Seo and Backlink Building Has Changed – Learn How

December 18th, 2009

SEO is changing.

I remember a time when SEO was all about knowing a few little tricks & gimmicks – that time came & went.

Then there was a timewhen SEO was all about knowing what to put where, what keyword frequency to have, and making sure that the main keywords were in the right tags – and a bit of backlinking. That time came & went also.

Then there came a time when SEO was for the most part about backlinking, and many websites got top ranking without having much in the way of content – that time came, and is now on it’s way out, at least for sites without content.

Now, search engines have become smart enough to find ways to make sure that SEO is about what is most important to them – content. Relevant, valuable content.

Sure, off page SEO is still very important, but the scales are now starting to balance out between offpage SEO and quantity & quality of keyword rich content, and I think search engines are close to finally getting it right.

Search engines want to provide the best possible valuable content to their users – we all know that just because a website has a ton of backlinks, doesn’t mean it’s going to provide high quality valuable content – so in the past off page factors have been far too heavy in the mix, in my humble opinion.

Yes, there are many individual factors which need to be taken into consideration in when deciding on how relevant a website is to a certain search, but realistically if quality content is the most important thing to the search engines, then on page content should be the most important factor, right?

The problem in the past has been how to determine which websites are providing the best and most valuable content for any given search, on page factors are too easily abused and too easy to manipulate. As a result off page factors were brought into the mix, and for a time were more important than on page factors.

Now we’re in an age where both are equally important, you just have to know the right combination.

On page content and internal linking, off page backlinks and proper anchor text.

Get those two right and you’re all set!

The one you can manipulate and control easily, content. The other, backlinks, are not in your control, but if you get the content right, the backlinks will come.

That’s why automated backlink building software that takes into consideration the actual content on each of your pages and uses it to determine the backlinks is the only way to go.

For this we recommend taking a look at NextGenLinks.com, it’s the only automated backlink building software that uses your own content on a page by page basis to create unique, high quality, one way deep links.

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25 Free Rebrandable Marketing Reports – New Series

December 6th, 2009

We have just added 25 new short marketing reports for our members, guests and affiliates to enjoy, use and learn from.

These reports are in PDF format and we include a tutorial on how to use a Free Open Source software called Open Office to rebrand all of the links in the report with your NextGenLinks.com affiliate links.

Everything is completely free and easy to use. You can even add your own links to your own sites in the reports!

It’s a learning experience in itself as it will teach you how to use free software to create stunning PDF documents that are easily rebrandable.

The reports cover all marketing topics such:

  • Article Marketing
  • Outsourcing
  • Auto Responders
  • Email Marketing
  • Product Creation
  • Product Launches
  • JVs and Partnerships
  • and many more topics

You can use these reports in your own email marketing, or as content in your blogs and websites.

Grab these free reports here:

http://www.nextgenlinks.com/Free_Reports.php

Rebrand them by watching the tutorial video here:

http://www.nextgenlinks.com/BrandYourReports.php

We hope you enjoy the reports and the free tutorials, we have put alot of work into them :)

Be sure to tweet about them as well, just click the twitter link below…

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How Can Link Automation Build Your Business Success?

October 12th, 2009

A website is nothing more than a collection of words, photos and links on the Internet. There are hundreds of millions of websites, but only 10 make the top page of the search engine results page.

What makes these top 10 websites the most relevant to the Internet browsers needs? The keywords and the association of those keywords to the links within those websites.

Link building is a process used to build ranking on the Internet for a website. The more links leading to the pages of the website, the more success the website will have at ranking within the top 10, but there is a problem with simple link building. There are too many pages on many websites to manually link to every page.

Link Building Requires More Than Inbound Links

The second problem with manual link building is the fact that many websites aim to gain all inbound links while forgetting the importance of outbound links.

Outbound links serve two purposes. The visitors reading your content will see you are not afraid to send them to another website to obtain relevant information on the topic they were searching for. And, the search engines love web pages that share a little of their traffic love.

Web pages is the keyword here. Not just the home page, but ALL of the pages on a website should have inbound links and many should contain a few outbound links as well.

Automating the Link Building Process

There are plenty of websites and software selections that claim to automate the link building process. Just like any other product, the consumer (YOU) needs to research the product before choosing any automation program or service.

Are the methods used to build backlinks white hat or black hat. Black hat automated SEO link building will get your website banned from the search engines which means NO ONE will find your information.

White hat tactics use tried and true methods of link building that are accepted by the search engines.

Building Backlinks Takes Time – Even With Automation

The key to successful white hat SEO techniques is time. If you think that Google, Yahoo, Bing, MSN and Ask are not going to question thousands of links being established leading to your website’s pages every day, you are sadly mistaken.

The correct process for building backlinks and deeplinks is a slow one. Even with link building automation, the process needs time to work.

Why? Because the links being built with the top SEO link automation software are real links. These are not links created from anchor text thrown on any website, but relevant links from businesses and websites that contain real information.

Just imagine a network of people sharing their content and link space with you.

Now, imagine that process 100% automated so you never have to worry about building links to the inner pages of your website again.

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Claiming my blog at Technorati :)

October 7th, 2009

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How Search Engines REALLY Work – Most Webmasters Have No Clue…

September 15th, 2009

This a bit of a technical post, but you don’t have to know the nitty gritty of how Search Engines work, just some of the basics that you may not know about.

The first job of the search engines is to crawl the web, this means sending out the bots to spider all of the pages, index those pages and analyze the links that they find along the way.

