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  • Casual Articles - Everflux - Google Phenomena Explained

    Are You in a Dead End Job?
    Some people believe that they are in a dead end job. This is rather ironic actually because there is no such thing as a dead end job nevertheless their friends, family or even their own negative biofeedback has convinced them that they are in a dead end job.Why do I state that there are no dead in the jobs? Because there are not; in fact many people in many large corporations started out in the mailroom. I remember I started out washing other peoples aircraft and detailing their cars.Yet I am not alone, in fact did you know that the CEO and CFO of Enterprise Rent-A-Car both started out washing cars at the enterprise Rent-A-Car lots and today they are running the company, which is one of the largest privately held companies in the world.There are numerous examples of people who started out at the bottom of the totem pole and made it all the way to the top and CEO position; so many folks who had made it through the ranks. It is amazing that people that are working in the jobs at the bottom do not see the possibility for upward mobility.Instead they do things halfway and do not give 110% in everything they do. If they did they would stand above the rest and quickly be promoted. The more they try and the harder they work, the more they will succeed. Perhaps you should think of this if you
    f us, myself included, get lazy or just copy and paste pages and forget to change the title - Google's software sees all that and does not forgive. Make use of the old-fashioned < h > tag, that is the "Header" tag. Google considers it to be polite to have paragraph headings. Don't use images for titles, or anything text.

    Google does not care about your images and does not consider a page full of images to be useful - they put a lot of emphasis on good old text. Use the description tag (read about Meta Tags if you don't know what I'm talking about) and the keyword tags. Do not keyword-spam, do not use gateways, do not hide text (you know, white text on white background). Basically, play nice, a-la late 90s pure HTML websites. If all this is too complex, hire a SEO consultant at the very least. An analogy is the stock market. If you know what you're doing, you know what you're doing - basically, you follow the rules and play nice. If you don't know what you're doing, yes you can dabble, but most people have an adviser to avoid the ups and downs of the market shift. In the Google world, we call this shift Everflux.

    3. Conclusion - don't be scared of the big bad Everflux

    Even if you don't own and/or design and/or run your own website, it's interesting to see how all the information collected by humanity over centuries is put into place inside a so called index of indexes. It is interesting to see how the exponential increase in information that has to be indexed presents real challenges to a process that started as a mere science experiment and evolved into a cultural phenomenon. It is also interesting to see how the people at the steering wheel deal with such challenges and the creative solutions they come up with in order to tame the information overload monster that can literally eat it all, if unle

    Job Hunting Tips -- Interview Preparation -- Part 2
    The first part of this article discussed the necessity to research the company background, the industry competitors and the industry trends before attending a job interview. In this, the second part, we will focus on the preparation required to communicate at an optimum level with the interviewer.1) Determine the questions you are likely to be askedYou need to put yourself in the mind of the interviewer, acting on behalf of your prospective future employer before attending the job interview. This will give you the best chance of being prepared to answer all the questions. It will also reduce the chance of being ‘floored’ by a question that you hadn’t even considered before.Key questions that you shouldn’t have any problem answering include, “Why do you want to work here”, “Where do you see yourself in five years time”, “What do you think are the key skills for this job” and “What key skills would you bring to this job”. You need to practice pre-prepared answers to these questions until they sound natural, believable and confident.Next, you need to think about questions that you are likely to be asked that relate to the existing or future politics within the organization. For instance, if the original entrepreneur that started the business runs the company, then the interviewer may try and f
    1. Introduction - about Google

    Unless you are a web surfer in the true meaning of the concept, if you are reading this, I am almost certain that you know Google. Or, you think you know Google. You are probably aware that Google is a "search engine", that almost 80% of the internet searches in the world are done through Google. If you are a metro- or uber-geek, you probably know that the term "to google" became part of the English language, as in "she googled her high school boyfriends". And if you are really, really on top of things all trivia and have Wikipedia as your browser's home page, you might even know that the name "Google" is a play on the word "Googol", which was coined by Milton Sirotta, nine-year-old nephew of U.S. mathematician Edward Kasner in 1938, to refer to the number represented by 1 followed by one hundred zeros. But here's one piece of geek trivia that you might not know: The "Google" spelling is also used in "The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy" by Douglas Adams, in which one of Deep Thought's designers asks, "And are you not," said Fook, leaning anxiously forward, "a greater analyst than the Googleplex Star Thinker in the Seventh Galaxy of Light and Ingenuity which can calculate the trajectory of every single dust particle throughout a five-week Dangrabad Beta sand blizzard?"

