Tuesday, September 4, 2007

DEVELOPER

Hi all
Now i am a developer . Now I am working on ASP.net . But I have still interesest in SEO so i am updating this.

Tuesday, July 31, 2007

SMO BLOGS to read

http://social-media-optimization.com/2007/07/social-media-questions-for-lee-odden-part-2/

http://www.leemccoy.co.uk/index.php // a cool blog

http://www.watblog.com/?content=detail&id=932

http://www.blogopreneur.com/

http://www.inaminuteago.com/mindtracks

http://ypnblog.com/blog/2007/07/09/optimizing-for-social-media/

http://blog.arhg.net/2007/06/yahoo-try-again-to-define-smo.html

http://www.creeper-seo.com/

http://ray963.spaces.live.com/Blog/cns!8ECAFEC9BD4D5C45!212.entry

http://www.seoscribe.com/?p=21

http://www.socialmediablog.co.uk/

http://newmediaetc.blogspot.com/2007/07/social-media-optimization-tips.html

http://www.dailyblogtips.com/101-blog-tips-i-learned-in-2006/

http://rohitbhargava.typepad.com/weblog/2006/08/5_rules_of_soci.html

101 Blog Tips

  1. if you are not, start blogging today
  2. write about something that you love
  3. if you are serious about blogging buy your own domain
  4. make sure your domain name is equal to your blog name
  5. use a short and easy to remember name
  6. use Wordpress
  7. use Wordpress plugins
  8. blog with consistency
  9. write at least 5 posts a week
  10. proofread
  11. proofread one more time
  12. interact with other bloggers
  13. leave meaningful comments
  14. leave funny comments
  15. leave the first comment
  16. backup your blog
  17. get rid of the sidebar calendar
  18. choose your niche wisely, not too big and not too small
  19. participate in online forums
  20. put a link on your signature
  21. use blog carnivals
  22. content is king
  23. customize your blog template
  24. use trackbacks
  25. simplicity is the way to go
  26. leverage social bookmarks
  27. join a blog network
  28. write “Top 10″ lists
  29. use tags
  30. use pings
  31. write “How to” articles
  32. make your posts scannable
  33. list your blog on directories
  34. ask questions to your readers
  35. use Feedburner
  36. use sense of humor
  37. be generous
  38. encourage readers to subscribe
  39. have some spare posts for emergencies
  40. encourage readers to digg your posts
  41. put an RSS subscription icon on every single page
  42. use “series” of posts
  43. return comments
  44. return links
  45. use readable fonts
  46. gather .edu and .gov backlinks
  47. break long posts in more parts
  48. experiment with different revenue sources
  49. write “pillar articles”
  50. use Google Analytics
  51. study those numbers
  52. use email interviews
  53. be yourself
  54. avoid duplicate content
  55. use an RSS reader
  56. read as much blogs as possible
  57. focus on timeless content
  58. have an “About” page
  59. have a picture of yourself on the “About” page
  60. crate your own “Advertise Here” page
  61. use meta tags wisely
  62. learn the basics of SEO
  63. use pictures whenever possible
  64. create value for your readers
  65. place ads wisely
  66. be patient
  67. consider getting a co-blogger
  68. submit your articles to directories
  69. share what has worked for you
  70. share what has not worked for you
  71. read Problogger.net
  72. do not clutter your sidebar with icons
  73. get rid of looooong blogrolls
  74. experiment with Google Adsense
  75. experiment with Text-Link-Ads
  76. link to other blogs as often as possible
  77. make it easy for visitors to contact you
  78. use titles effectively
  79. offer email subscriptions
  80. always answer to questions
  81. always answer to comments
  82. use Technorati
  83. enable subscription to comments
  84. offer useful tools or resources
  85. write with a personal touch
  86. become an expert on your niche
  87. do not rely on “linking posts”
  88. always give your opinion
  89. use simple colors
  90. participate in blogging projects
  91. get to know other bloggers personally
  92. list your best articles
  93. have a voice
  94. organize your categories
  95. talk directly to your readers
  96. make your URL structure efficient
  97. put functional links on your footer
  98. mention your sources or references
  99. do monthly roundups
  100. consider adding podcasts
  101. create a “101 list”

Social Media Optimization (SMO) vs. Social Media Marketing (SMM)

SMO refers to the process of refining a website (optimizing it) so that it’s awareness and content are easily spread through social mediums and online communities by users and visitors of the website. This can include anything done “on-page” such as improving the design and usability of the website so that it becomes more compelling to users, in an effort to help them spread it through social media sites. The simplest example of SMO is represented by all the “digg this” and “add to delicious” icons and links that are all over the web today.

