Sunday, 19 February 2017
SEO Keywords: How Better Keyword Research Gets You Better Results
What Are SEO Keywords?
Your SEO keywords are the key words and phrases in your web content that make it possible for people to find your site via search engines. A website that is well optimized for search engines "speaks the same language" as its potential visitor base with keywords for SEO that help connect searchers to your site. Keywords are one of the main elements of SEO.
In other words, you need to know how people are looking for the products, services or information that you offer, in order to make it easy for them to find you—otherwise, they'll land on one of the many other pages in the Google results. Implementing keyword SEO will help your site rank above your competitors.
This is why developing a list of keywords is one of the first and most important steps in any search engine optimization initiative. Keywords and SEO are directly connected when it comes to running a winning search marketing campaign. Because keywords are foundational for all your other SEO efforts, it's well worth the time and investment to ensure your SEO keywords are highly relevant to your audience and effectively organized for action.
Settling on the right SEO keywords is a delicate process involving both trial and error, but the basics are easy to understand. Here we’ll walk you through researching what your customers are looking for, discovering those keywords that will help you rank on a search engine results page (SERP), and putting them to work in your online content.
Finding Your Best Keywords for SEO
Most beginning search marketers make the same mistakes when it comes to SEO keyword research:
Only doing SEO keyword research once,
Not bothering to update and expand their SEO keyword list, or
Targeting keywords that are too popular, meaning they’re way too competitive.
Basically, SEO keyword research should be an ongoing and ever-evolving part of your job as a marketer. Old keywords need to be reevaluated periodically, and high-volume, competitive keywords (or “head” keywords, as opposed to long-tailed keywords) can often be usefully replaced or augmented with longer, more specific phrases designed not to bring in just any visitor but exactly the right visitors. (Who visits your site – particularly if they’re people who are actively looking for your services – is at least as important as how many people visit.)
And you’ve got to diversify. Here’s a tongue-twister that’s absolutely true: diversity is a key word in the keyword world. You’re not going to stand out if you find yourself using all of the same keywords as your competitors. Not only should you try new keyword search tools and keep track of the results, but you should feel free to experiment based on your own research – who else uses your keywords? And how do you make yourself stand out? By providing great content that truly answers the questions your prospective customers are asking with their keyword searches.
Making Your SEO Keywords Work for You
Now that you’ve found the best keywords, you need to put them to work in order to get SEO results (search-driven traffic, conversions, and all that good stuff).
So: how to proceed? On the one hand, SEO best practices recommend that you include relevant keywords in a number of high-attention areas on your site, everywhere from the titles and body text of your pages to your URLs to your meta tags to your image file names. On the other hand, successfully optimized websites tend to have thousands or even millions of keywords. You can't very well craft a single, unique page for every one of your keywords; at the same time, you can't try to cram everything onto a handful of pages with keyword stuffing and expect to rank for every individual keyword. It just doesn't work that way.
So how does it work? The answer is keyword grouping and organization. By dividing your keywords into small, manageable groups of related keywords, you’ll cut down on your workload (significantly), while still creating targeted, specific pages.
For example, let’s say you were running the website of an online pet store. You might be wise to create one keyword grouping for all your dog-related products, then one for all of your parakeet-related projects, etc. The next step would be to segment each individual group into smaller subgroups (parakeet cages, parakeet toys, parakeet snacks) and then even smaller groups for each type of product (low-fat parakeet snacks, luxury parakeet snacks… you get the idea). Now your pet store can create individual pages optimized for each small keyword group.
A marketer attempting to optimize a web page for the "gourmet parakeet snacks" keyword group should consider doing most if not all of the following:
Using the keyword in the title of the page
Using the keyword in the URL (e.g., online-petstore.com/parakeets/snacks/gourmet)
Using the keyword, and variations (e.g., "gourmet parakeet snacks"), throughout the page copy
Using the keyword in the meta tags, especially the meta description
Using the keyword in any image file paths and in the images' alt text
Using the keyword as the anchor text in links back to the page from elsewhere on the site
When optimizing your web pages, keep in mind that keyword relevance is more important than keyword density in SEO.
Manual keyword grouping can be very time-consuming, of course. Some of our own tools, which may prove helpful in a pinch, include our Keyword Niche Finder, which works just like a regular SEO keyword tool, but returns you suggestions pre-grouped into relevant clusters. We also provide a Keyword Grouper, which groups preexisting lists automatically.
Source: https://www.wordstream.com/
Labels:forex, iqoption, pubg Hacked
Keyword Research
Tuesday, 14 February 2017
Trainer Sniper Elite 4
Labels:forex, iqoption, pubg Hacked
Trainers
Saturday, 11 February 2017
Showing a PowerPoint file in your blog
This article is about options for showing the contents of a PowerPoint file inside your blog.
