As the importance of blogging (making money online) is increasing, there are many people searching for the following queries
Even I used to search for these queries in my beginning days of blogging. So I thought of sharing the list of high paid niches for Google Adsense. The list is completely based on my experience in Blogging & Adsense (since 4 years) as well as few advices from fellow bloggers.
I know what you’re thinking now! Start blogs in all niches and receive huge sum of money from Google Adsense! Right?
That’s really a wrong idea. If you do so, you’ll definitely feel bored of blogging in a matter of days. Only chose the niche that interests you. It is always advisable to blog on your interests rather than writing just for money. Because, you can write valuable and quality content if the topic you chose is of your interest. Or-Else you have to suffer from poor quality content which in turn affects your visitors as well as the income from Adsense.
So, my advice is choose a niche that interests you, Write Quality Content, Optimize your website for Search Engines using SEO and then boom.. Your website will receive high paid ads thus resulting in good Adsense Revenue.
Thanks for Reading this..
Happy Blogging ![]()
Article by
]]>Here’s the major reason that your company needs a solid SEO plan: profitability. Search Engine Optimization is just another way of marketing. If you don’t market a product, you can’t expect name recognition or sales to come pouring in. Most people surfing online go to search engines to find information or new products. Without a decent search engine ranking, your site, and products, will be passed over time and again.
There are five core reasons that SEO is important, all of which can help a business’s profit margin. Let’s begin with what is the basis of SEO marketing: content. The idea of providing unique content is so that the site becomes a trusted resource on a set of topics. So how does content help profitability?
First is search engine ranking. Search engine spiders love content. If the content matches the HTML title tag, an important optimization technique, and the content contains common keywords plugged into a search engine, there will be more opportunities for the site to land in the top listings of search results. Providing quality, targeted content will draw in potential customers looking specifically for what you have to offer.
Driving traffic has a two-fold purpose. Not only does a content-rich site help search engine results, but the content will leave a lasting impression on visitors. Imagine a site that’s in the top three results that provides no useful information. Traffic can be useless if the site doesn’t have some sticking power. Web surfers will come back to the site time and again. SEO will lead to both new and repeat visitors. Inspiring repeat visitors is reason number two for a solid SEO plan.
An offshoot of this is number three: referrals. The more content-rich your site, the more you’ll be able to get referrals. Web surfer one goes to a site and finds useful information, he then refers web surfer two—it’s a type of traffic that works independently of search engines, the basis of viral marketing. Part of SEO is providing an easy way for people to refer other web surfers, possibly with a reward system.
Fourth is linkbait. Again, this has two purposes. Quality content can lead to other sites linking to the original article. This will both drive traffic from the linking site, as well as help elevate search engine ranking. Search engine spiders love relevant links.
The final way SEO is useful is general: it improves the site. A website is a form of advertising–it represents the company. A site should be feature-rich and informative in order to increase brand recognition and ensure repeat visitors. Too often, website owners are caught up in how to “fool” search engine spiders. You might fool a spider, but you’ll rarely fool an actual web surfer. SEO should be about providing a content-heavy site that will become a trusted resource in your industry.
For more information visit: http://www.markethealth.com/?aid=456782
]]>Remember the web in the old days? You could cram in a bunch of keywords at the bottom of the page regardless of grammar, and pretty much devoid of any aesthetic sense, and search engines ate it up. It’s probably a good thing those days are over because websites have become a lot more professional. That still doesn’t mean that people are using keywords to the best of their advantage. In fact, because it is much harder to write keyword-targeted content, many site owners avoid the issue.
This is good news for anyone looking to improve their page ranking. The market is wide open for people who use an effective keyword strategy. The main issues are both quality and quantity. A few pages of keyword-driven content just aren’t going to do it anymore. If you’re really looking to improve your search engine ranking, and ultimately improve your sales, you have to provide dozens of pages of content.
