Thursday 19 November 2015
FreeHit Xchange
Get Free Visitors Every 20 Seconds
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Main attractive features of this site
- 1:1 Surf Ratio
- Manual Surfing
- 20 seconds surf-timer
- 15 sites allowed for traffic exchange
- Suffered 1000 sites and receive $0.30 cash
- Get 10 credits extra on suffering every 25 sites.
How it works...!
Each
site you view rewards you with a visitor to your website. You can surf
as much as you want and receive unlimited free traffic to your website.
This increases the number of visitors who actually view your website.
Firefox addons for seo
Best Firefox addons for SEO
(Search Engine Optimization)
These addons use for off-page seo :
- Download Statusbar
- Flagfox
- Tabmix Plus
- Autofill Forms
- SEO Status PageRank/Alexa Toolbar
- CopyAllURLs
- PageRank
- SEO Analysis
- URL Lister
- Page Rank Checker
- CopyURLs
- Tab Counter
https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/collections/luckyboy113/seo/
Social Bookmarking sites
Social Bookmarking Sites:
1 to 104
Social Bookmarking sites where you need to put your links to promote your business.
Here you can find social bookmarking sites according to your need for your work.......
- google.com/bookmarks
- twitter.com
- slashdot.org
- tumblr.com
- reddit.com
- digg.com
- furl.net
- dmoz.org
- delicious.com
- citeulike.org
- folkd.com
- tweetmeme.com
- php.brickhost.com/forums/
- polypat.org
- hotklix.com
- Scrubtheweb.com
- freeprwebdirectory.com
- lebweb.com
- kormidlo.cz
- almapubliclibrary.org
- tipd.com
- del.icio.us
- jumptags.com
- wirefan.com
- buddymarks.com
- bizsugar.com
- designfloat.com
- pusha.se
- newsmeback.com
- fwisp.com
- dotpoch.com
- wists.com
- scoopit.co.nz
- forum.mangastream.com/
- forum.tufat.com/
- busybits.com
- egyptsearch.com
- cy-sd.com
- somuch.com
- fes-jordan.com
- tagenie.com
- forum.frevvo.com/forum/index.php
- forum.barrowdowns.com/
- rdirectory.net
- sdrtin.com
- bulldogblog.net
- polypat.org
- yekey.com
- lublin-online.com
- auhana.com
- nuoret.org
- mavicanet.com
- codeclassic.net
- websites4smallbusiness.net
- linkarena.com
- youmob.com
- sponter.com
- malaysiastory.com
- yoomark.com
- hibo5k.com
- synergyproject.org
- business-planet.net
- postolia.com
- gegants.cat/forum/index.php
- gri-network.com/index.php
- jkbdf999.com
- directory.ldmstudio.com
- atgear.com
- sabuco.org
- gateway-worldwide.com
- humsurfer.com
- jetdonkey.com
- kojaxx.com
- kwzz.com
- solinkable.com
- enexpress.net
- newskicks.com
- segnalo.virgilio.it
- dig.gr
- netzdinger.ch/netzrechnen/Forum/index.php
- la-genealogie-entre-amis.com/forum/index.php
- forum.iphonesoft.fr/index.php
- stm32circle.com/forum/index.php
- brokencontrollers.com/
- directory.seo-supreme.com
- mytitbits.com
- thuhm.com
- bestofindya.com
- justartic.com
- blogcharts.net
- worldoftags.com
- darma.pl/index.php
- southernsupermoto.net/
- activa.portbb.com/
- 3atp.org/forum/index.php
- coloradosph.org
- yapod.com
- gaddiposh.com
- bookmarkriver.info
- jetkitty.com
- sticktothis.com
- eggig.com
- openfaves.com
- diigo.com
AJAX Pagerank Checker Review
AJAX Page-rank Checker Review
Pagerank
Checker is an ajax pagerank checking website that is as simple as it
gets when it comes to checking a url’s current Pagerank. I’ve used
dozens of free websites and tools that check Pagerank, many of which
were effective tools and they did their job. However, this particular
website has unmatched speed when it comes to checking a website active
rank.