SMM on the other hand plays more of an active role in relation to social media by referring to the creation and distribution of content and other messages through the social web by some form of viral marketing. This can be anything from creating compelling content that gets bookmarked and even hits digg’s homepage to spreading a viral video by putting it on YouTube and other social media websites. It’s about the things that are done off-site, for example, participating in online communities where your customers hang out would be an active role that falls under SMM.

SMO - Social Media Optimisation - Introduction

The Basics:

  • Backlinks (Websites that link to your site)
  • Traffic (Visitors to your site, for this post, we will exclude search engines from this term)
  • Branding (Basically a service, product or even a concept that you can distinguish from the many others)
  • Community Interaction (Interact with other users online throughout the globe, gathering feedback, ideas, responses)

Ever heard the terms SMO or Social Media mentioned? Where does it fit into the grand scheme of things? How do I benefit from using it? What does it exactly do? How do I start?

Tagging

This is done once you submit “content” to any community site, such as YouTube, MySpace, Flickr, etc. The “content” may be anything from a video clip, audio, Podcast, article or a small review of something. Once you have almost completed the process of submitting your “content”, you are able to add Tags (labels) that are meant to be related to the “content you have submitted. These help to identify the “content” you have submitted, and make it searchable to other users within the site. This can be done anonymously, or by creating yourself a profile within the site, preferably create a profile when you are looking at this from a SMO point.The profile will allow you to interact with other members within these sites. Higher “ranked” profiles within these sites will hold more weight on the “content” they submit, meaning it will be more accessible to other members, even “rank” slightly higher. To sum up, tagging, is basically labelling your “content”.

Digging

Not the best word to describe this, but possible the easiest way to understand (South Africans, even surfers will possibly understand easier, with the word being used as slang for “like”). Sites such as Digg, Technorati, etc. The basic idea of this, is that you submit your “content” where other community members may “Digg” your “content”, i.e., vote for it. The more votes your receive the higher the rank for the “content” and the chances of it appearing within the front page of the site, in a featured section, which will allow almost everyone visiting to see your “content” and view it, which in theory provides you with more traffic. Users are also able to make comments about the “content” submitted.

Blogs

Possibly the easiest way to enter into the online social community, allowing you to have your own “online diary” as I would describe, where you can literally write about anything you want. Blog about new industry happenings, release news about new company services, etc. Readers are also allowed to post comments about each post, providing feedback = community interaction. For the average website owner, a Blog is a means in which to add content online that you would normally not on your business website, a small rant about services within the industry, personal reviews on certain things, etc. which in the SEO field would provide a link back to your website, helping it within the search engines, even as another source for visitor referrals.

Social Networking/Community Sites

There are a fair number of these sites out there such as YouTube, MySpace, Flickr just to name a few, each with there own little unique twist appealing to certain people. YouTube is more your online video sharing site, MySpace providing you with your own online profile about yourself, allowing you to add friends and post messages to them within your friends list. Flickr, more of a photo sharing site. Within all these sites you are able to create your own unique profile, with a nickname, and communicate with people all over the world. Sharing news, ideas, chatting and getting feedback on certain ideas, etc. With a MySpace profile you are able to create bulletins, which when posted are seen on all your friends bulletin boards for them to click, read, follow, visit, and send replies = Community Interaction, time consuming for some. There are many of these sites available, with no limit to how many you can join, and they are absolutely free to join and use, just trend lightly according to the Terms of Conditions, when you have the sudden urge to start “spamming”.

Conclusion

If you are indeed interested in making use of Social Media, having a website is not enough. You will need to ensure that the content on your site is easily accessible and distributable on the web. Providing the 3rd party scripting to create links that allow others to “Digg” or even Blog about the “content” within a few clicks is a start.

Provide “content” that will appeal to users; be ready for the negative feedback. Users are fickle, what they like as “hot and happening” now, could be hated within a matter of hours. Social Media communities are also not a perfect system, as the can be misused by others, even scammers. It also allows you to gain feedback from community members to products, services to pro’s even con’s. Ultimately offering you a chance to increase brand awareness, previously only for those companies with vast amounts of money to spend on advertising, etc.

P.S.