To do so, you need to first research keyword strategies employed by competing businesses. Type in the most obvious keyword for your industry. What comes out in the top ten? What have those sites done to achieve that ranking? Keyword planning tools will tell you the popularity of certain keywords, but you should do some brainstorming on your own. Try and think every possible permutation of a possible search, including misspellings—even for easy-to-spell words.
Each search engine will provide keyword planning tools, potentially for a fee—you can check the keyword relevancy in Google, Overture, Yahoo, and others. It’s not a bad idea to check how keyword popularity compares in different search engines. You should be looking at potentially a hundred or more keywords—though this can vary according to the site. If a site sells a variety of different products, or provides different services, you’re going to be able to multiply that keyword list.
Each keyword list should be tailored to a specific demographic. Once you have the keyword list together, it is time to optimize content so that the site provides relevant content surrounding that list of keywords. The most important part of content optimization is the title. What this means is you should title the article with a specific keyword in mind—the HTML link for the article is vital for page rank. This keyword should then be repeated in the article—but not so much that the text becomes unnatural or, worse, unreadable.
If that’s the case, you could risk the site being banned by search engines outright. In addition to keyword popularity tools, you should also use keyword density tools for your site’s content. If the keyword density is too high, the site could be red-flagged as offering unnatural, inorganic content. All of these issues are core to keyword planning.
For more information visit: http://www.markethealth.com/?aid=456782
]]>By and large, the top resources for affiliate marketers aren’t so different than the resources for standard businesses. Of course, affiliate marketers have some unique concerns: payment scale, new affiliate opportunities, where to place links, etc. But affiliate marketers are the most successful when they don’t think of their sites as “dummy” sites, but full-fledged business opportunities. Another way of stating this is an affiliate marketing business and the host business are one and the same.
For both affiliates and marketers, one of the most important tools available is the site meter. Affiliate marketers should check in and out clicks. In-clicks will tell you what searches are being used the most often. You could then write some additional targeted content around this search term to bring in even more web surfers. Out-clicks are just as important. Out-clicks will show you which pages are the least popular. You will want to write some new content and/or redesign the page to help with a page’s popularity.
The key to any web business is driving traffic. This traffic needs to be monitored to determine where the site has been most effective. Remember, anything can be improved. Even if you’re very satisfied with the amount of traffic you’re getting, there are still thousands of web surfers out there who have never heard of your site. Improved content, site functionality, and useful affiliates can all drive repeated traffic to your site.
A website should never be static. You should never just design a site, leave it alone, and hope for the best. It should be monitored and improved—possibly even on a daily basis. Blogging has been an important and highly succesful addition to the affiliate marketing industry. Every day, affiliate marketers can write new content aimed at drawing in a different demographic, or expanding the customer base of a current demographic. Forum software is another good tool for keeping people on site and interested in the site’s contents. Both forums and blogs are good for bringing in new registration. An affiliate marketer should keep track of past browsers just like a standard business. Lead generation and organization are important for marketers as well.
Affiliate forums are some of the best places to find information on new affiliates. Certainly, there is stiff competition between affiliates, but there’s also a willingness to help each other out. If an affiliate has a particularly bad reputation, you can get the lowdown in the forums. At affiliate forums, you can also find web design tips, read about past successes, and basically start to get a foothold in the industry. As link popularity is enormously important for search engine rankings, you can begin link-partner relationships in forums as well.
For more information visit: http://www.markethealth.com/?aid=456782
]]>All optimization is not equal. There is such a rush to optimize a website for search engines that people don’t realize that some SEO techniques can be self-defeating. Either a lot of work will go into a particular type of optimization that is fruitless or it can be downright harmful for search engine ranking. A high search-engine ranking is the holy grail of search engine optimization, but make sure you put your energy in the right place.
The first two issues involve web design: don’t use flash or frames when designing a website. These won’t get you banned by search engines;but the site might be ignored entirely. While you can use some flash animation within a site, overuse of flash should be avoided. Search engines like text, not fancy graphics. A flash-heavy site could be passed over. The same goes for a site written with frames;frame-heavy sites confuse search engines so the sites are not properly indexed. The text on a framed site is hidden within the frame, so even if there is ample content within the frame, it will not be read correctly. Verdict: avoid it.
