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    The O J Simpson Case - The Impact of Race Communications - Nu Leadership Series
    An intellectual is a man who takes more words than necessary to tell more than he knows. Dwight D. EisenhowerAt work, I wait for the trial results. All I can hear was silence in the room. The results are announced. Some quietly cheer. Others cry. Reruns plague the television. Some celebrate. Others grieve. OJ was free, but America was not.How could this happen in America? I postulate that this was America’s modern day diversity litmus test. “OJ” has become the “Most Hated Man in America.” Schuetz and Lilley, legal experts, argue that the case hit five "hot button" legal issues including fairness of jury nullification.After this trial, those culturally diverse organizations became a test-bed for social unrest. How could my co-worker believe that OJ was innocent? The case hit many social “hot” buttons and urban legends, such as (a) black men-white women, (b) abandonment of black communities, (c) the rich and poor, (d) good and bad cops, (e) sexual taboos, (f) justice versus privilege, and (g) immigrant competence and leadership (namely Judge Ito).Was the trial really about OJ or about us? Tsui and Gutek, demographic gurus, maintain that despite the many equal opportunity initiatives, there is ample unrest about diversity. They explain, “Below the surface of increased activities and some apparent progress in diversity efforts by companies lie feelings of discomfort, frustra
    ut still happier than no links at all.

    Think about what the people you want to attract to your site are interested in and write about those things. If you are a head-hunter, anything HR related is valuable: legal issues, salary surveys, hiring tips etc. If you sell dog food, pet health and grroming, training techniques, reviews of related books, notice of upcoming shows and so on. Whatever your field is, there are dozens and dozens of things you can and should write about.

    LEARN about using meta-tags to help search engines properly index your site. Metatags have been abused so much that many search engines ignore them now, but it can't hurt. Make sure that whatever your article is about gets repeated whenever appropriate in the text. For example, this article is about "web site promotion", so you'll see that I use that and similar phrases throughout this article. Take a look at the meta tags I used here (do "view source"). The more the search engine thinks that the article is about site promotion, the more weight it will get when it is indexed. An excellent place to learn about how search engines work and site promotion in general is Search Engine Watch ( http://www.searchenginewatch.com ).

    DON"T do stupid things like repeating "web site promotion" a zillion times in a teeny font or with a background color the same as the text. Search engines are much smarter than they used to be: such tactics will not help and may even be held against you.

    Consider allowing other people to use what you have written. If you look at the bottom of any article I've written (including this one), you'll notice that I give free permission to copy it for any purpose- as long as you give credit for where it came from. Quite a few web sites do the same thing, which means that you can "steal" from oth

    How to Get Started Online For a Few Hundred Bucks or For Free
    My guess is, you don’t have $50,000 to get started. You want to get started for a few hundred bucks, including the how-to plan, the web site, the product, an email autoresponder system, and some traffic to your website.What I am going to teach you in this book are the basic steps and techniques that will work for you to get started marketing on the web. If you want to spend $50,000 your first month and play with the big guys, this book is not for you. Go buy one somewhere for $997.00. Or $1997.00.But if you genuinely want to learn how to make money on the internet, get started slow, for a few hundred dollars, I will show you step-by-step how to do it.The Leverage PlanA lot of basic services that you will need to get started on the web such as web hosting, web templates for your web site, sales materials, autoresponders (automated email services), credit card services (so you can take credit cards), and even products to sell can be achieved for very little up front, or even the first 30 days free. They are designed that way so you can try them out. The companies are willing to give you their service for free for the first 30 days because they know that if you are making money after the 30 days, then you will continue to pay for their service after the trial period.Now the key to working these trial periods is not to sign up for everything the first day. If you do, you will have a w
    Popularity isn't easy. Oh, you'll get spam that tells you it is- "We'll submit your site to thousands of search engines and your web counter will go BALLISTIC!!" and so on. Or you may be advised that you need to pay Yahoo a whole bunch of money to get your site "indexed". Under some circumstances, you might consider paying Yahoo or Google for context based advertising, but most of us don't need to. The only folks who should even consider paying for site promotion are those who need to come up to speed extremely quickly. Even if you do pay, don't ignore the techniques discussed here- paying is only going to give you a jump start; it won't keep you in the game.

