Niche websites:
AdWords Landing Page Quality Score
Google assesses Landing Page Quality to determine whether your ads should be shown at a normal bid or a higher bid. Now, that assessment will affect your ad distribution even in the content network.
Quality Content VS. Link Bait
As you probably know, there are a lot of articles on creating link bait. But what is link bait for your customers and how can you create the most efficient content?
New YSM Features: Ad Testing and Quality Index
Nothing particularly new here, and they haven’t launched yet, but in their September “On Target” advertiser newsletter, Yahoo outlines forthcoming features for their ad platform: ad testing and the quality index.
Click Quality Council Targeting Fraud
Members of the recently formed Click Quality Council want to speed up the process to establish standards for defining click fraud and valid pay-per-click activity. The white-hot issue of click fraud has become a source of greater concern for advertisers.
Quality Activity Equals Quality Results
Failing to focus salespeoples activity reduces efficiency and consequently reduces results, because there is not a salesperson alive that believes they have enough time in their working week to complete all the activities they want to achieve!
Enter Stage6, Exit Low-Quality Video Sites
As video-sharing sites flood the Internet in the wake of YouTube’s blinding success, it becomes an exercise of patience to find one that sets itself apart with a new approach. Clones are only interesting in biology. But DivX’s recently launched Stage6 could very well be the successor instead of the clone.
Yahoo Answers Call For Quality Content
Voting has a place on Yahoo Answers, as users of the popular question and answer site will see that become part of the site.
SES 2006: Importance Of Quality Scores
Both Google and Yahoo plan to place more emphasis on quality scores when ranking sites, and that topic quickly dominated the Search Algorithm Research session at SES 2006.
Inbound Link Quality Declared #1 In SEO
For Google, it’s not about how many people you know or how many people seem to like you. It’s about, mostly, who points to you and says “there’s a person worth visiting.” Fortune Interactive’s reverse engineering to decode how search algorithms work suggests that one weighty somebody is worth more than a multitude of nobodies.