Archive for November, 2006

Keep the Ted Leonsis SEO Contest Clean!

Todd Malicoat (aka. Stuntdbl) made a post recommending that we all keep things clean in the Ted Leonsis contest. After all, Ted Leonsis has done some good work for charities, and doesn’t deserve to have his name ruined as a result of a careless comment.

If you were to post bad things about Ted Leonsis, that would show a lack of integrity, and poor ethics. Check out Stuntdbl’s Ted Leonsis page!

Note: If you hit this page, and you have no idea what I am talking about, please read my post about the Ted Leonsis SEO Contest, and see my Ted Leonsis category for a blow-by-blow account of what’s going on in the contest!

Ted Leonsis SEO Contest Update

Just a quick note, I have been searching Technorati for references to Ted Leonsis that qualify for this contest, and so far there are only three, apart from myself:

Of course, there are probably a lot more Ted Leonsis pages competing which aren’t in Technorati. - I will report them as I see them.

Ted Leonsis

There is a new SEO contest on the block. Michael Gray (Gray Wolf) and Scoreboard Media annouced a contest for $500 to whoever can take the top spot for the name Ted Leonsis.

Who is Ted Leonsis? Ted Leonsis is the vice Chairman of AOL., and owner of the Washington Capitals. Ted Leonsis blogs, and Ted has done some interviews.Why Ted Leonsis’ name? Well, in a recent story in the Washington Post, Ted claimed to be somewhat of an ‘SEO’ and ‘cracked the Google algorithm’ by blogging for a year, and having his blog, or pages he controlled, show up in the top positions for his name. He claimed to ‘own’ the top spots for his name, and to have ‘gotten… inside the Google algorithm. As John Andrews nicely said,

I hate to give good people bad news, but that’s not SEO Mr. Leonsis. You did not “get..into the algorithm”. You don’t own those top spots in Google for your name, you see, it’s simply that no one else wants them.

Following this, Gray Wolf made a Ted Leonsis page which started to rank in a Google query for ‘‘. This was noticed by Threadwatch, and after some ‘back room chatter’, the Ted Leonsis Contest was born.

Ted Leonsis, claimed that he was a competent SEO because he took the top spots for his own name. Well, let’s see how he does now that some ‘real’ SEOs are working to knock him off.

This could be considered my entrance into the contest - this page may rank, and I will blog the progress of the contest. If I win, I will follow the example of Michael Gray, and donate any winnings to charity. Additionally, should I win, which is unlikely, I will email Ted Leonsis himself, and ask him which charity he would prefer me to donate the money to, and do so in his name.

Because Graywolf is competing for charity as well, I will just drop a quick link to his ‘Ted Leonsis’ page. Good luck Michael - so far you are in the lead!

For what it’s worth, I do not want anyone to think poorly of Ted Leonsis - he has been involved in a variety of charities. After the contest ends on Christmas Eve, if I have any ranking posts for his name, I will remove them again.

If you want to know more about Ted Leonsis, check out the Ted Leonsis article in Wikipedia!

I should mention, of course, that any links to this page, or my Ted Leonsis category are very much appreciated!

Good Design Has Nothing to do With Good Graphics…

One persistant annoyance to me is when people look at a site, and declare it as ‘poorly designed’, when the only problem with said site is that it may not have the most ‘professional-looking’ graphics, or perhaps it doesn’t quite have the right ‘Web-2.0′ appeal. I have news for you: Good design has *nothing* to do with pretty graphics.

Hear that noise? That’s the sound of smoke pouring out of the ears of millions of graphic designers.

As webmasters, many of us feel a certain pressure to ensure that our sites match up to the latest standards. They need to be attractive *and* useful, to draw visitors *and* keep them.

Function and Form are two different entities; I have seen some well designed sites with very low circa-1996 graphics. I’ve seen *many* websites created in the Web 2.0 look, with flashy graphics and appealing layouts, which were absolutely useless.

When you visit a site, try to look past whatever visual shortcomings you may see. You may be walking away from some of the most useful tools or services you will ever encounter. In short, don’t judge a book (website or service) by it’s cover (graphics, layout etc.)