    What you want is links to your site. Links equal traffic. Links come from two places: other pages, and search engines. The more links from other pages, the more the search engines like you. The more the search engines like you, the more people will click through (choose the link the search engine presented). Some of those people have their own sites, and if they like your site, they may add links pointing to you. That, of course, generates more search engine attention- it's a closed loop that feeds on itself and continues to grow. The art of getting more links is known as Site Promotion.

    You don't believe it? You think you have to pay money to get noticed? I started my http://aplawrence.com site in 1997 and never paid a dime to anyone.

    Well, actually recently I did, just to see whether there was any point in it. I did two things: one, I bought 15,000 "hits" from one of those redirection services that take over abandoned domains and redirect any traffic to you. The 15,000 extra hits increased my visitors for one month, but did not increase my income one dime, and the increase disappeared the following months, which means none of the 15,000 became regular visitors. Secondly, I paid an web site promotion and optimization expert $100.00 for a half hour evaluation and advice session. The advice he had was good and accurate, but again, nothing you could not learn on-line for free by yourself.

    Current site stats are 170,000 to 200,000 unique visitors per month, and this was done entirely by self-promotion as described here. Even more importantly, if you search for "SCO Unix" or similar searches at Google and other search engines, you'll often find my pages listed near the top- which is the place you want to be.

    ("Unique visitors" means individual visitors. That is, you might visit my site two times this month and look at 5 pages each time. That counts as 10 page views, but only one unique visitor. It's not a completely accurate figure; the actual number could be more or less (there might be more than one person behind one ip address, for example), but it's still a statistic that people use to measure popularity.)

    Many people tell you that you need to submit new pages as you add them. I've found that not to be true for my sites: Google's Spiders usually pick up new pages here within a few days. That may be because I constantly add new material and the Spiders know to return more often than they would otherwise. Also, Google has recently added its Sitemap protocol which lets you tell Google when you have updated content.

    To get links and visitors, there are a number of things to do. Most of these apply no matter what the purpose of your web site is, though some work better for some types of sites.

    Suggest a link

    Go to Google and search for "suggest". You'll get about about 85,900,000 matches (yes, I'm serious) , most of which are search engines or other web sites that will let you suggest a link to you from them. Fill out as many of these as you can. Ignore any suggestion (like Yahoo will give) that asks you to part with money in exchange for quicker placement (unless, of course, you are able to just throw around money freely- in that case, have you visited my Contributions page?).

    Next, search for "site promotion". These are less valuable, but some of them are free promotional thingies that will submit your site to some other sites. What they do is a small number for free, and then try to get you to buy a larger submission. Don't. Just take the free stuff. Most of it is useless, but it will at least get a few search engines to visit.

    Nowadays you'll also find blogs and web sites that offer tips on web site promotion. Some of them are just thinly veiled fronts trying to sell you expensive courses or books. Pay no attention: everything they would charge you for is available on line for free. It may take a little more effort to find it all, so if you are in a big hurry, some of the courses or books could be useful, but don't spend a lot of money - it's not worth it.

    Newsgroups

    Now we get to more valuable actions. If there are any newsgroups that at ALL relate to your site, make it a habit to read and post therein (see http://groups.google.com/googlegroups/posting_faq.html if you don't have direct Newsgroup access ). ALWAYS have your web site mentioned in your signature. If you can possibly work in a mention of a specific page on your site that would be helpful to someone posting, do so. But don't just post blatant advertising; people get annoyed by that.

