Take Care While you Choose Your Domain April 23, 2009
Posted by SEO Professionals in SEO Tutorials.Tags: domain name, domain name market, domain names, domain purchasing, domain purchasing tips, domain purchasing tools, domain tips, expert seo, expert seo services, internet marketing, know about seo, purchase a domain, search engine optimization, search engine ranking, seo, seo books, seo experts, seo notes, seo professionals, seo services, seo tips, seo traffic tutorials, SEO Tutorials, sub domain, tips for domain, tips to purchase domain, tld, top level domains, website traffic, what is seo
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Profit in business comes from repeat customers; customers that boast about your product and service, and that bring friends with them.”
The above quote by W. Edwards Deming author of “Out of the Crisis” (1984), is relevant to my discussion on Domain names. It is I believe also relevant to anyone in any business. OK, now I have got my pontificating off my chest let me get started with my discussion on domain names.
Contrary to what another writer has published, no reputable Domain name registrant, who intends staying in business will sell you a domain name for $2.00. The Registrant has to pay a much higher wholesale price than this for the domain name in the first place, and would be making a big loss by selling for a mere $2.00. The Domain name market is very competitive, and if you shop around you will be able to purchase a Top Level Domain (TLD) name for under $10.00, but certainly not for $2.00.
Now, I have seen advertisements for Domain names for under $2.00 for $1.99 actually. But the firm in question was making this offer on the proviso that some other product or service such as a hosting account was purchased with the domain name. So the domain name part of the purchase for this particular firm would be a “loss leader”, but they would be more than compensating for this with their profit an the other products or services.
What some firms may be selling for $2.00 are not domain names, but sub-domains of someone else’s domain name. The ethics of selling these even for $2.00, I personally would find very questionable.
Earlier I mentioned Top Level Domain (TLD) names and sub-domain names. I shall explain the difference.
A Domain Name consists of several different parts. The first part is generally “http://” , for secure sites it may be “https://”. The “http” is an acronym for “hyper text transfer protocol”. The next part of a domain name is “www.”. The “www” part of course stands for the “World Wide Web”. Then there is a bit in the middle “IanMcKenziesLinks”. This middle bit can not have any spaces and needs to be written as one word, as I have done above. It is this bit that you choose and complete the appropriate searches for availability, before you plan to register a domain name. Now, the final part of a TLD name is the suffix at the end of course. This traditionally is “.com”, but it could be several other suffixes in addition, such as, “.net”, “.org”, “.biz”, “.name” and so on.
Now, I know that some article sites do not like domain names listed in the article, so I won’t do that. But, if you put the first two bits “http://www.” and the middle bit “IanMcKenziesLinks” together and add the suffix “.com” at the end, you have an example of a Top Level Domain (TLD) name.
Top Level Domain names such as I have exemplified above, can have any number of sub-domains. For example, you could have the “http://” part and replace the “www.’ part with for example “iansblog.” . This would then become a sub-domain of the Top Level Domain described earlier. There could also potentially be thousands of others.
So, if you purchase a “domain name” like the first example in the paragraph above, you are not really purchasing a domain name at all, but a part of someone else’s Domain Name over which you really don’t have any control. If the owner of the TLD name of which yours is a part for example chooses not to renew their domain name registration, then too bad,all of the “suckers” who purchased sub-domains of this TLD will lose their sites.
Why would anyone purchase a sub-domain, when Top Level Domain names are so inexpensive?
On the issue of money and costs, I would like to pick up on one other point another writer has made. This writer slammed free hosted sites. Why? I ask?
The TLD site above, in addition to the sub-domain “blog” site associated with it are both hosted free of charge. The only financial cost involved was the two year registration of the TLD name costing me a total of $17.64. That fee also includes the ICANN fee. In exchange for the free hosting there are some unobtrusive advertisements across the top of each page. Now, these ads., are related to the content on the pages of my site. There is amongst the ads a Google search bar on each page also, which i think can be quite handy. In my opinion, it certainly is a small price to pay in exchange for totally free hosting.
Source : Ezine Articles
SEO Glossary – K April 23, 2009
Posted by SEO Professionals in SEO Tutorials.Tags: expert seo, expert seo services, glossary, internet marketing, know about seo, profesional seo services, se optimization, search engine optimization, search engine optimization glossary, search engine position tool, seo experts, seo glossary, seo notes, seo professionals, seo services, seo tips, seo traffic, seo traffic tutorials, SEO Tutorials, what is seo
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Long tail and brand related keywords are typically worth more than shorter and vague keywords because they typically occur later in the buying cycle and are associated with a greater level of implied intent.
When people use keyword stuffed copy it tends to read mechanically (and thus does not convert well and is not link worthy), plus some pages that are crafted with just the core keyword in mind often lack semantically related words and modifiers from the related vocabulary (and that causes the pages to rank poorly as well).
Keyword Funnel
The relationship between various related keywords that searchers search for. Some searches are particularly well aligned with others due to spelling errors, poor search relevancy, and automated or manual query refinement.
Keyword Research
The process of discovering relevant keywords and keyword phrases to focus your SEO and PPC marketing campaigns on.
Example keyword discovery methods:
- using keyword research tools
- looking at analytics data or your server logs
- looking at page copy on competing sites
- reading customer feedback
- placing a search box on your site and seeing what people are looking for
- talking to customers to ask how and why they found and chose your business
Short list of the most popular keyword research tools:
- SEO Book Keyword Research Tool – free, driven by Overture, this tool cross references all of my favorite keyword research tools. In addition to linking to traditional keyword research tools, it also links to tools such as Google Suggest, Buzz related tools, vertical databases, social bookmarking and tagging sites, and latent semantic indexing related tools.
- Overture – free, powered from Yahoo! search data. Heavily biased toward over representing commercial queries, combines singular and plural versions of a keyword into a single data point.
- Google – free, powered from Google search data.
- Wordtracker – paid, powered from Dogpile and MetaCrawler. Due to small sample size their keyword database may be easy to spam.
Please note that most keyword research tools used alone are going to be highly inaccurate at giving exact quantitative search volumes. The tools are better for qualitative measurements. To test the exact volume for a keyword it may make sense to set up a test Google AdWords campaign.
You can refer Keyword Suggestion Tools to get top Keyword Tools.
When people use keyword stuffed copy it tends to read mechanically (and thus does not convert well and is not link worthy), plus some pages that are crafted with just the core keyword in mind often lack semantically related words and modifiers from the related vocabulary (and that causes the pages to rank poorly as well).
SEO Glossary – J April 23, 2009
Posted by SEO Professionals in SEO Tutorials.Tags: expert seo, expert seo services, glossary, internet marketing, know about seo, se optimization, search engine optimization, search engine ranking, seo, seo books, seo experts, seo glossary, seo notes, seo professionals, seo services, seo tips, seo traffic, seo traffic tutorials, SEO Tutorials, website traffic, what is seo
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Search engines do not index most content in JavaScript. In AJAX, JavaScript has been combined with other technologies to make web pages even more interactive.