Previously I've described how to load content from MS Word to your blog.
But some people have material in PowerPoint (or other presentation software) files, that they want to show in their blog. So far, I've identified three options for doing this.
These approaches should work on any PowerPoint formatted presentation, no matter what tool it was prepared with - except of course if it was Google Docs in which case you go straight to option 2.
At first, I thought that this was a backward approach. But recently I wrote an article based on a presentation that I gave several years ago. After trying various ways of displaying the presentation and the article, I realised that I was trying to find a way to include all the comments that I made when I used the presentation face-to-face. To do this, I needed to show each slide individually, so I used this option because it gives full control over what commentary goes with each picture.
But you may want to copy-and-paste, either because you don't want the content as images, or because you want other things like presenter notes etc that are not stored in the presentation slides.
To do this, you need to:
An alternative may be to export the presentation as an outline (ie rich-text or RTF format), and then convert it via Google Docs in the same way that you would for a Word document. You would need to test this to check if it brings in the items that are stored outside of the slides.
I haven't tried this one out myself, but in theory at least it should work.
Converting from MS Word to Blogger, via Google Docs
File hosting options - places to keep your files on-line
Tools for applying copyright protection to your blog
Putting embed code from an outside service into your blog
.
Previously I've described how to load content from MS Word to your blog.
But some people have material in PowerPoint (or other presentation software) files, that they want to show in their blog. So far, I've identified three options for doing this.
These approaches should work on any PowerPoint formatted presentation, no matter what tool it was prepared with - except of course if it was Google Docs in which case you go straight to option 2.
Option 1: Each slide as an image
Follow these steps:- In PowerPoint, choose Save-as, and choose an image format (eg .png).
- When the system asks if you want all slides or just the current one, choose All.
- Upload all the image files that were created to your blog - it's your choice whether you put them all in the same post, or one-per-post.
I usually upload them firstly to Picasa web albums or another picture-hosting service, and then just link from my blog to there)
At first, I thought that this was a backward approach. But recently I wrote an article based on a presentation that I gave several years ago. After trying various ways of displaying the presentation and the article, I realised that I was trying to find a way to include all the comments that I made when I used the presentation face-to-face. To do this, I needed to show each slide individually, so I used this option because it gives full control over what commentary goes with each picture.
Option 2: Convert to a Google Docs Presentation
This is described in detail in Using Google Docs's publish-and-embed option - I believe it's better than trying to use Google Web-elements, because it achieves much the same thing, and takes one piece (web-elements) out of the equation.Option 3 Copy and Paste
As with MS Word, copy-and-paste from PowerPoint to Blogger is NOT recommended, because the PowerPoint content can have all sorts of extra HTML codes attached to it, and these can cause negative effects in your blog.But you may want to copy-and-paste, either because you don't want the content as images, or because you want other things like presenter notes etc that are not stored in the presentation slides.
To do this, you need to:
- Copy from PowerPoint,
- Paste into a text-editor (eg Notepad in Microsoft Windows)
- Copy again from the text-editor
- Paste into your blog.
An alternative may be to export the presentation as an outline (ie rich-text or RTF format), and then convert it via Google Docs in the same way that you would for a Word document. You would need to test this to check if it brings in the items that are stored outside of the slides.
Option 4 Use a slideshow host
Another approach would be to set up on account on SlideShare or a similar service that allows you to upload slideshows and gives you code that you can add to your blog in the usual way, which embeds the slideshow in your blog.I haven't tried this one out myself, but in theory at least it should work.
Related Articles
Showing a PowerPoint presentation as a slideshow in your blogConverting from MS Word to Blogger, via Google Docs
File hosting options - places to keep your files on-line
Tools for applying copyright protection to your blog
Putting embed code from an outside service into your blog
.
Labels:forex, iqoption, pubg Hacked
Article,
Blogger,
PowerPoint
Friday, 10 February 2017
How to Speak Wenja : Sayla's Scenes, part 2
Wapa Saylam gwamamas.
Let's return to Sayla.
Udam Provocation
Sayla:
Winja wantar pacha, Udam shanti hasa.
Wenja hunter saw, Udam near be-he
Wenja hunter saw Udam nearby.
(Literally, "Wenja hunter sees, an Udam nearby to be.")
Gwamarsh ha waykarsh. Ma Winja chimashta.
Come-they so.that attack-they. But Wenja ready
They come to attack. But Wenja are ready.
Ull!