Remember that SMO compliments your online marketing strategy, SEO, the same as the way PPC and SEO compliment each other. Using all of these will provide you with an all round online marketing solution. The online world changes each day, so I’ve tried to keep the above as down to basics as possible with regards to SMO, there are so many other opportunities available when it comes to Social Media, that covering them all would be extensive, and they change so quickly, it would be old within a matter of days, the basics are usually a stepping stone for greater things.

Social Media Optimization

Social Media Optimization
Social media optimization refers to making a web site or blog more adaptable to social media. It involves adding compelling, dynamic and fresh content on a regular basis—stuff like tip sheets, how-to’s, white papers, podcasts or videos can be especially sticky, can get more links to and help drive better ranking among search engines and specialty sites such as Technorati or Blogpulse. Other examples of SMO include the implementation of links to social media web sites to make tagging, sharing book marks (del.icio.us, Add to MyYahoo!), and voting for content (Digg, Reddit, Netscape) by visitors easier.

Top 25 SEO Blogs

I love rankings, what can I say. After I published the “Top 25 Blogs About Blogging” list I thought that someone would replicate it for the SEO sphere. But no one did, so here we go again.

This list was made using pretty much the same algorithm (only small modifications were made, mainly due to the fact that SEO blogs are more popular). Once again the list should be useful because it is based on objective factors. There are many “Top SEO Blogs” lists around the web, but most of them are based on the preferences of the author.

The Top 25 SEO Blogs list, instead, ranks the blogs according to their Google Pagerank, Alexa rank, number of Bloglines subscribers and Technorati authority. Each factor has a score from 0 to 10, and the maximum score for each blog is 40. Details about the algorithm can be found below the table.



#1 Search Engine Land
7 10 9 10 36
#2 SEOBook 6 10 10 10 36
#3 SEO Moz 5 10 10 10 35
#4 Matt Cutts 7 10 8 10 35
#5 Search Engine Watch 7 10 10 7 34
#6 Search Engine Roundtable 7 10 8 8 33
#7 Search Engine Journal 7 8 9 8 32
#8 Online Marketing Blog 6 7 7 10 30
#9 Pronet Advertising 7 7 5 10 29
#10 Marketing Pilgrim 7 8 6 8 29
#11 SEO Chat 6 10 4 6 26
#12 Search Engine Guide 7 8 4 6 25
#13 SEO Blackhat 6 8 6 5 25
#14 Stuntdubl 6 6 6 6 24
#15 Graywolf’s SEO 6 7 4 7 24
#16 SEO by the SEA 6 4 5 5 20
#17 Link Building Blog 5 5 5 4 19
#18 Jim Boykin 5 6 4 4 19
#19 SEOpedia 6 5 4 4 19
#20 DaveN 6 5 4 4 19
#21 Bruce Clay 5 7 3 3 18
#22 Blue Hat SEO 4 6 3 4 17
#23 Tropical SEO 5 5 3 4 17
#24 SEO Refugee 5 6 1 3 15
#25 Small Business SEM 5 4 3 3 15




Blogs considered: the list considers only blogs that have a high percentage of SEO-related content. Topics might range from SEO news coverage to general SEO discussion and link building.

Google Pagerank (0 to 10): the actual Pagerank was used on the algorithm.

Alexa Rank (0 to 10): Ranges were determined based on the Alexa Rank (i.e., 100k and up, 80k-100k, 60k-80k, 40k-60k) and each range was assigned a number (1 to 10).

Bloglines Subscribers (0 to 10): Subscriber ranges were determined (i.e., 1-50, 50-100, 100-150, 150-300) and each range was assigned a number (1 to 10).

Technorati Authority (0 to 10): Ranges were determined based on Technorati’s Authority rank (i.e., 1-125, 125-250, 500-750,750-1000) and each range was assigned a number (1 to 10).

SEO Donts - Things NOT to do for SEO

1. Don't take the SEO spam seriously which you see in classifieds or get in your email. There's no need to submit to 5,000 search engines or 5000 directories. It's unlikely you can buy 2,000 quality
links for $30. No serious SEO can guarantee a number one position
on any search engine for relevant keywords. A trusty and serious SEO does not need to send out SPAM-mails and does not rely on fantasy-promises to get potential customers.

2. Don't wait too long with SEO implementation . Whether you just
launched a new site or whether you're upgrading your current web site, SEO
considerations should be made in advance. This also includes keyword research to plan your site around certain keywords. And not tweaking it afterwards.

3. Take your time deciding to hire a SEO. Hiring a SEO is something which should take time since you dont want the first best SEO coming along your way. Remember: It's your business!. Online marketing can make or break a company, chosing a service should need lots of research. And: Feel free to ask questions before you consider a SEO firm.