    2. Everflux - what is that?

    Some obscure "Glossary of SEO terms" (SEO = Search Engine Optimization) defines the Everflux as "An anomaly by which pages can quickly appear and then disappear in Google page rankings. Usually occurs to newly added webpages."

    Basically, Everflux refers to the constant change in Google's Search Engine Results Pages (SERPs), while Google constantly scours the web looking for “minty fresh” content, changing their index accordingly.

    In plain English, occasionally, ranks go up or down randomly, link popularity is completely lost, pages that have been indexed for years just vanish and are nowhere to be found in Google and other similar Outer Limits phenomena. Most people whose income depends proportionally on their potential customers' ability to find them via a Google search, may think their business is destroyed, they are ruined, and I can clearly see why.

    According to forums at Webmasterworld, the first sightings of the phenomenon took place in July 2002. Later that year, the following speculation on Everflux emerged: "Lastly, they could be working on the index, rolling indexes back, switching parts of the index, backing up parts of the index, rewriting some offending part of the index, deleting parts of an index - or a multitude of other actions or problems that only Google could know about."

    Legend has it that there is one ex-Google employee who goes by the name of Googleguy, who posts in related forums. He offered this explanation: "As we do a full crawl of the web, we find most of the sites from our fresh crawl and put them in our regular index. My advice on our fresh crawl is to view it as a nice "bonus" on top of Google's deep index. Users can always search our full index, but sometimes we can serve up even fresher pages as an extra nicety."

    Google introduced a "fresh crawl" process to make their results as relevant and as fresh as possible. It runs each day. The purpose of the daily fresh crawl is to update Web pages in the index that change regularly. This allows Google to provide results that are up-to-date with current events.

    Google also does one major update per month, which generally begins anywhere from around the 19th or 20th of the month to approximately the 28th of the month. The update process continues for several days, with search results appearing to fluctuate as the update continues. Once the update has been completed, the new data migrates to google's partner sites. The main reason for the fluctuation is that Google employs several sites that have to be synchronized (in popular terms). While this process takes place, search results might seem to jump and information might seem to disappear and re-appear. It is similar in concept with the idea of DNS propagation.

    The regular monthly crawl takes place at different times for different web sites. The results of this crawl are generally reflected at the time of the following update.

    For a number of months, beginning early Summer 2002, spidering of sites and changes have been observed to be going on all month, in between the regular monthly updates. This has come to be known as Everflux, and represents google's continuing desire and efforts to keep their search relevant, of high quality, and "minty fresh."

    Everflux is another evolutionary step in the process of offering the most recent and relevant snapshot of the web to the public. Google is adding to their value as a search tool by giving their index some of the same qualities as what is being indexed. That is, the more fluid and adaptable an index of the web is, the more accurately it will be able to reflect the fluid and adaptable nature of the web.

    These of you who analyze web logs probably notice that traffic surges for certain search terms on certain days. For example, say you create a page on the web (or as the younger generation refers to it these days - you make a blog entry) about a movie which is just coming out on DVD and the "fresh crawl" daily process visits your site and makes note of it. Because of its relevance in time (overly simplified: sort results by pagerank and date), your page climbs to the top of the SERPs for a few days. Eventually, though, the story falls off your homepage and is replaced by another story about another movie which is soon gobbled by Google's robot. Meanwhile, the long-standing sites regarding that particular movie regain their dominant positions in the SERPs. This is Everflux in full action.

    As I am writing this article, there are reports of a potentially calmer Everflux coming to a browser near you. Google has very recently performed an update to their software, dubbed "Jagger". It appears that "Jagger" affected Everflux, but things started to slow down. It has been reported that the most interesting effect of "Jagger" on rankings has been diminishing the effect of reciprocal linking as a measure of popularity. It looks like "Jagger" has negated the hard work of thousands of website owners. The result is expensive linking campaigns that lead to high rankings and high revenues have plummeted. On the other hand, article submission seems to have come through the "Jagger" update apparently safe and sound. I believe this is happening because Google has put more emphasis on one way links.