Ull:
May malshashar Winja mana. U laykwa! Shuta marita!
Don't softblood Wenja remain. IMPERATIVE leave! Or die-you!
Softblood Wenja can't stay. Leave! Or you die!
(The word "softblood" is a compound of malsha "soft" and hasar "blood". Note that Ull is speaking directly to Takkar here by saying marita [vs. maritan "y'all die"])
U say salway gwan!
IMPERATIVE them all kill!
Kill them all!
(This is curious -- the Udam lord is using an super archaic salway for "them all". In normal Wenja, the only pronoun that makes a difference between singular and plural is sa / say "he, she, it" / "them")
Villager:
Palhu Udam!
Many Udam!
Lots of Udam!
Sayla:
Palhu hasmas! Nu Takkar masi-ha yawda!
Many be-we! Now Takkar us-with fight!
We are many! Now Takkar fights with us!
(Note once again Sayla is using the "high" or "prestigious" form of Wenja by saying masiha "with us", vs. the more normal masha)
Village Victory
Sayla:
QUESTION Udam kill-you?
You kill Ull?
(Seems that the translation of Udam was switched to Ull in post-production.)
Takkar:
Udam mari. Ull ati gwayfa.
Udam die. Ull still lives.
Udam are dead. Ull still lives.
Sayla:
Apa laywam haya. Shaja palhu Winja marirsh!
Back north-to go. Today many Wenja die-they!
He goes back to the north. Many Wenja died today!
Takkar:
Shaja palhu Udam mari. Winja bal tasha. Gwayfamas.
Today many Udam die. Wenja strong stand. Live-we.
Today many Udam die. Wenja stand strong. We survive.
Sayla:
Shaws Ulls dawsam. Sa nakwayda shanchi parshay, salwa Winja marwa.
Ear Ull-of need-I. He never stopping before, all Wenja dead.
I need Ull's ear. He never stops until all Wenja are dead.
(Very difficult construction here in the second sentence. Literally : "He, before ever stopping, all Wenja are dead")
Takkar:
Machi mi-karti jinafa.
Soon my-blade meet-he.
Soon he'll meet my blade.
Villager:
Winjayi. Winjayi.
Wenja-for. Wenja-for
For the Wenja. For the Wenja.
(Normal Wenja language would say Winjay, but here it's very formulaic, along the lines of "Long live the King" or "God bless America.")
Sayla:
Winjayi.
Wenja-for.
For the Wenja.
Enter the Udam Land
Sayla:
Sa Udam palhu Winja hu-gwana.
That Udam many Wenja COMPLETIVE-kill
That Udam had killed many Wenja.
Cha, shaws tanhi tushi daha.
Here, ears screams quiet make.
Here, the ears make the screams quiet.
(Note the causative [the make to do something construction] is formed here with the helping verb daha 'do, make')
Akista, tanhi nakwayda shanchirsh.
Outside, screams never stop-they
Out there, the screams never stop.
(Because Sayla views the screams as actual creatures [i.e., as animate beings], we find a plural verb form shanchirsh.)
Aysh tanhi tushi shanchi, Takkar. Aysh Ull gwanta.
SUBJUNCTIVE screams quiet stop, Takkar. SUBJUNCTIVE Ull kill-you
You can stop the screams, Takkar. You can kill Ull.
Takkar:
Sa damshu wanam.
Him home-in hunt-I
I hunt him in (his) home.
(The noun damsha + su regularly contracts to damshu)
Sayla:
Shrash! Gwanan sharu fadas si-damsha shlaka.
Yes! Killing rot fumes his-home protect
Yes! (But) deadly rot fumes protect his home.
(The adjective "deadly" literally means "killing")
Ma, mu wayda kwati sharu fadas shanchi.
But, me finds-it how rot fumes to-stop.
But, I know how to stop the rot fumes.
(I love how you say "to know" in Wenja; literally, "It finds me how to stop rot fumes")
Daru balya laywa-bi. U Udam dijam-su.
Wood leaf north-from. COMMAND Udam land-in.
Wood leaf from the north. (Go) in Udam land.
(Translated in the game as "yellow leaf", this originally was "wood leaf". Also note that in the translation it says "In Udam land" but she's really saying COMMAND in Udam land, hence more like "Go in Udam land.")
Takkar:
U ti-shawsi shwada, nasam.
COMMAND your-ears tell, return-home-I.
Tell your ears I come back.
(Best line of the game. Also note that the vowel -i appears after shaws since the following word begins with sh-. This is a regular process between all sibilants [s-, sh])
Udam Showdown
Sayla:
Mu wayda na-ta Udam gwana.