4. No content-spreading across several domains. There are
times when sub-domains or an extra domain will make sense. But always know
the pros and cons of using sub-domains and additional domains.

5. Submitting your URL to search engines is a waste of time. The bots and crawlers, Google, Yahoo, MSN et al. will find your web site anyway as soon as your links are established. Search Engine submission is overrated and basically really not needed.

6. Never have your web site uncrawlable. A wrong robots.txt file, having session IDs or too many variables
in your URLs, an incorrect and non-followable navigation menu, having your web site all in Flash, all graphics etc. are defintly big NOs when it comes to search engine optimization.

7. Dont use too general keywords. I see it way too often that people target keywords like "myspace", "shoes", "hosting" or similiar highly searched and general keywords. No way on earth is there even a remote chance for those sites to rank great for those terms. Use three- or four-letter words, do keyword research and target specialized keywords with some ok-to-good search volume and low competition. The "best" keyword is NOT the most searched for on the web, but the one giving you a realistic chance of rankings.
keyword stuffing - this one is tasty tho

8. No keyword stuffing. Stuffing keywords in META tags, Image-ALT Tags etc. This should be
obvious. Google is not easily fooled. Putting "Microsoft Windows" fifty
times in your tags does not make you rank higher than Bill for a search
on "Microsoft Windows".

9. No keywords in the page footer which blind-in with the background and no hidden text. Again, together wth keyword-stuffing this is just as pathetic and wont bring you anything. As a bonus you will get a nice Google penalty - if you're unlucky it might even get your site banned.

10. No same title element on every page. Avoid repetitions as good as you can. This is especially important for page-titles. Google has an eye on page-titles. So your unique content should also have unique page titles across your web site.

12. Don't let www.example.com and example.com resolve to one home page. To a search engine those are two separate addresses -meaning you
would have the same, duplicate content at two seperate addresses.

12. Poor Usability. Proper and logical site navigation and descriptive texts are important. Not only for your users - also for the search engine spiders. Write and design your site with the human in mind - not the google spiders. Again: Google is not easily fooled and a site which is good for your people will also suit the spiders and therefore your SEO.

13. Never give up creating content because you think
that you don't need it for your site or your customers would not be not interested in it. There's always room for great and new content. People in particular love TOP-Lists and similiar where they can bookmark and always come back to. Don't get lazy. Content is still king.

14. Don't go for low-quality links with unrelated sites just "to have links". Some immediately start trading links with every site they can find. For the sake of quality link you can forego low-quality link-trading with sites which have nothing to do with your product or service. You might get a huge number of links, yes, but in the long run this will rather hurt you. Focus on related sites and high quality. Be patient. Be choosy !

15. Not alway the same anchor text on all links to your web site. That's what is called "unnatural link building". The best way to build links is with varying anchor-texts and not automated by directory-submission to 1000s of directories using the same text. Every dummy can do this from certain web pages or using certain tools in a matter of minutes. Google, again, is not that stupid. Go it slow and build quality links and rather do a few manual high quality ones with different descriptions. No high volume repetive automated submitted links.

16. No links all over forums, blog comments To a certain amount this is spamming. There's nothing wrong to do this in moderation. But there are better ways to just leave your links all over the net. Example: Article writing and submission.

17. Obsession with keyword density. We all know we need our keywords in the page title, meta tags, body text etc....but obsessing over keyword density and trying to "tweak" it to perfection is pointless. If there is an "exact formula" we all would use it. There is none.

18. No Obsession over Google PageRank. Page Rank does not really have any real life value except telling you whether a
page is stored in the main or supplemental index and giving

The Top 10 Things You Should Know Before You Blog

It's been widely covered that weblogs are a viable way to build brand awareness and establish an individual's expertise in a particular area. "For a small business, [a weblog] is a perfect low-cost positioning-yourself-as-an-expert tool," notes Debbie Weil, the publisher of WordBizReport and Debbie's Blog, as well as author of an upcoming book on corporate blogging for Penguin Portfolio (2006). But what hasn't been covered is how to actually take the leap?

In essence, when you begin to blog, you're publishing your own work. You're making a statement to an enormous audience that will shine a spotlight on your company and your credibility as an expert. With so much at stake, building a weblog into your marketing arsenal can seem intimidating.

To help lessen the anxiety you might feel about blogging, we went out to three experts in the field to uncover the top 10 things you should know before you blog. These tips should help better prepare you for writing and maintaining a weblog for your business.

