Saturday, October 18, 2008

Tip #2 (michigan search engine optimization) SEO

Tip #4 on (search engine optimization service) SEO Web Design

Web Seo Specialist a (search engine optimization firm) SEO

Cyrus Mistry from Google presents to 25,000 in Miami -Part 1

Cyrus Mistry from Google presents to 25,000 in Miami -Part 2

Cyrus Mistry from Google presents to 25,000 in Miami -Part 2

This is a truly amazing step for unfranchise owners in Market America.

Market America and Google have partnered to implement the Google Search Appliance™ (GSA)
hardware and software on www.marketamerica.com. The deployment of the GSA applies Google’s
industry leading search engine capabilities to Market America’s website.
The partnership allows real time comparison shopping among the millions of products offered on
www.marketamerica.com. Customers can search for exclusive Market America products and those
from over 2,000 partner stores and have all results shown in an easy to compare format, including the
price of each product on one page. Shoppers will also have the ability to use advanced search features,
including sorting products by price, brand and store.
Market America is continually looking for technology applications that will solidify
marketamerica.com as the ultimate online shopping destination. This initiative using Google™
technology allows Market America’s customers and UnFranchise® Owners to utilize many of the same
benefits they enjoy from Google.com, with specific enterprise enhancements made that will make
search easy, useful and intuitive. Having this type of advanced, but easy to use search capability
permits Market America to more effectively match products with people.
Search engine enhancements on marketamerica.com include:
• Results Grouping – Allows customers to navigate search results easily and clearly using intelligent
grouping of products
• Automatic spell-check – Allows the searcher to avoid missing results through typos or misspellings
• Advanced Boolean Search – Customer can perform sophisticated queries with over 10 special query
terms, including Boolean AND, OR, and NOT searches
• Number Range Search – Customer can restrict search results by a number range, making it easy for
users to restrict by price range or other numerical values.
• Synonyms – Pre-defined synonyms for Market America specific terminology will be displayed to the
user as suggested alternative search queries

Optimized Press Release Services and Articles

Press releases, optimized press release services, how to write a press release, sample press release, writing a press release, Carlos C. 914-908-4773

Articles as links and the fundamental base of the internet is not the page, but the link.

A great way to accumulate links is to write articles and submit them to places interested in quality articles.

Carlos Cintron 914-908-4773
http://www.webseospecialistinnyc.com/

Where do I submit articles in my field? Some places will accept articles automatically and some require editorial approval. If you know your industry well you should know some places that accept articles.

It is important for me to say that I do not have any secret special access to Google. I cannot tell you exactly how the algorithm works.

Carlos Cintron 914-908-4773
http://www.webseospecialistinnyc.com/

What I can do is simply share my experiences and my results. I do my best to share what I know, but nothing can be guaranteed by ANYONE.

Unless you are a Google engineer, you never know for sure. I do well at SEO and have been successful at it, so I want to share that information here.

Ive reached page 3 for the highly competitive term SEO in just a few month. So Ive done some SEO work.

Friday, October 17, 2008

Internet Marketing and Internet Adverting Spending Rise!

During a major economic crisis, Internet advertising is on the rise. Search Engine Optimization and (SEO Web Design) will be a significant tool for online advertising.

Here's the latest:

Google Profit Tops Estimates on Ad Sales; Shares Rise (Update3)

By Crayton Harrison

Oct. 16 (Bloomberg) -- Google Inc., owner of the most popular Internet search engine, said third-quarter profit climbed 26 percent as more customers used Web search ads to spur sales in a slowing economy, sending the shares higher.

Net income rose to $1.35 billion, or $4.24 a share, from $1.07 billion, or $3.38, a year earlier, the company said today in a statement. Leaving out costs such as stock-based compensation, profit was $4.92 a share, beating the $4.75 average estimate of analysts in a Bloomberg survey.