    There may also be mailing lists related to your business. Read them, and contribute when you can. Take a look at http://www.webcom.com/impulse/list.html#Search for mail lists. If your site is technical, see OpenITx (http://www.openitx.com) for listings of technical mailing lists etc.

    Try to post intelligently. While the search engines that index the articles don't care if you say stupid things, the people who really read the newsgroups do. If you are helpful, polite, and all the rest (brave, loyal, trustworthy and true), folks will visit your site as a result of your posting. If they find something they like, they'll tell other people- maybe they'll even put a link to you on their own site.

    Put your web address on EVERYTHING

    Mention your web site on EVERYTHING you do: mail, invoices, pens, coffee cups, business cards- anything you do should mention your web site. I have a rubber stamp and I even stamp bills I'm paying- it never hurts.

    I'm fortunate in having a short enough site to get a PCUNIX license plate (that redirects to aplawrence.com) - that's probably not an option for you, unfortunately, but if you have signage on vehicles, make sure it mentions the site.

    ALWAYS USE "http://yoursite.com", not just "yoursite.com" in email or newsgroup postings- that makes it CERTAIN that it will be a clickable link for the person reading it- otherwise it may not be.

    The site itself

    WRITE as much as you possibly can and post the articles on your site. The articles don't have to be great, but the more informative they are the better. If you are an accountant, you can write about accounting and business issues. Your artist mother-in-law can write about brush techniques, color sense- whatever- just write, write, write. The more you write, the more traffic you get. Cross-reference everything as much as possible- with links to your other pages. Your own links make search engines happy, too. Not quite as happy as links from other sites, but still happier than no links at all.

    Think about what the people you want to attract to your site are interested in and write about those things. If you are a head-hunter, anything HR related is valuable: legal issues, salary surveys, hiring tips etc. If you sell dog food, pet health and grroming, training techniques, reviews of related books, notice of upcoming shows and so on. Whatever your field is, there are dozens and dozens of things you can and should write about.

    LEARN about using meta-tags to help search engines properly index your site. Metatags have been abused so much that many search engines ignore them now, but it can't hurt. Make sure that whatever your article is about gets repeated whenever appropriate in the text. For example, this article is about "web site promotion", so you'll see that I use that and similar phrases throughout this article. Take a look at the meta tags I used here (do "view source"). The more the search engine thinks that the article is about site promotion, the more weight it will get when it is indexed. An excellent place to learn about how search engines work and site promotion in general is Search Engine Watch ( http://www.searchenginewatch.com ).

    DON"T do stupid things like repeating "web site promotion" a zillion times in a teeny font or with a background color the same as the text. Search engines are much smarter than they used to be: such tactics will not help and may even be held against you.

    Consider allowing other people to use what you have written. If you look at the bottom of any article I've written (including this one), you'll notice that I give free permission to copy it for any purpose- as long as you give credit for where it came from. Quite a few web sites do the same thing, which means that you can "steal" from othe

    Customer Service Mistakes Can Be Entrepreneurial Opportunities!
    I called Domino’s Pizza the other night as I was watching the USC-Notre Dame game on the tube.Expecting to get exactly what I had purchased twice during the past three weeks, I quickly dialed the phone and recited my order:“I’ll have the three medium pizzas with unlimited ingredients. Here’s how I’d like them. Two with triple mushrooms, and one with double pepperoni, and a single serving of mushrooms, onion, and beef, please.”“We can’t do that,” the voice responded flatly.“Why, not?” I shot back. “What’s the problem?”“You can’t double one ingredient. They have to be different ingredients,” he claimed.“You must be in MANAGEMENT, am I right?” I challenged, knowing only a dumb bureaucrat could enforce such a senseless rule.He went on to inform me that my last two orders were placed with front line employee rule breakers who “Shouldn’t have done that.”I tried to reason with him, pointing out that if I put ten different ingredients on a pizza, which I understood he’d permit, this would cost his enterprise far more than a triple dollop of mushrooms or double pepperoni.He wouldn’t bite, even after I said I’d call Pizza Hut and award them my business.“Mistakes” that customer love, providing they don’t break the bank, are glorious entrepreneurial opportunities.I believe it was a customer who made the imaginative suggestion to the druggist who conco
    none of the 15,000 became regular visitors. Secondly, I paid an web site promotion and optimization expert $100.00 for a half hour evaluation and advice session. The advice he had was good and accurate, but again, nothing you could not learn on-line for free by yourself.

