’s, stage furniture and lights of the Dutch home shopping network Liveshop are being sold in a public auction including the right to use the brand Liveshop.

Overall the hardware is getting a couple of bids in, but the brand is not having any bid. Why? Because the selling party has priced it way too high: 500K Euro!

What would you bid on a brand name, brand rights of a failure…???

The brand will always be associated with the failure of the former brand.

I would put in 1000 Euro, just for the usage of the brand name with the url!

 

The url liveshop.nl has only 23 incoming links to it, but still has a pagerank of: 5

Jan 30 2008

Linkdiagnosis kick ass tool launched

admin| Category: Link juice | 0 Comments

Linkdiagnosis has launched a Kick Ass tool.

On their blog they have the example where they analyze the Inlinks to SEOBook. It is an in depth analytics tool which gives you a lot of information of the link profile of any site you would like to analyze.

Within a day the tool has generated 11 backlinks.

Linkdiagnosis

Let’s just track the link building over time of this site to see how the inlinks will have an effect on PageRank and rankings.

Nov 30 2007

Google attack on Deli.cio.us

admin| Category: Google | 0 Comments

Google is beefing up their efforts to play a role in the bookmarking scene. When opening my Google account to read some emails and blogs in Google Reader, a Google pop-up came up that looked like this:

Google pop-up

From the Pop-up:

Access your bookmarks from any computer

Just click the star to create bookmarks, then access them from the bookmarks menu on any computer that has the latest version of theGoogle Toolbar.

As it looks from the pop-up, Google is trying to get more users accepting their bookmarking product.

Determining Relevance

It would be interesting to hear if you think the bookmarkings are being used to determine relevance. For the personal websearch Google is slowly building the assets to fully understand their users profile of Internet surfing habits.

  • Webhistory, which sites did you visit
  • Search history, with click through rates on both Paid & Natural Search results
  • Bookmarks, which sites are important enough for you to bookmark, and how much do you visit these
  • Feeds in Google reader, what feeds do you read and how many of their posts

Combining all this data, with the data they might collect with Google-Out and the Doubleclick databases, they have a powerful way of knowing exactly what you’re doing on the Internet, and what your intentions are.

From my perspective, the ultimate targeting tool for advertisers would be to combine all the data mentioned above here with some sociological data on life cycle of the average person. That would be interesting. With the right statistics and analyses, you can predict what the intentions are going to be of any person through their lifetime, who fits in a particular segment of behaviors before.

Google using a pop-up

The usage of a pop-up by Google can be called controversial for the following reasons:

  • At the introduction of the Google toolbar was blocking pop-ups
  • Google’s advertisement product has strict rules around the usage of pop-ups on your site. If you would like to advertise through Adwords or Adsense, you are not aloud to use pop-ups! From their terms and conditions:

Don’t use pop-up windows on your site.

We do not approve destination URLs that generate pop-ups when users enter or leave your landing page.

We consider a pop-up to be any window, regardless of content, that opens in addition to the original window.

This includes pop-unders, timed or intermittent pop-ups, mock system warnings, and pages that automatically initiate a download.

So I think about this for myself:

  • Why do all webmasters still put up with the strict T’s & C’s of Mister Google, while they are breaking their own values time and time again?
  • Do you have more examples of these? One good example that jumps into my mind are the paid link advertisements Google must be making good revenue on

Google Paid  links

When will the BIG shift away from Google products start, or hit a higher number. Until now, only a few bloggers were hit by the Google smack down, and started bitching about it. The question is, when will the Google Smack Down go mainstream?

Comments are more than welcome…

Nov 22 2007

Sugardaddy.com - How to dominate the SERPs

admin| Category: Rankings | 0 Comments

In the last year I have managed to dominate the top 10 results on Yahoo for the search Query Sugardaddy.com. It appears there is not a lot of competition for the search term, but I have managed to gain quite a decent amount of traffic from this search term. Having an affiliate link in the posts made me some extra cash on the side the last couple of months.

It all started with a Dr. Phil episode which I blogged about on my blog in Dutch. I find it very unusual that my Dutch blog is ranking that high in Yahoo. I guess that’s why Yahoo has been losing ground to Mister G for some time right now. If I’m a user, and located in the US, I probably won’t speak Dutch very good. So how relevant is it to show a Dutch blog in the top 10? Check out:

These are number 7 and number 3 in the top 10 on Yahoo at the time of writing. Two pages in Dutch, with the term Sugardaddy.com in the title and url.

