Posts Tagged ‘Twitter’

Maintaining diversity and focus:

in Web Design Basic |

Optimization is difficult because it involves balancing diverse approaches with the maintenance of focus. Novices are mistaken if Google SEO alone will permit a site to outperform its rivals. High quality link building involves onsite and offsite activities which require joining up.

 

At searchengineoptimization.co.uk, we never let clients down by making our campaigns too narrow. Our commitment to research and monitoring means that we have the capacity to get progress on various fronts. The main thing is that we aim our work at target audiences and then make the most out of the traffic which comes to the sites which we are responsible for.

 

While an emphasis on site content is always a good starting point, it is imperative to get the maximum amount of success possible by exploiting the social media to the full. The likes of Facebook and Twitter are brilliant for attracting the attention of segments of the target audience. Other social media, such as LinkedIn, can also be of use.

 

Neither Facebook nor Twitter will be much use if the content standard slips. It simply has to be fit to circulate around the net. It must have a spark of originality. It cannot be just the same as a number of other articles. Diversity in content is thus an essential way of avoiding users becoming bored. Only by keeping the target audience onside will high quality inbound links be acquired.

 

Both patience and persistence are staple ingredients of link gathering success. Nonetheless, a hint of creativity can go a long way. Each campaign requires its own tailored methods.

Web 2.0 definition

in Web Design Basic |

What is Web 2.0 ? It is something of a keyword among those who enjoy newer things. I will attempt to distill it into some bite-size chunks of information for you. Hopefully when you are through it will be clear that the answer to the question is simple !

The topic of Web 2.0 is literally churning on the web. What will the future hold
for Web 2.0 as a whole ? Read on as I predict the future of the premier
change in the way computing is done soon, and continuing into the next
few years.

Twitter.com. A relative newcomer to the Web 2.0 foray is starting something
of a “cell-phone-myspace” type of service. You and your friends can be joined
through the use of text messages, using Twitter.com. Twitter is using the Web
2.0 model in a very unique way, and one I like in particular because it is
using mobile technology.

Web 2.0 will be fueled by mobile technology. If you have ever heard of “the mobile
web”, then you no doubt have also heard of mobile browsers, smart handheld
computers, and the like. As these devices become commonplace, other devices
will also be joined to the web using the Web 2.0 model. What type ? Well,
microwaves, refrigerators, fax machines and so forth. Web 2.0 will more
than likely be called something different by the time all electronic
items become connected to the ever growing World Wide Web.

One of the most promising developments of the Web 2.0 change will be the
way people work. The change will be subtle at first, and then more robust
soon afterward. One example that people have already been using has
not been classified under the Web 2.0 model but is nevertheless included ;
internet based email. Yahoo! says theirs is best. MSN started with hotmail.
Google joined in with their G-mail. This is just the tip of the iceberg.

Soon, when a person wants to open up something similar to a Word or Excel document, they
will not open up a program on their computer. As Web 2.0 unfolds, a person will
open up a website, and start their work there, and save it. It will be opened,
worked, and saved 100 % online. It becomes immediately available to all
on the “network”. The “network” will of course be the world wide web.

Security issues will arise with the advent of the Web 2.0 model. Having
all work done online instead of inside a traditional setting will mean more
jobs for internet security managers. A “local intranet” will not be nearly
as “local” as it is today. As negative as it may sound, the Web 2.0 security
issues will probably be addressed by governments, as the WWW becomes
a “governed” institution.

Web 2.0 will more than likely be led by an international group, instead of
just having Western influences. Currently those on the technological edge
of all technology are in Europe and Asia. I see this trend continuing.