    Current site stats are 170,000 to 200,000 unique visitors per month, and this was done entirely by self-promotion as described here. Even more importantly, if you search for "SCO Unix" or similar searches at Google and other search engines, you'll often find my pages listed near the top- which is the place you want to be.

    ("Unique visitors" means individual visitors. That is, you might visit my site two times this month and look at 5 pages each time. That counts as 10 page views, but only one unique visitor. It's not a completely accurate figure; the actual number could be more or less (there might be more than one person behind one ip address, for example), but it's still a statistic that people use to measure popularity.)

    Many people tell you that you need to submit new pages as you add them. I've found that not to be true for my sites: Google's Spiders usually pick up new pages here within a few days. That may be because I constantly add new material and the Spiders know to return more often than they would otherwise. Also, Google has recently added its Sitemap protocol which lets you tell Google when you have updated content.

    To get links and visitors, there are a number of things to do. Most of these apply no matter what the purpose of your web site is, though some work better for some types of sites.

    Suggest a link

    Go to Google and search for "suggest". You'll get about about 85,900,000 matches (yes, I'm serious) , most of which are search engines or other web sites that will let you suggest a link to you from them. Fill out as many of these as you can. Ignore any suggestion (like Yahoo will give) that asks you to part with money in exchange for quicker placement (unless, of course, you are able to just throw around money freely- in that case, have you visited my Contributions page?).

    Next, search for "site promotion". These are less valuable, but some of them are free promotional thingies that will submit your site to some other sites. What they do is a small number for free, and then try to get you to buy a larger submission. Don't. Just take the free stuff. Most of it is useless, but it will at least get a few search engines to visit.

    Nowadays you'll also find blogs and web sites that offer tips on web site promotion. Some of them are just thinly veiled fronts trying to sell you expensive courses or books. Pay no attention: everything they would charge you for is available on line for free. It may take a little more effort to find it all, so if you are in a big hurry, some of the courses or books could be useful, but don't spend a lot of money - it's not worth it.

    Newsgroups

    Now we get to more valuable actions. If there are any newsgroups that at ALL relate to your site, make it a habit to read and post therein (see http://groups.google.com/googlegroups/posting_faq.html if you don't have direct Newsgroup access ). ALWAYS have your web site mentioned in your signature. If you can possibly work in a mention of a specific page on your site that would be helpful to someone posting, do so. But don't just post blatant advertising; people get annoyed by that.

    There may also be mailing lists related to your business. Read them, and contribute when you can. Take a look at http://www.webcom.com/impulse/list.html#Search for mail lists. If your site is technical, see OpenITx (http://www.openitx.com) for listings of technical mailing lists etc.

    Try to post intelligently. While the search engines that index the articles don't care if you say stupid things, the people who really read the newsgroups do. If you are helpful, polite, and all the rest (brave, loyal, trustworthy and true), folks will visit your site as a result of your posting. If they find something they like, they'll tell other people- maybe they'll even put a link to you on their own site.

    Put your web address on EVERYTHING

    Mention your web site on EVERYTHING you do: mail, invoices, pens, coffee cups, business cards- anything you do should mention your web site. I have a rubber stamp and I even stamp bills I'm paying- it never hurts.

    I'm fortunate in having a short enough site to get a PCUNIX license plate (that redirects to aplawrence.com) - that's probably not an option for you, unfortunately, but if you have signage on vehicles, make sure it mentions the site.

