Archive for December 10th, 2008

High Search Engine Rankings And Black Hat Techniques

Wednesday, December 10th, 2008
Harvey Robinson asked:


Black Hat techniques are unethical techniques that some web masters use to get their site to rate higher in search engines. While Black Hat techniques temporarily do work, in the long run, they never pay off. Your temporary high will be a crash dive when the search engine spiders find out what you are doing and all your hard work will be a waste. If you want long term, high search engine listings, don’t use Black Hat techniques.

Why use unethical techniques when you can legitimately increase your search engine ranking? This is the question which this article will answer. After you’ve read this, you’ll know what techniques will get you in trouble and which ones are safe to use.

Black Hat techniques you don’t want to use.

Don’t use keyword stuffing. Keyword stuffing is the overuse of keywords in your content. This can be as extreme as repeating the same keywords over and over to try to achieve a higher ranking for that keyword.

Don’t use invisible text. This involves making keywords the same color as the background. Search engine spiders can see this text but people cannot.

Don’t use doorway pages. These are pages that your visitors cannot see, but search engine spiders can.

Black Hat techniques are cheesy because they go against the search engine’s rules. Not only do they go against the rules, they also do not do much for visitor’s.

Black Hat techniques do work.

That is the reason why web masters use them. I never recommend using these techniques. The problem is these techniques only work temporarily. Eventually the search engine spiders catch on and your site will be permanently banned.

If you want to use these techniques, do it on a site that you can use as a throw away. If you are good you can get away with it for possibly a few months. You may make a lot of money on that site for that time, but if you want to build for the long term don’t do it.

Search Engine Optimization (SEO).

If you should not use Black Hat techniques, what techniques can you use to get a flood of targeted visitors? Search engine optimization (SEO) is the process of improving search engine traffic to a web site from “natural” search results. There are several techniques that you can use to do this.

Keywords.

While keyword stuffing is not a smart thing to do, the natural use of keywords is proper. Spread your keywords throughout the article in a way that is normal and does not look like it has been seeded.

Keyword density is the number of keywords divided by the total words of a document. You want a keyword density of 1-3%, if your content is 600 words, you’ll want to use the main keyword between 6-18 times.

Before you write your content, pick out some keywords that are relevant to your site. Then, begin to write the content. Try to incorporate the keywords you have picked out in a natural way throughout the content. One thing to keep in mind is that actual people are reading your site. Thus, you should make sure that the use of keywords does not distract your readers from the reading of the content.

Writing articles to get links to your site.

Article submissions can bring a huge amount of traffic to your web site for years. Write a series of articles, with a resource box at the end containing a link to your site. Search Google for, “article directory”. You will find several directories that list articles. Submit your series of articles to as many article directories as you can. If they are good, web masters looking for content for their site will use your articles. People will read these articles and see your link at the bottom of the page. Spiders will find these one way links pointing to your site and this will help your rankings in the search engines.

Linking to help your search engine rankings.

Developing a successful link strategy can take some time and effort. Search engines move at their own pace, anything you do to your web site today can take weeks to show up. It helps your rankings every time a search engine spider visits a page with a link to your site on it. Exchanging links is a very common practice. It is very easy to do. Search Google for, “link directory”. You will find several directories that list sites that want to exchange links.

Pay Per Click Advertising.

This is the easiest way ever to get to the top of Google and Yahoo. Pay per click advertising, if properly done, can give you an increase in web site traffic and an increase in sales. Pay per click advertising may seem tricky, but it doesn’t have to be. Two programs that you may want to look at are Goggle Adwords and Yahoo Search Marketing, both come highly rated and recommended. They both produce results.

If you follow the above advice, your site will get listed high on search engines for the long term with no danger of being pulled. There are of many approaches to increasing your traffic, but the main thing is to take action and to keep it going over the long term.



