Friday, June 5th, 2009 at
8:34 PM
Wow, already June is it? Damn…its true about what they say; the older you get, the faster the time flies. I apologize for the lack of activity since Ad-Tech. I’ve just been focusing on new campaigns, new tactics, and a little “me” time. Vegas was fun. I got some pics I can’t share…but now its back to work (and blogging)
I’ll have you know, that “a weekly new blog post” is now officially part of my working schedule. It’s etched in on Friday’s 8-10 pm…so if you don’t’ see a new post by Saturday morning, I’m expecting some hate mail!This week I tore apart & restructured my work week, making sure to finally start using the calendar features of MS Outlook. Outlook, Gmail Calendars, and my Ipod Touch are now all in full sync in a very diligent effort to become more organized and become a better business person.
But since its been over a month between new posts, I thought I’d show ya’ll a cool trick I came across the other day. So without further adieu, check this out…
Read the rest of this entry
Sunday, November 9th, 2008 at
11:13 AM
If you have a quick read of a post I did back in August called “Content Stuffing Your Landing Pages…“, you’ll learn how to hide content with hidden div tags and css stylings.
Taking that same process a step further, you could do exactly the same thing and hide navigational menus that will help the Google bot spider your site, but at the same time, not give unnecessary links to follow for your real visitors.
Google wants to see links to a terms of service, page contact us, privacy policy. Also, having an xml sitemap, links to other internal pages such, and a few outgoing links to high quality resource sites can all improve your quality score. But depending upon the style of landing page you use, these links can be unsightly and lead to visitor “leakage”. Read the rest of this entry
Saturday, August 16th, 2008 at
10:41 PM
It is often said that content is king online, and when it comes to getting love from the Big G using Adwords, having quality content on your landing pages is no exception. But often times, the laziness often attributed with being a PPC affiliate gets the best of us, making building quality landing pages a royal pain in the ass.
Basically, the secret to a good quality score with Adwords follows many of the same best practices normally performed when optimizing a website for SEO. Using proper titles, descriptions, h1, h2, h3 tags, having a privacy policy, contact page, about page, and a disclaimer are just a few of the on page factors that can determine how Google evaluates your quality score.
But in terms of relevant content, there are a few shortcuts we can use when adding quality to our landing pages, or at least simulate the “appearance of quality” as far as the Google spiders are concerned. Warning: Now entering Blackhat PPC territory. Read the rest of this entry