Archive for December, 2009

It’s a great way to brainstorm for new niche AdSense or affiliate ideas.

The Fastest, Easiest, Most Powerful Link Analysis Tool For Google At A Price That Will Drop Your Jaw!

ecover2 Link Analysis Tool for High Ranking in Google
WebComp Analyst
Once you’ve watched the video (please follow the link), there’s really nothing more to say about WebComp Analyst. It’s simply the absolute fastest, easiest, most powerful link analysis tool for Google.

If you know anything about ranking in Google (and chances are you do if you’re reading this), then you know that ranking in Google is all about the links. The bottom line: you need to have more links aimed at your page, with the keywords you want to rank for in the anchor text, than your competition does.

The problem is that it’s incredibly time consuming and tedious to manually check every single result for the number of links it has aimed at it. On top of that, having to manually check the anchor text of those links can take hours!

WebComp Analyst does all of that work in seconds, giving you an easy-to-read snapshot of exactly how difficult it will be to rank for any set of keywords in Google. You can do the analysis on multiple sets of keywords at the same time, saving a huge amount of time.

On top of that, WebComp Analyst also has a built-in Niche Keyword Suggestion Tool that will provide a list of popular, up-to-date keywords that are currently being searched for. It’s a great way to brainstorm for new niche AdSense or affiliate ideas.

This powerful tool also has a Keyword Suggestion Tool that will search WordTracker and Ask.com for additional keywords related to any set of keywords you provide. Want to setup a site related to “green tea”, but need some additional keyword ideas for inner pages? Simply run “green tea” through WebComp Analyst’s Keyword Suggestion Tool.

WebComp Analyst is hands-down the best, and far cheaper than those bloated tools that provide tons of “features” that have no benefit to ranking in Google. Keyword density, meta tags? Oh, pah-lease! With Google, it’s all about the links — that’s why WebComp Analyst is all about the links.

Go there now and watch the video - WebComp Analyst

Andy Bolton

WebComp Analyst

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I’ve cut and pasted information from Google - kindly showing their link to prevent copyright infringement.

Every .com .co uk. .net .org etc… website should have various free blogs directing links to their main website. Here is a nice little trick to use for speed. Bogger blogs have a facility whereupon you can send a blogging post via email.

You need to go to your blogger account > settings > email and set up your own very personal email. Then email your blog post to your blog. If you know how to set up your email client you can send 5 or 10 emails to 5 or 10 blogs with the same post. This method helps to build backlnks and subsequent search engine position.

Here … let Google explain:

How do I post via email?

The Mail-to-Blogger feature turns any email account into a blog-posting application. In Settings | Email you can create a Mail-to-Blogger address which you will use to send posts via email to your blog:

Settings | Email tab

To post to your blog via email, you need to configure your Mail-to-Blogger email address in Settings | Email:

mail Post to Your Blog by Email

The format of the email address is username.secretword@blogger.com. Note that this email address must be kept secret. Otherwise, anyone who gets it will be able to post as you.

Also be sure to specify whether or not you prefer your email posts to publish automatically. If this option is not checked, then your posts will be saved on your account but will not appear on your blog until you log in to Blogger.com and publish them yourself.

Once you have saved your Settings, you can send email to your blog. The subjects of your email letters will be the titles of your posts, and the body of the emails will be the posts themselves. To include an image in your post, you can attach an image to you your email.

Notes:

  • Sometimes email programs append text to the bottom of each sent message; to make sure this cruft doesn’t get posted to your blog, put #end at the end of your post.

How is HTML handled in Mail-to-Blogger?

There are two formats that emails generally use: plain text and HTML. Many email clients will have an option to switch between the two modes. Here’s what happens when you use either of these formats in Mail-to-Blogger:

Plain Text: Everything is published on your blog exactly as you type it. That is, entering <strong> in your post will not make text bold. The <> brackets will be escaped and your published blog will actually display <strong> as text.

HTML: All HTML is interpreted as HTML. If you use your email client’s formatting functions to make text bold, you may not see the <strong> tag, but it will be included in your post and the text will appear bold on your blog. If you want to enter code manually, you may need to use an “edit source code” mode or something similar in your email client.

Courtesy Google:

http://www.google.com/support/blogger/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=41452

Andy Bolton

Adwords and Adsense Tips

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