Survey Says! People Hate Google’s Targeted Search Results
According to a survey conducted by AskYourTargetMarket, people aren’t so keen on Google’s decision to force targeted
According to a survey conducted by AskYourTargetMarket, people aren’t so keen on Google’s decision to force targeted
If your site or blog deals with health and fitness-related information (and if it doesn’t, you might want to rethink that, given that 2011 comScore data indicates that around 100 million Americans search for health info every month), listen up: Google will be changing the way it handles health-related queries in the very near future.
If your website or blog still hasn’t made the jump to social media, a new study issued by Booth Business School at Chicago University will have you thinking twice.
With SOPA, the Stop Online Piracy Act, in our collective rearview mirror, the tech community has now turned its attention to a new piece of legislation that could drastically impact online entrepreneurship, according to an article published by TechCrunch, this time it’s actually something worth supporting.
You’re a serious blogger. With a background in technical writing and journalism, you supply your readers with a daily dose of thoughtfully-written, highly valuable, easily-actionable content, and you take pride in the fact that you accomplish this task with nothing more than good ole’ fashioned words (and a few pictures, just to keep with the times).
Online copywriters need to keep two distinct but interrelated goals in mind at all times when writing content: convincing the search engines to rank their content highly in their search results (preferably on the first page), and convincing their visitors to actually read the entire piece of content and once complete, act upon it.
Most bloggers monetize their blogs in the same way – placing ads throughout their site. While high-traffic blogs can easily generate a sustainable income with nothing more than a Google AdSense campaign, many bloggers find this to be a difficult approach.
According to a study by Jakob Nielson, 90% of users at the average website never contribute a single comment. Just 9% of users comment on occasion, while 1% of users comment frequently.
In less than a year, YouTuber Dai Ling Ping has started a YouTube channel and gained over 25,000 subscribers strictly as a one-man operation. Now, he’s raking in advertizing revenue and is poised to grow his unique brand even further in 2012.