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Suggest You - Do Search Engines Like Your Web Site?
The Seven Secrets of Great Customer Service o your other pages.Copyright 2006 Cari HausThere’s a new sub shop in town, and their service—and food—are exceptional. We live in a small town with limited options, so the first thing I did after trying this recently arrived spectacular fare was tell the next five people I saw. I wasn’t really trying to be a walking billboard, it just came naturally.That, of course, is what every thinking business person wants to have customers do for their business. What could be a more effective mar This can happen if you have 'rollovers' as your navigation - for instance, pictures that change colour or appearance when you hover your mouse pointer over them. The JavaScript code that makes this happen can be convoluted enough for the spiders to ignore it rather than try to find links inside. If you think your rollovers are blocking your site from being Strategic Planning – The 2 Gaping Pitfalls Between 75% and 98.8% of visitors to Web sites come from searches made at search engines. If you're going to get high levels of traffic - and hence the levels of ROI you're looking for - it's very important that the search engines can access all the information on your Web site.80% of successful businesses have strategic plans for their organization. Even then, Strategic Plans can be less effective, even become superfluous due to two significant errors that even large corporations may make. The first is YOU, whether you are the owner, CEO or the Executive Team. The second is doing Check Ups on the plan after it’s implementation.The absence of YOU in the processIt doesn’t matter whether this is for a one person company or for a large corporat Do the search engines know about all of your pages? You can find out which pages on your site the search engines know about by using a special search. If you search for 'site:' and your Web site address, the search engine will tell you all of the pages on your Web site it knows about. For example, search for: site:webpositioningcentre.co.uk in Google. Yahoo or MSN Search, and it will tell you how many pages they know about. If the search engines haven't found some of the pages on your Web site, it is probably because they are having trouble spidering them. ('Spidering' is when the search engine uses an automated robot to read your Web pages.) Spiders work by starting off on a page which has been linked to by another Web site, or that has been submitted to the search engine. They then read and follow any links they find on the page, gradually working their way through your whole Web site. At least, that's the theory. The problem is, it's easy to confuse the spiders - especially as they are designed to be wary of following certain kinds of link. Links which confuse spiders If your links are within a large chunk of JavaScript code, the spider may not be able to find them, and will not be able to follow the links to your other pages. This can happen if you have 'rollovers' as your navigation - for instance, pictures that change colour or appearance when you hover your mouse pointer over them. The JavaScript code that makes this happen can be convoluted enough for the spiders to ignore it rather than try to find links inside. If you think your rollovers are blocking your site from being s Identity Theft - Is Your Business At Risk? earch engines know about by using a special search. If you search for 'site:' and your Web site address, the search engine will tell you all of the pages on your Web site it knows about.More and more business owners are purchasing document shredders then ever before.Why?... Identity theft for starters.A new law is going into effect in the summer of 2005 which states that if you employ anyone for any reason and have personal information on file regarding that individual for Social Security taxes, credit references, etc., you will have to destroy that information on any document before you toss it into the trash.The law requires you to destroy al For example, search for: site:webpositioningcentre.co.uk in Google. Yahoo or MSN Search, and it will tell you how many pages they know about. If the search engines haven't found some of the pages on your Web site, it is probably because they are having trouble spidering them. ('Spidering' is when the search engine uses an automated robot to read your Web pages.) Spiders work by starting off on a page which has been linked to by another Web site, or that has been submitted to the search engine. They then read and follow any links they find on the page, gradually working their way through your whole Web site. At least, that's the theory. The problem is, it's easy to confuse the spiders - especially as they are designed to be wary of following certain kinds of link. Links which confuse spiders If your links are within a large chunk of JavaScript code, the spider may not be able to find them, and will not be able to follow the links to your other pages. This can happen if you have 'rollovers' as your navigation - for instance, pictures that change colour or appearance when you hover your mouse pointer over them. The JavaScript code that makes this happen can be convoluted enough for the spiders to ignore it rather than try to find links inside. If you think your rollovers are blocking your site from being