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    Columbus Voyage a Tribute to Diversity
    Arranging for the voyage was a long process for Columbus as he tried to find funding in Portugal, Italy, and Spain. The journey was planned by a committee in Lisbon, Portugal. Led by Joseph Diego Mendes Vezinho, a Jewish scientist that later converted to Christianity, a nautical plan was developed using newly created star charts and maps developed by Muslim navigators.The diversity continued when it was time to fund the trip. Columbus sought finances from several sources eventually finding success with King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella of Spain. They did not agree to fund the trip until Luis de Santangel developed a successful plan. King Fedinand had ordered all Jews and Muslims convert to Catholicism or leave Spanish soil. Santangel, a Jew, converted under this decree. He compiled the funds using an endowment, uncollected penalties owed by the City of Palos, and his own personal funds. The mona
    ed to be more important when an actual person reads the contact.

    When we made the changes on our web site based on Heather's comments, it was the new title tags and the new content specific headlines on each page that made all the difference. These new headlines and new title tags attracted the spiders perhaps for the first time in a long time and when they saw how the individual tags connected to the page's content they took them more seriously than before. This was a simple, although time consuming, process and immediately we began to see traffic to pages that never even shown up before.

    Heather's Tip No. 6: Include key phrases in and around your hyperlinks.
    By now everyone knows about Google's pagerank system. In a nutshell it means that the search engines are now giving us "credit" for inbound links. They have a complex and unknowable process for weighting them based on the value of the web site from whom we are linked as well.

    In ad

    How To Write A Killer Sales Letter
    I sit down and look at my notebook. Then, I put myself into the ‘zone’.That’s how I start to write web copy that sells.Whether you agree with me or not, your web copy will determine whether your product’s going to sell online or not.Simple reason. In an offline sales pitch or presentation, you get to interact with your prospect. You get to touch him. He gets to see you personally.But not online. No, no, no. It all depends on the words on your site. See how powerful words are?I’m not saying I’m a guru at web copy. There are many other copywriters who are far better than me. Many. But I’ve written my own web copy and it’s selling. And at the same time, I’ve been hired to write for others.Keep on reading on how I write killer web copy and you can pick up any of the tips.The first part to write a copy, you MUST be in the ‘zone’.What the heck is the ‘zone’
    Heather Lloyd-Martin's presentation about successful search engine copywriting was held on the second day of the 2006 Search Engine Strategies conference in New York.

    By then I had concluded that I would focus my comments (in all my stories) on the needs of mainstream established companies-since those are the people I know the most about.

    We have many many articles written for others, such as Internet entrepreneurs, in the Selected Newsletter Articles section of our web site.

    Therefore, I listened to what Heather and all the other presenters had to say from the perspective of those folks primarily involved in a traditional Main Street businesses with an Internet component.

    What I found most refreshing was that her ideas "just made sense". No rocket-science required. And since I had heard her in 2001, we had already taken advantage of some of them and know they work.

    Heather's Tip No. 1: Brainstorm keyword phrases.
    This is important since the specific words and phrases that most accurately identify your products or services are likely to be different from the generic ones your web site designer would use. Who knows more about your products, your business, and your customers than you (and your staff)or your web site designer?

    Plus, as search engines become increasingly sophisticated, more complex descriptions are possible to connect you with more targeted searchers. The closer you connect with your prospect at this point the more likely what you actually have to offer will match with what they are specifically searching for. Time spent here is time well invested.

    Heather's Tip No. 2: Research your key phrases using trusted research tools.
    Naturally this assumes that you actually take this important step. For me this has always been a stumbling block - costing me rankings, I'm sure.

    In the past I assumed that I knew what keyword phrases people are using, instinctively without testing to be sure. The result was time, energy, and money spent to optimize keyword phrases that were "just slightly wrong", shooting myself in the foot before I got started.

    Actually, it was after hearing Heather in 2001 that I began to see the light and use search tools such as Wordtracker (www.WordTracker.com) and now the Google AdWords keyword selection tool before optimizing the page.

    Heather's Tip No. 3: Choose two or three key phrases their highly specific to each page.
    After hearing this tip (again) we made some simple changes that, within two weeks, made a dramatic difference in the traffic on our web site. We had 200 pages of what had originally been an ebook. Each page had identical meta tags and other code.

