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Suggest You - SEO Content Writing and the Long Tail
Business Premises - Choose Wisely stically it’s simply a matter of how much content is on your site. The more you post to your blog the longer tail (keyword-wise) your site will have. Now, I’m not saying that you should post a bunch of crap posts to a blog, but a blog that has 1000 posts will have a much longer tail than a blog with 100 posts. That is why most blogs don’t make a whole lot of money for the first 6-12 months. It takes a lot of time to write enough content that a blog starts to have a really long tail."Owners of businesses, regardless of type, will need premises of some kind. It may be that they can work from home in a spare room or garage (some say the kitchen table!!). Others may need a shop, office, workshop or warehouse, but a decision will have to be made as to where to locate the business.Many things need to be considered when making a decision on from which type of premises to operate your business. Some facilities are essential, others desirable but not quite so important.The essential requirements are: -- Affordability. - Location. - Size. - Services. - Security of tenure. - Accessibility. - Security.Let us take these requirements individually.Affordability - If the building is ideal but the rent, rates, service charges or other charges are too high it is pointless even considering it. Stay within your budget.Loca NetBaldwin noted that constantly updated content regarding one's primary keywords and related topics is important to tapping into the long tail: "To capture searchers through the Long Tail, a web site must include content that is consistently updated. And that content must go beyond the primary focus/purpose of the web site while also being (somehow) related." Big deal, right? After all, those types of searches are few and far between. They don't represent a real traffic flow. That may be true if you look at them individually, but as a group, they produce a great deal of traffic. And the more content you have, the greater likelihood you have of snagging good placement for many searches located within the long tail. USWeb, the outfit behind Blogitive, noted: "Try to imagin The Ultimate Guide On How To Answer Interview Questions It used to be that I would tell clients, "The more content you have, the morel likely you are to generate search engine traffic from longer searches. Although you might be targeting one or two of the more popular keywords, more content will allow you to start collecting hits for longer search strings that aren't as common. Those add up and provide a great deal of residual value to the content."There is nothing more stressful as going through an interview no matter what age you are. Even though you may have years of experience in your profession, or if you are a teenage on a look out of a summer job – the thought remains the same, how to answer interview questions. Well to some questions there are the obvious right and wrong answers. The questions that are determining the basic skill level needed for a particular job. It is well known that these are not the questions that determine who will get the job, as they only cover the basic job description and its duties. What makes you stand out from the others is learning how to answer interview questions when the interviewer is looking for a particular skill or attitude. These are perhaps the most tricky questions to prepare for. Also these are the questions that you constantly answer over and over again in your mind once you le Although those statements are true, coming from a freelance content writer, they have a tendency to sound a lot like "way #29 for this guy to sell his service." I could almost hear potential clients thinking, "Sure, if I have enough content I might get occasional hits for 'left-handed widgets for tired children in Monrovia,' but I want 'left-handed widgets' traffic. I can SELL to those people." Since 2004, there's a growing discussion about this whole issue and what it really means in terms of site traffic. Fortunately, those involved in that discussion have started using a pithy name for the phenomena, the "long tail." It's my belief that the current research and analysis on the long tail of search traffic is a great argument in favor of hiring a content writing pro. Let's start at the beginning of all of this. Wikipedia's discussion of the long tail provides a nice summary: "The long tail is the colloquial name for a long-known feature of statistical distributions ... The feature is also known as "heavy tails", "power-law tails" or "Pareto tails"… In these distributions, a high-frequency or high-amplitude population is followed by a low-frequency or low-amplitude population which gradually "tails off". In many cases the … long tail…can cumulatively outnumber or outweigh the initial portion of the graph, such that in aggregate they comprise the majority." Chris Anderson from Wired has a great book about the long tail, and created a public diary about his tome that included a post called “The Long Tail of Design” that I think serves as great place to develop an understanding of the whole idea. It's a nice "1 minute primer of long tail thinking" for those who aren't familiar with the concept. If we graph a market, we have a body, representing the "mass market" and then a