10 Dagen Experiment

January 16th, 2008

Hallo Jongens (tot nu toe nog geen meisjes Cry )

Ik Start vandaag een experiment van 10 dagen waarin ik per dag minimum 1 blackhat manier ga uitproberen…

Per dag zal ik dan ook een rapport geven hoe het gegaan is.

Gisteren nl de website http://SEOvideo.info Online gezet..
Het is gewoon een youtube scraper in de zin van jij tikt in wat je wil zien en voila daar komt het :-)

Vandaag start ik met backlinks want ik wil eerst en vooral geindexeerd worden
weet er trouwens iemand een manier om een pagina aan te maken per gezochte term?

Nu word de pagina enkel dynamisch aangemaakt.
het zou bevoorbeeld wel goed zijn moest er effectief een pagina word aangemaakt per term, zo zou ik snel een aantal paginatjes hebben..

Dus ken je iets van PHP of DB contacteer me!!!

Tot morgen

 

UPDATE DAG 1

ja een beetje later dan verwacht maar hier is de eerste dag…. Undecided

Site: SEOvideo.info
Programma gebruikt: CommentHut
difficulty 1-10: 1
Duur : 6uren
(kan gelijk hoe lang zijn hangt af van aantal urls)
Automatisch: Nee

Hoe:
Download
Download AUB als gratis user!! Wink

unzip install yada yada yada Roll Eyes

ok hier begint het, voor een blackhat programmatje heel simpel en gebruiksvriendelijk
Commenthut is een programma die zoekt naar blog met DOFOLLOW COMMENT mogelijkheden.

Deze 3 keywords heb ik gebruikt

“SEO” | “SEO VIDEO” | “SEO VIDEOS”

Je vult deze gewoon in bij “search terms
je kan meerdere keywords in 1 keer invullen maar heb ondervonden dat het beter lukt keyword per keyword..

Vergeet niet naast search terms is er een dropdown (search type) zet die op “all platforms”

Afhankelijk van hoeveel blogs er zijn in jouw zoek term kan het makkelijk een uurtje duren voordat Commenthut gedaan heeft met zoeken.

Ongeveer een uurtje later dus …. het resultaat van :

300+ wordpress en idem voor wordpress.com blogs

150 Hubpages
enz..

Nadat Commenthut gedaan heeft met zoeken, ga je zien dat er XXX aantal wordpress blogs zijn XXX aantal wordpress.com blogs zijn enz…

Natuurlijk zijn enkel blogpagina’s met een hoge PR belangerijk—> dus in opties kan je instellen vanaf welke PR je wil commentaar geven (ik stel de mijne in op PR3)
Stel de Snelheid van PR check op een laag niveau (GELOOF MIJ Grin ) ander kan google je ip bannen (GELOOF MIJ Cry )

Selecteer per platform alle blogs en klik op PR check, Commenthut gaat nu alle paginas checken en enkel die houden met PR3 of meer..

Resultaat: hangt natuurlijk af van jouw keywords
voor mijn site:
op 1 dag gelinkt door

1 PR7
12 PR6
37 PR5
120+ PR4
300+ PR3

 



Hoe verdien ik hier geld mee?
mja met je eigen site moeilijk..
Maar, en dit is de reden dat ik wat later was met het rapport..
ik was ingehuurd om 50 backlinks te maken via e-lance, Hoeveel krijg ik daarvoor? $250!!!

niet slecht verdiend voor een uurtje werk

Google Hacks Software

January 11th, 2008

Google Hacks is a compilation of carefully crafted Google searches that expose novel functionality from Google’s search and map services. For example, you can use it to view a timeline of your search results, view a map, search for music, search for books, and perform many other specific kinds of searches. You can also use this program to use google as a proxy.

Get it here: http://googlehacks.googlecode.com/files/GoogleHacksSetup1.6.exe

Danny Sullivan at Search Engine Land points out that “Selling paid links can hurt your page rank or rankings on Google“. He says, “More and more, I’ve been seeing people wondering if they’ve lost traffic on Google because they were detected to be selling paid links.”

So far, Google has never penalized any site for link selling. To the foremost, what Google does is prevent links from a site to pass page rank. But now the scenario is changing. For sell links, Google might penalize your site and your PageRank score can also get down.

To explain his point more clearly, Danny Sullivan gives the example of the Stanford Daily. Earlier, in one of his post titled, “Time For Google To Give Up The Fight Against Paid Links?“, he has highlighted as how the student newspaper of Stanford University used to sell links, even when the news came into the limelight. Even there was no penalty imposed by Google at that time.

Around a week ago, the PR of Stanford Daily dropped. Interestingly, there is no apparent reason for this to happen. Drop in the PageRank is reported by others also. It has been confirmed by Google that sites that sell links will have a lower PageRank. In addition, Google said that some sites that are selling links may indeed end up being dropped from its search engine or have penalties attached, to prevent them from ranking well.

Danny Sullivan has his own views for all this, such as:

  • It’s Google’s search engine. They have every right to say that if you sell links, they might penalize you.
  • Google is not telling people what to do with their sites, which is a popular argument point. Google is telling people what to do if they are concerned about doing better in Google. Don’t want to be harmed in Google? Don’t sell links.
  • Don’t care about Google? Sell links all you want.
  • Despite Google’s policy and even this latest action, they’ll never catch all the paid links. It’s part of the reason I’d like to see them back off the paid links war and instead work out other ways to determine if a link deserves credit, paid or not.