How do I Prepare my Resume for the Real World?

I need to ask the greater community for a bit of help. As many of you know, I am approaching the completion of my time in University. I will be graduating in April with a B.Sc, majoring in Computer Science with a minor in Math. I’ve also taken about half of a minor in physics - that was my first choice for a minor - I would have taken more courses in Physics if they had been offered by my University.

That all said, I am working on preparing my resume to send to a variety of SEO companies around the world. SEO/Web Development is what I want to do. I am interested in it, enjoy it, and pursue it as a hobby.

The problem is, I have no professional SEO experience, nor have I taken any courses in the subject. I do not doubt my own knowledge of the field; I have spent more hours pursuing and learning the science and art of SEO than I spent on my prior hobbies. While I know that there is always more to learn, I think I know as much as any non-professional SEO out there. As good as that may be, I have nothing professional in the industry to put on my resume. I have created a number of websites as a hobby; would they count for much?

My prior job experience, apart from a four month Coop this summer consisted of Treeplanting, Cabinet Making, Beekeeping, and a few other manual labour-type jobs in the summers while I’ve been in school. The summer coop I mentioned took place at Out Front Portable Solutions where I wrote some custom software for them, as well as redesigning their webpage…

I would like some advice from any professional SEOs who could take a second to send me a few pointers as to what I could/should put on my resume - I desperately want a job in the field, but I am not sure how to get my foot in the door. The one thing I do have going for me is that I have a few people I could call on for good references. Of course, so does just about anyone applying in the same market, I’m sure.

Thank you in advance for any and all help you may offer - if you don’t feel comfortable posting here, feel free to email me at !

I’ve Won a Coconut!

Last week I wrote a piece on a contest being run by the new BlogtownPress blog network being run to promote their new launch.

Well, great news!

Erik Vossman again emailed me the other day to inform me that I have won the first Coconut! This is excellent - my coconut should be arriving sometime within the next few weeks.

There are still two coconuts out there to be won, so join the contest while you still can. Erik mentioned that this contest has been doing well for them, creating a a mini-buzz for them, and gaining them a fair amount of backlinks. Perhaps some time in the next few weeks, I will conduct a short interview with him to see what results they got from running this contest.

How to Promote Yourself Through Article Marketing Megapost

This is a megapost version of the How To Promote Yourself Through Article Marketing series. You can read it in it’s individual sections as well: Part I, Part II and Part III!

Introduction

As a webmaster or marketer, you need to use every tool at your disposal to drive visitors and traffic to your website. Without visitors, you have no chance at branding or revenue, like a store with no customers.

One tool that is often overlooked by many webmasters is Article Marketing. Article Marketing is the process of writing an engaging, informative article, and submitting to a number of article directories on the Internet. By linking back to your website or websites from within the article, you can often drive large amounts of traffic, and create numerous backlinks to your site.

What Can it Do for Me?

Article Marketing has three major benefits for those that practice it:

It is beneficial from a SEO perspective as when it is done properly, it will create a large amount of backlinks on the Internet, with anchor text you control. The links will ideally be on pages relevant to your site’s content, which will somewhat increase the importance of the links. Without getting off-topic here, we know that the more relevant links your site has, the higher it can rank within the major search engines.

From a traffic perspective, if you do things right, you might get hundreds of visitors to your website via the articles you write. These visitors will be interested in your site and subject, and will be open to your message and/or products. This can easily result in increased revenue and sales.

From a branding perspective, Article Marketing can help you increase your mind share. When people think of a subject within your niche, or planning to purchase an item you sell, you want them to think of you first.

If your article is written well, and is appealing to readers, you may find it re-syndicated and republished on websites across the Internet, resulting in more traffic and more links. It is not uncommon for a well written article to be republished hundreds or thousands of times on different websites!

Write Your Articles

The most important part of Article Marketing is the articles themselves. If an article doesn’t catch potential readers immediately and entice them to continue reading, nobody will feel compelled to visit your site.

Now, the scope of this post does not include lessons or tutorials on how to write an article. If you would like to know more about that, read Copyblogger. I would, however, like to make a few relevant points to help you maximize your success.

