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Get Trained in SEO, SEM at IMRI | Choose Best SEO Institute in India

Learn SEO training courses

TrainSEOsem.com is a web-portal where you can get complete information related to what SEO and SEM is all about and also you will get information related to institutions in India which provide training in SEO, SEM, affiliate marketing and PPC. Search engine optimization (SEO) is the process of improving the volume or quality of traffic to a web site from search engines via natural or organic search results.

TrainSEOsem.com is a top leading seo ppc affiliate learning center and provides seo classroom training facility at bangalore, chennai, pune, mumbai, hyderabad, delhi, chandigarh, patna, indore, kolkata, ahmedabad, mangalore, coimbatore, surat

Related terms: train seo sem, train seo sem course,train seo sem in india,train seo sem institutes,train seo sem certificates.

The Free SEO Book - FREE SEO EBOOK. FREE DOWNLOAD - Search Engine Optimization SEO Training E-Book

The Free SEO BookWhat is The Free SEO Book? The Free SEO Book is a free search engine optimization (SEO) eBook that tells you all you need to know about search engine optimization and search engine marketing.

Learn SEO Books - Search Engine Optimization (SEO) How to Optimize Your Website for Internet Search Engines (Google, Yahoo!, MSN Live, AOL, Ask, AltaVista, FAST, GigaBlast, Snap, LookSmart and more)

 

Keyword Research| Study SEO Courses Tutorials in India

Place your targeted keywords in the page URL, separated by a dash between keywords.

E-Learning of SEO - Snap.com

Snap.com is a human-compiled directory of web sites, supplemented by search results. It aims to challenge Yahoo as the champion of categorizing the web.

Google-Yahoo-Ask Search | SEO Marketing Tools

Graphic display of top 50 in Google & Yahoo linked.

SEO Certifications - SEO / Search Engine Optimizer Hi-Tech Outsourcing Services

Job Description - To develop and implement the various SEO strategies and are able to perform multiple tasks for multiple websites at a time - Strong SEO Fundamentals and should be an expert in On Page and Off Page optimization techniques (including dynamic sites optimization) - Strong understanding of Social Media Optimization (SMO) techniques - Understanding of Link building/PR optimization/Directory submissions/Article submissions and several off page activities - Complete knowledge of latest search engine trends & algorithm - Creating Google and Yahoo Sitemaps - Keyword research and content integration - Determination Keyword Density - Knowledge of web statistics like Google analytics, Web Trends, Omniture etc

SEO News Blogs Daily: Google Base – The Best Base for your Online Business

Google has always been a hen that lays golden eggs for webmasters. Despite strict indexing policies and advanced technological support, webmasters love Google. The sole reason is its wide and fast mushrooming user base. The reason behind Google’s dominance in the search engine industry is its quick technological Updation, innovative ways of exploring internet users and supporting online businessmen by providing them free exposure to its high standard technologies.

SEO Classroom Glossary - Beacon

A line of code placed in an ad or on a web page that helps track the visitor's actions, such as registrations or purchases. A web beacon is often invisible because it's only 1 x 1 pixel in size and has no color. Also known as web bug, 1 by 1 GIF, invisible GIF or tracker GIF

SEO Social Media Marketing Strategies | Online SEO Videos

Boost your Search Engine Optimization (SEO) with Social Media Marketing Strategies. IMPAQT's Vanessa Cooper explains how to leverage Social Media tactics for Search Engine Marketing campaigns by touching upon: the effects of Online Video on SEO, the importance of Social Bookmarking for an Enterprise-Level Company and the Role of Marketing in Online Communities.

 

Introducing the Street View Partner Program

Street View is one of the most popular features of Google Maps. It already lets you virtually behold amazing sights like Yosemite's El Capitan and the Roman Coliseum without ever leaving your computer. So it's no wonder that, practically since the feature launched, organizations have been asking us how they can be displayed in Street View. Street View users have also chimed in with excellent suggestions ranging from universities to tourist destinations to racetracks. We've worked hard to implement some of the best ideas, and today we launched some of our first Street View partners, including Legoland California, Thunderhill Raceway, Mazda Raceway Laguna Seca, and San Diego State University.