What Makes It Special?
Hopefully,
the majority of webmasters are familiar with, or have some experience
with AJAX and its way of loading queries without reloading or refreshing
the page. PRChecker.net is the only Pagerank checking website that uses
this perfectly, it continuously searches as your typing, so by the time
your request is in text you have the result. This function has cut out
nearly 99% of loading time that everyone is accustomed to.
Simply
begin typing the URL into the form and the tool will begin pulling the
current data from Google. The service also offers a Pagerank badge
generator that allows you to proudly display your rank on any website.
Let us know what you think of this particular Pagerank checking service in the comments below!
Check-Domains – Best Free Website Analyzer
Check-Domains – Best Free Website Analyzer
Check-Domains.com
is one of the most complete, free, website analysis tools that I’ve
used. It offers endless listings for ranks and other website statistics
that make-up a websites authority and value. The tools primarily analyze
the statistical data revolving around various search engines SEO and
SMO needs. You simply enter the URL you wish to collection information
on and within a few seconds of query initiation you will have all the
data you could possible want.
Free Services
The
results are over overwhelmingly efficient when it comes to comparing
this free set of tools to others. You can monitor everything from search
engine optimization effectiveness to social media statistics and
influence. Below is a ‘short’ list of the main abilities of
Check-Domains.com.
IP’s and Hosting: Displays the hosting ISP, registrar, Country, City, and IP.
Indexed Pages: Shows how many pages are indexed per search engine; Google, Yahoo, and Bing.
Meta Tags: Exhibits the website keywords, description, and title.
Backlinks: The number of backlinks each search engine has indexed; Google, Yahoo, and Bing.
Domain Age: Shows the date your website was first visible and the overall age.
PageRank: Displays the current and predicted PageRank.
Complete Rank: Reveals a 5 month history graph of your sites Complete rank.
Alexa Rank: Shows the current Alexa rank and current Alexa reach.
SEOmoz Rank: Your current MozRank, total links, external links, domain MozRank, page and domain authority.
Service Costs
Well
there are no services costs for the information mentioned above, as
well as much more. That’s what makes this free set of tools so
exceptional for webmaster usage. It encompasses almost every major
aspect of websites and yet there is no cost other than time and a bit of
reading. If you have any comments or questions about the service please
let us know in the comments below.
Google Analytics Finally Gets Mobile App
Google Analytics Finally Gets Mobile App
At long last, the Google Analytics team has announced an official Google Analytics mobile app. There are nearly a dozen apps in the Google Play store that use the Google Analytics API to display reports and other dashboards.
The app uses a swipe-gesture interface to switch between screens that include access to multiple reports for all your Google Analytics profiles, including real-time analytics, all your dashboard stats and even goal alerts, all on-the-go.
"Our users have been asking us for a Google Analytics app for some time now, and we're so excited to make it available today on Android," said Peng Li, a software engineer at Google. "This project has been a real labor of love, and we're thrilled that users can start downloading the app today."
Earlier today, the Analytics team also announced Mobile App Analytics. With their newly release app, you can now check your mobile app's analytics with the Google Analytics mobile app.
The Google Analytics app is available in the Google Play store. For how long have you been waiting for this app? When you download it, sound off in the comments below.
1 to 20 Link Building Strategies
Link Building Strategies
Links matter. There's no debate links are a big signal of quality to search engines, so you need to know your ABCs.
Whether
you're starting from scratch or looking to further enhance your link
profile, links remain a critical method of marketing. However, if you've
been paying attention, you can see that link building is a constantly
evolving practice.
Certain
tactics are overused then abused then penalized, with link builders
running around trying to undo damage from techniques that worked well
but maybe weren't 100 percent safe ideas.
What
follows is a list and discussion of 20 link building tactics, some of
which worked just as well 10 years ago as they do today.
Start With the Basics
Ah,
the basics...these are the tactics that can form the foundations of any
link building campaign, no matter what your niche or budget. The basics
don't tend to change and they're critical to understand so that you can
move on to more advanced and creative techniques.