Write Something Unique

Do you want people to remember you? Than write something they haven’t read before. Take a new angle to a controversial issue, or discuss something that hasn’t been discussed before. You need to offer your potential readers something they can’t get anywhere else. You need to provide a reason for them to remember you, and this can be done successfully with unique views, opinions and content.

Headlines Are Your Best Friend!

On an article directory, your article will be mixed in with hundred or thousands of others, with only your headline to differentiate yourself from the rest. Therefore, write something that will grab the reader’s attention and steer them towards yours!

Make sure to include some keywords in your title for search purposes – a potential reader searching for a specific subject will be more likely to click on your article if they see exactly what they want in the title.

Headings Are Your Second Best…

Many writers do not use headings and subheadings in their articles. This is a mistake. Readers will often scan an article, a read the headings as a type of ‘Table of Contents’ to the article. It makes sense – what better way to get a feel for the contents of the article?

By breaking up your article into sections, you are providing some structure to it, and making it more comprehensive for the reader. Be careful though – too many headings may be just as overwhelming as a large block of small text.

Make Your Author Bio Box Compelling!

Most article sites have an author bio box which you can use to write a bit about yourself, and perhaps include a link to your site. Think carefully about what you want to include in this. Of the following two examples, which is more compelling?

“Brian Vuyk is a blogger who writes about SEO stuff at https://caydel.com

or

“Get the most from your websites! Learn how to promote yourself by reading Brian’s blog at https://caydel.com

Obviously, the second is far more compelling. It contains a call to action, and should grab the reader’s interest. Seriously – would you really click on the first?

Look the Part in Your Author’s Photo

Another thing to consider is a photo. Many article sites will publish a photo of the author along with the article. It is a proven fact that people will remember and recognize the photos long before they will recognize the name. The photo draws people’s eyes, and creates an impression on them. I know that I have often read an article, and recognized the author without recognizing the name or the site. I simple recognized the photo.

Take your photo seriously. Consider the image you are trying to present of yourself in the article you are writing, and the site you are linking to. For instance, a high-powered stock trader writing articles on stock tips will want to present a different photo of themselves than the outdoorsman writing about techniques in bowhunting.

Link Back to Yourself Cautiously

In addition to linking to yourself in the Author Bio box, try to link back to your website once or twice within the body of the article. Be careful with this! Make sure that it fits within the flow of the article, and ensure that it is relevant to the specific context of the paragraph you include the link in. If the link sticks out too much, or points to an irrelevant page, you may risk rejection by some of the sites you submit it to. Use anchor text that fits into the sentence you are writing, but try to include some keywords for SEO purposes!


Market That Article!

Now that your article is written, you have to market it. There are typically two ways to do this – either by manual submission, or by using a distribution service.

Submitting manually is the process of visiting the various article sites and directories on the Internet, and individually submitting your articles for inclusion.

Distribution services are exactly what they sound like. You can hire a company or individual to submit your articles for you to a set number of directories. Sometimes the articles are submitted by hand, other times the service will use a script to automatically submit the article to hundreds of sites.

Both approaches have their strengths and weaknesses. Submitting manually may take a large amount of time and effort. But it will allow you to customize your article’s formatting and display for each site you submit it too, ensuring that it is presented to the best of it’s ability. Submissions services are quick and easy, but may involve a fee. if you employ a submission service, you will lose the ability to ensure that your articles are displayed properly on every site. Below is a few of the siteswhich offer for article submission.

Article Directories:

  • Free-Journal-Articles.com *recommended*
  • ArticleOnramp.com
  • EzineArticles.com
  • GoArticles.com

Article Distribution Services:

Please note that I have not used any of the distribution services listed apart from ArticleSender.com, although I do have articles in the four directories listed above. These lists are not comprehensive - you can find dozens more simply by using Google or searching on the various webmaster forums.

In Conclusion…

Article Marketing has the potential to be one of the most valuable tools you have for promotion of yourself or your website. With everything, what you get out of it will be a reflection of the effort you put into it. If you make a point of ensuring that the article is top quality, and it distribute it well, you will find that it can drive valuable traffic to your site, leading to greater profits, and promotion of your brand. Take it seriously!

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