Sep 10

well worth a look, Gabor has put together a great site with tons of PLR content, and membership is free

www.plrarticle.info 

Sep 8

You may be wondering, “What in the world is SiloMatic?”

Well, SiloMatic is a brand new desktop software application for creating search-engine friendly websites quickly and easily.

The best content to use for SiloMatic is original articles. You can create 400 - 600 word articles yourself or outsource this job to a ghostwriter by using a service like Elance.com. Or, you can use or rewrite PLR articles.

Now, as you probably know, Google and other search engines try to display the most relevant search results for a given search term by ranking websites that have a tight theme relevance across the entire site.

However, do you know that synonyms of the main keyword for a web page strengthen the theme relevance of the page?

That’s right… and this is very important.

Additionally, linking pages in a specific way to prevent theme bleeding, while keeping a tight focus between pages that are linked together, strengthens the theme relevance even further.

If you think this sounds complicated, imagine trying to figure out how to do all this manually…

Talk about a complete waste of time, if you could even do it at all by yourself.

Well, thanks to SiloMatic, you don’t have to!

SiloMatic creates a website that links all the pages correctly to prevent theme bleeding. It also makes sure you create tightly focused groups of web pages known as silos.

Simply put… A silo is a group of web pages with content that strengthens (rather than hurts) your theme relevance.

These silos are linked together in a linear way to reinforce the theme.

The bottomline…

Better rankings on Google and other search engines, more visitors to your website and of course… increased profits.

So, download your copy of SiloMatic today and discover how it can benefit you and your web business:

http://www.gohere123.com/

Sep 8

The days of keyword stuffing, single phrase optimization and concentrating only on incoming links to gain traffic are slowly being phased out as a more holistic approach to judging website content comes online. This new concept has many webmasters hopping, and it should. Latent semantic indexing is quickly becoming the wave of now.

Latent semantic indexing, is a Google driven creation that’s meant to better gauge the content of a web page in relation to the entire site to discover the overall theme. It is a more sophisticated measure of what sites and their pages are all about. While it doesn’t mean webmasters need to completely retool all of their keyword optimization efforts, it does mean depth needs to be a greater consideration.

The history behind latent semantic indexing is rather interesting. Google’s current ranking system, which relies on incoming links (or votes) and keywords to scan pages for relevancy when surfers do searches has been known for penalizing perfectly good sites. The system was set up to scan for relevance and quality. In the process, it has a habit of knocking new sites and those which add too much content too quickly. Although some of these sites, naturally, are those that result from link farming and quick keyword stuffed content generators, not all are unplanned fabrications.

Google wanted a better way, and found one. Latent semantic indexing is meant to scan the overall theme of a site, so as not to penalize those sites that have fresh, relevant and good content even if they do happen to pop up over night.

This new focus puts an emphasis on quality and freshness of content to help sites gain higher ranking position. In essence, latent semantic indexing is meant to give a searcher the best possible site to meet their needs based on relevant keywords and comprehensive coverage and not just incoming links.

This system basically presents a more fair way to give search engine users the pages they really want. It does what Google has always tried to do – provide higher quality, more relevant results.

The old days of Google putting 80 percent of its emphasis on incoming links and 20 percent on the actual site itself are coming to an end. Incoming links will always have relevance, especially in regard to breaking search “ties,” but they may not carry the same weight as before. This can make it a bit easier for those who work on their sites with an emphasis on quality to see real results.

What all of this means to web publishers is that those who have done and continue to do their jobs correctly will have a better chance of shining with latent semantic indexing. Those who keyword stuff, create nonsensical content and spend a lot of time using link farms likely will not.

The key to getting ahead in the new age of Google search falls on quality. Sites that provide useful and relevant information in regard to their content will be likely to do better on searches. Those that cut corners could find themselves at the bottom of the search totem pole.

If you’re looking to build a perfectly-structured, highly-optimized site or even improve your existing site there is a great new software tool that just came out called SiloMatic.

This software guarantees all of your web pages will be properly structured to rank high on Google and other major search engines.

You can read all about it right here:

http://www.gohere123.com/