One the question is “What if someone sells links and gets their PageRank dropped or traffic reduced under this new policy by Google? In regard to this question, Google says , “Most people hit with a PageRank decrease will likely notice this, and then they can request a review. Eventually, it may be something flagged within the Google Webmaster Central system.”

Instead of doing all this, Google can simply change the PageRank meter to something like a red bar. This will warn the buyers from buying a nabbed site. Google also believes that by doing this, it would be easy for anyone to detect which sites have not had their paid links discounted. Google is only decreasing the PageRank for a subset of the sites they actually know about.

Once Matt Cutts said about paid links as an issue with his drop in rankings, when asking if they were gone and not coming back.

But Google itself is allowing paid links to be promoted in another way via its own ads. Here’s an example:

1509383024_087293b821_o.jpg
Whatever be the outcome, this step takes Google into a new era of attacking paid links. If Google traffic is important to you, it will ge good if you don’t sell links.

buresh.jpgFor new websites, more than anything else, the biggest struggle is optimization. After this business, web presence and all things will fall in place. Knowing how difficult this can be, Scott Buresh has a post on how, “A good search engine optimization company should be able to effectively work with a new website; setting the foundation for a remarkable success story while still achieving steadily increasing short-term benefit.”

The Issues: There are many reasons why new websites face an uphill battle. What follows are only a few of the major stumbling blocks:

The Google Sandbox: There is much debate as to what exactly the Google Sandbox is, and even debate as to whether it actually exists. However, recent patent filings on behalf of Google would seem to confirm that one of the factors that Google will take into consideration when deciding how websites should rank is the age of the domain name. More than one search engine optimization company has noted that there seems to be a penalty assessed to new websites, especially those that seem to gain too many inbound links, too fast. This is all conjecture, but this would make sense. Inbound links factor largely in Google rankings, and therefore many sites that were already popular in Google began selling links from their sites based upon that popularity (a practice that goes against Google’s terms of service). However, text link buying is very hard to police. The Sandbox makes sense in this scenario, because Google seems to be saying “we may not be able to stop people from buying text links, but they are going to pay a pretty penny for them before we’ll give them any ranking boost because of them.” This is more conjecture, of course, but it is a popular theory in numerous search engine optimization forums.

Lack of Links: Unfortunately, here, a new website is faced with the opposite problem. Links to new websites are called into question, but without incoming links, a new website has a slim chance of performing well on Google. This Catch-22 is obviously a sore spot for many owners of new websites.

Trustworthiness: For many years, a common search engine optimization company strategy was to set up numerous new websites all for one company, each geared toward targeting a different search term. This was largely due to the fact that search engines used to place a much higher importance on the home page of a website, rather than interior pages. Over time, search engines caught on to this trick, and as a result new domains are now looked at more skeptically. The prevailing wisdom seems to be that while it is relatively easy and inexpensive to set up a new website that targets a certain term, a website that has been around for much longer and has a breadth of content has much more to lose and is less likely to attempt to “game the system”.

The Solutions: Does this mean that you shouldn’t hire a search engine optimization company to work on your new website? Not at all. In fact, it is in the very beginning of your website planning that a long-term strategy should be put into motion - a strategy that still offers positive results in the short term.

Before You Build: It is important to get your search engine optimization company involved as early as possible before you build your new website. Not only are there many technical issues that you should be aware of before you begin design (such as linking architecture, types of text to use, and balancing your SEO efforts with your brand), but there are also strategies that can be set in motion at the outset that will counteract some of the stumbling blocks listed above. If you involve your search engine optimization company after you have built your new website, much of the work you have done will likely need to be redone with a long term strategy in mind.

Targeting Appropriate Phrases: A good search engine optimization company will tell you that targeting highly competitive phrases with a brand new website can be an exercise in futility. However, this does not mean that you cannot achieve initial success on search engines. The trick is to target less competitive phrases at the outset, and to begin tackling the more competitive phrases later. For instance, let’s assume that your company makes custom widgets, and that “custom widgets” is a very competitive search phrase. A search engine optimization company working on your new site might recommend that you instead target less competitive variations of the term, such as “custom made widgets” or “custom widget manufacturing.” Since these terms are less competitive, you will be more likely to obtain high rankings for them with your new website. You can thus enjoy highly targeted traffic in the beginning of your campaign and eventually target more competitive and popular phrases as your site gains traction, quality inbound links, and a reputation for usefulness.

Make Your Site a Resource: A quality search engine optimization company will encourage you to turn your new site into an industry resource. You can do this by providing educational content about your industry in the form of articles, whitepapers, and other forms of non-biased content. There are many benefits to this approach, one of the primary being that such content attracts inbound links without any effort on your behalf. In addition, such a resource area builds your credibility in the eyes of your potential customers and serves to educate them in all stages of the buying cycle, so that when they are ready to make a purchase, you will likely be first in mind.

Build Links: While making your new site a useful resource is a great way to attract inbound links, this does not mean that you shouldn’t also be seeking them out. Your search engine optimization company should get your site included in many general directories (such as the Yahoo directory and Business.com) but, even more importantly, in directories that are specific to your industry. Not only do these links help to boost your search engine rankings over time, but they are also a quality source of targeted traffic.

Keep Your Content Fresh: A search engine spider will revisit your site frequently if your content continues to increase and evolve frequently. A site that has been optimized for three years with no changes to its content will usually not fare as well as a site that has content which is consistently updated. It’s as if the search engine is saying “Well, this old stuff still looks good, but it certainly isn’t the newest stuff out there about this topic.” This so-called “freshness factor” can have a large impact on rankings, particularly with new websites.

Forum discussion available at Small business ideas forum.

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