Me finds-it not-you Udam to-kill.
Me finds-it not-you Udam to-kill.
I know the Udam wouldn't kill you.
Takkar:
Hu-pararsh.
COMPLETIVE-try-they.
COMPLETIVE-try-they.
They have tried.
(Takkar used hu- here create a perfect "have", emphasizing that their attempts have failed)
(Takkar used hu- here create a perfect "have", emphasizing that their attempts have failed)
Sayla:
Daru balya laywa-bi.
Wood leaf north-from.
Wood leaf north-from.
Yellow leaf from the north.
Sharu fadas-bi, ta salwaya. Machi hawchata.
Rot fumes-from, you keeps-safe. Soon learn-you.
Rot fumes-from, you keeps-safe. Soon learn-you.
This makes you safe from the rot fumes. Soon you'll learn.
Tu Takkar Ullim wana. Nu si-shaws hinacha.
Then Takkar Ull-against hunts. And his-ear take.
Then Takkar hunts for Ull. And takes his ear.
(If Sayla had said Ull wana, that would've been "hunts Ull"; Ullim wana really means "Hunt Ull down")
Then Takkar Ull-against hunts. And his-ear take.
Then Takkar hunts for Ull. And takes his ear.
(If Sayla had said Ull wana, that would've been "hunts Ull"; Ullim wana really means "Hunt Ull down")
Where's Da?
Sayla:
Ku Udam sanshta?
QUESTION Udam seek-you?
QUESTION Udam seek-you?
Are you looking for the Udam?
(Sayla is PISSED. And this comes across in her language. Here instead of her normal, flowerly sanshata, she says sanshta)
(Sayla is PISSED. And this comes across in her language. Here instead of her normal, flowerly sanshata, she says sanshta)
Takkar:
Kwar Da?
Where Da?
Where Da?
Where's Da?
Sayla:
Udam palhu Winja hu-gwana. Ma mash-damsham Udam gwar barta!
Udam many Wenja COMPLETIVE-kill. But our-home-into Udam beast bring-you!
Udam many Wenja COMPLETIVE-kill. But our-home-into Udam beast bring-you!
Udam have killed many Wenja. But you brought an Udam into our home!
(Again, short forms: mash- for masi-, barta for barata.)
(Again, short forms: mash- for masi-, barta for barata.)
Takkar:
Da mas krawhadan daf, Winja bal daha sakwi.
Da us flesh-eater gives, Wenja strong to.make helps-he.
Da gives us rot bane. Helps to make Wenja strong.
Da us flesh-eater gives, Wenja strong to.make helps-he.
Da gives us rot bane. Helps to make Wenja strong.
(Krawhadan is short for krawha "flesh" + hadan "eater")
Sayla:
Nay! Udam haywa tanhi bar.
No! Udam only screams bring.
No! Udam only screams bring.
No! Udam bring only screams.
(Again, short form bar)
(Again, short form bar)
Widum Winja Udam bararsh. Hay mazga darsh.
Forest-to Wenja Udam bring-they. Go, to-drown watch.
Forest-to Wenja Udam bring-they. Go, to-drown watch.
(Some) Wenja bring the Udam to the forest. Go, watch (him) drown.
(Short form darsh for darcha)
(Short form darsh for darcha)
Labels:forex, iqoption, pubg Hacked
How to Speak Wenja (Kwati Winja warha)
Wednesday, 8 February 2017
How to Speak Wenja : Sayla's Scenes, part 1
Meeting Sayla
Takkar :
Pshh pshh, pash. Tigri!
Lo, lo, look! Tiger!
Hey hey, look! Tiger!
(Pash is a reduced form of pacha 'see', and psh is an even more truncated version of it.)
Sayla :
Apa!
Back!
Back!
Takkar :
U dram!
IMPERATIVE run!
Run!
(Recall the u is the basic way to make a command in Wenja. You don't always hear it.)
....
Sayla :
U sakwa. Haym.
IMPERATIVE follow. This-to
Follow. This way.
(Haym is literally "to this (way)", consisting of the word hay 'this' plus the postposition -m 'towards, during', etc.)
Takkar :
Urus.
Oros
Oros.
(In Wenja, there is no vowel "o", which is why the Wenja say "Urus")
Sayla :
Ta Winja... na Urusbi.
You Wenja... not Oros-from
You're Wenja...not from Oros.
(Sayla, on the other hand, is SUPER old school. She channels an earlier stage of the language, where there was once an "o" vowel. This is by design.)
Takkar :
Palhu sashwalim shalam. Takkar hasam.
Many suns-for travel-I. Takkar be-I.
