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Casual Articles - How To Check If Google Has Indexed Your Site
Learn About The Exciting World Of School Fund Raising ndexed. You can click on ‘link to‘ to see who’s linking to your site and so on (a tool that I would recommend you use to find out who’s linking to your site is MarketLeap’s Link Popularity Check at http://www.marketleap.com/publinkpop/. It’s free to use and very useful indeed).Most schools these days are under funded and many programs have been cut out because of lack of finances. When a school doesn't have funds for all the needs that are required to offer a variety of programs that can reach our children at all levels of interest, creative funding is necessary. School fund raising is a way of raising needed funds to continue programs that have been cut because of lack of money. In today’s society where our young people are met with all kinds of temptations, the need for different social activities that are mo Let’s just try clicking on Google’s cache and see what pops up. What you’ll see is a bit of information that Google tells you about when it last indexed your site and at what time. Tip: Those ‘in the know’ ab Does Google Know You're There? PageRank and More If you own a website or a blog, or both, you’d probably want Google to know you exist. I mean, Google knew YouTube existed and copped it for a whopping $1.6 billion dollars. I’m sure you could do with, half of that kinda cash lying around somewhere. So to get there, you need to get your site or blog indexed in Google as a starting point.You’ve done everything in your power to get Google’s attention. Now how do you know when the Googlebot (www.google.com/bot.html), Google’s web-crawling robot, has come calling? Of course, if your site starts appearing in Google results, you can rest easy knowing Google is hip to you.But otherwise, it’s not particularly obvious when the Googlebot arrives, investigates, and leaves your site. With a little simple research, however, you can figure out what parts of your site Google is and – and more importantly – isn’t finding Note: I know many of you still have problems getting indexed in Google for your site or blog. I will cover that topic in future. How To Check If Google Has Indexed My Site
Google shows a few clickable links which you can click to get more information about your site. You will see a link to Google’s cache of your URL. A cache is a copy of the page that Google indexed. You can click on ‘link to‘ to see who’s linking to your site and so on (a tool that I would recommend you use to find out who’s linking to your site is MarketLeap’s Link Popularity Check at http://www.marketleap.com/publinkpop/. It’s free to use and very useful indeed). Let’s just try clicking on Google’s cache and see what pops up. What you’ll see is a bit of information that Google tells you about when it last indexed your site and at what time. Tip: Those ‘in the know’ abo Searching The Web strong>Google, Yahoo, MSN, Alta Vista and so much more… There are so many search engines out there today that we sometimes don’t know which one is the best, or which one we should use.The reality is, Google is the dominating search engine and it didn’t beat Yahoo for nothing. Google was the first to implement a conversion ratio together with click price in order to rank pay per click websites.Every time you search on Google, ads appear on the right side of the page. Every time you click an ad like this, you are making Google money
Google shows a few clickable links which you can click to get more information about your site. You will see a link to Google’s cache of your URL. A cache is a copy of the page that Google indexed. You can click on ‘link to‘ to see who’s linking to your site and so on (a tool that I would recommend you use to find out who’s linking to your site is MarketLeap’s Link Popularity Check at http://www.marketleap.com/publinkpop/. It’s free to use and very useful indeed). Let’s just try clicking on Google’s cache and see what pops up. What you’ll see is a bit of information that Google tells you about when it last indexed your site and at what time. Tip: Those ‘in the know’ ab Dispute Resolution; Competing With Other Franchisees og (bet ya didn’t know General Motors’ had a blog, did ya?). Why General Motors as an example? I just like the color of its site. If you are in a franchise and have a territory dispute with another franchisee you need to prevent a lawsuit use dispute resolution techniques to resolve the dispute. Competing with other franchisees is a subject that franchisors would prefer not to need to talk about. This is a real problem for some types of franchises. For instance mobile service businesses and home based franchises.There is really no reason for you to sneak into fellow franchisees’ territory to market or to do services. There is plenty of