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Shoemoney - Skills To Pay The Bills

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PostLinks – Effective, update proof back links to your website

Posted: 12 Jul 2012 11:04 AM PDT

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This is a post about an amazingly effective link network I have been playing with.

A word on buying links: Google years ago realized how powerful services like this are and does not favor link buying. However, we have never had a problem in using paid links. With that being said, when you are using these kinds of services to boost your site in search engines please ensure that these kinds of links are not the ONLY kind of link your site has. 

They have a publisher network of over 10,000 bloggers that are daily indexed by Google and have an average pagerank of 3. These are real websites and real bloggers.

When you buy a link with PostLinks you need to create a profile of the page you want the link to goto. Then you choose if you want the link in the context of a post or a comment. The comment thing to me was a new feature that I had not seen. Unlike other commenting services this one uses a no follow approved comment on a bloggers blog with your specified anchor text.

Another neat feature PostLinks offers is they let you specify how quickly to build the links. You can choose to add as many per day as you want.

They also have a Article Posting service which a lot of people say is very effective but, I have yet to mess with that yet.

We have been using the service on some content affiliate sites and they have survived every Google update since we started using the service. (Panda, Penguin).

PostLinks also has an API so you can offer a white-label solution to your clients. From what I hear this is powering a LOT of the new “buy links” websites that are popping up.

Trust me this site is worth checking out. They offer the whole 30 day free trial for 1000 link credits and the best part is they won't even ask you for your credit card or PayPal information up front.

So, after the 30-day trial if you decide not purchase your trial links then you simply let your account and links expire and you will not be charged.

I reached out to them this morning and asked them for a special bonus we could offer our readers. They said for the next couple days they would give ShoeMoney readers a 25% bonus when they upgrade to a paid account AND $10 worth of article credits. In order to receive this promotion please email info@postlinks.com with “ShoeMoney Promotion” as the subject line or please check out the site below and get start!

Check it out=>> http://www.shoemoney.com/specialpostpromotion

Trying to increase your Google rank that is like no other?

Why SEOs Engaging in Negative SEO Deserve to be Outted

Posted: 12 Jul 2012 07:23 AM PDT

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Negative SEO has been getting more and more buzz lately.  Despite years of Google insisting that there is nothing a competitor can do to hurt your site, good SEOs know that is a bunch of crap.  While some negative SEO campaigns are little more than competitors buying loads of sketchy links and pointing it to your site, some are a lot more sophisticated than that (but that is a post for another day!)

While negative SEO has been a dirty little secret for a couple of years now – and yes, some very well respected SEOs who claim to be completely white hat HAVE engaged in negative SEO against their competitors – the number of websites caught up in Google's aggressive updates this year who had been victims (or claim to be victims due to their own SEO screw ups) of negative SEO has gone up dramatically.  And of course, some of those SEOs are doing it simply because their own SEO can't compete with that of their (or their client's) competitors, and they believe they won’t be caught.  And a word to the wise, if you think you won’t leave a footprint behind your negative SEO campaign, think again.

Throw into the whole negative SEO arena the fact that Matt Cutts commented at SMX Advanced about allowing webmasters to disavow links to combat people pointing bad links to competitor's sites, and then Bing actually launching their own disavow link tool, it is a real problem not just affecting the most competitive spaces (which was where it was most often seen in years past) but in less competitive spaces too.  Yes, even spaces where a halfass skilled SEO should be able to get the job done without resorting to a negative SEO campaign are getting hit.

But really, targeting a negative SEO campaign against a competitor as not much above someone hacking a website, database or WordPress blog or adding spyware to trigger an unsafe site warning.  Those doing negative SEO are the sleazy used car salesman of the industry and are lower than pond scum.  Just because someone can't cut it in the market for themselves or their clients doesn't mean they have the right to screw over some innocent webmasters.  Basically, they aren't real SEOs but merely the scourge of the industry that gives the good SEOs a bad name.

Cleaning up from a negative SEO campaign, if you are unfortunate enough to be targeted, is a real challenge and will have you cursing every SEO who has ever done it.  If you can even manage to contact sites where links are pointed at you, chances are it will cost you a pretty penny to get them removed – if you can get them removed at all.  And even worse if the links are from hacked WordPress blogs, forums or CMS sites because people will also assume you are engaged in hacking.  And an unsafe warning for spyware?  That can have a huge detrimental effect to your website, because getting it out of an unsafe site purgatory with Google or antivirus companies can be a real pain in the ass to do, and it usually cannot be fixed immediately, even if you happen to notice it right away.  And in case you are wondering, negative SEO can go well beyond someone just buying a load of spammy links and having them point to your site.