Number 4 and number 5 are also of my hands, but these pages are at least in English. After I saw all the traffic coming in on the Sugardaddy.com keyword, I though that there could be an opportunity to dominate the SERP’s on this query. And look at these two:

The absolute winner in this ranking game is the number 2 spot that I’ve conquered. The post is absolutely about making money online with the Sugardaddy.com dating site:

  • money online”>Sugardaddy.com - Making money online

For everybody who would like to earn some extra cash from the program of Sugardaddy.com, you can subscribe here, and read about the potential of the Sugardaddy program in one of my monthly reviews.

Just in case this post is going to be featured in the top 10 as well, please subscribe to Sugardaddy.com.

We are a Sugar Daddy Matchmaking Service with the goal to bring together successful, rich men [Sugar Daddy] and attractive women who love to be pampered, spoiled and supported. Looking for an Extramarital affair? Find what you really want and join our free adult dating site - Cut to the Chase!

It sometimes amazes me how easy it is to rank on key-terms that bring in traffic. Look at the top 10 on Yahoo below here:

sugardaddy.com-Yahoo!-Search-Results

5 out of 10 results on Sugardaddy.com are my pages. Now the question will be if this pages will rank among these…

Technorati tags: , ,

Nov 13 2007

Spamming StumbleUpon?

admin| Category: Stumbleupon | 0 Comments

StumbleUpon is being used more and more by the SEO community as a tool to drive traffic to sites of clients and build links. But with the increased popularity of the tool, there are coming spammers and fake stumblers on the field.

I’ve been a stumbler since early this year, and slowly have been building up my profile. I only give sites the thumbs up if I really like them, and occasionally a thumbs down. This way I collected a humble Stumble profile. I liked (as time of writing):

  • 360 pages
  • 25 video’s
  • 32 photo’s
  • 25 fans

I came across two profiles that have been ramping up their stumbled sites like crazy. Seriously, these two must have been stumbling 24/7. Check this out:

OneDollarWiki Likes (at the time of writing):

  • 4,500 pages
  • 571 videos
  • 2.607 photos
  • 5 fans

Member since Oct 17, 2007

FiveDollarWiki Likes (at the time of writing):

  • 7,659 pages
  • 467 videos
  • 8 photos
  • 24 fans
  • Received 3 reviews

Member since Oct 09, 2007

Robots?

Have these members automated the voting through StumbleUpon to build a profile as soon as possible? How would you do this kind of thing? And can this be considered as Stumble Spamming?

What is StumblUpon doing to prevent spamming?

I’m wondering what SU is doing to prevent automated profile building.

It would be interesting to do some sort of test with two different profiles and submit pages in the same niche, containing the same kind of content, but on different sites.

One submitted by a fast build up profile that matches the way these two have done it. Which means that you build a profile stumbling through more than 5000+ pages within a month.

The second profile used would be a profile you have build up over time. A timely build profile would show a more natural build up of the stumbles.

Who would have time to do such a test?

Nov 11 2007

Liberty Names of America

admin| Category: Scam | 0 Comments

And yes, I got the snail mail letter from Liberty Names of America.

Liberty-Names-of-America

In September I read a post from a blogger who had received a letter from a lawyer from Domain Registry of America. It looks like more than one company is using these kind of techniques.

A search on Liberty Names of America says enough:

Liberty-names-of-america-GoogleSearch

On the second spot there is a post of Jim Boykin: Many say Liberty Names of America are Scammers. He got the letter too, already in 2006. So I guess Liberty Names must be making money out of this scam.

It would be great if the top 10 results can be dominated with posts about the scam of Liberty Names of America. At this moment all but one are pages that talk about their scams. Only the first result is their own corporate website.

The Prices are unbelievable high. What about $25 for renewal of a domain? Sounds like a bargain…! Oh but wait a minute, in the letter the renewal costs are $29, and on the site it is $25. That is a difference of $4. If you react through the letter, you pay a 16% premium. I guess they have to make up the DM costs from somewhere.

So please link to Jim’s post, which is number two, with the keyword: Liberty names of America. Or you can link to:

Now we will have to wait where this post will come in the rankings.

Nov 09 2007

Niche Blogging - A Broader Definition

admin| Category: Niche | 1 Comment

Originally I’m from The Netherlands, and at this moment this is giving me an advantage. If you think about attacking a particular niche, most SEO-ers & Bloggers think about a niche around a product. But a niche can easily be a different language.

In English there is a broad coverage on almost every niche you can think about. Blogs about blogging have grown triple digits, and most gadgets that hit the electronic market have been described, taken apart or hacked already by popular gadget blogs. Everything for the link bait.