long trailing tail of smaller niches with correspondingly smaller populations. However, if we look at our graph, we'll notice that the long tail actually contains just as many, if not more, potential consumers than the bigger “body.” Additionally, we should recognize that most sales efforts are concentrated on the body. Thus, the competition for the interest of the body is much more intense than is the competition for various points along the long tail. You can see where that's going, right? Niche marketing. Long tail theory, by that name or any other, has been one of the driving forces behind internet marketing for some time now. People in the IM community have been doing their market research in hopes of finding potentially lucrative smaller markets that one can mine for profits more efficiently than the massive area of the body. Yes, running a series of "boutique sites" can be more profitable than trying to take on eBay or Wal-Mart.com. No kidding. What does this have to do with hiring an SEO content writer? Good question. Here's the thing: We can apply long tail theory to search engine results, too. If you take a popular keyword, log the searches made containing that keyword, and graph the results you are going to get something a graph similar to the one we just discussed. There is going to be a mass of searches just for the keyword and obvious 2-3 word phrases using the keyword. Then, you are going to have a precipitous decline for searches using other strings that will result in a long, flowing tail. So, you can fight for that traffic in the body, but it's going to take some work. There's a lot of competition in the body. You can also start mining the long tail for traffic. How? One of the best ways is content--and lots of it. If you hire someone to handle your SEO content writing and to generate a series of pieces on "widgets," that content is assuredly going to produce strings containing the very kind of things for which those long tail searchers are looking. Here's an additional perk--even if you are not sold on the long tail idea, the content itself still helps with respect to marketing to the larger body. There is no forced compromise. Well-written content will serve both needs simultaneously. An entry at a popular SEOMoz.org blog noted: "In the long tail of keyword searches, the great value comes from having hundreds or thousands of unique, valuable content pages written on a niche subject. The millions of completely unique search terms that hit the engines each day help to bring in traffic that a purely 'designed' strategy could never receive." Blackbeard SEO said that having a nice long tail the "hidden secret of blogging" and makes a strong argument for content as a means of long tail access with respect to blogs: "So how do you hit the long tail for your site? Well, there are a few tricks that can help you, but realistically it’s simply a matter of how much content is on your site. The more you post to your blog the longer tail (keyword-wise) your site will have. Now, I’m not saying that you should post a bunch of crap posts to a blog, but a blog that has 1000 posts will have a much longer tail than a blog with 100 posts. That is why most blogs don’t make a whole lot of money for the first 6-12 months. It takes a lot of time to write enough content that a blog starts to have a really long tail." NetBaldwin noted that constantly updated content regarding one's primary keywords and related topics is important to tapping into the long tail: "To capture searchers through the Long Tail, a web site must include content that is consistently updated. And that content must go beyond the primary focus/purpose of the web site while also being (somehow) related." Big deal, right? After all, those types of searches are few and far between. They don't represent a real traffic flow. That may be true if you look at them individually, but as a group, they produce a great deal of traffic. And the more content you have, the greater likelihood you have of snagging good placement for many searches located within the long tail. USWeb, the outfit behind Blogitive, noted: "Try to imagin Niche Marketing and the Demands of Outsourcing a nice summary:While opening a business is often a gamble of sorts, in the world of online niche marketing, your greatest asset is often finding the right niche to expose and profit from. Granted, it takes time and expense to find the niche that's just right for you, but it's pay-off can be immense. No, there are no guarantees in this line of work, but neither do offline businesses get guarantees of certain income.However, here are certain strategies for choosing a niche that has a high probability of success.Some schools of thought propound the idea tha supply and demand is a good indicator of niche success. In fact, statistical information supplied by search engines is used to determine the popularity of certain search terms. This information is useful because terms which are being searched frequently are terms which have a large audience of Internet users looking for more information on the niche subject "The long tail is the colloquial name for a long-known feature of statistical distributions ... The feature is also known as "heavy tails", "power-law tails" or "Pareto tails"… In these distributions, a high-frequency or high-amplitude population is followed by a low-frequency