Google Lingo used by Googleites.

Filed Under (Google) by affiliate on 14-05-2009

Google is known for their unique company culture, and along with this, they’ve introduced or popularized some interesting phrases. Not all of these terms were coined by Google, but all of them have been used by Google. See how many of these you’ve heard before.

1. Googleplex

The Googleplex is the company headquarters in Mountain View, California. The name is a play on both “Google complex” and “googolplex,” the number you get when you take a one and add a googol zeroes to it.The Googleplex provides employees with unusual perks, like hair cuts, laundry facilities, and gourmet meals. While Google has been scaling back on some of their perks during economic hardship, employees still enjoy some fantastic benefits.

2. Googlers

Googlers are employees of Google. There are also several variations of the term, like “Gayglers” for gay and lesbian employees, Bikeglers for employees who bike to work together, and Newglers for new employees. Former employees sometimes even refer to themselves as Xooglers.

3. 20-Percent Time

Google engineers are allowed to spend twenty percent of their work time on pet projects. The philosophy is that this outlet helps Googlers stay creative and energized.Sometimes these “20-percent projects” are dead ends, but often they end up being developed into full-fledged Google offerings. Some examples of projects that benefited from twenty percent time include Orkut, Adsense and Google Spreadsheets.

4. Don’t Be Evil

“Don’t be evil” is an unofficial Google motto. Google’s corporate policy page phrases it “You can make money withouth doing evil.” This is an awfully high standard, and a lightening rod for Google criticisms. Concerns over privacy, market dominance, or Chinese censorship inevitably have critics asking if Google is “being evil.”

5. PageRank

PageRank is the algorithm that made Google what it is. PageRank was developed by Google founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin at Stanford. Rather than just calculating keyword density, PageRank factors in how others link to a particular page.Although PageRank is not the only factor in determining how well a website will rank in Google results, it’s certainly important to understand how PageRank works if you are website creator.

6. Eating Your Own Dog Food

This wasn’t a phrase that originated at Google, but it’s certainly been heard there. The phrase comes from the idea that if your product is terrific, it ought to be a product you use yourself.Google does this with most of their products by using them internally as much as possible. It’s easier to catch bugs and fix inconveniences if it’s a product you use yourself.

7. The Long Tail

The Long Tail was an article by Chris Anderson in Wired which has since been expanded into a book. Basically the theory is that Internet markets are stressful by specializing and catering to lots of niche markets rather than concentrating on the top sellers like retail stores.Google’s business model relies on The Long Tail. Google allows small advertisers to place inexpensive, highly specialized ads in places targeted to a receptive audience.

8. Bad Neighborhoods

Google refers to malicious websites and spammers as “bad neighborhoods.” If you hang out in bad neighborhoods, you’re likely to be mistaken for a hooligan. The same is true of Web designers. If you link content to known spammers, Google might mistake your website for spam and lower its ranking in search results.

9. Googlebots

In order to index websites in the massive Google search engine, Google uses automated programs to crawl from link to link and archive all the content on the page. Some search engines refer to this as spidering or Web spiders, but Google calls them ‘bots and refers to theirs as the Googlebot. You can request pages not be indexed by Google and other robots and spiders by using a robots.txt file.

10. I’m Feeling Lucky

Google’s search engine has had an “I’m Feeling Lucky” button on it almost from the beginning. Even though most users don’t seem to be feeling lucky, the button has stayed. It’s even moved to other tools, like Picasa. I guess Google feels lucky about the button.

Motive Interactive Affiliate & Twitter Contest

Filed Under (Affiliate Networks, Promotions/Contests) by affiliate on 13-05-2009

Zac Johnson talks about a new contest promotion by Motive Interactive on his blog.

Motive Interactive a new affiliate network based out off CA are having their 2nd contest promotion. Their 1st one was a huge success. Unlike the first contest which was only for new affiliates, this one is open to everyone who follows them on Twitter or blogs about their contest. This contest promotion runs through the month of May, and there is NO LIMIT on the amount of winners/prizes for their tiered earnings portion. One Twitter winner will be announced, for three weeks, along with one blogger prize at the end of the month.

Three Ways to Win:
1.)  Join Motive Interactive and Earn within any of the Commission Levels above during the month of May. Contest tier prizes only awarded to new Motive affiliates signed up through this blog during May 2009.

2.) Follow and Tweet this contest on Twitter.

Just “tweet” the following from your Twitter account and you are automatically entered to win a new iPod Shuffle or 8GB iPod Nano.

