Search Engine Submission Service

Registration in major search engines, search engine submission services and optimization tips for higher ranking

Archive for July, 2009

Google’s PageRank and Beyond : The Science of Search Engine Rankings

Abstract: Guaranteed Search Engine Submission
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Google’s PageRank and Beyond : The Science of Search Engine Rankings

6 Reasons Why I Would Submit To Yahoo’s Paid DirectoryAmerican Chronicle, CA – Aug 20, 2007Although Google is still the world’s most popular search engine, Yahoo is still widely used worldwide. Why? Several reasons: Its webmail progam, …

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Search Engine Submissions & Ranking

Abstract: Web Search Engine Submission
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When you are looking for something on the Internet, what do you usually do? You go to a search engine. Where do those results come from and how do you put your website up there too?

The mother of all marketing tools online is the search engine. There are many to choose from and there is no reason not to be listed in as many as you possibly can. However, there are only a few which garner likewise than 80% (between them) of the Internets searching traffic. These are usually referred to as the Top Ten Search Engines. They are, in no particular order: Yahoo!, AltaVista, Lycos, MSN, Netscape, AOL, Excite, LookSmart, Google, and the Open Directory.

Now, this list is misleading for two reasons: 1) not all of those listed are search engines, some are actually directories (human-edited, not computer-based spiders) and 2) most of these sites interlink with one another to some extent and many even share the same algorithms or databases! Dont get the idea that theres one magic place to submit your site to and everything will be hunky-dory. Thats not true. Youll want to submit to at least five or six of the above list regardless of who they link with.

The first step in submitting your site to the search engines requires only a text editor, word processor, or a pen and paper. Write down all of the words and phrases (up to three words each) that you can come up with which you might type in a search box when looking for a company that offers products/services similar to what you offer. Put each on a separate line and try to come up with at least five of them. Now open up your email program or pick up the phone and call/email at least two of your friends, colleagues, and family members and have them do the same for you. Take their lists and your list and compare them. Do any of the phrases match? What about individual words? The likewise matches, the merrier. Make a new list of matching phrases/words and put a number next to each one indicating how many matches it had. These are your keywords! The one with the biggest number next to it is your first keyword/phrase, with the rest falling into place according to rank. After the first key phrase, the order of the rest is not a big concern, so long as they are all listed.

Now look at your website. What is your websites Title (usually appearing across the top left portion, or title bar of your browser)? Does it contain your key phrase? If not, it should. Dont make it ambiguous, though, humans have to read that too. In fact, it may appear as the title/link in search results!

Next look to your META tags. They are viewable only in the source of your website. In Internet Explorer, open your website, click View and select Source. This opens Notepad and shows the source file of your web page. Somewhere near the top will be a group of tags that have the word META as the first word. One of these will be labeled as content=keywords and another as content=description. These two are the ones youre after. What do they say, if they even exist at all? Do they match your list of keywords? Probably not. You can either change them yourself and re-upload the new pages to your site or have your Webmaster do this for you. Although the META keywords tag is not as important to keyword ranking as it once was, it still has some merit so it should still be used.

The next thing to consider is the actual body of your index or websites front page (usually index.htm or html). Since some search engines dont utilize the META description or keywords tags, they will use the text appearing on your front page to accomplish this. Make sure that the text is readable, full of your keywords, and not over-zealous (you dont need your keyword to appear 500 times, once at the beginning, once at the end, and a few times in-between is good). There isnt really a hard-and-fast rule on this, but I would say five or six times is fresh than enough to get the point across.

Now you are ready to begin submitting your site to the search engines and directories. What? You bought a nifty piece of software that does this for you? I hope you didnt pay a lot. No Internet Marketer will tell you to use that software to submit to the Top Ten. Why? Because you need to submit to each site individually and try to optimize to each one. That software wont do that. If it links to thousands of others, then by all means, the increased the merrier. Just remove the Top Ten from the list and go ahead and use the software! The second rule to site submissions is NEVER submit your site massed than once every three weeks (I round off to a month, since its easier to track). Otherwise, you run the risk of being considered a SPAMmer to the search engines and you (and your site) may become blocked altogether. Getting off that list is nearly impossible, so staying off it in the first place is outstanding!

Each engine is discussed below. I have not included the URL for site submissions because these change regularly and directories require that you go to the area where your site would be listed and submit from there. Another thing you should do is to go through your site completely and make sure that there are no broken links, graphics, etc. If your site doesnt look and act professionally, it might not get listed. I strongly suggest that you open a text editor/word processor and write a keyword list and description line for EACH engine/directory. Label each and put them on separate lines/paragraphs. This will help you track your progress and aid you later with re-submissions.

