Oct
22
Ways to keep surfer stay longer at your website or blog
09:39 am
Have you ever encounter that your website is not profitable although you have done much to promote your website and getting lots of traffic? This could due to the fact that your website visitors are not staying there for longer time. There are some of the consideration you could take note of and these will be explained below:
Giving direct website
When a visitor surf and come to your home page, he or she will get his or her first impression. As such, the home page should be professionally designed. It should be appealing to the visitors. You could easily outsource to some professional website design company if you are not trained to do it.
Your website must contain four important information. You must tell the surfer what your website is exactly about and what is there for them. At the same time, you must also tell them why should they get Product/Services from there and why now. The last important information you must convey to your surfer is what is the benefit they will get from there
These messages should described in a short and precise words so that they could easily understood at one look.
Restricting from showing flash animation and pop ups
You must know that your target audience is world wide and there are many surfer who have slow internet connection or they do not have flash animation plug in. You must assume the worst scenario of your surfer.
As animation typically will takes up some time to load, it could be annoying for visitors just to wait to view the page. The situation will be even worst if their internet connection is slow.
For your information, those web pages with flash animation will also be difficult to index on most search engine.
Your web pages should try not to have any advertisement pop ups. Surfers could be annoyed. They may not be interested in these advertisements especially when they are surfing for something.
Filed Under Website promotion | 1 comment
Oct
17
How Google works!!!
10:49 am
I have found out the procedure of how the magical thing called as google works.Click the picture above to check out how they make the fastest way out to get the search results more faster day by day.
Also It explains the revolutionary changes that google has contributed to make the life of mankind more simpler as it grows.
Filed Under Tutorials | 1 comment
Oct
14
Googly dance of google!!!
06:10 pm
The Google Dance has been named by webmasters after the name of Google to explain a concept associated will all search engines. It is not surprising that Google’s reputation as a search engine reaches all over the world and thus has been minutely scrutinized by other search engines always. When Google shuffles the rankings of websites in its search engine results pages (SERPS), the results of a particular search on Google is very fluctuating. This is simply what is termed as ‘dance’. While the dance is taking place, the results of a particular search on Google varies from minute to minute.
This change in the index in terms of outcome is instantly reflected on the SERPS, but the actual process takes over the next few days. It is not feasible for Google to shut down its operations or go offline till the updated index has been completely transferred. Thus, the results for a particular index ‘dance’ till the index update can reach all Google servers and be transferred.What we need to remember Google has three main servers which are www.google.com, www2.google.com and www3.google.com. While an index update is taking place, the results that will be visible on the three servers will vary to a large extent. Why is it so? Simple, this is because one server is reflected the updated index while the other is still showing the results of the old index.
Simple ways to know whether ‘the dance is on’ is by first making a search request on www.google.com and observe the blue bar that appears on top of the page. It shows ‘pages 1-12 of about 564,000’. The next step would be to do the same on www2.google.com and www3.google.com. By seeing if the number of total pages differs in each other, one will know if the dance is on. Once the numbers do not vary and the order of the results is the same on all the servers, we know that the ‘dance is over.’
Does the dance still happen?
Experts in the field believe that this does not occur now. However, the monthly update of the index list is a direct result of the deep crawl employed by Google’s spiders to crawl the web. People who regularly search the net strongly believe that the results fluctuate more than just once a month. This happens because Google employs a fresh crawl and continuously carried out to keep the index updated. ‘Everflux’ is a term that describes this frequent fluctuation that emerges in the results of a search. The fresh crawl does not determine whether the dance is on because this does not explain the variation in the total number of search pages. Remember a rule, if the three Google servers show a variation in the number of back links to important sites such as Yahoo or AOL, then just know that the ‘Google dance is on.’
So what does it all mean?
An important aspect to remember is that the monthly update does not lose its significance. Fresh crawls ensure that a continuous search of the web is taking place which causes pages to keep getting included in and excluded out of the result pages on a daily basis. Remember that Google’s ranking of web pages is determined by the deep crawl of the web. Don’t lose heart when your ranking drops suddenly among Google’s rankings.
This is temporary and related to the Google dance, after five or six days you will be relieved when you observe that the rankings have stabilized. Do not try to compensate by panicking, keep the content quality high on your website and you will emerge the victor!
Filed Under SEO Tips and Tricks and Website Marketing | Add comment
Oct
10
Convert Visitor into Subscriber to your website
07:17 am
If a person visits your website and leaves, chances are that he or she will not come back, especially if there are no compelling reasons to do so. After all, we all behave rather impulsively on the Internet, so much so that we can easily forget where we were 10 web pages ago.But the bottom line is that your visitor may not come back to your website again. If 1,000 visitors visit your website, leave and never come back again, you can imagine the amount of potential revenue lost, simply because they do not come back. You could have converted a fraction of the visitors into your customers.
Some may say that creating unique content can keep some of the visitors coming back, but very often, unique content is not the solution. The real, long-term solution lies in converting your visitors into subscribers of your mailing list.
Before your visitor leaves your website, you want to convert him or her into your subscriber via a simple opt-in to your mailing list. You do this by asking for your visitor’s name and email address through your opt-in form.
And if your visitor signs up to be on your mailing list, you can still follow up with him via email. You can get your subscriber to consider your offer, or endorse another offer to him or her.
All in all, you want to convert as many visitors into subscribers as possible and obtain the potential revenue you rightfully deserve - the easy, wise way
Filed Under SEO Tips and Tricks and Website promotion | Add comment
Oct
07
Ways to be a good Web Developer/Designer
06:58 pm
Whether writing server-side, client-side, or regular-old-markup, you need to develop some debug muscles. Errors are an incurable side effect of human programming, and when they pop on your screen, you can probably hear your bank account draining. Become an adept debugger and you’ll write cleaner apps, in shorter time.
Bigger Debuggers in 12 Easy StepsConsidering how much time we all spend debugging, it is ironic how rare a topic it is in books and conversation. So how does one become a better debugger? Hopefully, the twelve guidelines I’ve compiled here will help you squash bugs faster, smarter, and with more authority.
1. Organize your code.
Let’s face it, building websites isn’t rocket science. If you’ve been at it for 6 months, you’ve probably developed some sort of methodology. All sites share common elements, pay attention to what they are and re-use code as much as possible. Organize your code and includes so you know where everything is.
The W3C is pushing standards that separate content from structure; you’ll find adopting this philosophy helps when debugging as well. Some general guidelines:
- Code once, include often. I’ll say it again, organize your code so you know where everything is. Strive to have no duplicated code on your site.
- Externalize client-side scripts.
Put all CSS and JavaScript into external includes. Your pages will load faster, as the scripts will go into the browser’s cache. Also, you’ll be able to disable all your JavaScript or all your CSS more easily. Resist the temptation from the darkside, never code CSS inline or write javascripts willy-nilly through your pages. You’ll be happy later when you want to either turn it all off, or export it to another project.
- Refine it.
Every website gains features through the development cycle. When a complex project reaches the 75% complete zone, it is usually begging, pleading, and bleeding for a rewrite. Try to take the 2, 3, maybe 4 days it will take to go back through your code and refine it when it feels out of hand. Don’t be the type of a developer that has an FUNW folder for an inbox. Try to build in as much scalability as you can from the start.
Filed Under Tutorials | 1 comment