  1. A weblog is a two-way conversation, not a top-down communication medium.
    As a boss, you're in a natural leadership role -- generally, you talk and people associated with your company listen. When you're blogging, the dynamic is different. Your audience is infinitely larger, and the conversation you start will take on a life of its own. "You need to ask yourself, 'Am I willing to engage people without controlling the conversation in a top-down kind of way?'" says Paul Chaney, president of Radiant Marketing Group, a business blog consulting firm. Readers will build on your thoughts, and, gasp, may even criticize them. You need to be able to accept feedback in stride. Besides, a little criticism might lead to a topic you might want to discuss in a future posting. Even better, it could lead to such tangible outcomes as better solutions, products, and strategies for your business.

  2. It takes time to blog, maybe more than you're willing to devote.
    Consistency and frequency are the keys to building an audience on the Web. If you're using a weblog to build brand recognition or establish yourself as an expert, you need to be sure that you're blogging frequently. "I advise business owners to blog at least twice a week," says Anita Campbell, a former CEO and editor of the daily blog Small Business Trends. "If you don't do it at least twice a week, the blog can quickly look stale," she adds. This is not to say you have to sit down to write 500-word posts two or three times a week. "Better a couple of sentences three times a week than one blog a week," suggests Weil.

  3. Find out what others are saying about you and your business.
    Get a head start on your weblog by first discovering what others, maybe even competitors, are saying about your industry, your business, even you. "Get the pulse of what is being said to determine whether you can speak to that particular issue or put forth a message that can set you apart," suggest Chaney. "If you're in a competitive space where other companies are blogging, you can monitor that and then come up with a strategy that's more intelligent than just throwing stuff out there," he adds. Chaney suggests using blogpulse to search the most up-to-date listings of weblog postings about your company and industry.

  4. Yes, you do need to be able to write.
    But you don't have to be Ernest Hemingway. "If you can write a coherent e-mail, you can write a blog entry," Weil says. Pay attention to proper grammar -- you don't want to sound illiterate, and try to have fun with it. "The writing style should be informal, as if you're speaking to someone in an e-mail," Weil suggests. And if you don't feel like you have a distinctive voice, just give it some time. It will emerge eventually.

  5. Practice can make perfect. Or, at least make you more comfortable with blogging.
    Some owners might shudder at the thought of writing so publicly. But it doesn't have to be "show time" right out of the gate. You can experiment before you go public. Put comments on others' weblogs or do a weblog behind the scenes. "Open up a Typepad account, use it for free, and don't make it public," suggests Weil. Keep it private for a while or put it behind a firewall. "Get at least ten entries in there and have colleagues comment on them," she adds. Feedback from people you trust can help build your confidence. Likewise, the exercise could reveal you just don't like doing it. Better to learn this now rather than after you've made your blog intentions public.

  6. Some topics are verboten.
    Remember, you're blogging for your business, so stay away from anything that could throw prospective and current customers into a tirade. Campbell generally advises against blogging about the following topics: sex, race/ethnic bias, religion, politics, and too much patriotism. The patriotism one is especially sensitive because of the global nature of the Internet, according to Campbell. "Anyone can come to your website from any country," reminds Campbell. "While you can be patriotic, you don't want to do it at the expense of someone else's nationality."

  7. Be sure to know your keywords.
    Blogs can help customers find your business when they are searching on Google or other sites. Therefore, it's important to know: What words do customers most often use to find you via the search engines? What words show up in competitor or industry blogs on a regular basis that help place them high in Google's index? Knowing which words to drop into your posts on a regular basis will help boost your search rankings. "Small businesses get more search engine benefit from blogs than larger businesses," Campbell says. After all, your marketing budget probably is a fraction of what GE will spend this year. Writing frequently and dropping keywords into your posts to help boost your search standings can go a long way for a business owner on a tight marketing budget. But don't overdo it. Readers will see right through any obvious attempts at self-promotion.

  8. It will take longer than you think to build awareness -- and a following.
    Don't expect your weblog to be an instant hit. Traffic to it and building a following will take a while to develop. "You will find you need to give at least a three- to six-month commitment, updating routinely [to get noticed]," Chaney says. And Weil suggests at least one year. Whether its three months or a year, you need to be committed for the long haul, regardless of feedback, or lack thereof, from readers. "You're not going to be found after a couple of weeks," says Weil. It will take at least several months before the major search engines and other bloggers and websites find you.

