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Build SEO with .EDU Backlinks

If you looked at that headline and went “Huh?” - you’re probably brand new to the world of Search Engine Optimization (SEO). There is an entire business industry setup around helping web site owners, blog authors, and online publications optimize every page - make that every word of every page of content - highly optimized to be indexed by search engines like Google or Yahoo!.

Search engines each have their own algorithms for indexing and ranking pages - there are books, seminars and get-rich-quick schemes all surrounding the cult of Google Page Rank. Businesses seem to live and die by their Google PR. The better optimized your site, the higher your page rank will be. A page rank is what determines how high in the results your listing is when customers are searching on certain keywords.

If you want people to find you, you want to be earlier in the search results, right? If your competitors are in front of you, your potential client might go with them first, and that means lost sales or ad revenue. Google and other search engines want their search results to be the most relevant, so they check things like your site’s meta-data and description and match it to keywords.

Back-links are when a site with more credibility or popularity than you links to your site. If it has a higher page rank than yours, it helps your page rank grow. Search engines rate links from sites with .EDU addresses as more relevant, because only educational institutions are allowed to have them. Since school teachers and administrators and professors are likely to be more researched (or so they think), an edu link is worth a lot to growing your site’s relevance within search results.

Also, just a link on a .EDU site isn’t going to help. Search engines look at the content around a link, so a link on the side of a page not surrounded by content is going to be less relevant than a link surrounded by content in an article, for example.

Sponsored by Edu Text Link

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New Venture: ‘Tech Jaws’ Technology News Site

As I’ve been hinting at the last few days, and those of you following me on Twitter already know, I’m working with Frank J on a new tech news web site, Tech Jaws. It’s got an aggressive tone with a focus on the bleeding-edge of technology reviews, news, and tips.

This morning I posted an article reviewing the Logitech Harmony One universal remote control. This remote is simply awesome! Head on over to Tech Jaws and check out my review - complete with screenshots of the software and photos of the remote itself.

Also, feel free to comment - and when you do, mention you came there from my blog!

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One Rank to Rule Them All

Previously mentioned Izea Ranks, is set to trump all other ranking systems. Alexa, Google Page Rank, Technorati, Blogjuice, and the other myriad of ranking systems are starting to get nervous, maybe even a little sweaty, over newcomer Izea Ranks.

These other ranking systems all have their prolific search engine-based ranking algorithms and fancy mathematical formulas that basically add up to bloggers and other web site owners having to kiss-up to the ranking provider, and live and die by their numbers.

Those systems might still be well and good, after all, they’ve been mostly good to me (I’m glaring at you, Google). But when you’re a blogger and your livelyhood is based on how popular your blog is, you want a metric that’s actually based on your blog traffic and not whether or not the ranking provider likes you or the way you run things.

Enter Izea Ranks - just install a simple piece of javascript code into your blog’s template (don’t worry, it’s not that complicated - they provide you with instructions) and then within a day or two, you’ll start getting statistics on your blog’s popularity within the blogosphere.

It’s exciting to get daily updates on where you stand, as opposed to waiting 3 or 4 months for a certain company to get off their “google” and update your page rank. That way, you can see what is and is not effective at attracting visitors to your site. This allows blog owners to be dynamic and quick-change artists who can effectively draw traffic and page views.

One of the best things about a daily update though, is that it gives a certain sense of satisfaction to my competitive side. Something about looking at my rank and knowing that there’s thousands upon thousands of blogs that aren’t doing as well as me makes me happy. I know that’s unsportsman-like, but you know you’d do the same thing.

I challenge you other blog owners out there to sign-up for Izea Ranks and install the code, and see how you stack up against The Raging Tech.

Sponsored by IZEARanks

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Get Plugged In to HD Music Videos

This morning I received an e-mail telling me that new HD music video / social networking site PluggedIn launched in beta today. PluggedIn is apparently a venture by actor / recording artist Will Smith in association with Sony, EMI, and other big name record labels.

What immediately one me over when I loaded up the site this morning was that in spite of it’s slick interface and decent selection of music videos, it runs from a Java-based client that works in Firefox on a Mac. Quickly it works, with next to no loading time to operate.

I just watched “Closer” by Nine Inch Nails (a live performance) and it was awesome. If you sign up for an account (also free), you can queue up a playlist of videos and get artist bios and shop for music in an online marketplace.

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Make Your Site “Sticky” with Zookoda

April 16th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in Blog, Bloggy Goodness, Web 2.0, e-mail, websites

Zookoda is a site that lets bloggers and other content providers create fully-customizable, managable, and effective e-mail newsletters. Bloggers can use Zookoda to send out periodic digests of recent posts, entice readers back to their site, or host an insider’s newsletter.

Content providers can use newsletters to keep customers and website visitors informed of what’s new and happening at their company. The newsletters are completely customizable to match your existing web site’s theme.

Bloggers can also customize to match their blog’s theme. You can even place a customized newsletter subscription form on your site that will make your blog seem more professional.

Zookoda also gives its users the ability to receive real-time reports on things like bouncebacks (bad e-mail addresses), unsubscriptions, and click-through rates on the links in your newsletters. This gives you, the blog owner, the ability to see what your readers are interested in and what copy works best to get them to click-through from your newsletter to your site.

Currently, you’ll need a blog hosted by either Blogger, Yahoo! 360, MovableType, TypePad, Word Press, Bloglines, or MSN spaces to take part in the Zookoda e-mail newsletter subscription service. You don’t need to install any serious server applications because Zookoda is served up off their own servers.

There is not a currently supported medium for serving up ads, such as Google Adsense or Project Wonderful within your e-mail newsletters, though support for doing so seems to be in the works for the future.

Zookoda will allow you to manage more than one blog, as I’m sure many of you are operating two or three or even twenty blogs! You can control all of your Zookoda subscriptions for all of your blogs from one single Zookoda account.

Check out Zookoda today and see what it can do for your blog’s traffic base.

Sponsored by Zookoda

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