work in your territor Google shows a few clickable links which you can click to get more information about your site. You will see a link to Google’s cache of your URL. A cache is a copy of the page that Google indexed. You can click on ‘link to‘ to see who’s linking to your site and so on (a tool that I would recommend you use to find out who’s linking to your site is MarketLeap’s Link Popularity Check at http://www.marketleap.com/publinkpop/. It’s free to use and very useful indeed). Let’s just try clicking on Google’s cache and see what pops up. What you’ll see is a bit of information that Google tells you about when it last indexed your site and at what time. Tip: Those ‘in the know’ ab Let's Get Physical your site is indexed, what you’d probably like to do next is find out, how much Google really knows about it. So, type in info:http://www.yoursite.com or, info: followed by any of the other URL variations I mentioned above. That should bring up a page which looks something like this:A lot of companies have gotten it right in the digital realm, only to drop the ball once you meet them on the physical plane. People show up to shop and retailers don't always have a good grasp of what to do with them.You walk into a store and human assistance is in short supply. And, you find, the store layout doesn't make sense to you. Probably designed by some engineer who has no idea about how the customer experience works.Wine stores are a great example. Now, I like wine and read a lot about it. So, I have a grasp of th Google shows a few clickable links which you can click to get more information about your site. You will see a link to Google’s cache of your URL. A cache is a copy of the page that Google indexed. You can click on ‘link to‘ to see who’s linking to your site and so on (a tool that I would recommend you use to find out who’s linking to your site is MarketLeap’s Link Popularity Check at http://www.marketleap.com/publinkpop/. It’s free to use and very useful indeed). Let’s just try clicking on Google’s cache and see what pops up. What you’ll see is a bit of information that Google tells you about when it last indexed your site and at what time. Tip: Those ‘in the know’ ab List Building-Top 5 Techniques for Massive Growth ndexed. You can click on ‘link to‘ to see who’s linking to your site and so on (a tool that I would recommend you use to find out who’s linking to your site is MarketLeap’s Link Popularity Check at http://www.marketleap.com/publinkpop/. It’s free to use and very useful indeed).List building is the backbone of any marketers’ arsenal. To effectively grow online, you must have a list, and that list must be responsive.Therefore, there are two aspects to work on.The first aspect is growing a list, and all things being equal, the bigger the better. But when the focus is only on building a bigger list, it is easy to forget about responsiveness and allow just anyone to subscribe. When one builds a list just for the sake of the numbers, responsiveness often goes down.The second aspect, of course, Let’s just try clicking on Google’s cache and see what pops up. What you’ll see is a bit of information that Google tells you about when it last indexed your site and at what time. Tip: Those ‘in the know’ about search engine optimization takes advantage of Google’s cache feature to have it spider their sites regularly. Here’s how you can do the same: If you have a whole lot of pages on your site, Google’s bots will never usually index all of it in one go. It will spider your site a bit at a time and return to index some more. What you do is check Google’s cache a few times over a few days to see how often Google’s bots ‘pays homage’ to your site. Once you get an idea of its frequency, update your content before Google’s bots returns. Do this regularly enough, and Google’s bots will understand that your site is one that is regularly updated. What happens then is the bots will keep a regular schedule of visiting your site. Taking advantage of this fact, place a link in your site or blog (now knowing fully well when Google is coming over for a visit), that points to your own product page, which could be a direct response web site or an order page (these sites hardly rank well in Google because of its lack of content). This sends a surge of traffic from your blog (which is now regularly visited by Google) to your product’s website (hardly visited by Google). That’s traffic you never had to pay for. There’s a lot to search engine optimization than meets the eye, but it is vital to anyone doing business online to understand it. I’ll be covering more on this topic along the way and pointing you to resources that will keep you well up-to-date on how to keep you sites highly ranked and bringing in steady traffic. Copyright 2006 Kevin Singarayar. All rights reserved.
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