    ALWAYS USE "http://yoursite.com", not just "yoursite.com" in email or newsgroup postings- that makes it CERTAIN that it will be a clickable link for the person reading it- otherwise it may not be.

    The site itself

    WRITE as much as you possibly can and post the articles on your site. The articles don't have to be great, but the more informative they are the better. If you are an accountant, you can write about accounting and business issues. Your artist mother-in-law can write about brush techniques, color sense- whatever- just write, write, write. The more you write, the more traffic you get. Cross-reference everything as much as possible- with links to your other pages. Your own links make search engines happy, too. Not quite as happy as links from other sites, but still happier than no links at all.

    Think about what the people you want to attract to your site are interested in and write about those things. If you are a head-hunter, anything HR related is valuable: legal issues, salary surveys, hiring tips etc. If you sell dog food, pet health and grroming, training techniques, reviews of related books, notice of upcoming shows and so on. Whatever your field is, there are dozens and dozens of things you can and should write about.

    LEARN about using meta-tags to help search engines properly index your site. Metatags have been abused so much that many search engines ignore them now, but it can't hurt. Make sure that whatever your article is about gets repeated whenever appropriate in the text. For example, this article is about "web site promotion", so you'll see that I use that and similar phrases throughout this article. Take a look at the meta tags I used here (do "view source"). The more the search engine thinks that the article is about site promotion, the more weight it will get when it is indexed. An excellent place to learn about how search engines work and site promotion in general is Search Engine Watch ( http://www.searchenginewatch.com ).

    DON"T do stupid things like repeating "web site promotion" a zillion times in a teeny font or with a background color the same as the text. Search engines are much smarter than they used to be: such tactics will not help and may even be held against you.

    Consider allowing other people to use what you have written. If you look at the bottom of any article I've written (including this one), you'll notice that I give free permission to copy it for any purpose- as long as you give credit for where it came from. Quite a few web sites do the same thing, which means that you can "steal" from oth

    Map Your Reference Checking Process To The Job You’re Recruiting For
    A lot of times when people do reference checks on candidates, they fail to adapt the reference checking process to the type of position that they’re looking to fill and therefore ask very generic questions. This fails to uncover the kind of information that you really need to have in order to understand whether or not a specific candidate is a good match with the specific job you're trying to fill.Prior to performing reference checks on sales and marketing candidates, make sure that you come up with a specific list of questions that you're going to ask each reference that are aligned to the exact hiring criteria that you've set for the position that you're trying to fill. If you're looking for a market research person, and you’re trying to check references on a candidate, make sure that you go into depth regarding their market research capabilities, their analytical skills, and other aspects of the candidate’s qualities that would indicate whether or not they have the right DNA for a market research position. If you’re hiring an internet marketing person, make sure that you ask questions relative to their knowledge of search engine marketing, their understanding of email platforms, their ability to manage pay-per-click campaigns and other job-specific hiring criteria.So, as you check references on sales and marketing candidates, make sure that you adapt the questions that you ask each reference to
    et you suggest a link to you from them. Fill out as many of these as you can. Ignore any suggestion (like Yahoo will give) that asks you to part with money in exchange for quicker placement (unless, of course, you are able to just throw around money freely- in that case, have you visited my Contributions page?).

    Next, search for "site promotion". These are less valuable, but some of them are free promotional thingies that will submit your site to some other sites. What they do is a small number for free, and then try to get you to buy a larger submission. Don't. Just take the free stuff. Most of it is useless, but it will at least get a few search engines to visit.

    Nowadays you'll also find blogs and web sites that offer tips on web site promotion. Some of them are just thinly veiled fronts trying to sell you expensive courses or books. Pay no attention: everything they would charge you for is available on line for free. It may take a little more effort to find it all, so if you are in a big hurry, some of the courses or books could be useful, but don't spend a lot of money - it's not worth it.