 

Back from Google I/O

 

We're back from attending Google I/O in San Francisco, and it was great meeting those of you who were there. For those who couldn't make it (or if you were there and missed something), videos of each session are now posted online along with the slides from the presentation

 

Verifying a Blogger blog in Webmaster Tools

You may have seen our recent announcement of changes to the verification system in Webmaster Tools. One side effect of this change is that blogs hosted on Blogger (that haven't yet been verified) will have to use the meta tag verification method rather than the "one-click" integration from the Blogger dashboard. The "Webmaster Tools" auto-verification link from the Blogger dashboard is no longer working and will soon be removed. We're working to reinstate an automated verification approach for Blogger hosted blogs in the future, but for the time being we wanted you to be aware of the steps required to verify your Blogger blog in Webmaster Tools.

 

Automatic captions in YouTube

11/19/2009 08:30:00 AM

Since we first announced captions in Google Video and YouTube, we've introduced multiple caption tracks, improved search functionality and even automatic translation. Each of these features has had great personal significance to me, not only because I helped to design them, but also because I'm deaf. Today, I'm in Washington, D.C. to announce what I consider the most important and exciting milestone yet: machine-generated automatic captions.

 

Energy R&D funding from "Lightbulbs to Lightbulbs"

There are still power plants operating today that Thomas Edison could have seen with his own eyes. If he were to tour our electrical grid, he would recognize that too. As former Secretary of State George Shultz says, in energy "the past must not be prologue." Can we reinvent our energy system in only ten years? I think we can -- but we need to have a clear mission, we need to aim high, and we need substantial and sustained R&D funding.

 

 

Top Myths about Google Website Optimizer

 

A lot of people ask us similar questions about what Website Optimizer can and can't do, so we thought we'd share the answers with everyone. If you've always wondered, or you've forgotten our answer ;), here's our own Top Myths List:

 
1. Does Google Website Optimizer work for organic traffic?
 
Yes! We alternate your content regardless of where visitors come from. You can optimize a page whose traffic is all organic, multiple paid keyword sources, all direct, or any combination of those three.
 
 
2. Can I optimize pages that aren't landing pages?
 
Sure. You can test product detail pages, purchase funnels, any place where there is HTML. You can even use it within web applications.
 
 
3. What about dynamic pages?
 
You can optimize those as well. The multivariate tags simply insert the alternate code as the visitor's browser renders the page being tested. Those tags can be part of a template or dynamically added by your web server using fancy logic. Furthermore, alternate content can be code that pulls dynamic content from a database.
 
 
4. Does Google Website Optimizer perform fractional analysis?
 
Yes. We can serve variations and combinations equally or provide main effects, fractional analysis. This assumes no interactions and can lead to initial insights much faster than full factorial analysis. More detail is on our Help Center.
 
 
5. Can I get dedicated account management, consulting or support?
 
Absolutely. You can get in-depth professional services from one of our Authorized Consultants who are experts at Website Optimizer experiment research, design, instrumentation, troubleshooting, live support, analysis and training. These consultants can be hired on retainer or by the hour.
 
 
6. Can I look at experiment data in conjunction with my web analytics data?
 
Yes. If you're doing an A/B test, simply look in your content report for each page.
 
If you're doing a multivariate test, look at the cookie we set for each visitor, which will indicate the combination to which they're assigned. Then segment your web analytics report by combination. Check out ROI Revolution's post on using Google Analytics and Google Website Optimizer together.
 
 
7. Can I use Google Website Optimizer with my own goal tracking?
 
Yes, you can split your traffic, alternate the content, and then use another method to perform your statistical analysis. For example, you could run an A/B test, which offers a different telephone number for each page version. In this case, you could probably tell which page is most effective by simply counting the number of calls you receive on each number.
 
 
8. Can I run a test across more than one page?
 
You can put the tags for an experiment on an unlimited number of pages. For example, you can put our tags in a common header file or put them individually across multiple pages. Read more on our Help Center here and here.
 
 
9. Does Google Website Optimizer require me to use Google Analytics?
 
No. If you're using a non-Google web analytics service and are happy with it, you can still use Google Website Optimizer. Just add our tags to the pages where you want to run experiments and leave your existing web analytics tags as they are.
 