BOB

Bowler Hat

Wednesday, December 10th, 2008
dresscloth asked:


r hat, also known as a derby (US) or billycock[1], is a hard felt hat with a rounded crown originally created in 1849 for Edward Coke, the younger brother of the 2nd Earl of Leicester. The bowler hat was devised in 1849 by the London hatmakers Thomas and William Bowler to fulfil an order placed by the firm of hatters Lock & Co. of St. James’s, a company established in 1676 which is still in business. Lock & Co. had been commissioned by a customer to design a close-fitting, low-crowned hat to protect his gamekeepers’ heads from low-hanging branches while on horseback. The keepers had previously worn top hats, which were easily knocked off and damaged. It was also hoped that the new style of hat would protect the keepers if they were attacked by poachers. Lock & Co. then commissioned the Bowler brothers to solve the problem. While most accounts state that the customer was William Coke, a nephew of the 1st Earl of Leicester, recent research has cast some doubt on this, and it is now believed that it was instead Edward Coke, the younger brother of the 2nd Earl of Leicester. Flag CapsWhen Coke arrived in London on 17 December 1849 to collect his hat he reportedly placed it on the floor and stamped hard on it twice to test its strength; the hat withstood this test and Coke paid 12 shillings for it. In accordance with Locks & Company’s usual practice, the hat was called the “Coke” hat after the customer who had ordered it, and this is most likely why the hat became became known as the “Billy Coke” or “Billycock” hat in Norfolk. Peaking in popularity towards the end of the 19th century the bowler hat offered a middle ground between the formality of the top hat, which was associated with the upper classes, and the casual soft flat caps worn by the working classes. The bowler became a cultural identifier, ironically with two completely different meanings: throughout most of England it was associated with professional servants, e.g. butlers, and so upon seeing a man wearing a bowler in a pub or on the street, it was fairly safe to assume he was a “gentleman’s gentleman,” meaning a valet, manservant or butler; in London itself, however, it was associated with professionals, and so a man wearing a bowler in The City could safely be assumed to be a lawyer, stockbroker, banker or government official. As the traditional headwear of London city ‘gents’ it has become something of an English cultural icon. The bowler was also to some extent adopted by the surrealist movement, particularly by Magritte, as an object which typified the absurdity of “normal life” and appeared in many surrealist paintings in one guise or another. However, Englishmen stopped wearing hats as a matter of course in the 1960s, and most young English people in the 21st century have never seen a bowler hat worn as part of normal dress. The decline of the bowler is possibly linked to the rise in car ownership in the 1960s which would make it difficult to wear[original research?]. It is, however, still commonly seen worn at some formal public events, such as by town councillors at Armistice Day ceremonies. It is also traditionally worn by members of the Orange Order in Northern Ireland during their 12 July annual parades, though usage has declined. A bowler hat was once worn by the gaffer of a team of furniture removers although this tradition has died out. In the United States this hat is also known as a derby hat, after Edward Smith-Stanley, 12th Earl of Derby, founder in 1780 of the Epsom Derby. The cultural significance of this style of hat was slightly different in the United States; though certainly not exclusively so, the derby tended to be associated with urban culture, and particularly with well-to-do people who had risen from the working class. Hence, it was often seen on the heads of “machine politicians”, urban Irish-descended “ward heelers” and others, and so often appears in movies, comic books and comic strips of the 1930s and 1940s as a silent signal that the wearer is of this group. Al Smith, who exemplified the urban Tammany politician of the 1920s, was often seen in his distinctive derby; while typically, men’s full-sized derbies are black, Al Smith always wore a brown derby. A small bowler hat worn at an angle is typically referred to as a “gruff hat” or “pickle hat”. In Germany, the hat is known as Melone (melon), due to its shape. Similarly in France it is known as “chapeau melon”. The bowler hat - called a bombin - has also been worn by Quechua and Aymara women in Peru and Bolivia since the 1920s when it was introduced to Bolivia by British railway workers. For many years a factory in Italy manufactured the hats for the Bolivian market, but they are now produced locally.

VICTOR