Franchise Expansion Thru Regional Team Manager Agreements ges on your Web site, it is probably because they are having trouble spidering them. ('Spidering' is when the search engine uses an automated robot to read your Web pages.)One potential marketing strategy for franchisors is to set up two-year agreements with star franchisees to assist in the expansion of regional areas without selling those areas a master franchises. In doing so the franchisor can have more control over the marketing of new franchises and say over which territories and agreements will be entered into, without giving up any control.The fee structure could be a percentage of franchise fees in each sale and a percentage of royalti Spiders work by starting off on a page which has been linked to by another Web site, or that has been submitted to the search engine. They then read and follow any links they find on the page, gradually working their way through your whole Web site. At least, that's the theory. The problem is, it's easy to confuse the spiders - especially as they are designed to be wary of following certain kinds of link. Links which confuse spiders If your links are within a large chunk of JavaScript code, the spider may not be able to find them, and will not be able to follow the links to your other pages. This can happen if you have 'rollovers' as your navigation - for instance, pictures that change colour or appearance when you hover your mouse pointer over them. The JavaScript code that makes this happen can be convoluted enough for the spiders to ignore it rather than try to find links inside. If you think your rollovers are blocking your site from being Influence Management - Your Fast Track to Greater Impact - Part 3 heir way through your whole Web site.In Parts 1 and 2 of this article series, we examined four points of influence, including the word w“Because,” Reciprocity, Contrast, and Pointing out the Negatives, and what you can do as a business leader to use them to your advantage. The points of influence outlined in this conclusion to the series are Consistency and Association.ConsistencyWhen an individual takes a position, he or she will defend their belief whether it is right or wrong. Have you ever been in a At least, that's the theory. The problem is, it's easy to confuse the spiders - especially as they are designed to be wary of following certain kinds of link. Links which confuse spiders If your links are within a large chunk of JavaScript code, the spider may not be able to find them, and will not be able to follow the links to your other pages. This can happen if you have 'rollovers' as your navigation - for instance, pictures that change colour or appearance when you hover your mouse pointer over them. The JavaScript code that makes this happen can be convoluted enough for the spiders to ignore it rather than try to find links inside. If you think your rollovers are blocking your site from being What to Look For in an Ebook Publisher o your other pages.For authors considering an alternative to print publication for any reason - be it a desire for more creative control, faster turnaround on production, or a desire to experiment with a new medium - it is important to research an eBook publisher as closely as one would a print house. Despite the stigmas placed on the industry, most eBook publishers are legitmate businesses interested in producing quality literature for sale. If an eBook publisher gains a reputation for poor editing a This can happen if you have 'rollovers' as your navigation - for instance, pictures that change colour or appearance when you hover your mouse pointer over them. The JavaScript code that makes this happen can be convoluted enough for the spiders to ignore it rather than try to find links inside. If you think your rollovers are blocking your site from being spidered, you will need to talk to your Web designers about changing the code in to a 'clean link' - a standard HTML link, with no extra code around it - that is much easier for the spiders to follow. Links like these will look something like this: Page addresses to avoid Spiders will also ignore pages if they don't like the URL (the address needed to find the page). For example, a Web site that has URLs containing several variables can cause spiders to ignore the page content. You can spot pages like these as they have a ? in them, and &, for instance: http://webpositioningcentre.co.uk/index.php?page=12&cat=23&jib=c This URL has three variables, the parts with the = in them, between the ? and &s. We find that if a page has one variable, or even two, the top search engines will spider them without any problems. But if a URL has more than that, often the search engines will not spider them. Spiders particularly avoid URLs that look like they have 'session IDs' in them. They look something like this: http://webpositioningcentre.co.uk/index.php?page=12&id=29c8d7r2398jk27897a8 The set of numbers and letters do not make much sense to humans, but some Web sites use them to keep track of who you are, as you click through their Web site. Spiders will generally avoid URLs with Session IDs in them, so if your Web site has them, you need to talk to the people who developed the site about re-writing it so they do not use these IDs, or at least that you
HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
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