There are a number of countries where blogging is less popular, or not even popular at all. In English, the particular blog has a great number of competitors, and first page rankings for key terms is hard.

In countries like Germany, blogging has not hit the big crowds yet. In a country like The Netherlands the advanced SEO experts are easily counted. Let alone the niche search optimized blogs/ niche sites.

I have conducted a couple of tests using a general blog that I’m keeping using brands as keywords in my title. The results are remarkable, and telling me there is a big opportunity for Dutch SEO bloggers to take advantage of it. If only I had more time.

Nutricia Chocomel

The only real chocolate milk in The Netherlands is Nutricia Chocomel. I’m ranking number 3 on the search query Nutricia Chocomel.

Nutricia-Chocomel

A380

The wings of the Airbus A380 are being partly being manufactured in The Netherlands. I wrote a piece on the test movies that were circling around on You Tube. A couple of weeks ago, at the time the first commercial flight of the A380 was flown, I saw my traffic spike with triple digit growth. It appears that my blog ranks number 2 on the keyword A380. Right behind Wikipedia.nl.

A380-Googlesearch

Corona biertje

“Biertje” is the word for a small beer, and used by a lot of people in The Netherlands due to a Heineken commercial. My blog is ranking number 2 on the Corona biertje search query after I wrote a story about an article in The New York Times on health regulations in New York.

Corona-biertje-Googlesearch

Moral of the story

A niche is not only a market defined by a particular product or service field. Countries can be very interesting niches. I’m currently looking into specific niches within countries that are not yet developed.

Nov 04 2007

Domain name submission to 14 established search engines

admin| Category: Scam | 0 Comments

Did you ever get a letter from Internet Corporation Listing Service? If you did, and you are in the business of SEO, you will see right through the scam that is being offered. But the problem with this way of customer acquisition is that not everybody who receives this letter knows about SEO.

This is the second time that I get a letter in the mail from Internet Corporation Listing Service. ICLS.net from their website:

Internet Corporation Listing Services is not a domain name registrar and does not provide domain name registrations or renewals, web hosting or email services. ICLS.NET is a search engine ranking and submission services firm. Our goal is to improve your rankings on search engines.

From the letter:

Domain name submission to 14 established search engines, quarterly search engine position and ranking reports for eight keyword/phrase listings from 14 major search engines.

This service will cost you $35 per year, $60 for 2 years, or $140 for 5 years.

The disclaimer in the letter is clear about what the letter is for:

This Internet listing offer is provided to millions of websites throughout the United States to enhance their website exposure. This is a solicitation for the order of goods or services, or both, and not a bill, invoice, or statement of account due. You are under no obligation to make any payment on account of this offer unless you accept this offer.

Right, this is the reason why the SEO world is being seen by some as sleazy. What a joke, submitting a domain to 14 search engines, and reporting on the whooping number of 8 keywords.

Internet Corporation Listing Service

From their About Us page on the website:

Internet Corporation Listing Service is a professional services firm specializing in search engine ranking reports and submission. Internet Corporation Listing Service has found a cost effective way to improve your website rankings on various search engines. We have developed comprehensive processes to ensure that more qualified prospects visit your web site. Our search engine submission efforts lead to high search engine rankings and improved visibility across all the major search properties, increasing your market reach and brand awareness. The value we provide is measured in increased conversions, a competitive advantage and increased returns on your Web investment.

This sounds so promising, and if you had no idea how the search engine market works, you would almost fall for these words. We continue…

Internet Corporation Listing Service was founded by a group of technology and search engine professionals, who are dedicated to helping businesses achieve greater position on the global market. The founders believe that through the Internet, and specifically through the 60 million + user base of search engines, that business can take a more prominent position than was ever previously achievable in the global economy.

I agree with most of this here, as the Internet, and specifically SEO should play a major role in the marketing strategy of every company. What I question is the fact that the founders are a group of technology and search engine professionals.

I will explain why by simply reviewing their website. If these people are such search engine professionals and experts in the SEO field, their website should be highly SEO-ed, and showcase the latest techniques in SEO. Don’t you agree…?

Now lets have a look at the website of Internet Corporation Listing Service.

ICLS.net

First thing you will see on their homepage is the following image:

ICLS-advert

So the question really is, why would you put the content that describes your main service in an image. This is a rookie mistake. Your most important content about your service should be readable for the crawlers.