    The moral of the "Jagger" update story? Make sure that you do not follow the fads and the top new found ranking factors of the search engine algorithm. If you have all your eggs in one basket, I promise you, Google is sure to trip you up eventually. So, diversify your ranking efforts and generally, try to follow the very basic rules that webmasters have been hearing since the beginning of the web: design your website for users, not for Google and not for robots. Make sure every page has a unique title (you know, the < title > tag), don't put a google of keywords in the title, just one or a few that reflect the content of that page. Make sure every page has different content and different title. Most of us, myself included, get lazy or just copy and paste pages and forget to change the title - Google's software sees all that and does not forgive. Make use of the old-fashioned < h > tag, that is the "Header" tag. Google considers it to be polite to have paragraph headings. Don't use images for titles, or anything text.

    Google does not care about your images and does not consider a page full of images to be useful - they put a lot of emphasis on good old text. Use the description tag (read about Meta Tags if you don't know what I'm talking about) and the keyword tags. Do not keyword-spam, do not use gateways, do not hide text (you know, white text on white background). Basically, play nice, a-la late 90s pure HTML websites. If all this is too complex, hire a SEO consultant at the very least. An analogy is the stock market. If you know what you're doing, you know what you're doing - basically, you follow the rules and play nice. If you don't know what you're doing, yes you can dabble, but most people have an adviser to avoid the ups and downs of the market shift. In the Google world, we call this shift Everflux.

    3. Conclusion - don't be scared of the big bad Everflux

    Even if you don't own and/or design and/or run your own website, it's interesting to see how all the information collected by humanity over centuries is put into place inside a so called index of indexes. It is interesting to see how the exponential increase in information that has to be indexed presents real challenges to a process that started as a mere science experiment and evolved into a cultural phenomenon. It is also interesting to see how the people at the steering wheel deal with such challenges and the creative solutions they come up with in order to tame the information overload monster that can literally eat it all, if unlea

    The Future of Innovation- A Conversation with Business Consultant Praveen Gupta
    >Praveen Gupta is president of Accelper Consulting in Schaumburg, IL, and an adjunct professor of business innovation at the Illinois Institute of Technology's Center for Professional Development. He has written several books on Six Sigma, business innovation and corporate performance. In this interview, Gupta predicts the role that smaller firms will play in business innovation during the rest of this century.How can small business owners and leaders keep their performance yield high while minimizing cost cutting? Smaller businesses can compete with larger businesses based on performance and speed. Small businesses normally do not have as much waste as large business do due to smaller infrastructure. Thus, there is a constant battle between lowering the cost of products or services and offering value to customers. This requires that small businesses build customer relationships based on value-to-price ratio rather than just the price.We have learned that every business, including small businesses, must focus on profitable growth by developing innovative solutions to grow customer demand. If we offer our customers what they "love to" have rather than what they have just asked for, customers will be willing to pay a premium, and won't be rushing to find the cheapest solutions. So, we mus
    nks go up or down randomly, link popularity is completely lost, pages that have been indexed for years just vanish and are nowhere to be found in Google and other similar Outer Limits phenomena. Most people whose income depends proportionally on their potential customers' ability to find them via a Google search, may think their business is destroyed, they are ruined, and I can clearly see why.

    According to forums at Webmasterworld, the first sightings of the phenomenon took place in July 2002. Later that year, the following speculation on Everflux emerged: "Lastly, they could be working on the index, rolling indexes back, switching parts of the index, backing up parts of the index, rewriting some offending part of the index, deleting parts of an index - or a multitude of other actions or problems that only Google could know about."

    Legend has it that there is one ex-Google employee who goes by the name of Googleguy, who posts in related forums. He offered this explanation: "As we do a full crawl of the web, we find most of the sites from our fresh crawl and put them in our regular index. My advice on our fresh crawl is to view it as a nice "bonus" on top of Google's deep index. Users can always search our full index, but sometimes we can serve up even fresher pages as an extra nicety."