RT to Win: Follow @motive and @moneyreign to make money and win big prizes! http://xr.com/zjmotive

3.) Blog about this contest promotion on your site.

If you have a blog, simple link back to Zac Johnson’s blog post (link to his post) and talk about this contest and you will be entered to win a new 16GB iPod Nano.

 
Motive Interactive Contest Rules & Conditions:
For international publishers (residing outside of the US), in the event that we cannot find a company that ships your prize internationally to your country, Motive Interactive will compensate by sending a PayPal payment or bank wire payment (depending on the prize value) for the value of the prize.

In order to be eligible for the competition, publishers must be new referrals who sign up under our Motive Interactive referral link during May. No exceptions.

 Any publisher caught doing illegal measures such as fraud or being in violation of the Motive Interactive’s Terms of Service will not be eligible for a prize.

 Prizes for the tiered prizes will be sent out after final numbers are confirmed for May.

SEO 101 – SEO Basics nevers goes out off style.

Filed Under (SEO) by affiliate on 11-05-2009

As our expertise in affiliate marketing and seo increases, we tend to take the basics for granted. This weekend I was asked to review a site to check their optimization. To my surprise, I found that a few basic techniques werent implemented. I walked them through it and thought about sharing it. This might be mundane for the seasoned professional but should be helpful to beginners.

1. Choosing the Right Keywords

The most important and basic requirement is to optimize your site to a group of keywords. It’s very important not to keep the keywords generic. The keywords should be specific and targeted towards your niche.

eg: a web design website in Canada could target the keyword “web design”. This keyword has a huge competition and the chances of a new site to get a good ranking for this keyword is slim to none. It would be better to target the keyword “web design canada” or get more local and optimize for the city, like “web design toronto”, “web design vancouver” etc.

It important to see the competition you have for the keyword you are targeting and appropriate choose them. Type in the keyword in Google, Yahoo or MSN and see the number of sites that show up in the results. Larger the number greater the competiion. You will notice that the competition for longer tailed keywords is lesser.

You can use the also use a tool like the Google Keyword Tool for detailed traffic numbers for each keywords and get ideas for other possible keywords in your niche.

As a rough guideline, try to optimize every page on your site for a different search phrase. Each search phrase should contain 2 to 3 highly targeted keywords.

2. Your URL and Title Tag

It would be ideal to own the www.webdesign.com domain for a web design company or webdesigncanada.comfor a web design company in canada but typically all the domain names you are looking for are not available.

One way around this is to get a domain that could be web-design.com or web-design-canada.com etc. This might not be appealing to many because it doesnt sound professional as you might want the url to be www.yourcompany.com.

The most common way to make your domain/URL work for you is to include the keywords in the file name of each page. eg: www.yourcompany.com/web-design-canada.html, www.yourcompany.com/cheap-web-design-package.html etc.

It’s also important to include the keywords in your title tag. You cant stuff the title tag with keywords because it would look unprofessional. Incorporate the keywords into your message cleverly.

Remember to have different title tags for every page as you will be targeting different keywords in each page.

3. H1 tags and Keyword Density

The H1 tag no longer power that it used too. What exists is the fact that most search engines like Google, values the content between the H1 more than any other tag. You need to have keyword and keyword phrases in H1 tags at a few places in each page.

Yes, H1 tags arent pretty so you would need to use CSS to stylize them.

eg: H1 { color: black; font-family: Verdana; font-size: 14px }

4. Alt and Title tags

Many developers and designers forget about these tags. Its important to put keywords in the image alt tags and href title tags. Once again avoid keyword stuffing as these keywords would be visible to the view when they mouseover the image or the link. Include the keywords in professional phrases.

eg: <img src=”images/logo.gif” alt=”cheap web design in toronto, canada”>

<a href=”web-design-rates.html” title=”web design rates in toronto”>

5. Keyword Density

The percentage of your keywords in the content of your page is the keyword density of that page. You can increase the keyword density by incorporating keywords in the various tags mentioned in the previous points.

Also, you can make sure to rephrase a few sentences in your page to highlight the keywords.

Remember, not to stuff your page with keywords. Keep the keyword density between 1 to 4 percent anything higher could be considered as spam by most search engines.

You can use the tool at Keyword Density or other such tools.

Of course, this is not the end. Link Building would be the next most important technique but Google and other search engines have come down heavily on link farms and other unrelated link exchanges. Its good to get a few direct link exchanges with sites in your niche but avoid inbound links from unrelated sites.

The easiest way to get link backs to your site is to start a blog on your site and use our social meida and bookmarking sites.

Hopefully, this gives some of the readers