The user side means that they have to deliver search results so they have to handle queries, retrieve the pages based on the queries, rank the pages they have retrieved and then displaying the SERPs (search engine results pages), all of this happens very fast, in a matter of milliseconds.

The first thing we want to talk about is URL or Page Discovery, this means how the search engines actually go about finding pages on the web. URL actually stands for Uniformed Resource Locator, but there’s no need to go into that much detail, for us it is simply a page on the web.

There are several ways that a search engine can find your pages, for example you can submit an xml sitemap to all of the major search engines, the xml format is something that is standard across all of the SE’s, you can submit your site to site directories, though that is not as useful as it was even a few years ago and some SE’s even offer paid inclusion.

By far the most common way that a search engine will find your URLs is via links on other “indexed” pages that point to your pages. This is how the search engines prefer to find your pages and it will provide the greatest weight to your pages.

An xml sitemap is a great way to tell the SE’s about your pages, but what many webmasters don’t realize is that this is not a mandatory call to action for the spiders, it is still up to the SE’s to analyze these pages and determine whether or not they will be spidered and added to the index.

So what exactly is a spider and how does it work?

A spider or bot or crawler is a software program designed by the SE’s to simply crawl the web and collect data or as they call it “fetch pages”.

The spiders are required to follow certain rules that you can set forth for them regarding how you want them to spider your site, these are contained in a file called a robots.txt file and they refer to the Robots Exclusion protocol. There are many tutorials online that talk about the robots.txt options in depth.

Although a spider has visited your site does not mean you will automatically be indexed, the spider simply collects the data and stores it for the engine to analyze later and determine if it is to be indexed or not.

The spider communicates with your server when requesting to look at your pages, the protocol that it follows is called HTTP or Hyper Text Transfer Protocol.

So this is the basic interaction:

1. The spider sends a “GET” request to your server which basically says “GET yourpage.html” included in this request is the “HOST” information and this will say something like “HOST www.yourdomain.com”.

Many spiders will also send a request that looks like this” IF-Modified-Since” this is a way to ask the server if the page has been modified since the last time they requested if. If it has not they can skip it and move on.

The spider will also include information telling the sever who it is, for example “Googlebot” form Google or “Slurp” from Yahoo.

2. The server will respond to the spider telling it the status of the page requested. There are several different status codes that can be returned, for example:

  • 200 Status OK
  • 301 Moved Permanently
  • 302 Found but Moved Temporarily
  • 304 Not Modified Since Last visit
  • 404 Not Found
  • 410 Gone for Good
  • and 500 Server Error

3. Assuming the spider finally reaches your page, it will simply store all of the html code in the spider database.

at this point the spiders job is done, for this particular page anyway.

Parsing and Indexing of your pages actually happens later on in the Search Engine software itself, not by the spider.

Parsing means that the SE software will now process the page and prepare it for indexing and ranking, this means stripping out stuff like javascript, most of the formatting tags, stripping out unneeded html code such as iFrames and whatever content is within them.

What the Engine will leave in and pay attention to are the tags it finds important such as Title tags, MetaKeyword and Description tags, Header tags H1-H6, A Anchor tags and IMG image tags.

Now here is where it gets interesting…

It’s time for the SE to store your “Page” in it’s index, at least that’s what we commonly think happens. But in reality, the engine stores the words in the index and uses them to reference our pages. Each word is stored in the index and then given the attributes as they relate to our page. For example, if the word “automation” is found on our page, it will be stored in the index along with the URL it was found on, where it was found on the page like in the title tag, description etc, how many times or in which position for example 2nd word in the title or 54th word in content, the html attribute assigned to the word for example A anchor text or H2 header tag etc. Of course these would all be represented by some type of numeric binary code to make it easier and faster for the ndex to find and sort later.

That was a pretty complex paragraph! The important thing to understand here is that the index does not store our pages, it stores our words as they relate to our pages.

This gets confusing sometimes because Google will present us with a full cache of our pages, but this is simply something that Google offers to it’s users and it is NOT what the is being queried when we perform searches.

Links and anchor text are stored in a separate indexes altogether. First the engine will filter out all of the “nofollow” links, the duplicate links and any links that return an error such as a 404, 410 or 500 response.  Once it determines the links it wants to keep track of it will place the link in a special index and then place the anchor text to that link in a different index.

When searching for backlinks on the internet’ it’s very important to keep in mind that Google does not share this information freely, or at all for that matter. When it comes to finding backlinks, Google is very inaccurate, that does not mean they do not know, they do, but sharing that information accurately with webmasters would make it very easy for them to figure out Google’s algorithms and manipulate their rankings and that is not something that they want happening.

With links in mind, it is important to know the value placed on errors returned. Internal links that point to pages on your site which return an error raise a red flag and are considered very bad. Not so much links that are pointing to outside pages on the web that you really cannot be held accountable for, as long as they are limited in number.

Here are some popular misconceptions that should be cleared up now :) :

  • Search Engines Don’t store web pages, they store words
  • Search Engines DO NOT search the web when you use their search tool, they only search “some” of what is in their index
  • If you are not in the index, you will not appear in search results
  • Search engines do not rank pages, first they receive a query from a user, find that page in the index based on the text used and rank its relevance to the search query
  • This means that the same page can rank differently for many different keywords and keyword phrases and will rank differently on those SERPs as well.

I hope this basic explanation has helped you better understand how SE’s actually do what they do!

Feel free to link to this page and send it to your friends as well. Use the handy tweet link below to tweet about it too!

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