or low-amplitude population which gradually "tails off". In many cases the … long tail…can cumulatively outnumber or outweigh the initial portion of the graph, such that in aggregate they comprise the majority." Chris Anderson from Wired has a great book about the long tail, and created a public diary about his tome that included a post called “The Long Tail of Design” that I think serves as great place to develop an understanding of the whole idea. It's a nice "1 minute primer of long tail thinking" for those who aren't familiar with the concept. If we graph a market, we have a body, representing the "mass market" and then a long trailing tail of smaller niches with correspondingly smaller populations. However, if we look at our graph, we'll notice that the long tail actually contains just as many, if not more, potential consumers than the bigger “body.” Additionally, we should recognize that most sales efforts are concentrated on the body. Thus, the competition for the interest of the body is much more intense than is the competition for various points along the long tail. You can see where that's going, right? Niche marketing. Long tail theory, by that name or any other, has been one of the driving forces behind internet marketing for some time now. People in the IM community have been doing their market research in hopes of finding potentially lucrative smaller markets that one can mine for profits more efficiently than the massive area of the body. Yes, running a series of "boutique sites" can be more profitable than trying to take on eBay or Wal-Mart.com. No kidding. What does this have to do with hiring an SEO content writer? Good question. Here's the thing: We can apply long tail theory to search engine results, too. If you take a popular keyword, log the searches made containing that keyword, and graph the results you are going to get something a graph similar to the one we just discussed. There is going to be a mass of searches just for the keyword and obvious 2-3 word phrases using the keyword. Then, you are going to have a precipitous decline for searches using other strings that will result in a long, flowing tail. So, you can fight for that traffic in the body, but it's going to take some work. There's a lot of competition in the body. You can also start mining the long tail for traffic. How? One of the best ways is content--and lots of it. If you hire someone to handle your SEO content writing and to generate a series of pieces on "widgets," that content is assuredly going to produce strings containing the very kind of things for which those long tail searchers are looking. Here's an additional perk--even if you are not sold on the long tail idea, the content itself still helps with respect to marketing to the larger body. There is no forced compromise. Well-written content will serve both needs simultaneously. An entry at a popular SEOMoz.org blog noted: "In the long tail of keyword searches, the great value comes from having hundreds or thousands of unique, valuable content pages written on a niche subject. The millions of completely unique search terms that hit the engines each day help to bring in traffic that a purely 'designed' strategy could never receive." Blackbeard SEO said that having a nice long tail the "hidden secret of blogging" and makes a strong argument for content as a means of long tail access with respect to blogs: "So how do you hit the long tail for your site? Well, there are a few tricks that can help you, but realistically it’s simply a matter of how much content is on your site. The more you post to your blog the longer tail (keyword-wise) your site will have. Now, I’m not saying that you should post a bunch of crap posts to a blog, but a blog that has 1000 posts will have a much longer tail than a blog with 100 posts. That is why most blogs don’t make a whole lot of money for the first 6-12 months. It takes a lot of time to write enough content that a blog starts to have a really long tail." NetBaldwin noted that constantly updated content regarding one's primary keywords and related topics is important to tapping into the long tail: "To capture searchers through the Long Tail, a web site must include content that is consistently updated. And that content must go beyond the primary focus/purpose of the web site while also being (somehow) related." Big deal, right? After all, those types of searches are few and far between. They don't represent a real traffic flow. That may be true if you look at them individually, but as a group, they produce a great deal of traffic. And the more content you have, the greater likelihood you have of snagging good placement for many searches located within the long tail. USWeb, the outfit behind Blogitive, noted: "Try to imagin Public Relations for Gambling Casinos terest of the body is much more intense than is the competition for various points along the long tail.Many people decry gambling casinos because they say it brings in crime and it fosters the criminal element. Many people are upset with gambling casinos because so many individuals who cannot control their addiction will lose all their money and end up homeless on the streets. Many people will say that these factors cause more hardship than good in our society and civilization. Whereas most of this is true in some regards one must also look at the aspect of the