When writing content, make sure the content makes sense. In the early days of the web, people went keyword crazy. They would cram a huge paragraph of keywords throughout a page. This worked for a little while. Now search engines are wise to it and this technique can lead to a site being banned. Website owners try to trick search engines by including the keywords within actual content, but if the keywords are too close together, this could also lead to problems.
Another issue is spamdexing. Never use keywords that don’t apply specifically to a site. This can most often be seen with site owners using adult-themed keywords to bring in unrelated searches. This will cause a site to be quickly red-flagged. Using invisible text is a bad idea as well. Invisible text is the same color as the background. It can be read by spiders, but can’t be read by human eyes. The problem here is that spiders now recognize this technique and it will be red-flagged.
Generally, content should be useful and informative. You can include specific keywords within content, but if you provide enough content, these keywords will be covered automatically without jeopardizing the site with picky search engine spiders. The use of quality content is two-fold: it’s a better way to optimize with search engines and web surfers will spend a longer time on the site reading articles or other content. The trick is to create trust;both with spiders and real people.
For more information visit: http://www.markethealth.com/?aid=456782
]]>Social networking is the art of connecting with those who share common interests. Your “˜network’ is a community that helps keep you united with others and offers many benefits. Networking via social media sites has revolutionized how we use the Internet and is at the forefront of what we now call Web 2.0.
Facebook is social networking. People have been “facebooking” each other for about 6 years now, making Facebook the most used social network with over 350 million users worldwide. But how does Facebook work?
In this article, I will discuss Facebook’s inner workings, covering its architecture and frontend/backend infrastructure”"the nuts and bolts that hold Facebook together.
Facebook uses a variety of services, tools, and programming languages to make up its core infrastructure. At the front end, their servers run a LAMP (Linux, Apache, MySQL, and PHP) stack with Memcache. Not a computer science expert? Let’s take a look at exactly what that means.
Linux & Apache
This part is pretty self-explanatory. Linux is a Unix-like computer operating system kernel. It’s open source, very customizable, and good for security. Facebook runs the Linux operating system on Apache HTTP Servers. Apache is also free and is the most popular open source web server in use.
MySQL
For the database, Facebook utilizes MySQL because of its speed and reliability. MySQL is used primarily as a key-value store as data is randomly distributed amongst a large set of logical instances. These logical instances are spread out across physical nodes and load balancing is done at the physical node level.
As far as customizations are concerned, Facebook has developed a custom partitioning scheme in which a global ID is assigned to all data. They also have a custom archiving scheme that is based on how frequent and recent data is on a per-user basis. Most data is distributed randomly.
PHP
Facebook uses PHP because it is a good web programming language with extensive support and an active developer community and it is good for rapid iteration. PHP is a dynamically typed/interpreted scripting language.
Memcache
Memcache is a memory caching system that is used to speed up dynamic database-driven websites (like Facebook) by caching data and objects in RAM to reduce reading time. Memcache is Facebook’s primary form of caching and helps alleviate the database load.
Having a caching system allows Facebook to be as fast as it is at recalling your data. If it doesn’t have to go to the database it will just fetch your data from the cache based on your user ID.
Downsides to Using LAMP
Facebook has realized that there are downsides to using the LAMP stack. Notably, PHP is not necessarily optimized for large websites and therefore hard to scale. Also, it is not the fastest executing language and the extension framework is difficult to use.
Mike Schroepfer, Facebook’s Vice President of Engineering, recently did an interview at EmTech@MIT concerning this. “Scaling any website is a challenge,” Schroepfer said, “but scaling a social network has unique challenges.”
He went on to say that unlike other websites, you can’t just add more servers to solve the problem because of Facebook’s “huge interconnected dataset.” New connections are created all the time due to user activity.