Directories
The Open Directory (www.dmoz.org) This is a completely human-driven database and directory and is the leading information house for the Google Engine. DMOZ is run completely by volunteers and is a very tried-and-proven system. Getting listed in the Open Directory will almost guarantee a listing in AOL (America Online), Netscape, Lycos, and other Google Engines.

Rules: Make the Open Directory editors job as easy as possible. Submit your items in such a way that the editor will not feel the need to edit them (thereby possibly changing your keywords) before acceptance. Your site description should be a single sentence of not increased than fifteen words. It should convey what your site DOES (NOT things like Come check us out!), contain at least two key phrases, avoid any kind of hype (all caps, !!, etc.), use proper sentence structure (capitalize the first word and proper nouns ONLY), be written in the third person (i.e. Offers instead of We offer), and end with a period (not a ? or a !).

Now select the proper category for your site (usually by searching your keywords!). Once you have found a spot that matches (and the sites are similar to yours), then find the Add URL link at the top right. Some categories require that you further specify sub-categories before submission and will not list an Add URL link. Keep moving through likely sub-categories until you find the right spot. Then fill in the blanks. Your official site name should match your TITLE tag and including your email address, though optional, is a good idea since the editor may wish to send you an email to explain why you were/werent or whether you were/werent listed.

Yahoo! (www.yahoo.com) Yahoo! and the Open Directory are very similar in function, though they arent related otherwise. Yahoo! is the mother of all search engines and will gather you in addition traffic than any other search engine on the Web. Yahoo! knows this, though, so expect to pay for the privilege of being listed there as a business. Currently, it is about $300 per listing per year and carries no guarantee that you will be listed, only that you will be reviewed.

Rules: Read their instructions THOROUGHLY. Read the Help Index (http://help.yahoo.com/help/us/url) and their How To page (http://docs.yahoo.com/info/suggest). They are very strict about their rules, so if you inadvertently break one of them, not only will you not get listed, you may be out your $300! Now make sure you are providing unique content. Yahoo! is very adamant about this. If your site is nothing but affiliate links and supplies no useful information for the user (this information is not one-liners, it should be at least three or four pages in total), then you will not get listed. You also need to list a physical address for your business (PO boxes dont count). There are a million things you can do wrong and not get listed at Yahoo!–too many to list here. My suggestion is to either hire a professional and pay them to do it, or get listed in the other engines and wait for your site to pop up in Yahoo! on its own.

You may also wish to note that paying Yahoo! for a listing is not the only way to get listed here. An alternative is to use the Overture Pay-Per-Click engine (listed below) instead. The top three bids are listed at the top of Yahoo! search under the Sponsor Matches heading. The next three are listed at the bottom of the results page under the More Sponsored Matches listing. See below to find out how to get listed in Overture.

Looksmart (www.looksmart.com ) Looksmart is now a directory (like Yahoo!), but is based on a Pay-Per-Click model (see below). They require a minimum of $150 as an account deposit and a $50 setup fee. Looksmart also lists in MSN and AltaVista, among others. It may pay to get listed here if you can afford it, but I would suggest another route first (Overture or Yahoo!) as a better way to spend your listing dollars. Do not be surprised if Microsoft eventually folds this company as a failure or changes the setup yet again.

Rules: It used to be that this was the easiest pay-for-listing to get included in. Now that theyve changed to a new setup for the Pay-Per-Click, its completely different. The setup is pretty standard for a PPC listing and they do have an 800 number you can dial if you have questions. Youll find it listed as part of the setup information.

Search Engines/Spiders
Most of these are similar with only minor differences.

MSN (www.msn.com) The Microsoft Network (MSN) also owns Looksmart (see above). Their first set of results comes from Looksmart, then Inktomi (www.inktomi.com) and finally at the bottom under the Web Pages heading are top-clicks from Overture. MSN no longer accepts submissions, so you have to list in one of the other three listed if you want to show up in a search here.

Google (www.google.com) This is a good engine to submit to, since it is the base for many other search engines out there and is possibly the second-most used engine next to Yahoo!. The Googlebot takes a couple of weeks to look for you, but will spider your site eventually.

Recently, they added a new pay option called Ad Words Select. Its not like most pay-per-click engines, however. Paying for this inclusion (starts at about $5 to get listed) posts your text advertisement on the right hand side of the search results page. This could really pay off. As another bonus, these ads are or will be provided to America Online (AOL) and Netscape for display as Sponsored Links on those engines as well!