    Newsgroups

    Now we get to more valuable actions. If there are any newsgroups that at ALL relate to your site, make it a habit to read and post therein (see http://groups.google.com/googlegroups/posting_faq.html if you don't have direct Newsgroup access ). ALWAYS have your web site mentioned in your signature. If you can possibly work in a mention of a specific page on your site that would be helpful to someone posting, do so. But don't just post blatant advertising; people get annoyed by that.

    There may also be mailing lists related to your business. Read them, and contribute when you can. Take a look at http://www.webcom.com/impulse/list.html#Search for mail lists. If your site is technical, see OpenITx (http://www.openitx.com) for listings of technical mailing lists etc.

    Try to post intelligently. While the search engines that index the articles don't care if you say stupid things, the people who really read the newsgroups do. If you are helpful, polite, and all the rest (brave, loyal, trustworthy and true), folks will visit your site as a result of your posting. If they find something they like, they'll tell other people- maybe they'll even put a link to you on their own site.

    Put your web address on EVERYTHING

    Mention your web site on EVERYTHING you do: mail, invoices, pens, coffee cups, business cards- anything you do should mention your web site. I have a rubber stamp and I even stamp bills I'm paying- it never hurts.

    I'm fortunate in having a short enough site to get a PCUNIX license plate (that redirects to aplawrence.com) - that's probably not an option for you, unfortunately, but if you have signage on vehicles, make sure it mentions the site.

    ALWAYS USE "http://yoursite.com", not just "yoursite.com" in email or newsgroup postings- that makes it CERTAIN that it will be a clickable link for the person reading it- otherwise it may not be.

    The site itself

    WRITE as much as you possibly can and post the articles on your site. The articles don't have to be great, but the more informative they are the better. If you are an accountant, you can write about accounting and business issues. Your artist mother-in-law can write about brush techniques, color sense- whatever- just write, write, write. The more you write, the more traffic you get. Cross-reference everything as much as possible- with links to your other pages. Your own links make search engines happy, too. Not quite as happy as links from other sites, but still happier than no links at all.

    Think about what the people you want to attract to your site are interested in and write about those things. If you are a head-hunter, anything HR related is valuable: legal issues, salary surveys, hiring tips etc. If you sell dog food, pet health and grroming, training techniques, reviews of related books, notice of upcoming shows and so on. Whatever your field is, there are dozens and dozens of things you can and should write about.

    LEARN about using meta-tags to help search engines properly index your site. Metatags have been abused so much that many search engines ignore them now, but it can't hurt. Make sure that whatever your article is about gets repeated whenever appropriate in the text. For example, this article is about "web site promotion", so you'll see that I use that and similar phrases throughout this article. Take a look at the meta tags I used here (do "view source"). The more the search engine thinks that the article is about site promotion, the more weight it will get when it is indexed. An excellent place to learn about how search engines work and site promotion in general is Search Engine Watch ( http://www.searchenginewatch.com ).

    DON"T do stupid things like repeating "web site promotion" a zillion times in a teeny font or with a background color the same as the text. Search engines are much smarter than they used to be: such tactics will not help and may even be held against you.

    Consider allowing other people to use what you have written. If you look at the bottom of any article I've written (including this one), you'll notice that I give free permission to copy it for any purpose- as long as you give credit for where it came from. Quite a few web sites do the same thing, which means that you can "steal" from oth