1. Email
a webmaster, asking for a link to your site. Personalizing your emails
is critical here (think about how many emails you get every day) so make
sure you're actually emailing webmasters who have sites that are
relevant to yours, and, even more importantly, make sure that your site
is actually link-worthy. We're all busy people and no one wants to waste
time so if it's not a good place for a link to you, don't waste
anyone's time.
2. Use
the phone. Picking up the phone to do the same thing as listed above is
also acceptable for those of us who aren't averse to having to speak to
another human being for work matters.
3.
Find great sources for links by simply searching the web for your
desired target keywords. Whereas even a year ago I would have said that
sites appearing high in the SERPs would be good sites to contact, due to
the truly amazing amount of spam and hacked sites that appear high up
for certain search terms, I'd say you need to visit the sites with a
very careful eye. Whereas we used to think that getting a link from any
source was a good idea, after Google started notifying webmasters that
they had bad links which should be removed, I'd say to be very, very
critical.
4. Use
social media to find great sources for links. There are loads of tools
that can help with this (my favorite is Icerocket) but simply going to
Twitter and searching for a keyword in the same way that you search
through an engine's results can show you some fantastic link
opportunities.
5.
Make the link negotiation personal. Even if you've emailed to ask for a
link, don't be opposed to speaking to this benevolent webmaster by
phone, or in person if that works out. Sometimes this personal
connection can be what secures your link.
6.
Know what makes a site a good linking partner. If you've been building
links for a long time, you can probably easily glance at a site and, in
under a minute, determine whether it would be a beneficial linking
partner. However, for the rest of the world, it's not so easy. Know what
makes me like a site more than anything else? Social love. If I see a
blog post that is relevant to my topic, has ongoing relevant comments, a
decent amount of tweets/likes/shares, that's a good site to me because
I'm thinking about traffic.
7. Think
about traffic! Think about sites that can send you relevant traffic,
not just sites that might improve your rankings. If you can see yourself
going to that site, seeing your link, clicking on it, and thinking
"nice, this is just what I wanted!" then yes, that's a good
traffic-generating site most likely.
8. Stop
thinking about rankings and Google's Toolbar PageRank. Rankings
definitely matter but considering the amount of places that can send you
traffic (like social media sites, sites that link to you, sites where
you guest post, etc.) it's silly to rely on rankings in one engine. Stop
thinking that a link from a site with a PR of 0 won't help you, and
that a link from a site with a PR of 5 definitely will.
9. Check
to see what your competitors are doing. While this should never be a
definitive way to define your own link plan, it's valuable to see what
works for others in your niche. Just don't think that you can mimic a
competitor's link profile and do as well as they have. It's definitely
not that simple.
10.
Make sure your site isn't hurting you. Many times we think that with
the right links, our sites will soar in the rankings, even though they
are usability nightmares with nothing real to offer anyone that can't be
found elsewhere.
11. Check
out the sites that link to you and find the sites they link to. Sounds
convoluted, but it's a great way to figure out other good sites to
contact.
12. If
you get a link from a fantastic site that is exactly the type of site
you want to link to you, after congratulating yourself on this
achievement, do some digging and find out who else links to that site.
Those may also be good sites to contact for links.
13. Search
for sites that should link to you but don't. If you find a blog post
entitled "Top 100 companies that sell green widgets" and you sell green
widgets but aren't listed, contact the webmaster and point this out.
Nicely, of course.
14. Don't
automate if you can help it. There are times when automation can be a
lifesaver but when it comes to reviewing a site and making a personal
connection that leads to a link, I'd make the decision to do it all
manually.
15. If
you receive a negative response, regard this as very important, as
these refusals could be telling you something. Perhaps your site isn't
as link-worthy as you thought it was. If a webmaster takes the time to
email you back and say no thanks, ask him or her why. Maybe you'll
uncover an error that is glaring to everyone but yourself. Regard this
as a fantastic usability opportunity. Also, if a webmaster points out
something fixable and you fix it, maybe you'll get that link in the end.
