Visitors for Replicate Site OwnersWritten by Pat@Maxaid
Ah, Hah ! You've just found Greatest Opportunity of century.It's a new affiliate business that offers top commission, free autoresponders, and of course your very own free replicated Website. (or page) You have been told that all you have to do is join and you will get all this for Free, Plus you won't have to do anything, your site will be promoted in various ways and submitted to an "x" number of search engines to bring traffic to your "new" site. I'm sorry that I should be one to break this bad news to you. All else may work well for you and your replicated site BUT, you can forget traffic from search engines ! It just won't happen. Why ? All replicate and duplicate sites have identical code, info, graphics and such. The only difference is in members I.D.numbers. This doesn't mean diddly to search engine robot (spyder) that collects info from web pages. After going to a few pages that have same info and graphics robots that collect info from pages recognize it as a duplicate. Then, thinking someone has submitted multiple submissions for same page they view it as spamming .
| | Site Submission ServicesWritten by Richard Lowe
This is a simple fact about life on internet: if you have a web site you must get it listed in all of major search engines. In fact, not only must site get listed, but it must get listed "well".What does this mean? It means you must spend some time designing your site properly so engines can make a good guess as to what it's about. You see, search engines are robots - they are automated pieces of software which examine your pages and attempt to decipher subject(s). This translates to words and phrases that robots believe will allow best describe your site to people who need your information. What this actually means is for each page of your site, you must be able to come up with some good keywords which accurately describe contents of that page. Once you've done that, you must scatter those keywords throughout page in various ways. The search engine robot will examine your pages, see keywords in places it likes, and determine your page is indeed about that subject. For many engines, better you do this higher your site will be in results when someone searches using that keyword (this is called ranking). And, as should be obvious, higher you are in listings, more hits you will receive. Google is one of most significant exceptions to this rule. It's primary concern is not keywords on your pages. No, Google actually looks at links to your pages and uses this information to determine your site's ranking. Making your pages "search engine friendly" is not difficult but it can be tedious. The basic procedure is to pick a keyword which describes your page, then scatter that keyword in various places: title, description and keyword Metatags, ALT tags on images, H1 and H2 headers and within first couple of paragraphs of text. To satisfy Google, you can get people to link to site with text including keyword as well. Okay, so now you've got some pages which are very descriptive to search engines. How do you get them listed? You submit them, of course. Virtually all search engines have a page which allows you to submit one or more URLs from your site. Some search engines are smart and require only a single URL, others require as many URLs as you want to give them (occasionally limiting number that you can enter in a single day). All of them have rules about spamming (making many submissions on a single day or week, or trying to get your site better ranked using unethical means). So be sure not to submit your site too often. It can be a major pain to submit your site to search engines. If you do it manually, you have to get a list of as many search pages as you can, visit each of them, find their submission page, then enter one or more URLs. To be complete, you also need to do this again occasionally - perhaps once a month or quarter. Even just submitting manually to major 10 engines can be a real pain.
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