    Google introduced a "fresh crawl" process to make their results as relevant and as fresh as possible. It runs each day. The purpose of the daily fresh crawl is to update Web pages in the index that change regularly. This allows Google to provide results that are up-to-date with current events.

    Google also does one major update per month, which generally begins anywhere from around the 19th or 20th of the month to approximately the 28th of the month. The update process continues for several days, with search results appearing to fluctuate as the update continues. Once the update has been completed, the new data migrates to google's partner sites. The main reason for the fluctuation is that Google employs several sites that have to be synchronized (in popular terms). While this process takes place, search results might seem to jump and information might seem to disappear and re-appear. It is similar in concept with the idea of DNS propagation.

    The regular monthly crawl takes place at different times for different web sites. The results of this crawl are generally reflected at the time of the following update.

    For a number of months, beginning early Summer 2002, spidering of sites and changes have been observed to be going on all month, in between the regular monthly updates. This has come to be known as Everflux, and represents google's continuing desire and efforts to keep their search relevant, of high quality, and "minty fresh."

    Everflux is another evolutionary step in the process of offering the most recent and relevant snapshot of the web to the public. Google is adding to their value as a search tool by giving their index some of the same qualities as what is being indexed. That is, the more fluid and adaptable an index of the web is, the more accurately it will be able to reflect the fluid and adaptable nature of the web.

    These of you who analyze web logs probably notice that traffic surges for certain search terms on certain days. For example, say you create a page on the web (or as the younger generation refers to it these days - you make a blog entry) about a movie which is just coming out on DVD and the "fresh crawl" daily process visits your site and makes note of it. Because of its relevance in time (overly simplified: sort results by pagerank and date), your page climbs to the top of the SERPs for a few days. Eventually, though, the story falls off your homepage and is replaced by another story about another movie which is soon gobbled by Google's robot. Meanwhile, the long-standing sites regarding that particular movie regain their dominant positions in the SERPs. This is Everflux in full action.

    As I am writing this article, there are reports of a potentially calmer Everflux coming to a browser near you. Google has very recently performed an update to their software, dubbed "Jagger". It appears that "Jagger" affected Everflux, but things started to slow down. It has been reported that the most interesting effect of "Jagger" on rankings has been diminishing the effect of reciprocal linking as a measure of popularity. It looks like "Jagger" has negated the hard work of thousands of website owners. The result is expensive linking campaigns that lead to high rankings and high revenues have plummeted. On the other hand, article submission seems to have come through the "Jagger" update apparently safe and sound. I believe this is happening because Google has put more emphasis on one way links.

    The moral of the "Jagger" update story? Make sure that you do not follow the fads and the top new found ranking factors of the search engine algorithm. If you have all your eggs in one basket, I promise you, Google is sure to trip you up eventually. So, diversify your ranking efforts and generally, try to follow the very basic rules that webmasters have been hearing since the beginning of the web: design your website for users, not for Google and not for robots. Make sure every page has a unique title (you know, the < title > tag), don't put a google of keywords in the title, just one or a few that reflect the content of that page. Make sure every page has different content and different title. Most of us, myself included, get lazy or just copy and paste pages and forget to change the title - Google's software sees all that and does not forgive. Make use of the old-fashioned < h > tag, that is the "Header" tag. Google considers it to be polite to have paragraph headings. Don't use images for titles, or anything text.

    Google does not care about your images and does not consider a page full of images to be useful - they put a lot of emphasis on good old text. Use the description tag (read about Meta Tags if you don't know what I'm talking about) and the keyword tags. Do not keyword-spam, do not use gateways, do not hide text (you know, white text on white background). Basically, play nice, a-la late 90s pure HTML websites. If all this is too complex, hire a SEO consultant at the very least. An analogy is the stock market. If you know what you're doing, you know what you're doing - basically, you follow the rules and play nice. If you don't know what you're doing, yes you can dabble, but most people have an adviser to avoid the ups and downs of the market shift. In the Google world, we call this shift Everflux.