  9. Know your confidentiality limits. "Don't write anything you don't want your competition to know about," Campbell says. When you're blogging, it's easy to get caught in the moment and share your coolest ideas and best strategies. But you need to think of your weblog as any other writing communication you do for your business. Before you write, ask yourself whether your topic will compromise your position in the market, or compromise your position as leader of your company. If an employee or competitor shouldn't hear it, then it shouldn't be in your weblog.

  10. Know why you're blogging.
    Sounds like common sense, but stating why you've decided to start a weblog can quickly put into perspective what you expect to get from it. "You shouldn't be doing it just because it's the latest trend," Chaney says. You need to determine how the weblog will serve your organization: Will its primary purpose be to build brand awareness? Do you want to establish yourself as an expert in a field to better highlight your company's expertise? Will it be used to simply alert people to company news and information? Are you more interested in using it as an internal vehicle for updating employees? Knowing what you're setting out to do with your weblog will help define what you'll write about -- and keep you focused on your primary effort.

Once you know the ropes, blogging is easy -- and fun. It's an opportunity for you to establish meaningful conversations with potential and existing customers. And it offers you a instant platform to share your knowledge and expertise with the world at large.

Training a New SEO

One of the interesting challenges in managing an SEO company is training new people to be top notch SEOs. I find that this is the easiest way to expand the size of the business. After all, SEOs are in scarce supply, and many of the best have their own SEO companies already. Here are 8 aspects of training an SEO generalist to consider when taking on this training task:

  1. A good SEO has both business / marketing skills and technical skills. SEO inherently involves an understanding of the technical details of a site's implementation, but it's also a marketing activity. Quality SEOs know that they are only a component of the marketing picture for a web site, and they understand that there are compromises that will be made from time to time due to other aspects of the client's needs.
  2. Make sure your SEO in training has an entrepreneurial personality. SEOs are always going to be ask to deal with a wide variety of different problems, and need to be flexible and adaptable.
  3. Pick an initial area of focus. There are hundreds of things to learn in the SEO field. Don't bury the person at the start. Let them focus on and master a specific area.
  4. Start slow. Don't give them 5 clients to work on at once. Get them going on a single client, and help them to be successful with that client.
  5. Realize that your workload on that first client will go up. Training people is hard work, and you still need to make sure that the work gets done correctly for the client (first priority!). So in addition to doing almost the same amount of work, you will also be spending time educating your SEO in training. It might be the 3rd client or so before you get a net gain.
  6. Have all their work on the first 2 or 3 clients go through you. The client comes first. This will also give you the most visibility into what they have learned so far, and that they haven't
  7. Be patient. It's easy to under-appreciate the complexity of SEO. No single aspect of SEO is hard. What makes it hard is that the search engines keep their algorithms secret so knowledge is experience based, there are so many different details to learn, and the nature of search is constantly evolving.
  8. Lastly, in contrast to the title of this post, don't think about creating SEOs, think about creating web marketers. The mission is to increase site traffic for your client, and there is more than one way to do that these days (consider social media for example).

Other Cool SEO SITE

www.seoglossary.com
http://www.webconfs.com/15-minute-seo.php // All abou SEo
http://www.seochat.com/c/a/Choosing-Keywords-Help/How-to-Effectively-Choose-Your-Web-Sites-Keywords/ // A cool forum to read
http://www.regimages.com/showlink.asp?PageIndex=3&Category_id=88&Ordertype=0 // Site to submit article
http://www.seo2020.com/seo-articles/article-sites.html // Web site where u can submit aricle
http://forums.digitalpoint.com/showthread.php?t=315153 // To submit directory
http://forums.digitalpoint.com/showthread.php?t=63771 // To Submit article
http://directory.google.com/Top/Computers/Internet/On_the_Web/Weblogs/Directories/ // to submit blog dir
http://www.seobook.com/glossary/ // A cool forum to SEO
http://onlinemusicdownload.blogspot.com/ // My music Blog

SEO SITES TO READ

Hi
These are SEO sites To read.

http://info.vilesilencer.com/main.php?rock=seo-friendly.php
http://www.webproworld.com/viewtopic.php?t=64841
http://www.seomoz.org/article/beginners-guide-to-search-engine-optimization

Here you can Find all Information SEO.

About me

Hello all
My name is Anil Yadav. I am currently working as a SEO in Comet conversion Noida. I am a postgraduate(MCA).


I belongs to Shikohabad, near Firozabad(A famous City for Its glass work .)

HELLO

Hi
This is my Personal Blog. I start this to share all my reading and Searching material from Internet.