    By going back and optimizing each page around the specific keyphrases already on them the search engines are now seeing them individually. The result is that each page is, to a greater or lesser degree, generating new search traffic.

    Heather's Tip No. 4: Include key phrases throughout your text, not just in the first couple of paragraphs.
    Everyone "knows" that the search engine spiders enter your page from the top. Conventional wisdom was to put your keywords and keyphrases toward the top of your page. The result may have made your page look good to the spiders but not to the actual people who you want to be reading it. Now that we know that spiders zip through our entire site we have the freedom to insert the phrases where they fit best, where they make the most sense, and where they enhance the readability of our web site.

    Heather's Tip No. 5: Include key phrases in your headlines and some headlines. In some ways spiders are like humans. What gets emphasized attracts their attention. Headlines, sub-headlines, and bold faced type are considered to be more important by the spiders in the same way that they are considered to be more important when an actual person reads the contact.

    When we made the changes on our web site based on Heather's comments, it was the new title tags and the new content specific headlines on each page that made all the difference. These new headlines and new title tags attracted the spiders perhaps for the first time in a long time and when they saw how the individual tags connected to the page's content they took them more seriously than before. This was a simple, although time consuming, process and immediately we began to see traffic to pages that never even shown up before.

    Heather's Tip No. 6: Include key phrases in and around your hyperlinks.
    By now everyone knows about Google's pagerank system. In a nutshell it means that the search engines are now giving us "credit" for inbound links. They have a complex and unknowable process for weighting them based on the value of the web site from whom we are linked as well.

    In ad

    5 Tips To Starting An Online Business
    Everyday, people all over the world, make money running a business on the Internet. The Internet is a great way to start a business with little to no money. The following five steps will provide some suggestions on getting your online business started.1. Register a website. This is the only expense that you will initially have and it’s worth every penny. This is vital to giving your online business a professional feel and for less than $10 a month you can register a web address and get the pages hosted. 2. Create a blog. A blog is short for web log. It’s an online journal of sorts that anyone can read and comment on. Some bloggers make over $100,000 a year by ad revenue. The most common source of ad revenue is Google. The easiest way to start a blog is through Blogger.com which is owned by Google and completely free. 3. Build your own industry specific news group. For
    is important since the specific words and phrases that most accurately identify your products or services are likely to be different from the generic ones your web site designer would use. Who knows more about your products, your business, and your customers than you (and your staff)or your web site designer?

    Plus, as search engines become increasingly sophisticated, more complex descriptions are possible to connect you with more targeted searchers. The closer you connect with your prospect at this point the more likely what you actually have to offer will match with what they are specifically searching for. Time spent here is time well invested.

    Heather's Tip No. 2: Research your key phrases using trusted research tools.
    Naturally this assumes that you actually take this important step. For me this has always been a stumbling block - costing me rankings, I'm sure.

    In the past I assumed that I knew what keyword phrases people are using, instinctively without testing to be sure. The result was time, energy, and money spent to optimize keyword phrases that were "just slightly wrong", shooting myself in the foot before I got started.

    Actually, it was after hearing Heather in 2001 that I began to see the light and use search tools such as Wordtracker (www.WordTracker.com) and now the Google AdWords keyword selection tool before optimizing the page.

    Heather's Tip No. 3: Choose two or three key phrases their highly specific to each page.
    After hearing this tip (again) we made some simple changes that, within two weeks, made a dramatic difference in the traffic on our web site. We had 200 pages of what had originally been an ebook. Each page had identical meta tags and other code.

    By going back and optimizing each page around the specific keyphrases already on them the search engines are now seeing them individually. The result is that each page is, to a greater or lesser degree, generating new search traffic.

    Heather's Tip No. 4: Include key phrases throughout your text, not just in the first couple of paragraphs.
    Everyone "knows" that the search engine spiders enter your page from the top. Conventional wisdom was to put your keywords and keyphrases toward the top of your page. The result may have made your page look good to the spiders but not to the actual people who you want to be reading it. Now that we know that spiders zip through our entire site we have the freedom to insert the phrases where they fit best, where they make the most sense, and where they enhance the readability of our web site.

    Heather's Tip No. 5: Include key phrases in your headlines and some headlines. In some ways spiders are like humans. What gets emphasized attracts their attention. Headlines, sub-headlines, and bold faced type are considered to be more important by the spiders in the same way that they are considered to be more important when an actual person reads the contact.

