EasyPostcard

We will show you how you can launch a big marketing campaign for your business.
Subscribe

How to Generate Traffic using Postcards

June 04, 2009 By: admin Category: Articles


Marketing with postcards has been proven to be an efficient advertising method not only by regular sellers but by internet marketers as well. Yes, even if you’re selling products and services online, you can enhance your marketing performance through postcard advertising.

Remember that not everyone spend a lot of time on the web. Add to this, not everyone knows where to find you online. One way to use postcards effectively is to let people know the URL to your business website. Below are some tips on how you can get more response from postcard marketing:

Use the right mailing list.
Make sure that your postcards are sent to the right people. Who is your target market? If you don’t have your own mailing list, you may consider purchasing a valid mailing address from a reputable list broker. (more…)

Marketing Your Business Online Through Written Articles

June 04, 2009 By: admin Category: Articles


If you own an online business, one of your main concerns is probably receiving huge web traffic. But more than just getting visits, converting those hits into actual sales is the most important thing. How can you market your website more effectively by using written articles? How can article writing help you achieve a high conversion rating?

Directing People to Your Site through Articles

If you want to find anything over the internet, all you have to do is type in your keywords in your search bar, hit enter, and you’ll have a list of information resources right in front of you. Most of these resources are actually written articles that are submitted to search engine directories and article submission sites. If you click on the first article that captures your attention, you could either read about the exact information you need or you may have to click another article until you find what you’re looking for. (more…)

How to Build a Google Sitemap

June 03, 2009 By: admin Category: Articles


Google has implemented a cutting edge method of crawling web site for its search engine index. This unprecedented method of indexing web pages is known as Google Sitemaps, and it is quickly growing in popularity among webmasters and SEO agents and managers due to its ability to get entire web site indexed quickly and to pick up errors in the links coming into and out of these web site.

Google Sitemaps consists of placing the URLs of your pages along with important information regarding how Google should index them into an XML document. This information is then read by the Google Spider and the pages are normally indexed quite quickly assuming that they are coherent to Google’s standards for indexing pages (and also assuming that the sitemaps conform to Googles Sitemap Criteria which will be explained a little later).

There are two primary types of Google Sitemaps. The first is a list of pages in a website and the second is a list of sitemaps in the website. Google has limited the number of URLs in its sitemaps to fifty thousand URLs. This may sound like a lot, but for some of the more intricate web site, fifty thousand URLs may not even make a dent in what they want indexed.

This led to the advent of the Google Sitemap index file which can index up to one thousand sitemaps. If you do the math, this means that you could have one thousand sitemaps with up to fifty thousand URLs in each sitemap which allows for fifty million URLs to be placed in your Google Sitemap scheme. But wait, there’s more. Who ever said that you can’t have an index of indexes? You could actually make an index of a thousand index files which are all indexes of a thousand index files. Basically, there is no limit to the number of URLs that you can hold in your Google sitemaps.

Now that you understand the power of the Google Sitemap you’re probably asking yourself how to create and implement a Google Sitemap. The first step is to simply create your sitemaps. Here are the templates which are also available at http://www.google.com/webmasters/sitemaps/

For a sitemap file use the following format:

http://www.example.com/

2005-01-01
monthly

0.8

http://www.example.com/catalog?item=12&desc=vacation_hawaii

weekly

http://www.example.com/catalog?item=73&desc=vacation_new_zealand

2004-12-23
weekly

http://www.example.com/catalog?item=74&desc=vacation_newfoundland

2004-12-23T18:00:15+00:00

0.3

http://www.example.com/catalog?item=83&desc=vacation_usa

2004-11-23
Everything here is pretty self-explanatory with the exception of the changefreq and the priority aspects. The changefreq asks how often you think the page will change on average. The possible values for the changefreq option are: always, hourly, daily, weekly, monthly, yearly, and never. The priority aspect basically just asks how important the particular page is in your website. The value can be anywhere between 0.0 and 1.0. If you decide not to specify a priority it will default to 0.5.

To create a sitemap index file follow the following format:

http://www.example.com/sitemap1.xml.gz

2004-10-01T18:23:17+00:00

http://www.example.com/sitemap2.xml.gz

2005-01-01

This is all pretty straight forward but it leads me to my next point. You notice that the file names all end in .gz. Google allows you to compress your sitemaps so that they take up less of your disk space when you place them on your site and less of your band width when Google downloads them (which it seems to do approximately once every 9 hours or so). You may only use .gz compression. If you try .zip, it won’t work.

Now all that you really have to do is submit your sitemap to google. In order to do this you must go to https://www.google.com/webmasters/sitemaps/login and log into your Google account. If you don’t have a Google account, you can create one. Once you log in you will be allowed to submit your sitemap into the google index. At some point within about 24 hours of your submission, Google will give you the option to place a small HTML file onto your website so that it can confirm that you do, indeed, have access to editing the site. Once you have done this it will begin to provide you with statistics regarding your google sitemap. (Note that even without this feature you can see when google downloaded the sitemap last and what the status of the sitemap was at that time.)

How Google Sitemaps Fits Into Search Engine Optimization.

According to Google, the Sitemaps utility is free and will continue to be – yet it’s almost as good as the paid inclusion service offered by rival search engines. So how can you take advantage of this great service?

First of all, you should create a Google Account. Although you can still use Google Sitemaps without an account, you need one before you can use Google’s tools to check your site submissions. Once you do that and go to sitemaps.google.com, you’ll be guided through the process.

Google Sitemaps has a very helpful question and answer page that will give you the help you need – the answers to most questions people have can be found right there. Good luck!

About the Author

Luie De Von is a marketing consultant with Easypostcard Marketing and has been providing consumers and business owners with marketing strategies. For years he has helped businesses to have more and growing clients through Advertising Postcards , Marketing Postcard , Business Post Card.