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Added for You - Banned By Google And Back Again
Researching A Business Opportunity nest webmasters write emails begging for mercy.When researching a business opportunity, it is essential to make sure that the business opportunity complies with the business opportunity statutes of the state in which you are doing the transaction. Also, check to see if it is registered. If the business opportunity comes under the FTC rule that it is mandated to disclose specific information regarding the business, ask if they are offering a prospectus to potential buyers.How To Research A Business OpportunityIt is necessary to study the history of the parent company, to determine if it is a successful company. It is necessary to be very sure that it is the right opportunity th Like me. I did some searching via Google, to find out how to do a re-inclusion request. Here's how: 1. First, you check your site is truly gone, by going to http://www.google.com, typing 'site:www.yourdomain.com' without the apostrophes. If it returns no pages at all ... 2. You check Google's webmaster guidelines at http://www.google.com/webmasters/guidelines.html. These are not really guidelines; you should treat them as iron-clad rules. 3. You Don't Just Answer Questions at Your Job Interview The date: 29th July 2005. The time: early morning. I got out of bed and fired up my PC. Opened my browser to check my site. Had a look at the third-party Google toolbar plugin (http://toolbar.google.com/) on said browser (FireFox). It showed grey.Many years ago, I hated what I was doing for a living and engaged a career coach. As a first assignment, she encouraged me to write down several short stories about times and events in my life where I influenced the outcome. I was stumped at first, but after a few days, I came up with over 15 pages of "stories". These were about times in my life where I not only influenced the outcome but also grew myself and bettered the existence of others around me.So what does this have to do with a job interview?If you read other books on job interviews, you'll notice they feed you lists of interview questions to learn answers to. An intervie Ice formed in my stomach. I opened my bugged version of Internet Explorer: my PageRank was 0. By now I was frantic. I went to http://www.google.com and typed in 'site:www.tigertom.com': no pages listed. I did this for two other satellite sites of mine: ditto. What had happened? TigerTom.Com (http://www.tigertom.com) had been banned by Google. I went to the WebmasterWorld forum (http://www.webmasterworld.com), and found out the awful truth. Google was doing one of its periodic updates of its algorithm, and had filtered out my sites completely. Further research there, and a bit of soul-searching, revealed why. I had too many pseudo-directory pages with auto-generated external links. Snippets from search engine results were used as descriptions of said links. Said links were run though a redirect script. These are hallmarks of pseudo-directories and 'AdSense scraper'* sites. Google is reportedly trying to filter these from its 'SERPs'**. I say reportedly, because Google doesn't announce these purges. They are inferred. To compound my sins, these pages were also effectively doorway pages†. The theory was that legitimate sites had been hit as 'collateral damage'. I say theory, in that Google rarely comments on individual cases. It won't tell you exactly why your site was banned. I guess this is for reasons of time, and to give no clues to spammers. In my case the ban was justified for my two satellite sites; while not looking like spam, they were effectively doorway sites. My main site was different. It had offending pages, but was mostly a diverse labour of seven years; a personal site on steroids. Google bans sites algorithmically: a site that fits their 'spammer' profile gets dropped via software from their index automatically. Real spammers shrug their shoulders and move on; honest webmasters write emails begging for mercy. Like me. I did some searching via Google, to find out how to do a re-inclusion request. Here's how: 1. First, you check your site is truly gone, by going to http://www.google.com, typing 'site:www.yourdomain.com' without the apostrophes. If it returns no pages at all ... 2. You check Google's webmaster guidelines at http://www.google.com/webmasters/guidelines.html. These are not really guidelines; you should treat them as iron-clad rules. 3. You 10 Ways You Can Make It Easy For Email Spammers ad happened?Here are 10 ways you can make it easy for spammers to continue to harass you and the other 1 billion internet users worldwide.Which of these "sins" do you commit?1. Buying from spammers - since it costs just a few cents to email thousands of email addresses a spammer only needs one sale now and then to make the whole process worthwhile. Spammers just need to hit go and the rest is automatic, so by buying from them you are granting them a license to make money.2. Being suckered in by FREE - free is the most popular keyword and attracts like nothing else, problem is we assume free has no catches - the firm is just giving you so TigerTom.Com (http://www.tigertom.com) had been banned by Google. I went to the WebmasterWorld forum (http://www.webmasterworld.com), and found out the awful truth. Google was doing one of its periodic updates of its algorithm, and had filtered out my sites completely. Further research there, and a bit of soul-searching, revealed why. I had too many pseudo-directory pages with auto-generated external links. Snippets from search engine results were used as descriptions of said links. Said links were run though a redirect script. These are hallmarks of pseudo-directories and 'AdSense scraper'* sites. Google is reportedly trying to filter these from its 'SERPs'**. I say reportedly, because Google doesn't announce these purges. They are inferred. To compound my sins, these pages were also effectively doorway pages†. The theory was that legitimate sites had been hit as 'collateral damage'. I say theory, in that Google rarely comments on individual cases. It won't tell you exactly why your site was banned. I guess this is for reasons of time, and to give no clues to spammers. In my case the ban was justified for my two satellite sites; while not looking like spam, they were effectively doorway sites. My main site was different. It had offending pages, but was mostly a diverse labour of seven years; a personal site on steroids. Google bans sites algorithmically: a site that fits their 'spammer' profile gets dropped via software from their index automatically. Real spammers shrug their shoulders and move on; honest webmasters write emails begging for mercy. Like me. I did some searching via Google, to find out how to do a re-inclusion request. Here's how: 1. First, you check your site is truly gone, by going to http://www.google.com, typing 'site:www.yourdomain.com' without the apostrophes. If it returns no pages at all ... 2. You check Google's webmaster guidelines at http://www.google.com/webmasters/guidelines.html. These are not really guidelines; you should treat them as iron-clad rules. 