Many in the search industry have a policy of not outing spammers, or at the very least, only outing big brands for spamming.  But do those engaging in negative SEO really deserve to be protected by the code of silence?  Or should they be strung up by their heels if they get caught?  I know I speak for many when I say throw any and all SEOs engaging in negative SEO under the bus  (even though I also know some of them have also participated in that very thing for some of their clients, but I digress.)

If someone is willing to engage in such high risk practices that screw over a competitor, they deserve to be outed so long as there is proof – just as Josh Davis managed to unearth Iacquire was behind a paid link campaign, webmasters have definitely been able to identify those behind some negative SEO campaigns.  And those people deserve to be outted as the scum they are.

What do you think?  Have you been able to identify parties behind a negative SEO campaign targeting you or a client and were any of them notable names/companies in the SEO industry?  And do you think those involved in negative SEO should be outted or have you outted them somewhere?

Looking for an SEO service that won’t get you banned?

Outrank Your Competitors Faster with These New SEO Tools - DailyBlogTips

Outrank Your Competitors Faster with These New SEO Tools - DailyBlogTips


Outrank Your Competitors Faster with These New SEO Tools

Posted: 12 Jul 2012 05:53 AM PDT


A couple of weeks ago I got an email from the CEO of a company called cognitiveSEO. I knew they offered a set of SEO tools, but I had never used or tested the tools personally. The CEO gave me a live demo of what the tools could do, and I was impressed, so much that I decided to test the tools myself.

The first thing you’ll notice is that the user interface is really polished, and there are some useful features that you rarely find on similar sites, like the option to create bookmarklets on your browser and to use those to analyze the current website or page you are visiting.

After playing around a bit I tested the “Backlink Report” tool. It gives you a complete view of the backlink portfolio of a specific page or of a domain name. You’ll get details like the total number of links, the authority of the page/domain according to various sources, a cloud with the anchor text terms, the authority of the incoming links and so on. The cool thing is that you also have access to all the individual links, as you can see on the image below:

This seo tool will even track when the link was first found, whether it’s nofollow or dofollow, and the IP address of the linking website.

Next I decided to create a campaign, which is how you manage your activities inside the suite. You basically create one campaign for each website you want to improve the rankings, and while you add a new campaign you’ll be able to add the URL of your competitors, whether you want the tool to track new backlinks to your and so on. You’ll notice that it takes a while to create the campaign, but that’s because the tool will go and crawl on-demand all the links that it can find for your site and your competitors.

Once your campaign is ready to go, you have four sections to explore: Inboud Link Analysis, Link Management, Rank Tracking and To dos.

The Inboud Link Analysis section will give you all the backlink data, in a similar fashion to the Backlink Report, but with much more data. However in this section you have the option to compare your backlink portfolio with that of competitors, as you can see on the image below:

One cool thing you can do with the Link Analysis tool is to identify websites that have been punished with Google’s Penguin update. Here is a video case study on how you can actually do this.

You also have the ability to filter the links. For instance, you can select only links that were tracked over the past 3 months, that have a ranking authority of at least 3 and that are coming from blogs. So basically you can perform detailed research to understand why your site or that of a competitor is gaining or losing rankings over a certain period of time.

The Link Management section is where you go to manage and grow your backlinks. The tool automatically tracks all new links, as well as the existing ones to make sure they are still online. There’s even a preview tool that let’s you see on a small thumbnail exactly where your link appears on the website that is linking to you. You can also compare your performance with competitors here.

The Rank Tracking section allows you to input keywords you want to track, and it will keep a time line of your rankings, as well as that of competitors. You’ll notice that the graphics are really elaborate and customizable. All the tracking is done on a daily basis, in all the 3 big search engines (Google/Bing & Yahoo).

Finally the To-Do section is where you can schedule tasks, co-ordinate efforts with your partner or other members of the team and so on.

As a feedback to the creators of this toolset, I would love to see more modules added in the future. Social stuff and On Page reporting will be great add-ons to the toolset.

If you are planning to take your SEO to the next level I would take a look at cognitiveSEO. The pricing is pretty affordable (starts at $19 per month), and the set of tools you’ll get are among the best in the market, so check it out.

Wanna make money with your website?


Original Post: Outrank Your Competitors Faster with These New SEO Tools