    When we made the changes on our web site based on Heather's comments, it was the new title tags and the new content specific headlines on each page that made all the difference. These new headlines and new title tags attracted the spiders perhaps for the first time in a long time and when they saw how the individual tags connected to the page's content they took them more seriously than before. This was a simple, although time consuming, process and immediately we began to see traffic to pages that never even shown up before.

    Heather's Tip No. 6: Include key phrases in and around your hyperlinks.
    By now everyone knows about Google's pagerank system. In a nutshell it means that the search engines are now giving us "credit" for inbound links. They have a complex and unknowable process for weighting them based on the value of the web site from whom we are linked as well.

    In ad

    How Do You Make Gold Online Without A Database?
    That is a great question!We all know by now that the long term success for having an online business comes from building and maintaining a database, and selling to the people on it again and again, right?But what if (like me) you're too impatient to wait until the list is big enough to make lots of money from?Our success has come from looking outside the square and trying to identify markets and ideas that aren't currently being utilised to their full potential.Plus we don't let anything stand in our way, and will bulldoze through the so called hurdles.We didn't have a big list when we started on the Internet so we decided to find someone who did!What we did is put ourselves into the position where we were able to meet people who had what we were looking for, and seeing how we can help them, before we asked them to help us.People don't j
    instinctively without testing to be sure. The result was time, energy, and money spent to optimize keyword phrases that were "just slightly wrong", shooting myself in the foot before I got started.

    Actually, it was after hearing Heather in 2001 that I began to see the light and use search tools such as Wordtracker (www.WordTracker.com) and now the Google AdWords keyword selection tool before optimizing the page.

    Heather's Tip No. 3: Choose two or three key phrases their highly specific to each page.
    After hearing this tip (again) we made some simple changes that, within two weeks, made a dramatic difference in the traffic on our web site. We had 200 pages of what had originally been an ebook. Each page had identical meta tags and other code.

    By going back and optimizing each page around the specific keyphrases already on them the search engines are now seeing them individually. The result is that each page is, to a greater or lesser degree, generating new search traffic.

    Heather's Tip No. 4: Include key phrases throughout your text, not just in the first couple of paragraphs.
    Everyone "knows" that the search engine spiders enter your page from the top. Conventional wisdom was to put your keywords and keyphrases toward the top of your page. The result may have made your page look good to the spiders but not to the actual people who you want to be reading it. Now that we know that spiders zip through our entire site we have the freedom to insert the phrases where they fit best, where they make the most sense, and where they enhance the readability of our web site.

    Heather's Tip No. 5: Include key phrases in your headlines and some headlines. In some ways spiders are like humans. What gets emphasized attracts their attention. Headlines, sub-headlines, and bold faced type are considered to be more important by the spiders in the same way that they are considered to be more important when an actual person reads the contact.

    When we made the changes on our web site based on Heather's comments, it was the new title tags and the new content specific headlines on each page that made all the difference. These new headlines and new title tags attracted the spiders perhaps for the first time in a long time and when they saw how the individual tags connected to the page's content they took them more seriously than before. This was a simple, although time consuming, process and immediately we began to see traffic to pages that never even shown up before.

    Heather's Tip No. 6: Include key phrases in and around your hyperlinks.
    By now everyone knows about Google's pagerank system. In a nutshell it means that the search engines are now giving us "credit" for inbound links. They have a complex and unknowable process for weighting them based on the value of the web site from whom we are linked as well.

    In ad

    Physician Assistant Jobs
    While we know exactly the role played by a physician, who is a physician assistant (PA)? Is he one who simply assists a physician in his or her clinic? A PA can be defined as one who is licensed to practice medicine under the guidance of a physician. This guidance, in most cases, need not be direct or on site as in the physician's clinic or hospital. It can also be available for a PA who wants to practice in remote areas that are far removed from major towns and cities. PAs can treat patients and, in most states, prescribe medicine. In some states they are authorized to prescribe controlled medications like narcotics or those drugs that can have harmful side-effects if taken without proper analysis or study.In surgical practices, PAs can also serve as first assists. They provide medical services that are reimbursed under Medicare and third-party insurance. Physician assistants and nurse practitioners
    ee, generating new search traffic.

