Friday, April 15, 2011

What is Search Engine Optimisation ??? And how does it effect my business ???

Search Engine Optimisation otherwise known as SEO, is the method used to gain higher page rankings within your industry for your desired keywords on search engines. For example if you was a driving school in Essex and you wanted your pupils to find you quick and easy via Google for example, your main keyword would probably be ‘Driving schools in Essex’. Just because your a driving school in Essex, it doesn’t mean your going to be on any of the front pages for any of your keywords. The Search Engines must be instructed to list your website for your relevant keywords using SEO Techniques. This is where we step in.

I4 Visual Media are specialists in Search Engine Optimisation, we have an in depth knowledge of how the major search engines work, how to get your website up the ranks, and getting your site the exposure it deserves.

All of our packages include the below services, and the optional packages are at the bottom of this section including prices

ON PAGE SEO

  • Search Engine Friendliness Analysis & Keyword Analysis & Content Recommendation.
  • Optimisation of up to 5 pages + homepage.
  • Meta tags generation of 5 pages & robots.txt
  • Implementation of Meta Tags on the respected pages
  • Post optimisation ranking report.
  • Formation of 10 Different site linking text (Anchor Text)
  • On Page Optimisation of your website with keyword placement within content.
  • Research and finalization of keywords
  • Generation of the Project Completion & Final Ranking Report


OFF PAGE SEO

  • 20 Guaranteed Directory Listings
  • Two Article writing and submission to 100 articles directories
  • Website Detailed Report
  • Social Bookmarking Submission to top 25 Websites.
  • 20 Theme based one way links from quality pages.

Thursday, March 17, 2011

Google upgrades search with user-customized block lists

Google will take a back seat and let users do some of the website blocking for themselves with customizable block lists.

Everyone knows by now that Google’s algorithm update had its faults – many of which the search giant has been working to amend. Despite its best intentions, some reputable sources found themselves buried pages beneath their former page ranks due to Google’s attempt to sweep as many content farms and spammy sites into oblivion.

Now Google is introducing another way to get rid of these types of sites. Users can now further customize their results by blocking specific URLs from ever showing up in their searches again. The new feature is available in Chrome 9+, IE8+, and Firefox 3.5+ and is nothing more than a link that appears with search results giving users the ability to block that source from showing up in your future queries. And of course, if you change your mind, there’s a “manage blocked sites” option.

Google also notes that this will not affect user-blocked sites’ page rank, so website operators can breathe a small sigh of relief. We say small because Google notes that “we’ll look at the data and see whether it would be useful as we continue to evaluate and improve our search results in the future.” On the surface and for the time being, this seems like an ideal way for Google to address the types of sites its recent adjustment attempted to: Give the users all the control in the world to rid themselves of unsavory or unsatisfying content without looking like it’s trying to play SEO god. The idea that Google would determine what a “high-quality” site was didn’t sit well, and this new solution coupled with the search engine’s evolving alterations will hopefully restore the content that deserves high rankings and suppress those that don’t. But if Google did begin taking user block lists into account for its own page rankings, what would keep website owners from creating multiple accounts and blocking the hell out of their competitors? We’ll keep an eye on Google’s plans for this feature, and possibly how it will address the possibility of abuse should it affect Google search results on a wider scale.