Advertisers are shifting budgets away from TV and print media toward ads that run alongside search listings, targeting online shoppers. The Internet will account for 8.7 percent of the $284 billion in U.S. ad spending this year, up from 7.2 percent in 2007, according to Barclays Capital.

``This was exactly the kind of shot in the arm that investors need,'' said Jeff Lindsay, an analyst with Sanford C. Bernstein & Co. in New York. ``People lost a lot of faith in the Internet, but this is exactly what the doctor ordered.''

Excluding revenue passed on to partner sites, sales expanded to $4.04 billion, compared with the $4.05 billion average estimate. Total revenue climbed 31 percent to $5.54 billion.

Google, based in Mountain View, California, rose $36.98, or 10 percent, to $390 in extended trading after closing at $353.02 on the Nasdaq Stock Market. The shares have dropped 49 percent this year.

Low Expectations

At least eight analysts had reduced their estimates for Google's third quarter this month after the global credit crisis erupted. That made it easier for the company to beat their average estimates today.

``We are realistic about the poor state of the global economy, but it's Google, so we'll manage accordingly,'' Chief Financial Officer Patrick Pichette said today in an interview. ``We had a good third quarter, with strong traffic and revenue growth.''

In the U.S., Google fielded 63 percent of online searches in August, double the market share of Yahoo! Inc. and Microsoft Corp. combined. That dominance has helped Google command higher prices for ads, according to Yahoo, which is awaiting government approval of an agreement to let Google sell some ads on its sites.

`Uncharted Territory'

``The economic situation is so fluid that we're all sort of in uncharted territory,'' Chief Executive Officer Eric Schmidt said on a conference call. ``We've always been in this for the long term, and we believe that's even more important today than ever.''

The slumping U.S. economy had been expected to drag down results, said Clay Moran, an analyst at Stanford Group Co. in Boca Raton, Florida. ``Google is a resilient business that's going to fare relatively well in this recession, but it's not immune from the overall macroeconomic environment,'' he said.

Google, which doesn't forecast results, is seeing a slowdown in spending from some types of customers, such as U.S. auto and home-financing companies, Pichette said.

The company has cut back by slowing its hiring rate and spending less on travel and events, said co-founder Sergey Brin.

``We don't know exactly what the future holds. We've taken a conservative approach,'' Brin said in an interview. ``We view this as an opportunity to refine our company and sharpen it.''

Cutting Costs

Capital expenditures fell to $452 million, down 18 percent from a year earlier, as Google made more efficient use of its computing centers, Brin said. He said he couldn't forecast whether the costs would continue to fall.

Google recorded $280 million in costs for stock-based pay, up from $273 million the previous quarter. Those costs will reach $1.1 billion in 2008, leaving out stock awards granted after Oct. 1, Google said.

Sales outside the U.S. made up 51 percent of Google's revenue, up from 48 percent a year earlier. If foreign exchange rates for currency had remained constant over that period, Google's third-quarter sales this year would have been $168 million lower, the company said.

The credit crisis may cost the Internet ad market $6.7 billion in lost sales through 2010, according to Collins Stewart Plc. Big and small businesses, from General Motors Corp. to Simplexity LLC, are reducing ad spending plans, while some financial companies, such as Wachovia Corp., have disappeared.

The reductions will push down growth in U.S. Internet ad outlays to less than 20 percent next year for the first time since 2002, said Sandeep Aggarwal, a Collins Stewart analyst in San Francisco.

Google, which gets almost all its revenue from search ads, is developing ways to advertise with images and video. The company struck a deal this month to show full-length programs from CBS Corp. on its YouTube site, splitting ad revenue with the network.

Microsoft, seeking to close the gap with Google, bid as much as $47.5 billion for Yahoo this year. Sunnyvale, California-based Yahoo rejected Microsoft's offer in May, opting instead to strike the advertising partnership with Google.

To contact the reporter on this story: Crayton Harrison in Dallas at tharrison5@bloomberg.net

Last Updated: October 16, 2008 19:13 EDT