    Heather's Tip No. 4: Include key phrases throughout your text, not just in the first couple of paragraphs.
    Everyone "knows" that the search engine spiders enter your page from the top. Conventional wisdom was to put your keywords and keyphrases toward the top of your page. The result may have made your page look good to the spiders but not to the actual people who you want to be reading it. Now that we know that spiders zip through our entire site we have the freedom to insert the phrases where they fit best, where they make the most sense, and where they enhance the readability of our web site.

    Heather's Tip No. 5: Include key phrases in your headlines and some headlines. In some ways spiders are like humans. What gets emphasized attracts their attention. Headlines, sub-headlines, and bold faced type are considered to be more important by the spiders in the same way that they are considered to be more important when an actual person reads the contact.

    When we made the changes on our web site based on Heather's comments, it was the new title tags and the new content specific headlines on each page that made all the difference. These new headlines and new title tags attracted the spiders perhaps for the first time in a long time and when they saw how the individual tags connected to the page's content they took them more seriously than before. This was a simple, although time consuming, process and immediately we began to see traffic to pages that never even shown up before.

    Heather's Tip No. 6: Include key phrases in and around your hyperlinks.
    By now everyone knows about Google's pagerank system. In a nutshell it means that the search engines are now giving us "credit" for inbound links. They have a complex and unknowable process for weighting them based on the value of the web site from whom we are linked as well.

    In ad

    Can Newbies Make Money With Ewen Chia’s Cash Machine?
    Make money on line with Affiliate Programs and New Cash Machine. When looking online for a business to work from home, with little to no cash investment a person will almost always run across affiliate programs. These are programs that different companies offer to help promote their products and increase sales, with out costing them anything up front to do it. You essentially become a sales person for that company or that product, your commission depends on you making a sale. This is a legitimate business, it is possible to be a great success with it, but affiliate marketing is not easy. However, Ewen Chia has come up with a program, the Newbie Cash Machine, that he proclaims is what all “newbies” to internet marketing need in order to be successful. The real question is “Can newbies make money with Ewen Chia’s Cash Machine?”Ewen Chia has been in internet marketing for ten years. So there is some cre
    ed to be more important when an actual person reads the contact.

    When we made the changes on our web site based on Heather's comments, it was the new title tags and the new content specific headlines on each page that made all the difference. These new headlines and new title tags attracted the spiders perhaps for the first time in a long time and when they saw how the individual tags connected to the page's content they took them more seriously than before. This was a simple, although time consuming, process and immediately we began to see traffic to pages that never even shown up before.

    Heather's Tip No. 6: Include key phrases in and around your hyperlinks.
    By now everyone knows about Google's pagerank system. In a nutshell it means that the search engines are now giving us "credit" for inbound links. They have a complex and unknowable process for weighting them based on the value of the web site from whom we are linked as well.

    In addition, when the links themselves are contextual, rather than just the base URL more weight is added. When there is an interest from a trade association or other reputable source to link to our web site, we encourage them to use the contextual link, in order to maximize the benefit of the link they create.

    Heather's Tip No. 7: Include least to 250 words per page.
    As I said earlier, the longer keyword search phrases being used make it more likely that the searcher reaches the specific products on your web site that they're looking for, if you have enough content in which to place this keyword phrases.

    Again using our recent experience, pages with an average of 600 words (this one has 1,250), are being greedily consumed by the search engine spiders. I don't actually know how many people are searching our content but I'm confident that those who do so are doing it based on a large body of relevant material. What I do know is that inquiries are getting more relevant all the time - which is better for us and the searcher.

    Heather's Tip No. 8: Include keyphrases in your title (the blue bar above every web page).
    I'm no expert but like I said before this just makes sense. I remember a time, back before I heard Heather in 2001, that all of all our pages said "iBizResources.com" across the top. Until then I had no idea what we were missing. Now all of them identify the content on that particular page and is directly related to the keyphrases included in the page or articles headline. Simple but powerful.

    Heather's Tip No. 9: Never sacrifice your conversion goals for search engine positioning.
    For me and for you she saved the best for last. The reason we have our web site is to provide relevant, actionable, and transferable strategies from office and our contributors to you. The copywriting is for people like to, not search engine spiders.

    Nevertheless we have to recognize their importance. It is up to them to put our content in front of you - so we have to balance the two. As a business person your objective is to expand your reach beyond your normal marketing area, to increase your market share and to increase the value of every contact. That's why you head of a web site.

    So, when you are taking advantage of Heather's tips tools and strategy don't forget it's the people that write the checks not the search engine spiders.

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