Top 5 Ways To Use Web 2.0 for Web Marketing

Web 2.0 and Web marketing is a match made in heaven. There are many ways to create traffic to your website using the power of Web 2.0. Below I am going to examine what I consider to be the top five.


Jack Humphrey, a well-known Web 2.0 expert, defines it this way in his Authority Black

Book:


Generally speaking, if people can submit links to content, submit content, make comments and vote good/bad content up/down thus affecting the amount of traffic that content can generate, it’s Web 2.0.


Blogs, wikis, file sharing sites, content rating systems, book-marking sites, and social networking sites are all examples of Web 2.0. Some of the more well-known Web 2.0 sites are YouTube (file sharing), Facebook and MySpace (social networking), Wikipedia (wiki), BlinkList (book-marking) and Digg (content rating system). The list is almost endless, and the traffic that these websites generate is absolutely staggering.

Read more »

Related posts

Getting Spam And Virus Protection For Your Business Email

With anti spam vendors offering low cost licensing, businesses can now afford advanced email spam and virus protection with a simple to use interface at a much lower cost.  The great thing about technology is that as it evolves it gets faster, additional features and economical.  Over the past few years the same evolution has taken place with anti spam technology and services.  In large part this can be attributed to the open source software community plus enterprising companies enhancing the capabilities of this software and packaging it into easy to use anti spam appliances.

It is not practical to have anti spam software running on desktops in a networked business environment.  Managing all employee junk email software at the desktop is not realistic.  It can be a nightmare and costly in terms time and licensing.

Read more »

Related posts

Do Search Engines Think That Your Website is Spam?

For example, search engines might look for the most frequent keyword in the internet page, the number of times a particular keyword appears in the internet page, the domain name associated with the web page, the number of links pointing to the page, the HTML tags in which a keyword appears and a lot of other elements.

The patent filing indicates that search engines look at hundreds of different factors to rank internet pages.

How search engines try to detect spammy pages

Read more »

Related posts