 
10. Does Google Website Optimizer require me to use Google AdWords?
 
No. If you already use AdWords, you can conveniently access Website Optimizer from the Campaign Management tab within AdWords. If you don't use AdWords, you can use our standalone version.
 
 
11. Can Google Website Optimizer be used on an enterprise website?
 
Sure. We use it on most of our own sites, such as AdWords, Gmail, and Google Earth. Fortune 500 companies have also used Google Website Optimizer since we launched in late 2006.
 
 
12. Can I track non-page goals?
 
Sure, goal tags don't need to be implemented as part of a separate goal page. You can record a conversion when someone submits a form, clicks on a link, or dwells on a page after a certain number of seconds.
 
 
13. Do I need to retag my pages to run a new experiment on the same page?
 
If it's a multivariate experiment, you can use our copy feature to re-use tags and launch a new experiment directly.
 
14. Is it really free?
 

Yes! We think better designed web content makes the web more efficient and benefits users, Web search and advertisers.

 

Now you see it, now you don't

 

You may have noticed that our homepage is sporting a new look. Today we're excited to be releasing a new version of our classic homepage. The main feature of the new homepage is that it "fades in" — when the page first loads, it shows only our logo, the search box and the buttons. For the vast majority of people who come to the Google homepage, they are coming in order to search, and this clean, minimalist approach gives them just what they are looking for first and foremost. For those users who are interested in using a different application like Gmail, Google Image Search or our advertising programs, the additional links on the homepage only reveal themselves when the user moves the mouse. Since most users who are interested in clicking over to a different application generally do move the mouse when they arrive, the "fade in" is an elegant solution that provides options to those who want them, but removes distractions for the user intent on searching.

Left: Before the fade. Right: After the fade. Click the image for a closer view.
For the past few months, we've been experimenting with homepage designs like this and have run several live tests on the site. We do these live tests when we are making a change that we think may fundamentally affect how people use the site. Initially, some of the experiment findings had us concerned, but one thing we have learned through our tests is not to judge the outcome too quickly.

All in all, we ran approximately 10 variants of the fade-in. Some of the experiments hindered the user experience: for example, the variants of the homepage that hid the search buttons until after the fade performed the worst in terms of user happiness metrics. Other variants of the experiment produced humorous outcomes when combined with our doodles — the barcode doodle combined with the fade was particularly ironic in its overstated minimalism. However, in the end, the variant of the homepage we are launching today was positive or neutral on all key metrics, except one: time to first action. At first, this worried us a bit: Google is all about getting you where you are going faster — how could we launch something that potentially slowed users down? Then, we realized: we want users to notice this change... and it does take time to notice something (though in this case, only milliseconds!). Our goal then became to understand whether or not over time the users began to use the homepage even more efficiently than the control group and, sure enough, that was the trend we observed.

Internally, a large number of Google employees have been using the new homepage. They have come to really like it — it represents our focus on great search yet helps searchers efficiently access all of Google's products. Like the new supersized search box we launched several months ago, this change is one that is very noticeable at first, and then quickly becomes second nature. We hope you like it!

 
 

Spread some holiday cheer, one card at a time



Every year around this time I start thinking about the annual holiday email I send to friends and family members. I usually email my mom, dad, sister, friends and co-workers. But the one person who appreciates my season's greetings the most — my grandma — is stuck in the pre-digital age of snail-mail. Of course, I could go to a store, aimlessly wander through the aisles, choose a card, wait in line to pay for it, go to the post office, pick up some stamps, etc., etc. — but wouldn't it be so much easier just to fill out a form and have Gmail handle the rest?

This holiday season, as a token of our appreciation to our most enthusiastic fans, we'll snail-mail a free holiday postcard on your behalf. Yes, through the mail and everything.


To send a card, visit gmail.com/holidaycard. We'll only be able to send cards to U.S. addresses and to a limited number of people (due to limited Gmail elf availability), so be sure to request one soon.

And if you're headed home for the holidays, consider spending some "computer time" with loved ones who aren't as up-to-date with technology. With some luck, maybe this time next year you'll be able to email them a holiday card instead!

Wishing a happy holiday to you and yours!

 


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