    3. Conclusion - don't be scared of the big bad Everflux

    Even if you don't own and/or design and/or run your own website, it's interesting to see how all the information collected by humanity over centuries is put into place inside a so called index of indexes. It is interesting to see how the exponential increase in information that has to be indexed presents real challenges to a process that started as a mere science experiment and evolved into a cultural phenomenon. It is also interesting to see how the people at the steering wheel deal with such challenges and the creative solutions they come up with in order to tame the information overload monster that can literally eat it all, if unle

    Expand And Grow Your EBay Business While Beating The Competition
    While the success experienced by eBay sellers continues to draw attention, what is usually left out is the corresponding growth in competition. eBaybusinessbook.com has introduced innovative methods for outselling the competition.Most eBay sellers are highly educated entrepreneurs. They have access to hundreds of eBay books, eBay software packages, and eBay ebooks, which guide them through their eBay business.The level of information available does place those eBay sellers who have access to it, at an advantage. But since the majority of this information has been disseminated throughout eBay forums and chat rooms the applicable value of it has dropped.Practical advice and guidance has always been what has distinguished one eBay seller from the next one, but this advice and guidance decreases in value as more eBay sellers have access to it.So in response to this there are now various sources of eBay business information which have set up methods to limit the access of this information.There are paid membership sites, and eBooks, which provide eBay sellers with advanced business strategies to outpace their competition.But even this type of exclusivity has a downside to it. Since as more eBay sellers access these ideas by paying for them, then those same ideas decrease in value as
    ults appearing to fluctuate as the update continues. Once the update has been completed, the new data migrates to google's partner sites. The main reason for the fluctuation is that Google employs several sites that have to be synchronized (in popular terms). While this process takes place, search results might seem to jump and information might seem to disappear and re-appear. It is similar in concept with the idea of DNS propagation.

    The regular monthly crawl takes place at different times for different web sites. The results of this crawl are generally reflected at the time of the following update.

    For a number of months, beginning early Summer 2002, spidering of sites and changes have been observed to be going on all month, in between the regular monthly updates. This has come to be known as Everflux, and represents google's continuing desire and efforts to keep their search relevant, of high quality, and "minty fresh."

    Everflux is another evolutionary step in the process of offering the most recent and relevant snapshot of the web to the public. Google is adding to their value as a search tool by giving their index some of the same qualities as what is being indexed. That is, the more fluid and adaptable an index of the web is, the more accurately it will be able to reflect the fluid and adaptable nature of the web.

    These of you who analyze web logs probably notice that traffic surges for certain search terms on certain days. For example, say you create a page on the web (or as the younger generation refers to it these days - you make a blog entry) about a movie which is just coming out on DVD and the "fresh crawl" daily process visits your site and makes note of it. Because of its relevance in time (overly simplified: sort results by pagerank and date), your page climbs to the top of the SERPs for a few days. Eventually, though, the story falls off your homepage and is replaced by another story about another movie which is soon gobbled by Google's robot. Meanwhile, the long-standing sites regarding that particular movie regain their dominant positions in the SERPs. This is Everflux in full action.

    As I am writing this article, there are reports of a potentially calmer Everflux coming to a browser near you. Google has very recently performed an update to their software, dubbed "Jagger". It appears that "Jagger" affected Everflux, but things started to slow down. It has been reported that the most interesting effect of "Jagger" on rankings has been diminishing the effect of reciprocal linking as a measure of popularity. It looks like "Jagger" has negated the hard work of thousands of website owners. The result is expensive linking campaigns that lead to high rankings and high revenues have plummeted. On the other hand, article submission seems to have come through the "Jagger" update apparently safe and sound. I believe this is happening because Google has put more emphasis on one way links.

    The moral of the "Jagger" update story? Make sure that you do not follow the fads and the top new found ranking factors of the search engine algorithm. If you have all your eggs in one basket, I promise you, Google is sure to trip you up eventually. So, diversify your ranking efforts and generally, try to follow the very basic rules that webmasters have been hearing since the beginning of the web: design your website for users, not for Google and not for robots. Make sure every page has a unique title (you know, the < title > tag), don't put a google of keywords in the title, just one or a few that reflect the content of that page. Make sure every page has different content and different title. Most of us, myself included, get lazy or just copy and paste pages and forget to change the title - Google's software sees all that and does not forgive. Make use of the old-fashioned < h > tag, that is the "Header" tag. Google considers it to be polite to have paragraph headings. Don't use images for titles, or anything text.