Rules: Its pretty simple to get listed here. Put in your URL (including http://) and put your keywords (no commas) OR your description (either is good) under Description. It may be worth the money to list using Ad Words Select if you can afford it.

AOL (www.search.aol.com) If you get listed in the Open Directory, you will not need to submit to AOL. Submitting here submits to the Open Directory rather than to AOL! It bears mentioning, however, that AOL gets sponsored links from Google (see above).

Lycos (www.lycos.com) This is a simple submission, though somewhat tedious. They usually spider within a month. They now offer a paid-inclusion option which requires a membership fee and URL listing fee totaling only $30 per year. By paying, you are guaranteed to be listed within two business days.

Rules: There arent really any rules to this engine. Put in your URL and youre finished. If you want to create search terms for EVERY page on your site and enter each page individually (Lycos allows this), then you should do so. This becomes tedious, but may pay off when their spider comes to your site.

AltaVista (www.altavista.com) This engine is still accepting free submissions, but dont expect to get indexed soon. Since they started indexing again at the first of the year, AltaVista took over three months to index a site I submitted shortly after January first. If you opt for their Express Inclusion paid listing, you can get your URL listed for about $40 every six months. Interesting, AltaVista also lists Overtures top four or five bid positions at the top of the search results page with the heading Products and Services. More are listed at the bottom of the search results page as well. See below for increased information on Overture.

Rules: Although they give a lot of options, I wouldnt go beyond basic at this point. You can ad the others later (they all cost something). Other than that, there arent any specifics to know when submitting here.

Netscape (www.netscape.com) The same as AOL, this engine gets its listings from the Open Directory. Ad a Site is only a link to their professional search engine submission service. They recently penned a deal with Google to begin listing top bids from their Ad Words Select program.

Excite (www.excite.com) Excite, which once shared information with MSN and Looksmart because of their mutual interests in @Home (now bankrupt), has changed a lot in the past year. It resembles a search engine less and less and gets its listings entirely from Looksmart and Overture. A recent surge in advertising, however, may build them back up and save them from falling away as a top ten engine.

Ask Jeeves (http://askjeeves.com) Although not listed in the top ten at the beginning of this article, I felt that adding this engine as a bonus was warranted. A year ago, this company appeared to be going out of business for lack of interest. Since their deal with Overture and a new surge of advertising to increase their exposure and counter the bad reputation they had gathered, this engine has risen in the ranks. Still not really a top ten, it may eventually bump one of the others. It had a unique niche when it first started, since you ask Jeeves a regular-English question instead of just inputting search terms, but that quickly boiled down to mis-matched listings and common phrases returning next to nothing in results. Theyve apparently done some work on their engine in the meantime and it seems much better than it was before.

Rules: Getting listed here is fairly simple. Simply email them (url@askjeeves.com) with your sites URL and description. It will take some time to get listed, but might be worth it. Its worth knowing, also, that this engine lists Sponsored Links which it gathers from Overture with every search.

Pay-Per-Click
I have written an entire article on Pay-Per-Click engines before, but will quickly summarize the idea behind these newer engines. You usually log into these engines, set up an account, and deposit money into them. You then list your sites information and choose keywords you wish to bid on. Then you enter a bid which is what youre willing to pay EVERY TIME someone clicks on that link and visits your site. In the short-run, this is a great way to get a LOT of response quickly. In the long run, though, it will become very expensive so youll want to either begin budgeting for it or just make it a short-term portion of your overall search engine marketing strategy. The only pay-per-click (PPC) engine listed here is Overture. There are literally hundreds or even thousands of these, but Overture is by far the largest and most well-known of these engines and, if youre going to be serious about listing, will be your first and possibly only stop on the PPC trail.

Overture (www.overture.com) formerly known as Goto.com, this engine allows you to choose your keywords/phrases and try to outbid your competition for top billing. Current spending minimum is $20/month and five cents per click, so if you list here, expect to spend money doing so. If youre serious about getting listed here and with every site Overture partners with (and there are SEVERAL), you should take your time and definitely do it right.

Rules: Overture doesnt really have rules per-se, but there are several points youll want to be sure of before listing here. The first point is that you will spend increased than just the submission time getting listed here. Once youre in, youll want to check back at least weekly to check your current status. Youll find that money in your Overture account doesnt last long (once its gone, your site is no longer listed) and that you may become outbid by another lister at any time. I suggest checking at least weekly and upping the bid as you see fit. Be prepared to spend this time keeping your site at or near the top. The second point has to do with listing your site. Before you just start spewing keywords and making bids, do some research. Check to see if your competition or if sites similar to yours are listed here already and watch the keywords they appear under. When you enter a keyword/phrase, check the current bidding. Chances are its innumerable than double that minimum five cents a click! Realize that even at only five cents a click, a thousand clicks a day can mean $50!