16. If
you move your site to a new URL, surely you'll 301 it but for the
maximum linky benefit, do yourself a favor and contact the sites
(especially the really good ones) that link to you to point out your new
URL.
17. Sponsor something. Sponsor a charity, a contest, an afterschool club at your kid's school, anything.
18.
Learn to love the nofollowed link. There's more to life than link
juice. Nofollows can be amazing for traffic so if someone says yes, I'll
link to you but I have to nofollow it, say thanks.
19. See who links to YouTube videos that relate to your industry and ask them for a link.
20. In that same line of thought, see who links to infographics in your niche. Ask them for a link.
21 to 30 Link Building Strategies
Link Building Strategies
Become a Content Provider
If
you aren't putting content out there for consumption, you stand little
chance of acquiring links. People use the web to gather information, and
if you aren't giving it to them, someone else (your competitor)
definitely is.
I
know that many people who are fantastic communicators and great
thinkers often don't believe that they can write anything of value.
However, as we'll point out to start off, practice is the key here.
21. Write something even if you're not yet very good at it. The more you practice, the better you'll be.
22. Write
something really, really good, something that no one else has yet
written. Put a new spin on what you want to say so that it will grab
people's attention. For example, if you're writing about pest control
(and for the record I do not work with any pest control clients), then
maybe write a piece about how you're never more than a few feet away
from a spider. Shivers.
22. Think
about an ongoing content plan and write so that it's easy to write a
follow-up piece. Series are great, regular guest post slots are great,
and knowing what your "thing" is can definitely be great. For example,
for my agency's blog, we've decided that we want to show how we think
about links. We have a group of employees who are from extremely diverse
backgrounds and we've had a lot of success with blog posts that do more
than tell you how to contact a webmaster and get a link. Our "thing" is
creative thinking about what we do for a living.
23.
Produce something other than just textual content. Do an infographic or
create a comic. Produce videos where you do things like interview
people in your industry (hey, look how far it took Jonathan Allen!)
Start a weekly online radio show. That kind of non-text-based content
does get links.
24.
Actively pursue new opportunities for contributing to your industry.
Maybe you can moderate a forum or help curate a weekly newsletter. Maybe
you can provide fantastic answers on Quora.
25. Find
something that's missing and jump into giving it to us. No forum for
your industry? Start one. Looking for a list of all the preschools in
your town but can't find one? Do the research, write it, and put it out
there for everyone to see and link to.
26. Do
one major article that will become the definitive resource for
something and that can be (and will be) updated on a semi-annual or
annual basis. Think Rae Hoffman-Dolan's amazing series "Link Building
With The Experts."
27. Create a curated list for something. Think about your industry and what you have trouble keeping up with.
28. Produce a monthly "best of" series to recap what's happened in your industry in case people missed something.
29. Reference your older articles when they're relevant. Michael Gray does a great job of this with his archived posts tweets.
30. Make
sure that when you do promote your content, the right people are seeing
it at the right time. If you're publishing an article about the best
pizza delivery in New York, don't publish it when everyone on the East
Coast is sound asleep. There are great scheduling tools out there, so
use them if you can't promote content at the right time.
31 to 40 Link Building Strategies
Link Building Strategies
Leave Your Links Everywhere
Well,
not everywhere maybe, but links can be a calling card if used wisely.
Some of these cross over with the above section on providing content.
This is the same idea as any other marketing really; you want as many
eyeballs as possible on your product.
31. Link to your site in your email signature.
32. Link to your site in all your social media platforms.
33. Link to your site on your business cards that you will naturally give out at industry events.
34. Tell people about your site. You'd be surprised at how much of a resource this can be.
35.
Comment on relevant blogs and sites without doing so in a spammy
manner. I wouldn't suggest popping your link into a casual comment
because that's not a good way to build long-term link exposure, but
using your site for your comment signature can lead people to you, even
if it doesn't actually generate a link on the spot.
36.