    5 Things You Must Know Before You Buy Day Job Killer
    Ok to begin with I want to tell you some things first about the Day Job Killer. Before continuing I want to ask you a few question1st Do you want to make money on the Internet ? 2nd Do you make money on the internet and you want to improve your sales stats? 3rd Do you want to do your full time job on the internet ?Did you answer yes any of the above ? If yes please continue... If no please stop here and move away.I think that most of you have tryied several online programs about making money on the internet... Am I right ? I may also guess that before trying them you were promised thousands or even millions of dollars without doing anything... Am I right ? Finally I may also guess that after the purchase was made .... you did almost nothing."DAMN WHY AGAIN ?"Maybe you asked yourselves the above question like I did most of the times I was buying such programs.At the same time I was searching at forums for guidance and I noticed that other people made thousands...But why they and not me ?Am I idiot ? --- > Maybe you are... but it doesn't matter. Am I stupid ? --- > Maybe you are... but again it doesn't matter.You should ask yourselves.....AM I WELL INFORMED ? ------> NO That's the KEY you are not informed. That's why you do not make money.Because you do not know H-O-W. I guess you know almost everything about affiliate marketing.... I guess you ha
    site is technical, see OpenITx (http://www.openitx.com) for listings of technical mailing lists etc.

    Try to post intelligently. While the search engines that index the articles don't care if you say stupid things, the people who really read the newsgroups do. If you are helpful, polite, and all the rest (brave, loyal, trustworthy and true), folks will visit your site as a result of your posting. If they find something they like, they'll tell other people- maybe they'll even put a link to you on their own site.

    Put your web address on EVERYTHING

    Mention your web site on EVERYTHING you do: mail, invoices, pens, coffee cups, business cards- anything you do should mention your web site. I have a rubber stamp and I even stamp bills I'm paying- it never hurts.

    I'm fortunate in having a short enough site to get a PCUNIX license plate (that redirects to aplawrence.com) - that's probably not an option for you, unfortunately, but if you have signage on vehicles, make sure it mentions the site.

    ALWAYS USE "http://yoursite.com", not just "yoursite.com" in email or newsgroup postings- that makes it CERTAIN that it will be a clickable link for the person reading it- otherwise it may not be.

    The site itself

    WRITE as much as you possibly can and post the articles on your site. The articles don't have to be great, but the more informative they are the better. If you are an accountant, you can write about accounting and business issues. Your artist mother-in-law can write about brush techniques, color sense- whatever- just write, write, write. The more you write, the more traffic you get. Cross-reference everything as much as possible- with links to your other pages. Your own links make search engines happy, too. Not quite as happy as links from other sites, but still happier than no links at all.

    Think about what the people you want to attract to your site are interested in and write about those things. If you are a head-hunter, anything HR related is valuable: legal issues, salary surveys, hiring tips etc. If you sell dog food, pet health and grroming, training techniques, reviews of related books, notice of upcoming shows and so on. Whatever your field is, there are dozens and dozens of things you can and should write about.

    LEARN about using meta-tags to help search engines properly index your site. Metatags have been abused so much that many search engines ignore them now, but it can't hurt. Make sure that whatever your article is about gets repeated whenever appropriate in the text. For example, this article is about "web site promotion", so you'll see that I use that and similar phrases throughout this article. Take a look at the meta tags I used here (do "view source"). The more the search engine thinks that the article is about site promotion, the more weight it will get when it is indexed. An excellent place to learn about how search engines work and site promotion in general is Search Engine Watch ( http://www.searchenginewatch.com ).

    DON"T do stupid things like repeating "web site promotion" a zillion times in a teeny font or with a background color the same as the text. Search engines are much smarter than they used to be: such tactics will not help and may even be held against you.

    Consider allowing other people to use what you have written. If you look at the bottom of any article I've written (including this one), you'll notice that I give free permission to copy it for any purpose- as long as you give credit for where it came from. Quite a few web sites do the same thing, which means that you can "steal" from oth

