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Monday, 18 August 2008 15:02 |
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Well, now that the cat's out of the bag and virtually every designer, programmer, marketer, and newbie worth their salt has weighed in on Flash SEO relating to the Google/Yahoo/Adobe Flash SEO announcement. There are some haters, some lovers, and some who have even gone to the trouble of creating tutorials for the rest of us. Here are the tutorials. Go get 'em Flash SEO! Flash SEOTutorials WebTecker Roytanck Hochman Consultants SEO Consultants SEOMyFlash If you're trying to learn how use Flash SEO techniques to optimize a Flash website, start with these sites and you'll be on the right track. Happy SEO'ing! |
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Sunday, 03 August 2008 13:24 |
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We know that our readers are anxious for our Phase 1 Results of our official Flash SEO tests. Unfortunately, we're still waiting for our testing site to be properly indexed by Google and Yahoo before we can complete the first round to our satisfaction. Stay tuned, as we can expect this to happen any time... |
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Sunday, 03 August 2008 13:17 |
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Copywriters are one thing; submitters are another. As with any SEO project, much of your Flash SEO work will be in submitting to article websites, directories, search engines, and social bookmarking sites like Digg, Technorati, and StumbleUpon. It's tempting to hire a provider to do this for you, but be wary of spam. While no one knows for sure exactly what is the best strategy for submissions, one thing is clear: If you go overboard, it can hurt your Flash SEO efforts rather than help them. That being said, you defintely need to earn backlinks. One way to do this is to toil away making daily submissions to new sites. Other ways include hiring firms to do this for you (see our Flash SEO Providers), trading links with relevant sites, or -- and most practical -- provide great content that people independently want to bookmark. It's important that you take care not to get listed on link farms or sites that use blackhat techniques; instead, look for high-Page Rank sites with a good reputation for credibility. Because if their users trust them, the visitors they send to you will trust you. |
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Monday, 28 July 2008 13:58 |
In the previous section we discussed the importance of your domain name. Obviously the question has arisen and will continue to arise about why companies like Google, Yahoo, Squidoo, AOL, Tech norati, StumbleUpon, and millions of others can get by with having no relative keywords within their respective domain names.
The answer is simple: Branding. One of the most important elements to consider in any business is: What will you look like in front of your customers?
Almost all businesses that have the expendable capital for brilliant marketing schemes will exhaust all of that extra capital on logo branding and corporate identity. Coca-Cola and Anheuser Busch are two great examples of companies that can rely solely on their name/brand to get them traffic on the web. Who isn't familiar with the red can with the dynamic wave? How many times have you watched the Super Bowl, simply for the commercials? It takes the effort of getting your name and logo in front of your target audience, and then your SEO efforts will become even more effective. Not only that, you will most likely NOT have to fight the keyword wars that are so common these days. That is why you see all too often, that these larger companies choose to have Flash sites, despite the previous lack of Flash SEO dependability.
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