Saturday 16 June 2012

How To Get Adsense Approval Without Website : Indyarocks

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Google Adsense is the best Pay Per Click ad network for the webmasters and the only revenue stream for some bloggers . Although , there are some alternatives but they can’t compete with Google Adsense because Google Adsense have higher Click Through Rates [ CTR ] with a lot of advertisers . But getting approved by Google Adsense is almost an impossible task for some bloggers . And when, you don’t have a Website of your own, it’s like impossible in most common scenerio.
Basic Adsense approval requirement:
A website with a standard domain of at least 6 months old .
Your website should not contain any illegal and pornographic content .
You should have a mature website with some useful content .
The content of your website should not be copied from other sources .
Adsense approval without Website trick:
And for the Indians , it is more difficult than the others . But , there is a way to get Adsense approval without website . Yeah , you heard it correctly . There is an Adsense revenue site named Indyarocks.com which offers easy sign up for Adsense without having a website . All you need to do is to sign up for Indyarocks and put some content in your account , and then request for an Adsense account . See below the requirements of Indyarocks to get an Adsense account :-

Your profile should be at least 50% complete .
Your account should have an image . [ Remember that you have to upload your own image ]
You should upload al least 10 images to your album and their privacy must be set to everyone .
You should post at least 2 blogs in your account .

I will advice you to request for an Adsense account when it becomes at least of 10 days old , although it is not an eligibility proposal of Indyrocks . Right after you meet all the requirements , you can request for an Adsense account . After your request , you will receive an email regarding confirmation . Then , confirm your request and complete the request form by visiting the form url which will come along with your email . Within 10 days you will receive an email regarding your account whether it is approved or not . And the most wonderful thing is that you don’t need to provide your website url during the sign up process . So , using this method , you can easily achieve an Adsense account without having any website . Not only you can get an Adsense account through Indyarocks but you can also earn some extra money in Indyarocks by implementing your Adsense account with Indyarocks , by uploading videos , by watching videos and by referring people to the site .

My Experience with Indyarocks

When I was not familiar with Indyarocks , I tried several times to get approve by Adsense using my blog but again and again I got rejection . I was so frustrated , then I found Indyarocks . At that time , I thought that it was a fake program but thought to give it a shot . Right after 3 days of my Adsense account request , I got an email from Adsense regarding my account approval . I was shocked , it was really a wonderful moment for me . I am really thankful to Indyarocks and you can also give it a chance to get your Adsense account without having a website .
Do let us know your experience with IndyaRocks? Do you know other sites like Indyarocks which let you get an approved Adsense account without having a Website?


Friday 15 June 2012

Why ‘The Atlantic’ No Longer Cares About SEO

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SEO News

The number of online news consumers has grown consistently over the past half-decade, yet not every publication has gotten the same lift as The Atlantic, whose web audience has catapulted from approximately 500,000 to 13.4 million monthly visitors since taking down its paywall in early 2008.

As we’ve explored previously, there are many factors that have contributed to The Atlantic‘s online success: assigning a number of well-known columnists, like James Fallows and Andrew Sullivan (now of The Daily Beast), to begin writing original pieces for TheAtlantic.com; launching and staffing two new online news properties, TheAtlanticWire.com and TheAtlanticCities.com; and building up its digital ad offerings to support those hires.

Furthermore, The Atlantic is adapting its editorial strategy to the shifting landscape of online news consumption, namely, to capitalize on the growing importance of social networks, rather than search engines, as sources of traffic.

“Sixteen months ago we received the same number of monthly referrals from search as social. Now 40% of traffic comes from social media,” Scott Havens, senior vice president of finance and digital operations at The Atlantic Media Company, said in a phone conversation ahead of his on-stage interview at our Mashable Connect conference in Orlando, Fla. last weekend. “Truly [our writers] are not really thinking about SEO anymore. Now it’s about how we can spin a story so that it goes viral.”

SEE ALSO: Inside The Atlantic: How One Magazine Got Profitable by Going ‘Digital First’
Bob Cohn, who was recently promoted to editor of The Atlantic Digital, rejoices the change. “Before, it seemed Demand Media was going to own the Internet by assigning stories based on search returns. It was a cynical approach to journalism,” Cohn recalled. “We’re no longer writing to get the attention of Google algorithms. We’re writing to get you to share it, to digg it.”

Cohn says that writers author their own headlines, which are frequently rewritten by their channel editors and sometimes tweaked again by a homepage editor. Often, a headline that appears on Facebook or Twitter is different than the one that appears on the site.

I asked Cohn why he didn’t feed in a separate headline in the metadata. He said he and his team could, but it was no longer important enough to compensate for a boring headline, even in search results or on Google News.

And what kind of headlines do well? “A great headline is just a great headline,” says Cohn. “It has to be clear; it has to be intelligent. We’re not writing for machines. We’re writing for humans.”

What to Do When Your SEO Tactic Doesn’t Work

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Seo Tactic 

Before the likes of Twitter and Facebook stepped to the front of the stage, blogging was all the rage. Successful bloggers garnered audiences that were often greater than what the typical commercial site could attract. In turn, companies created blogs of their own, packed full of search engine optimization (SEO) tactics. The promise being that if you build a blog the traffic will follow.

What most people ignored was that a blog should add value to a site and be used to engage potential and existing customers. In practice, what ended up happening was that the blog became a dumping ground for a mishmash of content that was uninteresting, usually too short and infrequently delivered. But even after their blogs failed to attract traffic or produce results in any measurable way, site owners are still loathe to get rid of them. The most common reason given? Because having a blog allows them to check off another SEO tactic on their list.

Don’t get me wrong, I’m all for trying something different. In fact, part of what makes SEO so interesting for me is the testing of new ideas. But I also learned from my project manager days that sometimes when a project isn’t completed on time and the window of opportunity the project was meant to capitalize on has closed, the best course of action is to terminate the project. Or if you’re the investment type, you don’t throw good money after bad. Clichés aside, terminating an SEO tactic that isn’t working is a smart move, but can be hard to do.

Confirm Your Assumptions

Don’t start with an assumption that you haven’t verified. In the blog example above, it would be easy to declare that what seems like low-traffic levels as a failure of the blog effort, but what if the blog was created as a testing ground for landing page copy that is far easier to deploy using blog software like WordPress? Once you confirm what the goal was you can then proceed to confirm that it wasn’t met.

Understand the History

Second, find out the history of the tactic. You’ll have a much easier time shutting something down if the person that came up with it is no longer an employee or, better yet, if it was something a previous SEO agency came up with. While the difficulty will vary depending on who came up with the idea, your best approach is one that acknowledges that everyone is just trying to succeed in the competitive organic search engine space. So your justification to end an effort should be one that is based on data, actual experience, or if secondary research is all that is available, then try to make it as bulletproof as possible.

Prepare an Alternative

Lastly, before you go in with a recommendation to end something, be sure to have a replacement idea to present. After all, if you’re about to free up resources, you might as well come up with something new to apply those resources too. Not only will this help move the SEO campaign forward, but it will also provide a good conversation point for anyone that has to explain why a tactic is being terminated, i.e., it is being replaced by a new and improved tactic that holds more promise.