    Google does not care about your images and does not consider a page full of images to be useful - they put a lot of emphasis on good old text. Use the description tag (read about Meta Tags if you don't know what I'm talking about) and the keyword tags. Do not keyword-spam, do not use gateways, do not hide text (you know, white text on white background). Basically, play nice, a-la late 90s pure HTML websites. If all this is too complex, hire a SEO consultant at the very least. An analogy is the stock market. If you know what you're doing, you know what you're doing - basically, you follow the rules and play nice. If you don't know what you're doing, yes you can dabble, but most people have an adviser to avoid the ups and downs of the market shift. In the Google world, we call this shift Everflux.

    3. Conclusion - don't be scared of the big bad Everflux

    Even if you don't own and/or design and/or run your own website, it's interesting to see how all the information collected by humanity over centuries is put into place inside a so called index of indexes. It is interesting to see how the exponential increase in information that has to be indexed presents real challenges to a process that started as a mere science experiment and evolved into a cultural phenomenon. It is also interesting to see how the people at the steering wheel deal with such challenges and the creative solutions they come up with in order to tame the information overload monster that can literally eat it all, if unle

    Improve Your Search Engine Ranking
    Simple tips to help move your website to the top.Every website is constantly searching for ways to improve their search engine rankings or stay on top. Google is the dominant search engine to master. For the new website owner keeping up with changes and how-to’s for search engine mastery can be a nightmare.If you’re struggling with search engine optimization help is available. Follow these few simple tips to improve your rankings… without spending hours and hours only hoping for results.Choose the right keywords. Often when you’re searching for keywords, it is easy to forget the real purpose behind the keywords. Keywords are the phrases your potential visitors are using to search for information or products/services they want. These people are either looking for specific information or a specific type of product. It only makes sense to make their selections easier by using a specific keyword.Let’s use the phrase “gift ideas”. A quick search at http://inventory.overture.com/d/searchinventory/suggestion/overture.com reveals the last month reports show the term “gift ideas to have been searched 1, 584,791 times. While your initial instinct may be to use this phrase, it may not be the most profitable thing to do. The competition is high. If your website is new chances ar
    e SERPs for a few days. Eventually, though, the story falls off your homepage and is replaced by another story about another movie which is soon gobbled by Google's robot. Meanwhile, the long-standing sites regarding that particular movie regain their dominant positions in the SERPs. This is Everflux in full action.

    As I am writing this article, there are reports of a potentially calmer Everflux coming to a browser near you. Google has very recently performed an update to their software, dubbed "Jagger". It appears that "Jagger" affected Everflux, but things started to slow down. It has been reported that the most interesting effect of "Jagger" on rankings has been diminishing the effect of reciprocal linking as a measure of popularity. It looks like "Jagger" has negated the hard work of thousands of website owners. The result is expensive linking campaigns that lead to high rankings and high revenues have plummeted. On the other hand, article submission seems to have come through the "Jagger" update apparently safe and sound. I believe this is happening because Google has put more emphasis on one way links.

    The moral of the "Jagger" update story? Make sure that you do not follow the fads and the top new found ranking factors of the search engine algorithm. If you have all your eggs in one basket, I promise you, Google is sure to trip you up eventually. So, diversify your ranking efforts and generally, try to follow the very basic rules that webmasters have been hearing since the beginning of the web: design your website for users, not for Google and not for robots. Make sure every page has a unique title (you know, the < title > tag), don't put a google of keywords in the title, just one or a few that reflect the content of that page. Make sure every page has different content and different title. Most of us, myself included, get lazy or just copy and paste pages and forget to change the title - Google's software sees all that and does not forgive. Make use of the old-fashioned < h > tag, that is the "Header" tag. Google considers it to be polite to have paragraph headings. Don't use images for titles, or anything text.

    Google does not care about your images and does not consider a page full of images to be useful - they put a lot of emphasis on good old text. Use the description tag (read about Meta Tags if you don't know what I'm talking about) and the keyword tags. Do not keyword-spam, do not use gateways, do not hide text (you know, white text on white background). Basically, play nice, a-la late 90s pure HTML websites. If all this is too complex, hire a SEO consultant at the very least. An analogy is the stock market. If you know what you're doing, you know what you're doing - basically, you follow the rules and play nice. If you don't know what you're doing, yes you can dabble, but most people have an adviser to avoid the ups and downs of the market shift. In the Google world, we call this shift Everflux.