3. You Series 3 Exam e run though a redirect script. These are hallmarks of pseudo-directories and 'AdSense scraper'* sites. Google is reportedly trying to filter these from its 'SERPs'**. I say reportedly, because Google doesn't announce these purges. They are inferred.The Series 3 exam is the national commodity futures test. If you ever wanted to participate in the futures market trading contracts, options or engage in hedging strategies, this may be a career for you. Adding licenses such as the Series 3 can add to your credentials in any investment career. If you do not have an impressive finance degree or other designations, this license will at least add to your credentials and give you some benefit when job hunting or going on interviews.Preparing for the series 3 exam usually takes 6-8 weeks of 1-2 hours per day home study. The exam is a multiple choice test. The exam includes the following topics: To compound my sins, these pages were also effectively doorway pages†. The theory was that legitimate sites had been hit as 'collateral damage'. I say theory, in that Google rarely comments on individual cases. It won't tell you exactly why your site was banned. I guess this is for reasons of time, and to give no clues to spammers. In my case the ban was justified for my two satellite sites; while not looking like spam, they were effectively doorway sites. My main site was different. It had offending pages, but was mostly a diverse labour of seven years; a personal site on steroids. Google bans sites algorithmically: a site that fits their 'spammer' profile gets dropped via software from their index automatically. Real spammers shrug their shoulders and move on; honest webmasters write emails begging for mercy. Like me. I did some searching via Google, to find out how to do a re-inclusion request. Here's how: 1. First, you check your site is truly gone, by going to http://www.google.com, typing 'site:www.yourdomain.com' without the apostrophes. If it returns no pages at all ... 2. You check Google's webmaster guidelines at http://www.google.com/webmasters/guidelines.html. These are not really guidelines; you should treat them as iron-clad rules. 3. You Marketing - Lifeblood of a Business guess this is for reasons of time, and to give no clues to spammers.So your business does its fair share of advertising, right? You run commercials on the radio and on TV. You post ads in the daily newspaper and in the weekly neighborhood tabloids. You have a quarter-page ad in the Yellow Pages and are listed in the Business section of the phone book. You have an Internet webpage and can be found on all the major search engines.Granted, most small businesses cannot advertise in all these ways. Advertising normally requires a significant financial investment, and volume advertising is typically out of reach of the typical small business. But you probably are advertising in some manner.Say you run a s In my case the ban was justified for my two satellite sites; while not looking like spam, they were effectively doorway sites. My main site was different. It had offending pages, but was mostly a diverse labour of seven years; a personal site on steroids. Google bans sites algorithmically: a site that fits their 'spammer' profile gets dropped via software from their index automatically. Real spammers shrug their shoulders and move on; honest webmasters write emails begging for mercy. Like me. I did some searching via Google, to find out how to do a re-inclusion request. Here's how: 1. First, you check your site is truly gone, by going to http://www.google.com, typing 'site:www.yourdomain.com' without the apostrophes. If it returns no pages at all ... 2. You check Google's webmaster guidelines at http://www.google.com/webmasters/guidelines.html. These are not really guidelines; you should treat them as iron-clad rules. 3. You Poor Performance - Fix it by Coaching nest webmasters write emails begging for mercy.Coaching is about finding out the cause of poor performance or behaviour and discussing with the team member how to put it right.The team member might respond immediately to coaching and improve the situation. However the improvement wont always be permanent and you may have to do further coaching.When I suggest this to some managers, they see it as some kind of touchy-feely softly-softly approach. Let me assure you right now - it's not! It's about telling the team member what part of their behaviour you're unhappy with, listening to what they have to say and agreeing a way forward.The goal is to achieve a change in Like me. I did some searching via Google, to find out how to do a re-inclusion request. Here's how: 1. First, you check your site is truly gone, by going to http://www.google.com, typing 'site:www.yourdomain.com' without the apostrophes. If it returns no pages at all ... 2. You check Google's webmaster guidelines at http://www.google.com/webmasters/guidelines.html. These are not really guidelines; you should treat them as iron-clad rules. 3. You stop the offending content from being web-accessible, permanently. If you're familiar with Apache web-server mod_rewrite you can: - Send a 410 'Gone' response to requests for the offending pages, or - CHMOD them to 600, which will return a 403 'Forbidden' response, or - Move them to a different directory if you need to keep them, or - Just delete them. Don't try to be clever. Just get rid of them. 4. You go to http://www.google.com/support/bin/request.py, tick the relevant boxes, and type 'Re-inclusion request' in the subject box of the form. 4a. You add the complete URL of your site i.e. http://www.naughtydomain.com, 4b. You state that you have read the webmaster guidelines above, 4c. You admit what you did wrong; simply, succinctly, with no carping or special pleading. Don't try to be clever. Don't argue. Don't lie. Don't waffle. Google has cached copies of your site. When an engineer checks your site, he'll look for the offending content, and compare it against their cache. He'll spend about two minutes on it; don't give him a reason to continue to exclude you. 4d. You ask for re-inclusion. 5. You wait. In my case, it took about a week; a long, unpleasant, fretful week. I sent follow up emails saying what I was doing, and a fax, and I was going to write letters if that didn't work. That was probably excessive. Once you have a ticket number, that's all that should be necessary. They emailed a standard reply saying "the problem had been passed to their engineers". That's good. I understand they send no reply to spammers. A week later my site was back in. Lesson learnt. To make sure I'm not so vulnerable again, I'm splitting my content to different sites, on the principle of 'best not to have all your eggs in one basket'. Have I learnt anything from this? Yes. Have more than one site as your 'money-maker'. Spend less time on search engine optimisation and more on traditional marketing. Come up with a unique selling proposition that compels people to link to your site
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