Skip to main content

Submit Your Work

There are two primary kinds of authority sites in the internet world: big,
highly trafficked, content specific sites (consider Inc.com, Wall Street
Journal), and educational and governmental sites. Search engines are still
giving lots of credít to university .edu sites and .gov pages, especially
the federal government (who knew).

The major ways to obtain backlinks from these sites are to provide valuable,
one-of-a-kind content in the form of articles or to post comments to content
already on these websites. If you're lucky enough to hand in great content
and get yourself published on a high-authority content site, that is worth
its weight in gold to your link building efforts.

Don't throw away your time with auto-posting, scraping applications that are
going to write nonsense responses for you. They'll post, but in most
instances will be deleted in the monitoring of the site. You can browse the
web and find listings of good PR .edu and .gov websites (ones with a PR of
4, 5, 6, 7) that allow for forum postings with backlinks. Buyer beware and
regularly test the domains, applying PR Checker.

Regards Gerald Crawford

Webcraft.ws Stellenbosch
PO BOX 12216 Die Boord 7613 Stellenbosch South Africa
Telephone: +27-021-8833027 (office)
Cell: +27-0720390184 (mobile)
SMS: 0796343545
Skype: webcraft.guru
Fax: 0865657300
After Hours: 0881242372
Website: http://www.webcraft.ws
E-mail: gerald@webcraft.ws
Yahoo: webcraftguru@yahoo.co.za
Blog: http://webcraftws.blogspot.com/

Twitter: WebcraftGuru
Facebook: Webcraft Guru

This e-mail (and any attachments) contains information which is confidential
and may be legally privileged and protected from disclosure. It is intended
solely for the use of the individual or entity to whom it is addressed and
others authorised to receive it. If you are not the intended recipient of
this e-mail or any parts of it please telephone +27-0720390184 immediately
upon receipt.


I'm protected by SpamBrave
http://www.spambrave.com/

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

What Is Internet Website Content?

What Is Internet Website Content? Content is made up of multiple elements, and is primarily the; * On-page visible text * Images and image Alt text * Anchor text in hyperlinks to internal or external pages * Hyperlink titles in links and menus * The descriptive Title and Description meta-data In the context of Google, a picture is NOT worth a thousand words! Moreover, words must be accessible, not embedded in images or Flash movies, JavaScript, slide shows etc. In 15 years as an SEO consultant, if there's one common denominator evident on websites, it's that there is a profound reluctance to expend time, money, and creative energy on unique text content. Brevity is the watchword - economical use of words is encouraged by design, branding and marketing advisers! * The branding gurus want you to use the textual equivalent of sound bites - bullet points and short sentences! * The website designers want the entire content of the page to be above ...

How to Write Web Copy

Actionable tips for software developers writing web copy. Scan Web site visitors read websites very differently than they might read a book or a newspaper. Web visitors scan the text, rather than reading each and every word. As a result, the web copy should be designed to be easily scannable. That is not to say the copy should not be well written, but it should be broken into small "chunks" so that the visitor can easily scan it and take away the main idea. White Space Avoid dense copy. Copy should be broken into readable, digestible "chunks" and surrounded by a good amount of white space. Font Type Font size matters. Avoid using micro fonts. Studies have shown that the easiest type faces to read on the Internet are san serif fonts. Popular sans fonts include Helvetica, Avant Garde, and Arial. Popular serif fonts include Times Roman, Courier, and Palatino. Sans-serif fonts have become the de facto standard for "body" text on-screen, because monitors pr...

The REAL Value of Keywords

An important question in SEO is how much intrinsic value resides in a specific keyword and, whether SEO has the potential to take everybody on a fool's errand? When it comes to bigger companies, for instance, can a massive SEO investment in trying to achieve top ranking for almost-generic, ultra-competitive keywords be worth all the disappointment and soul-searching? Surely, in so many cases, there has to be a better way? At the other end of the scale are smaller companies with a limited marketing budget, particularly in the business-to-business sphere. There is often a fine balance to achieve when it comes to investing in SEO for what can only be low-traffic keywords in niche sectors, even where higher gross margins per sale indicate otherwise. Realizing this, many companies will skip the on-line sales dance, or resign themselves to having a website that is little more than an 'on-line brochure' presence or a support mechanism for Pay-Per-Click or social media activities. ...