Facebook has grown so quickly that they are often faced with issues regarding database queries, caching, and storage of data. Their database is huge and largely complex. To account for this, Facebook has started a lot of open source projects and backend services.
Facebook’s backend services are written in a variety of different programming languages including C++, Java, Python, and Erlang. Their philosophy for the creation of services is as follows:
A list of all of Facebook’s open source developments can be found here. I will discuss a few of the essential tools that Facebook has developed.
Thrift (protocol)
Thrift is a lightweight remote procedure call framework for scalable cross-language services development. Thrift supports C++, PHP, Python, Perl, Java, Ruby, Erlang, and others. It’s quick, saves development time, and provides a division of labor of work on high-performance servers and applications.
Scribe (log server)
Scribe is a server for aggregating log data streamed in real-time from many other servers. It is a scalable framework useful for logging a wide array of data. It is built on top of Thrift.
Cassandra (database)
Cassandra is a database management system designed to handle large amounts of data spread out across many servers. It powers Facebook’s Inbox Search feature and provides a structured key-value store with eventual consistency.
HipHop for PHP
HipHop for PHP is a source code transformer for PHP script code and was created to save server resources. HipHop transforms PHP source code into optimized C++. After doing this, it uses g++ to compile it to machine code.
Conclusion
In a nutshell, that’s Facebook. This article could easily be 37 pages longer if I were to go into more detail, but to answer the question “How does Facebook work?” I think this will suffice. If you look past all of the features and innovations the main idea behind Facebook is really very basic”"keeping people connected. Facebook realizes the power of social networking and is constantly innovating to keep their service the best in the business.
Did you find this article useful? Leave your thoughts, comments, and ideas below!
Source: http://www.makeuseof.com/tag/facebook-work-nuts-bolts-technology-explained/
]]>
Here is how all of the leaders stack up for the week ending Sunday, Nov. 22:
The DN Journal Top 20 Reported Domain Sales - Mon. Nov. 16, 2009 - Sun. Nov. 22, 2009
Euro to Dollar Conversion (€ to $) is Based on Rates in Effect Nov. 24, 200
It’s a dog eat dog world out there on the Internet. There is the capacity for an unlimited number of storefronts on the web that you’d never be able to find on main street. The fact is that there is even more competition for business online than there is in the brick-and-mortar world. This is only going to get more intense. It wasn’t so long ago that many people were afraid to use credit cards online. Shopping online was a curiosity. Now, it’s a given.
The battle of relevancy online is the battle of one site being more useful than another. In the growing virtual marketplace, it isn’t nearly enough to just have a number of products and hope for the best. Look at Amazon.com reviews—they are core to what has made that site grow. A glowing Amazon review can do a lot for a product’s sales. Web surfers use Amazon reviews as much as they use a review in the local paper, if not more. Reviews have made Amazon a relevant and trusted resource for a department store’s worth of products.
Not every site can hope to have the same review structure as Amazon. A number of affiliate sites use Amazon reviews as their own content. Web surfers are getting savvy to this: they can smell an affiliate site. Why not just go to Amazon directly? The battle for relevancy, then, is to become something as trusted and vital as the major sites online. You can’t necessarily wait around for people to write reviews, and the process may not even apply to your site, so a site owner needs to provide content of your own.
Another word for relevancy is usefulness. It has been shown that the longer a person sticks around on a site, the more likely he or she will make a purchase. Even if that person doesn’t make a purchase the first time to the site, the site will have left an impression. People are looking for information on a product or service as much as they are looking to make an immediate purchase. Web surfers like to be informed shoppers and the web gives them an unlimited amount of places to get this information.
This is where your site comes in. Don’t make a web surfer click off your site to find information on a product—give them the information right on site. This means you should have articles available about any and all issues affecting a particular type of product or service. There can be hundreds of potential topics on one type of product, and a site may have dozens upon dozens of products available.