As mentioned earlier, guest post. Ask to guest post. Approach sites and
say hey, would you be interested in having me as a one-time
contributor? Be prepared with something though, in case you're asked for
an idea or a writing sample.
37.
Interview someone. Interviewees usually link back to these interviews,
and they're a great way to get to know people in your industry.
38. Write a testimonial or a review of a product.
39. Leave reviews for local businesses you've visited on sites like Yelp.
40.
Give feedback online through social media. If you like an article,
tweet that to the writer. If you had a great hotel stay, put it on their
Facebook page.
Some SEO Terms You Should Know
Some SEO Terms You Should Know
If
you have a website or blog, or if you work with anything related to the
Internet, you’ll certainly need to know a bit about search engine
optimization (SEO). A good way to get started is to familiarize yourself
with the most common terms of the trade, and below you’ll find 20 of
them. (For those who already know SEO, consider this post as a
refresher!).
SEM:
Stands for Search Engine Marketing, and as the name implies it involves
marketing services or products via search engines. SEM is divided into
two main pillars: SEO and PPC. SEO stands for Search Engine
Optimization, and it is the practice of optimizing websites to make
their pages appear in the organic search results. PPC stands for
Pay-Per-Click, and it is the practice of purchasing clicks from search
engines. The clicks come from sponsored listings in the search results.
Backlink:
Also called inlink or simply link, it is an hyperlink on another
website pointing back to your own website. Backlinks are important for
SEO because they affect directly the PageRank of any web page,
influencing its search rankings.
PageRank:
PageRank is an algorithm that Google uses to estimate the relative
important of pages around the web. The basic idea behind the algorithm
is the fact that a link from page A to page B can be seen as a vote of
trust from page A to page B. The higher the number of links (weighted to
their value) to a page, therefore, the higher the probability that such
page is important.
Linkbait:
A linkbait is a piece of web content published on a website or blog
with the goal of attracting as many backlinks as possible (in order to
improve one’s search rankings). Usually it’s a written piece, but it can
also be a video, a picture, a quiz or anything else. A classic example
of linkbait are the “Top 10″ lists that tend to become popular on social
bookmarking sites.
Link farm:
A link farm is a group of websites where every website links to every
other website, with the purpose of artificially increasing the PageRank
of all the sites in the farm. This practice was effective in the early
days of search engines, but today they are seeing as a spamming
technique (and thus can get you penalized).
Anchor text:
The anchor text of a backlink is the text that is clickable on the web
page. Having keyword rich anchor texts help with SEO because Google will
associate these keywords with the content of your website. If you have a
weight loss blog, for instance, it would help your search rankings if
some of your backlinks had “weight loss” as their anchor texts.
NoFollow:
The nofollow is a link attribute used by website owners to signal to
Google that they don’t endorse the website they are linking to. This can
happen either when the link is created by the users themselves (e.g.,
blog comments), or when the link was paid for (e.g., sponsors and
advertisers). When Google sees the nofollow attribute it will basically
not count that link for the PageRank and search algorithms.
Link Sculpting:
By using the nofollow attribute strategically webmasters were able to
channel the flow of PageRank within their websites, thus increasing the
search rankings of desired pages. This practice is no longer effective
as Google recently change how it handles the nofollow attribute.
Title Tag:
The title tag is literally the title of a web page, and it’s one of the
most important factors inside Google’s search algorithm. Ideally your
title tag should be unique and contain the main keywords of your page.
You can see the title tag of any web page on top of the browser while
navigating it.
Meta Tags:
Like the title tag, meta tags are used to give search engines more
information regarding the content of your pages. The meta tags are
placed inside the HEAD section of your HTML code, and thus are not
visible to human visitors.
Search Algorithm:
Google’s search algorithm is used to find the most relevant web pages
for any search query. The algorithm considers over 200 factors
(according to Google itself), including the PageRank value, the title
tag, the meta tags, the content of the website, the age of the domain
and so on.
SERP:
Stands for Search Engine Results Page. It’s basically the page you’ll
get when you search for a specific keyword on Google or on other search
engines. The amount of search traffic your website will receive depends
on the rankings it will have inside the SERPs.