    Why Do I Pay A Royalty Fee?
    The first point to make about Royalties is that good Franchise systems should look at them not as a payment but rather as a remittance. It is the Franchisor’s share of the income derived from customers or clients. The Franchisee collects that fee along with all other revenues from the customer.It’s an important concept because it emphasizes that the customer ultimately pays for everything, including the Franchisor’s royalty, the Franchisee’s overhead, all costs of sales, employee’s salaries, and the Franchisee’s profit. Therefore it’s all about the customer – as it should be.The Franchisee should want the Franchisor to earn a significant amount of royalties because that’s really the oil that makes the engine run. Each Franchisee collects and remits a small portion of that oil to the Franchisor. All elements of the system can continue to improve as long as the royalty stream is strong.The Franchisor’s royalty will be based on the fact that they have provided a system and strategy that has ultimately served the customer. The Franchisee delivers that system to that customer. The royalty represents the Franchisor’s share based on the various parts of the Franchise system, which has four elements.The four elements of a Franchise are:a) Brand b) Operating System c) Support System d) FranchiseeBrand – the name associated with the services delivered in a memorable an
    ut still happier than no links at all.

    Think about what the people you want to attract to your site are interested in and write about those things. If you are a head-hunter, anything HR related is valuable: legal issues, salary surveys, hiring tips etc. If you sell dog food, pet health and grroming, training techniques, reviews of related books, notice of upcoming shows and so on. Whatever your field is, there are dozens and dozens of things you can and should write about.

    LEARN about using meta-tags to help search engines properly index your site. Metatags have been abused so much that many search engines ignore them now, but it can't hurt. Make sure that whatever your article is about gets repeated whenever appropriate in the text. For example, this article is about "web site promotion", so you'll see that I use that and similar phrases throughout this article. Take a look at the meta tags I used here (do "view source"). The more the search engine thinks that the article is about site promotion, the more weight it will get when it is indexed. An excellent place to learn about how search engines work and site promotion in general is Search Engine Watch ( http://www.searchenginewatch.com ).

    DON"T do stupid things like repeating "web site promotion" a zillion times in a teeny font or with a background color the same as the text. Search engines are much smarter than they used to be: such tactics will not help and may even be held against you.

    Consider allowing other people to use what you have written. If you look at the bottom of any article I've written (including this one), you'll notice that I give free permission to copy it for any purpose- as long as you give credit for where it came from. Quite a few web sites do the same thing, which means that you can "steal" from other people to flesh out your own site and make it more attractive to search engines. It is of course better to have your own material, but when you are getting started, you can have a much more comprehensive site. PLEASE pay attention to copyright notices: for example, not ALL the material on my site allows free copying- other sites may have similar restrictions on certain material.

    The advantage to me and the other people you borrow from should be obvious: more links back to us, more publicity, more site promotion and popularity.

    Do book reviews- and provide links to Amazon or Barnes and Noble so you even get a little income from people who buy as a result of reading your reviews- I get about $50.00 a month from that- not much, but it pays for buying more books to review (actually I've done so many now a number of publishers just send them along free) and every review brings more people to my site.

    I keep rough track of sites linking to mine. You can check that on Google using their "site:" tag. You want the number of sites to keep growing.

    These are the ways I built my traffic. You can get some relative idea of site ranking by visiting http://www.alexa.com/data/ds/traffic_rankings?p=DestRank_W_b_40_T1 and typing a domain name into the search box. It's not accurate (for one thing it only counts Alexa users) but it will at least give a relative idea- if you rank somewhere in the millions, or not at all, you have work to do. Go ahead and put "aplawrence.com" in there- last I looked it was somewhere in the 70,000's (lower is better with Alexa).

    If you download Google's toolbar, that will show their Page Rank for the page you are looking at. My aplawrence.com site's home page has a rank of 6.

    Speaking of Google: Adwords is a great way to advertise if you have something to sell, or just to drive traffic to your site. You can set a daily limit, and you pay for actual clicks.

    Netcraft also has a nice toolbar (works in Firefox too) that shows their ranking of sites.

    Why all the attention to rank? Because part of how you improve YOUR sites rank is to see the rankings of your competitors and then try to figure out what they are doing that you are not.

    Web site promotion isn't easy, but it is just basic common sense. If you build it, and promote it, your visitors will come.

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