Today I will explain some of the ways that self submission will hurt you in terms of social bookmarking. Webmasters still assume that submitting your own website and content will gain links and exposure to the social networking sphere. Social bookmarking experts would have to disagree.
Bellow I will briefly explain why self submission is not the best way to gain traffic and links.
Legitimate Users don’t like spammers
When webmasters submit their own posts nine times out of ten the blog posts/ articles will no doubt be low quality, in other words just posting articles for the sake of it to gain traffic. Regular users won’t trust you and brand you as a selfish submitter, rather than someone who is looking for good quality content across the Internet.
Administrators may catch on
If a webmaster decides to submit their website more than once then there is a chance that administrators will find out that the user is submitting selfish links and spamming. This could result in the social bookmarking website reporting these findings to Google and possibly cause a decreased rank within Google’s Index.
Just like any other technique that has been violated over the years, could social bookmarking administrators catch on and disable these spamming webmasters?
For successful PPC activity it is imperative that you create targeted campaigns from the start. Below is a summary of creating targeted categories, ads and landing pages.
Well themed categories contain keywords that users with the same interests query the search engines with. This makes it easier to target the users with your ads. Good categories also fit the theme of the landing page. Landing pages should be designed along with the ads – if the ad is targeted to the user, and the landing page reflects what is written in the ad, the landing page will be targeted to the user. A good ad describes a product or service, a benefit of the product or service, and an action the user should take once he/she clicks on the ad. A good landing page should backup the same statements made in the ad:
These five statements should be backed up, shown, and/or explained on a landing page, and it all relies on what is written in the ad. The landing page should describe the same product, benefit, and action that was written in the ad. There should be no surprises and no distractions (like irrelevant links, images, or offers), although it is a good idea to offer other actions for a user to take if they aren’t quite ready to make a full commitment. And all of this information should be conveyed without too much text. Visitors typically decide what’s on a page and whether they should abandon it by looking at images and scanning short snippets of text.
Landing pages should be kept simple. You already know what a visitor is looking for so it’s not necessary to show them a bunch of other things. How 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5 become a full web page with text, images, and links is beyond the scope of this article. Here’s where you can start:
Well themed categories not only have terms that mean the same thing, but also are composed of similar words. Words from a user’s query are bolded in your ad, making your ad stand out more. Repeating terms from a user’s query in an ad helps increase CTRs. If categories have terms that contain the same words, it’s more likely that the ads will contain words from the user’s query.
The above represents just some of the best practices you should take.
O Yousaf – PPC Manager