Sandbox:
Google basically has a separate index, the sandbox, where it places all
newly discovered websites. When websites are on the sandbox, they won’t
appear in the search results for normal search queries. Once Google
verifies that the website is legitimate, it will move it out of the
sandbox and into the main index.
Keyword Density:
To find the keyword density of any particular page you just need to
divide the number of times that keyword is used by the total number of
words in the page. Keyword density used to be an important SEO factor,
as the early algorithms placed a heavy emphasis on it. This is not the
case anymore.
Keyword Stuffing:
Since keyword density was an important factor on the early search
algorithms, webmasters started to game the system by artificially
inflating the keyword density inside their websites. This is called
keyword stuffing. These days this practice won’t help you, and it can
also get you penalized.
Cloaking:
This technique involves making the same web page show different content
to search engines and to human visitors. The purpose is to get the page
ranked for specific keywords, and then use the incoming traffic to
promote unrelated products or services. This practice is considering
spamming and can get you penalized (if not banned) on most search
engines.
Web Crawler:
Also called search bot or spider, it’s a computer program that browses
the web on behalf of search engines, trying to discover new links and
new pages. This is the first step on the indexation process.
Duplicate Content:
Duplicate content generally refers to substantive blocks of content
within or across domains that either completely match other content or
are appreciably similar. You should avoid having duplicate content on
your website because it can get you penalized.
Canonical URL:
Canonicalization is a process for converting data that has more than
one possible representation into a “standard” canonical representation. A
canonical URL, therefore, is the standard URL for accessing a specific
page within your website. For instance, the canonical version of your
domain might be http://www.domain.com instead of http://domain.com.
Robots.txt:
This is nothing more than a file, placed in the root of the domain,
that is used to inform search bots about the structure of the website.
For instance, via the robots.txt file it’s possible to block specific
search robots and to restrict the access to specific folders of section
inside the website.
Google Search Tricks
10 Cool Google Search Tricks
Browsing through the web this week I came across another interesting post covering 10 cool Google search tricks. Here is what they included on the list:
- How to search different file formats (keyword filetype:doc)
- How to search educational resources (keyword site:.edu)
- Finding the meaning of words and abbreviations (define:keyword)
- Finding the time of any location (time new york)
- Finding the weather of any location (california weather)
- Tracking commentary of live events (cricket)
- Using Google as a calculator (9 * 10)
- Converting currencies (1 USD in EUR)
- Tracking stocks (stocks:MSFT)
- Finding faces (add imgtype=face to the URL)
Some of these tricks I was familiar with, others I was not. Most are pretty interesting anyway, and they illustrator the breadth of scope that Google is achieving lately.
Expected dates of google page rank update 2012
Expected dates of Google
page rank update 2012
Page
rank is Google’s view of importance of a web page. Having a Higher
Page Rank means Google considers your webpage more in SERP results than
your counterparts, there by getting you more traffic & amp ;
more money. It is not the only factor that determines rankings in
search results, but it can be important.
Google PageRank Update history – year 2012
On February 7th, 2012 Google has released an major update and the PRs had changed considerably for several webmasters.
Google
updates its PageRank throughout the year but major updates happen four
times a year .The time frame in between every page rank update is around
3 months.There may be some minor updates in between.
Next Google PageRank Update Expected dates for year 2012:
February 7th, 2012 [Google Page Rank Update - Completed]
April 24th, 2012 [Google Page Rank Update - Completed]
July-August 10th, 2012
October-November 14′th, 2012
There
are millions of websites around the web and if you want to be on the
top of all in your niche, then it’s important for you to get a Good
PageRank. Here’s a list of Dofollow social Bookmarking websites that can
help you improve PageRank.
If you want to learn more about PageRank and about SEO in general, I suggest SEOmoz – they have a great beginner’s guide.
Note:
These Page Rank Update dates are an approx estimate itself, they may
deviate.But I’m sure there will be around the expected time frame
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