Here are some SEO 101 tips if you do want to use an images:

  1. Give the image a name that uses the keywords you would like to rank for. Here the ICLS has given the image the simple name: advert.gif. Useless for SEO.
  2. The image is missing an alt tag. Alt tags are not only necessary to make your website accessible for people who have a vision handicap, it also makes it easier for crawlers to understand what your images are about.

Title & Meta Tags

The whole website of ICLS is poorly optimized if we look at the Title & Meta tags.

Every page has the same title:

Internet Corporation Listing Service - icls.net

No page has any Meta descriptions or Meta keywords.

Although ICLS has a full page on meta tags and even a meta tag generator, they don’t use these themselves. Now what does this tell you about their expertise. Especially as they use time and time again Altavista in their text. Clearly this text has not been updated since 2003.

…this is what Altavista would show in it’s description, and it wouldn’t give the viewer any idea of what your site actually covered. Of course, not all search engines work this way, I’d suggest you ferret around a little bit to see exactly how the popular engines work, and certainly the major search engines such as Altavista, Lycos, Google, Infoseek and Excite.

If you look at the Meta tag generator page, you will see that the default date of the expiry date of the file is set to Mon, 31 Dec 2003. 2003…? What a joke!

Robots.txt

The site does not have a robots.txt file.

Usage of “nofollow”

Like expected, there is no usage of the nofollow atribute on any of the internal links. This means that all pages, including the sign up page, are being indexed.

Footer

All logos and trademarks in this site are property of their respective owner. © 2002-04 by Internet Corporation Listing Service

Great footer text, only we have left the year 2004 already 3 years behind us. Updating your website with up to date content and information is key to grow trust with future clients.

Their service

Let’s have a quick look at the sample report they offer.

Project: New
Run Date: Wednesday, July 24, 2002 07:07:59 PM
Performed For: www.adobe.com
Keywords: acrobat

Congratulations! You were TopDog on 1 out of 5 search engines.
Your site was listed:

  • by 5 of 5 search engines.
  • 5 times among the top ten positions.

Your TopDog average scores are:

  • 96 out of 100 among search engines that list your site.
  • 96 out of 100 for all search engines.

Conclusion

We can go on and on, making use of all the free SEO tools available to show how bad these people are in SEO, but I think all above says enough.

In my opinion: this service is one big rip off. The only reason why Internet Corporation Listing Service still exists, is that there are so many people who don’t understand the search engine market. These people receive a letting in the mail, and think that the $35 investment in better ranking is worth the risk. It’s a small enough amount to loose, but big enough for ICLS to keep sending these letters and still make money. I guess not paying tax by being listed on the Bahamas helps in keeping margins high :)

The last thing I did in this review, is Google their name. First ranking is a Wikipedia result. Wow, this scam company has their own Wikipedia page…? Guess what it says:

The Internet Corporation Listing Service is a fraudulent corporation that solicits website owners using the US Postal Service. They present the website owner with what looks like a fake bill or invoice and attempt to get them to pay between $35 to $95 dollars for submitting their website to 14 major search engines. This information is delivered by the ICLS via email though it is freely available online.

LOL…

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  • Oct 17 2007

    Social Marketing Round Up - SMX New York

    admin| Category: Conference | 0 Comments

    I decided not to live blog the SMX Social Media Marketing after seeing all the people with laptops on their laps. Instead I spent the time listening, networking, taking some pictures, and here and there dropping a Tweet through Twittermail.

    My Tweeds can be found at: Twitter/The-Next-Corner

    My pictures can be found on my flickr acount. You can use these pictures if you like them, and if you do, you can drop a link back to either this blog, or my flickr account.

    The conference was a lot of fun, although at night I was pre-occupied with my mind and in conference calls most of the time. I did went to the cocktail drink on Tuesday night, which was great. Next time I’ll make sure I don’t pick up that 9 o’clock phone call…

    In my opinion the best presentation was from Sarah Hofstetter off 360i. Finally somebody who is speaking at a conference who understands marketing through the blogosphere. She was not only a good presenter, but also used real cases, which make the presentations much more lively. Rest of the presentations were goo, but some were pretty basic. I guess that I have been reading too many blogs lately :)

    Most of the sessions have been covered by the high profile bloggers/SEO’ers.

    Check out the articles of Rebecca Kelley and Vanessa Fox.

    Later my main takeaways. Now I have to walk to the gate to catch my flight to Paris…

    Oct 16 2007

    Danny Sullivan on SMX in New York

    admin| Category: Conference | 0 Comments

    Danny Sullivan on SMX in New York

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