huge number of people that are brought in due to gambling casinos.The gambling casinos bring in huge amounts of revenue into the city, which also helps small business people and provides tremendous numbers of people a good job. Additionally, many state and government agencies receive quite a bit of money in tax revenue from the gambling casinos. This helps pay for services that the Government provides this in a sense that normally would not You can see where that's going, right? Niche marketing. Long tail theory, by that name or any other, has been one of the driving forces behind internet marketing for some time now. People in the IM community have been doing their market research in hopes of finding potentially lucrative smaller markets that one can mine for profits more efficiently than the massive area of the body. Yes, running a series of "boutique sites" can be more profitable than trying to take on eBay or Wal-Mart.com. No kidding. What does this have to do with hiring an SEO content writer? Good question. Here's the thing: We can apply long tail theory to search engine results, too. If you take a popular keyword, log the searches made containing that keyword, and graph the results you are going to get something a graph similar to the one we just discussed. There is going to be a mass of searches just for the keyword and obvious 2-3 word phrases using the keyword. Then, you are going to have a precipitous decline for searches using other strings that will result in a long, flowing tail. So, you can fight for that traffic in the body, but it's going to take some work. There's a lot of competition in the body. You can also start mining the long tail for traffic. How? One of the best ways is content--and lots of it. If you hire someone to handle your SEO content writing and to generate a series of pieces on "widgets," that content is assuredly going to produce strings containing the very kind of things for which those long tail searchers are looking. Here's an additional perk--even if you are not sold on the long tail idea, the content itself still helps with respect to marketing to the larger body. There is no forced compromise. Well-written content will serve both needs simultaneously. An entry at a popular SEOMoz.org blog noted: "In the long tail of keyword searches, the great value comes from having hundreds or thousands of unique, valuable content pages written on a niche subject. The millions of completely unique search terms that hit the engines each day help to bring in traffic that a purely 'designed' strategy could never receive." Blackbeard SEO said that having a nice long tail the "hidden secret of blogging" and makes a strong argument for content as a means of long tail access with respect to blogs: "So how do you hit the long tail for your site? Well, there are a few tricks that can help you, but realistically it’s simply a matter of how much content is on your site. The more you post to your blog the longer tail (keyword-wise) your site will have. Now, I’m not saying that you should post a bunch of crap posts to a blog, but a blog that has 1000 posts will have a much longer tail than a blog with 100 posts. That is why most blogs don’t make a whole lot of money for the first 6-12 months. It takes a lot of time to write enough content that a blog starts to have a really long tail." NetBaldwin noted that constantly updated content regarding one's primary keywords and related topics is important to tapping into the long tail: "To capture searchers through the Long Tail, a web site must include content that is consistently updated. And that content must go beyond the primary focus/purpose of the web site while also being (somehow) related." Big deal, right? After all, those types of searches are few and far between. They don't represent a real traffic flow. That may be true if you look at them individually, but as a group, they produce a great deal of traffic. And the more content you have, the greater likelihood you have of snagging good placement for many searches located within the long tail. USWeb, the outfit behind Blogitive, noted: "Try to imagin You - Your Appearance - Your Profession - and Your Selection or Rejection 's a lot of competition in the body. You can also start mining the long tail for traffic.You…Your Appearance…Your Profession…and Your Selection or RejectionIntroductionIt might look strange but it is a fact that your looks or appearance does affect your career or profession…it does (To an extent) affects the selection or rejection of your candidature. You might argue that it’s the knowledge and experience of the candidate that is important and I agree with you. It is knowledge and experience that is important and that’s the way it should be.You might have read that in last election Tony Blair spent close to 5 million pounds on his beauty parlor…no his looks and appearance. Similar was the issue raised in USA during the last election when Hillary Clinton’s opponent talked about her cosmetic surgery. It is a well known fact the people who look good get a mileage and they do really well in their career … compare to those who are not that good looking. Yes, exceptions are there. How? One of the best ways is content--and lots of it. If you hire someone to handle your SEO content writing and to generate a series of pieces on "widgets," that content is assuredly going