Domains for Porn
• Saturday, December 24, 2005 - Building a Blog Day 1
Day 1 1. Decide what Niche your blog will be about. - Tighter Niches are Better: (Big Tits is better than Tits, Asian Tranny is better than Tranny).
- Avoid
Saturated Niches: It will be a lot harder to rise above the noise with
another Teen or Babe blog than with a Foot Fetish or Pregnant blog.
2. Detrmine your Main Categories and Your Keywords.
I'm not going to go real deeply into this, but as a general idea you
want to go with less competitive keywords at first. You can add more
competitive keywords in later when you have built up your content and
links. - 4-8 Main Categories. These should be major keywords that represent "Sub-Niches" or "Areas" within your niche. Should probably be 2-3 word phrases.
- 6-10 Keywords for each Main Category.
Do not pick the keywords with the most searches. I know it's tempting,
but trust me, don't do it. Pick, instead, those with less competing
pages in the index at Google. You will get more traffic at first from
top ten placements with terms that get fewer searches than with page 3
and 4 rankings for terms with more traffic. You'll be able to add these
later and do better with them. These should be 3+ word phrases.
- If you don't have at least 50 Keyword Phrases, add another Main Category or add extra keyword phrases to some of your Main Categories until you do.
3. List your Main Categories and Keywords in an easy to follow format. List them with each Keyword Phrase listed under the Main Category it relates to. This will enable you to organize your blog and to quickly identify topics you need to add posts on. Tomorrow we'll set up our blogs.
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• Friday, September 2, 2005 - Finding RSS Feeds and Finding Holes In RSS Feeds
Hey Kids,
This entry is about finding RSS Feeds and what's better finding Holes in RSS Feed Coverage that you can exploit.
Now we all know about going to Technorati's Rss
Feed search, but that's boring. Old hat. Yesterday's news.
Clusty
Here's something fresh. Clusty is a meta search engine
with a twist. It's called clustering. Essentially it uses the same
basic technology Google uses for it's adsense program LSI or Latent
Semantic Indexing to group, or "cluster" search terms into meaningful
related hierarchies. If that is all greek to you then think of it this
way; It figures out what related keywords might be sub keywords of your
primary keywords. Now that's pretty neat all in and of itself, but
what's really cool is that clusty also has a Blogs
Search link that lets you limit your search to blogs containing your
keywords.
Why is that important? Well, Kinder, if you can find blogs that are
related to your keywords, you can also find 1) rss feeds related to
your keywords. I'll leave it to you to figure out what to do with them
for now, but I'll go over a couple options in another post soon. and 2)
You can also find Comment Forms that allow you to leave your link on
a highly relevant keyword targeted page.
There is software out now that allows you to spam you comments all over
the blogosphere, but after looking it over, I'm going to recomend you
pass. In the first place it is non targeted. It posts your comment to
any blog in it's database. Links to your anal sex pages from a cooking
or needle point blog will not do you any good and may cause you some
problems especially if you are not hosting your own blog. Secondly the
comments it leaves are obvious spam. You will do much much better to
find ONE highly targeted relevant bvlog and leave an individual
relevant message that shows you actually saw the blog than with 100 or
1000 untargeted obvious spam posts.
So fire up clusty, find some related blogs and start making a list of
feed URI's and leaving welcomed comments with your fellow bloggers and
earning valuable links back to your site.
MSN
msn.com has added a new search
query protocol. "feed:" using this protocol causes the search engine to
only return actual rss feeds. Not sites with rss feeds, but the feed
page itself. Again, you can grab these URI's and start making a list of
them for later use, but what you can also doo is hunt for holes.
Let me establish some facts here.
1) You are a believer. You understand that one of the best things you can do for your site, SE wise, is to publish a feed.
2) You basically know how to publish a feed, at the very least through the use of a blog.
OK, now given that wouldn't you rather publish a feed that had 100,
300, 600 feeds in competition than one that had a few thousand? Yeah, I
thought so. So what you do is in the MSN search box type [ feed:
keyword ]. This will return the feeds related to that keyword.
Now you can look through the feeds MSN knows about (and MSN LOVES feeds) for those with less competition, and target them.
Just for instance.
feed: tits
http://search.msn.com/results.aspx?q=feed%3A+tits&FORM=QBRE
returns 6832 results
whereas
feed: "big tits"
http://search.msn.com/results.aspx?q=feed%3A+%22big+tits%22&FORM=QBRE
returns 661 results
Which would you rather be targeting?
So go grab some more feed URIs and hunt down some profitable feed holes for yourselves.
P.S.
If you use clusty first, you can then check all of the related keywords it gives you for the best targets in MSN.
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• Wednesday, August 24, 2005 - Dane's Pond Pad
Hey there kids, welcome
to Dane's Pond Pad! This blog will be about webmastering from an adult
angle. I also maintain a mainstream Marketing Blog at
http://danemorgan.com.
If your new to the idea of adult webmastery be sure to visit Netpond, it is simply the best Adult
Webmaster Board around, with lots of people and mods that really are
about helping out newbies.
If you are new to blogging be sure to bookmark this blog and check back
for my irregular, but semi frequent updates. Als be sure to visit Forum69 the
Netpond Blogging Forum.
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