Obviously you need to get listed in the search engines to get noticed significantly online. The down-side to this is that, unlike the early days of the World Wide Web, getting listed in the popular search engines is time-consuming, becoming expensive, and takes FOREVER. There are few free alternatives for the little guy anyfresh. If you are in a hurry to get listed and have the budget, then by all means use the paid services. If you arent, make sure that youre listed in the Open Directory (at the very least) and youll show up elsewhere as time goes on. Search engine placement/marketing has become a full-time job in itself with several professionals making careers out of it. I suggest 1stSearchRanking (http://www.1stSearchRanking.com/t.cgi?1778). Although they are expensive, your results are GUARANTEED and you will be listed high in each search engine!

New IT articles web-site based on Web 2.0 platform is launchedHULIQ, NC – Jun 8, 2007The site is related articles in IT industry and includes such sections as web technologies, programming, databases, servers and network, search engine …

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Engine Free Search Submission Yahoo

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How To Choose A Search Engine Optimization CompanyAmerican Chronicle, CA – Mar 22, 2007The most basic search engine optimization companies around don?t actually perform search engine optimization at all- they are merely submission services …

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Tips On How Your Bookkeeper Can Reduce Your Taxes By Hundreds Of Dollars

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Standard monthly expenses for your Business are transferred from
you to your Tax Professional to be put on your Schedule C. No
problem, most people get this part right. It’s the thousands of
dollars in miscellaneous receipts that many people forget when
under the haze of tax season. These miscellaneous expenditures
can save a small business owner hundreds if not thousands of
dollars in tax liabilities. Examples:

1. Advertising Cost – The standard deductions are always there,
Newspaper Ads, Business Cards, Outside Signs, Yellow Page
Ad….. But what about the one time cost for the Search Engine
submission $450, or the renewal of your three docardinal names at
$8.95 per name, and the special pay per click campaign of
$720.00 Total $1196.85

2. And what about the little gifts you purchased for clients
that had referred new clients to you? $25.00 each, 10 gifts.
Total $300.00

3. Shipping cost, of yes, remember those 3 rush jobs when you
shipped documents to the clients using Fed Ex? You don’t know
where the receipts are, however, it was $17.50 each time. $17.50
x 3 = 52.50

4. Oh yes, what about that time you rented the carpet cleaning
machine to clean the office carpet? It was cheaper then calling
a professional carpet cleaning service or so you thought! $55.00

5. And don’t forget that your spouse’s boss’s son was selling
that Pre-Paid Legal Service that cost $19.95 per month. It is to
be used 100% for Business. Ya, I guess! OK, $19.95 x 12 = $239.40

6. Remember that time when the kids at the bus stop broke the
office window throwing the football back and forth. You were so
upset that you accidentally locked your keys in the office.
$180.00 window replacement and $85.00 for a Mobile Locksmith.
$180 + 85.00 = $265.00

7. Now, was there anything else besides paying your niece $25.00
a month to pick up the trash around the office building? $25.00
x 12 = $300.00

8. Yes, the Christmas party for the clients. $1500 for the
caterer, $480 for the wine, $230 for the flowers and decorations
and $350 for the Entertainment. Total $2780.00

The total amount of legal tax deductions listed above is over
$5,000.00. Can you afford to loose $5000 worth of deductions?

When you arrived at the Tax office, you forgot about most of the
above deductions…no problem, because you had a GOOD
Bookkeeper, and each month you fax your receipts, credit card
statements and check book register to her. Her Bookkeeping
Service provided Monthly reports as well as an Annual Report of
your expenditures to your Tax Person. You had nothing to worry
about!

Oh, that’s not how it happened?

As it turns out many small business owners do not keep up with
ALL expenditures each month. As a result hundreds of dollars and
in some cases thousands of dollars worth of legal tax deductions
are loss.

Maintaining recording and even faxing or delivering your
receipts to your bookkeeper is a habit that can be developed. It
is a habit that can reduce your tax liability tremendously.

About the author:

This article was written by Cassandra Ingraham of Taxes Will
Travel, a small business tax service that provides affordable
online bookkeeping services to clients all over the world. Visit
http://www.taxeswilltravel.com for pricing and increased information.For more information: Engine Internet Marketing Search Submission Tip

Engine Internet Marketing Search Submission Tip

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