to produce strings containing the very kind of things for which those long tail searchers are looking. Here's an additional perk--even if you are not sold on the long tail idea, the content itself still helps with respect to marketing to the larger body. There is no forced compromise. Well-written content will serve both needs simultaneously. An entry at a popular SEOMoz.org blog noted: "In the long tail of keyword searches, the great value comes from having hundreds or thousands of unique, valuable content pages written on a niche subject. The millions of completely unique search terms that hit the engines each day help to bring in traffic that a purely 'designed' strategy could never receive." Blackbeard SEO said that having a nice long tail the "hidden secret of blogging" and makes a strong argument for content as a means of long tail access with respect to blogs: "So how do you hit the long tail for your site? Well, there are a few tricks that can help you, but realistically it’s simply a matter of how much content is on your site. The more you post to your blog the longer tail (keyword-wise) your site will have. Now, I’m not saying that you should post a bunch of crap posts to a blog, but a blog that has 1000 posts will have a much longer tail than a blog with 100 posts. That is why most blogs don’t make a whole lot of money for the first 6-12 months. It takes a lot of time to write enough content that a blog starts to have a really long tail." NetBaldwin noted that constantly updated content regarding one's primary keywords and related topics is important to tapping into the long tail: "To capture searchers through the Long Tail, a web site must include content that is consistently updated. And that content must go beyond the primary focus/purpose of the web site while also being (somehow) related." Big deal, right? After all, those types of searches are few and far between. They don't represent a real traffic flow. That may be true if you look at them individually, but as a group, they produce a great deal of traffic. And the more content you have, the greater likelihood you have of snagging good placement for many searches located within the long tail. USWeb, the outfit behind Blogitive, noted: "Try to imagin Freelance Writing - Draw on Your Personal Experiences stically it’s simply a matter of how much content is on your site. The more you post to your blog the longer tail (keyword-wise) your site will have. Now, I’m not saying that you should post a bunch of crap posts to a blog, but a blog that has 1000 posts will have a much longer tail than a blog with 100 posts. That is why most blogs don’t make a whole lot of money for the first 6-12 months. It takes a lot of time to write enough content that a blog starts to have a really long tail."Freelance writing success relies, of course, on writing skill, but it also requires that you find the right story to titillate that editor. Here are some ways to come up with the right freelance writing idea. This could even be the foundation for a new business, since there is so much demand today for good writers.The first place to look for freelance writing topics is within. Your personal experiences can make great fodder for article ideas. Nearly every magazine has a personal essay section, and more of them have an opinion page as well. Your local newspaper may welcome a guest column on a subject that is both timely and from the perspective of someone who has personal knowledge of the subject matter.Weekday morning shows such as The Today Show and Good Morning America can give you some ideas for freelance writing topics. While they're both focused primarily on national or international issue NetBaldwin noted that constantly updated content regarding one's primary keywords and related topics is important to tapping into the long tail: "To capture searchers through the Long Tail, a web site must include content that is consistently updated. And that content must go beyond the primary focus/purpose of the web site while also being (somehow) related." Big deal, right? After all, those types of searches are few and far between. They don't represent a real traffic flow. That may be true if you look at them individually, but as a group, they produce a great deal of traffic. And the more content you have, the greater likelihood you have of snagging good placement for many searches located within the long tail. USWeb, the outfit behind Blogitive, noted: "Try to imagine the type of impact 1,000 targeted terms have on long tail. Suddenly your site is visible for all sorts of terms that you would have never thought of. "To make matters even better, there's reason to believe these long tail searchers are actually more likely to buy than those targets within the body. These people are conducting more detailed searches than those who are just typing "widgets" into Google and cruising around aimlessly. They’re searching with a purpose. If you run a website, you can certainly see the benefit of covering the long tail, especially if the best route of doing that also assists efforts in the body, as well. The bulk of the search population--which contains your potential traffic--is hanging out in the long tail. Using a freelance SEO content writing firm to produce great content for your site can help bring them to you.
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