CAT | Search engine optimisation
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Freezone Affiliates programme.
No comments · Posted by Sean Smith in Affiliates program, Digital Marketing, Domain, Email Marketing, Search engine optimisation, Small business, Small businesses, Wesbite Traffic
Make Money With No Cost.
If you are ready to make money with no cost to you, it is time to consider joining Freezone. Freezone is UK’s best value hosting company and the company offers one of the best affiliate programmes that will give you commission on every sale you make. If you are looking for the best commission rates in the industry and you want to receive rewards just for signing up, review why Freezone is the answer and start making money today.
What Does the Affiliate Scheme Through Freezone Offer?
The hosting packages sell themselves and you can make commission on every sale you make, including domain names. Affiliates who are signed up with the Freezone affiliate programme can earn as much as £80 for each and every sale they make. You will make up to £3 on each domain name and up to £80 on every eShop sale. The commission structure is extremely clear cut so you never have to guess how much you will earn in commissions each time you are paid.
Some of the additional benefits offered by Freezone include:
* £10 payout bonus just for signing up for the free account
* Domain names are extremely affordable.
* Commissions are paid on every product.
* Commissions are paid directly into your Paypal account.
* Accessibility to live support agents.
* Online chat support tools for convenience.
* Full account management tools so you can make more money.
* A wide range of banners and the option to custom make banners.
* Free access to advice from account managers.
You should never have to pay to become an affiliate and earn commissions. In fact, the company should want you so bad they are willing to payout a bonus to you when you join. Freezone is the host you have always been looking for. Earn high commission rates as an affiliate partner with Freezone and earn money for selling domains, email, shared hosting, Eshop, and SSL certificates.
affiliates · Cheap web hosting · Earn on signup · freezone affiliates · Hosting
28
Does Google search the web every time you type in a query?
No comments · Posted by Freezone in Search engine optimisation, Web Hosting
A few days ago I was at a conference on how small businesses can exploit search engine optimisation more effectively to achieve better ranking and therefore attract more customers.
The audience was a mixture of marketing people / owner-managers with fairly limited understanding of SEO. To gauge her audience’s understanding of search engines, the speaker asked them how they thought that Google searched for and presented them with search results to a query.
There was a significant minority that thought that Google takes a query, scours the web and presents back the results based on some sort of ranking rules.
Well, not quite. In fact, Google (like other search engines such as Bing, Ask and Yahoo) takes your query and simply searches its own database that has been built by indexing millions of websites across the web. Effectively, search engines create a snapshot of the nature of websites they visit and then continually update it.
Now this is obvious to those of us who are familiar with SEO and it immediately becomes obvious to anyone who thinks about it.
Therefore, just because you have a website does not automatically mean that you will be found on search engines through standard search queries – not near the top results pages in any case.
So, as a website owner, your job is to ensure that your website is correctly indexed by search engines. This is done by making sure that the coding of and the content on your website (on-page / on-site optimisation) clearly defines your business so that search engines can index your website based on the kind of business you are. And more fresh content you add to your website, more chance of search engines visiting your website more frequently to keep a more up-to-date ‘profile’ of your website on their databases.
The other half of the SEO picture is to build relevant links (off-page / off-site optimisation) to your website from other well ranking websites.
While we have discussed SEO elsewhere in this blog, the key thing to remind yourself is that search engines look through their own databases to provide results to queries. The more you can do to help create a better ‘profile’ on their databases, the better the chances of seeing your website when people are looking for the type of product / service that you provide.
While SEO maybe a job for experts, there is plenty that you can do to get the ball rolling. In fact, the UK web hosting industry offers plenty of free advice to small businesses looking to optimise their websites. Contact your web hosting company and see if they can give you some tips and point you in the direction of a suitable SEO professional.
11
Why am I not on page one of Google?
No comments · Posted by Freezone in Domain, Hosting, Search engine optimisation, Web Hosting
We hear a lot of people asking this question. After all, they say, they have paid good money for web hosting and yet when they search for keywords related to their business, their website is not to be found anywhere on search engines.
In fact, there are still plenty of businesses that assume that all they need to do is register a domain name, buy some web hosting and their website will miraculously appear on top of Google. Sadly, the reality is somewhat different.
Unless businesses take search engine optimisation (SEO) seriously, they are unlikely to realise the potential of their website.
Now, I don’t propose to write a best practice manual here, but let me distil a few key components.
First, what exactly is SEO?
In plain English, it’s the process whereby you undertake some tasks that will help your website to appear on search engines (towards the top few pages) when your potential customers type in keywords associated with your business.
There are two broad areas you need to think about – on-page optimisation and off-page optimisation.
Now, search engines aren’t as clever as you might imagine – they can’t recognise what a website is about simply by looking at it as we humans can do in an instant. So, you have to tell them by using special notations. You have to ensure there is sufficient amount of relevant content on your website. There is more, but fundamentally, this on-page optimisation allows search engines to index your website based on the nature of your business.
The second stage, and some regard this as much more critical, is building links (effectively votes) from other websites to your website. This is off-page optimisation. More popular and relevant a website is to your business, more weight search engines will allocate to a link from it to you. The more relevant links you have to your website, the better the positioning on search engine results.
And here is the key bit of advice – think about SEO at the same time you secure a domain name, web hosting and start creating your website. Don’t leave it as the last thing on your list.
Let me leave you with a final thought…not optimising your website is a bit like opening a business, but not telling anyone about it. No business would do that. Or would they?!
domain name · Hosting · Search engine optimisation · Web Hosting