I have traveled many suns. I am Takkar.
(Takkar is being extremely formal here with the verb "hasa". Normally speakers would say "Mu Takkar" or sim. Note, too, the use of -m after sashwal "sun" to indicate "during, for, over" [accusative of time])
Sayla :
Sayla.
Takkar :
Tigri chawhasu tiyi baya martis.
Tiger cave-in you-for danger death-of
You risk death in tiger cave.
(tiyi baya martis = literally, to you [there was] danger of death).
Sayla :
Tigri Udam daf. Udam shaws dawsam.
Tiger Udam take. Udam ears need-I
The tiger took the Udam. I need Udam ears.
(Recall that there is no explicit way to mark plurals on nouns, so shaws can mean "ear" or "ears")
(U Takkar Ullim wana...)
IMPERATIVE Takkar Ull-for hunt...
Not translated : May Takkar hunt down Ull...
Takkar :
Ku hayka gwashta?
QUESTION alone walk-you?
Do you walk alone?
(The sentence starter "ku" marks a question.)
Sayla :
Miyi kawha. Hatra. Gwama. U gwama!
Me-for shelter. Food. Come. IMPERATIVE come!
I have shelter. Food. Come. Come!
(To say 'have', you say 'there is to me'. So miyi kawha is literally "To me shelter.")
Deep Wounds
Sayla :
U ... hada.
IMPERATIVE... eat.
Eat.
Kwar alya Winja?
Where other Wenja?
Where (are the) other Wenja?
Sayla :
Ull, Udam shajan. Winja damsha hu-gwijara.
Ull, Udam leader. Wenja home COMPLETIVE-destroy
Ull. Udam leader. He destroyed Wenja home.
(In addition to pronouncing words in an archaic fashion, Sayla consistently uses the "long form" of words, which most Wenja find pretentious. In fact, Sayla only uses short forms when angry -- we'll get to that next time)
Udam palhu Winja hu-gwana.
Udam many Wenja COMPLETIVE-kill
The Udam killed many Wenja.
(note the singular verb indicates "all Udam" [vs. a select group])
Nu Winja haywa gwasha. San damsha Urusu.
Now Wenja alone walk. Without home Oros-in
Now (all) Wenja walk alone. Without a home in Oros.
(We get the sense of "all" Wenja from the use of a singular verb. Also, the normal postposition -su is reduced to -u after the word Urus -- you can't have two ss [what's called a geminate] in Wenja)
Tigri dancha dubu.
Tiger bite deep
Tiger bite (is) deep.
(No verb 'to be' in Wenja.)
Takkar :
Sakwim.
Help-I
I help.
Sayla :
Walta lawba akista. U miyi bar.
Willow bark outisde. IMPERATIVE me-for bring
Green leaves outside. Bring to me.
(Walta lawba actually means "willow bark". Supposedly it has medicinal properties)
(U walta lawba wayda. Ha tigri walna yaka.)
(IMPERATIVE willow bark find. In.order.to tiger wound heal
Find the green leaves. To heal the tiger wound.
On your return:
Takkar :
Sayla. Ti-walnayi.
Sayla. Your-wound-for
Sayla. For your wound.
Sayla :
Shaja tanhi chlawta. Ku chlawata?
Today screams loud. QUESTION hear-you?
Today the screams are loud. Do you hear?
(For normal speakers "loud" and "you hear" would sound the same : chlawta. But since Sayla is fancy, she says chlawata, the long form.)
Takkar :
Tanhi?
Screams?
Screams?
(Note you don't *always* have to use ku to make a question.)
Sayla :
Deep... wound-into push. Thank-you.
Push deep into the wound. Thank you.
(dubu is first to emphasize deep)
Takkar :
Nu hayam Urus-kwa pacham.
Now go-I Oros-and see-I
Now I go and see Oros.
(The basic way to say "and" is with a postposed -kwa. So: shazda baka-kwa "Twig and berries")
Sayla :
Many dangers there: wolves... bears... Udam
Many dangers there. Wolves... bears... Udam.
(Pronouncing wal as wull is another archaic pronunciation of Sayla's.)
Salwa tiyi cha. U alya Winja wayda, nu hay padas shwada
Safe you-for here. IMPERATIVE other Wenja find, and this place-of tell
It is safe for you in this cave. Find other Wenja, tell them of this place.
(First sentence is literally "[It is] safe for you here." If you're wondering why it's padas "place-of" instead of the basic word pada "place", -s means both "of" and "about", just as we see in the English translation.)
Labels:forex, iqoption, pubg Hacked
How to Speak Wenja (Kwati Winja warha)
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)