Not only will this type of information keep your site relevant to web surfers, it will be relevant to search engines as well. With content, these make up your target audience: search engine spiders and real people. If you provide relevant content that speaks to both, your site can compete with the giants.
For more information visit: http://www.markethealth.com/?aid=456782
]]>When it comes to real estate, people usually shout out the mantra: location, location, location. When it comes to web real estate, you could say the same thing: location, location, location in search engines. Organic real estate on the web refers to the positioning your website has on the web landscape. A solid organic real estate design and SEO strategy will make a website as necessary a destination as the corner market. In short, organic real estate keeps a website from languishing unseen in cyberspace.
So how does Organic Real Estate work? What makes Organic Real estate, well, organic? The main feature of Organic Real Estate is quality, informative content. This is what sets quality SEO plans apart from those that are merely trying to trick search engine spiders. Content should be natural, not written as if composed by a machine. Natural, well-written web content will increase page rank at a faster rate than content that is written only with keywords in mind.
This is especially important for web entrepreneurs who run affiliate sites. Web surfers are getting savvy to the fact that many affiliate sites are just a dummy site set-up to “hopefully” bring in some sales. Experienced affiliate marketers know that you can make a site that is as competitive, and useful, as the affiliate’s host site. The more quality content there is on your site, the better an affiliate site can separate itself from the crowded web marketplace.
But Organic Real Estate is about a lot more than content—and this is where a lot of SEO plans fall short. In addition to providing content, a site owner must determine a target audience. In one way, content and target audience go hand in hand. You have to figure out target audience and tailor content accordingly. In addition, you may have a different target audience for different products or services offered on your site. Content and keyword targeting must be tailored to each potential type of client and customer.
Without these strategies, what will you have: a site that looks more like a link-factory than a trusted resource in a particular industry. In the past, people stressed the need for quality web design. While this is no doubt important, it is now much easier for amateur’s to design a high-quality looking site. It is far less easy for site owners to provide fresh and useful content. You’ll find a bevy of nice-looking sites with little or nothing to offer in terms of content. In Web 2.0, content is what separates the great from the mediocre, and the organic from the artificial.
For more information visit: http://www.markethealth.com/?aid=45678
]]>Think of the alternatives to custom content: no content at all or content that has been taken from another site. If those two options seem unusable, you’re getting a good idea of why custom content is so important. Looking at it another way: not having content is like designing a web site with the exact same layout as Amazon. This just isn’t done—your site needs to be unique to be effective.
The two keys to custom content are uniqueness and authority. An informed buyer is an active buyer. Don’t make a web surfer go elsewhere to find information on products and services. Everything a customer needs to know should be found on your site: informative articles, glossary definitions, reviews of products, answers to Frequently Asked Questions, and more. When all of this content is in place, a site will rank more highly in search engines, so a potential customer will have a better chance to come to the site and start perusing the information.
The idea is not just to sell specific products, but to sell the website itself, as well as sell the entire company. All of these things work in conjunction with each other. If people trust the information on the site, they’ll be more willing to make a purchase. In addition, there’s an element of gratitude for having direct questions answered. A site should never cover the bare minimum, but the gamut—every possible piece of information surrounding an industry, no matter how small.
Along with custom content there should be content organization. Just plastering long paragraphs of text on the screen will exhaust a web surfer before he or she even starts reading. Content needs to be well organized with relevant links both within the article and on the sidebar leading to information that corresponds to the original article. Just as the content needs to be well informed and well written, it needs to be well presented, or a web surfer is going to click out and move on.
All of these issues can make a website stand out from the vast array of sites online. People are more and more looking to the web for both information and shopping. At a content-rich site, surfers can kill two birds with one stone. These days, web owners are hiring copywriters to handle the task of preparing custom content. Each site will have a different demographic and require a different type of writing—for instance, technical or conversational—so it is important to find a content writing firm that specializes in a wide variety of industries.
For more information visit: http://www.markethealth.com/?aid=456782
]]>