    3. Conclusion - don't be scared of the big bad Everflux

    Even if you don't own and/or design and/or run your own website, it's interesting to see how all the information collected by humanity over centuries is put into place inside a so called index of indexes. It is interesting to see how the exponential increase in information that has to be indexed presents real challenges to a process that started as a mere science experiment and evolved into a cultural phenomenon. It is also interesting to see how the people at the steering wheel deal with such challenges and the creative solutions they come up with in order to tame the information overload monster that can literally eat it all, if unle

    Affiliate Guide To Profits
    As most of you may or may not know affiliate marketing is probably one of the biggest ways to make money online. For those of you who do not know how affiliate marketing works here is a quick example. Someone has a product, and you sell it for them and they split a certain percent of the profits with you for whatever sales you earn. So you can see the potential here to make big profits from affiliate marketing.So if you are new to affiliate programs, and are looking to get into affiliate marketing then I am here to help you get started. I am going to go over a few quick and easy ways you can get up and running in a matter of just a few hours.A few things you must first know about affiliate marketing are. Yes you can make money promoting other peoples programs, but you want to pick something that is not going to already have a ton of people promoting it. This will lead to you having to spend more money to make less money. You also should pick a program or product that has good conversion rates.Now first if you want to get set up in a matter of just a few minutes sign up and become an affiliate. Usually becoming one is free to do, and only take a few seconds. Once you get your affiliate code open up a google adwords account if you do not already have one. Then make a campaign usi
    f us, myself included, get lazy or just copy and paste pages and forget to change the title - Google's software sees all that and does not forgive. Make use of the old-fashioned < h > tag, that is the "Header" tag. Google considers it to be polite to have paragraph headings. Don't use images for titles, or anything text.

    Google does not care about your images and does not consider a page full of images to be useful - they put a lot of emphasis on good old text. Use the description tag (read about Meta Tags if you don't know what I'm talking about) and the keyword tags. Do not keyword-spam, do not use gateways, do not hide text (you know, white text on white background). Basically, play nice, a-la late 90s pure HTML websites. If all this is too complex, hire a SEO consultant at the very least. An analogy is the stock market. If you know what you're doing, you know what you're doing - basically, you follow the rules and play nice. If you don't know what you're doing, yes you can dabble, but most people have an adviser to avoid the ups and downs of the market shift. In the Google world, we call this shift Everflux.

    3. Conclusion - don't be scared of the big bad Everflux

    Even if you don't own and/or design and/or run your own website, it's interesting to see how all the information collected by humanity over centuries is put into place inside a so called index of indexes. It is interesting to see how the exponential increase in information that has to be indexed presents real challenges to a process that started as a mere science experiment and evolved into a cultural phenomenon. It is also interesting to see how the people at the steering wheel deal with such challenges and the creative solutions they come up with in order to tame the information overload monster that can literally eat it all, if unleashed.

    Now if you do own, operate, design websites and if your paying bills on time process depends on the above mentioned process, it can be really frightening, as incertitude is the main enemy of happiness as we know it. The advice we get from the most famous gurus (found in forums postings, of course) unanimously suggest the following: "don't go hacking your pages to bits on account of Google's Everflux." In other words, it's not something to freak out about, but it's still something a well rounded webmaster should understand. As always, I believe that while you might not be able to control a process, your happiness will benefit dramatically from just the mere idea of understanding that process. If you can't beat it, join it - in other words, learn how to understand it and live with it.

    4. Conclusion - about Google

    Someone should really write a book entitled The Hitchhiker's Guide to Googling and start it with an excerpt from Google's own "Information for Webmasters" resource:

    [...] "Don't Panic." Just do the normal things you should do:

    1. Create a great site.
    2. Submit your site to google on our "add url" form.
    3. Get a link from the Open Directory Project or other directories (Yahoo, etc.).
    4. Don't panic if your site takes a little while to show up in google. Be patient, and start to look around the web--there's lots of great advice about improving your site for users and search engines.

    Hope this helps,

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