Affichage des articles dont le libellé est after. Afficher tous les articles
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samedi 12 novembre 2016

Reminder: Domain prices go up after June



alt="Reminder: Domain prices go up after June" src="http://whsr.webrevenueinc1.netdna-cdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/04/default-image-500x308_c.jpg" />

Inflation on Internet: 10% Price Increase for .com and .net domains

In case you missed the announcement last year, this is the final reminder that in less than a month time, registration cost for .com and .net domains will increase for 10% at VeriSign.

VeriSign announced that as of July 1, 2010, the registry fee for .com domain names will increase from .86 to .34 and that the registry fee for .net domain names will increase, from .23 to .65.

Ref: href="https://investor.verisign.com/releasedetail.cfm?ReleaseID=431292">https://investor.verisign.com/releasedetail.cfm?ReleaseID=431292

What does this mean to you?

Basically the price-change doesn’t affect much on most webmasters unless you are holding over 1,000 domain names. If so the first thing you should do is, apparently, to renew your expiring domains before July.

The increase is approved by ICANN and in other words this will affect all domain registrars who offer .com and .net registration services. As profit margin is already ultra thin in this field, registrars like GoDaddy will most likely pass on the inflated cost to its end users (aka, you and me!).

id='right'>src="http://www.webhostingsecretrevealed.com/images/2010/0611-1.jpg" alt="Domain prices increase" />

Inflation happens all the time, get used to it!

I read quite some rants across several webmaster forums and honestly, I don’t understand why these guys cannot accept the fact that prices of everything will increase.

In fact I would be surprised if the .com and .net price stays stagnant in year 2009-10. After all the business is monopoly by VeriSign and moreover, according to a href="http://www.icann.org/en/topics/vrsn-settlement/revision-matrix-09feb06.pdf">settlement in for lawsuit between Verisign and ICANN in 2006, the company is allowed to increase their prices on an annual basis with increases of up to 7% per year for .COM.

(Ask yourself, would you do the same if you are allowed, legally, to ask for more money? ;) )


Page 29 – Web Hosting Secret Revealed




Why Author Rank Matters More After The Death Of Google Authorship



alt="Why Author Rank Matters More After The Death Of Google Authorship" src="http://whsr.webrevenueinc1.netdna-cdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/1-500x490_c.jpg" />

class="alignright size-full wp-image-10951" src="http://whsr.webrevenueinc1.netdna-cdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/1.jpg" alt="1" width="330" height="324" srcset="http://whsr.webrevenueinc1.netdna-cdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/1.jpg 330w, http://whsr.webrevenueinc1.netdna-cdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/1-300x294.jpg 300w" sizes="(max-width: 330px) 100vw, 330px" />

What does an editorial by an established author have in common with all the other content pieces by all the other authors in your niche?

Too much… there are countless authors who are musing the same ideas as authoritative writers, and in similar ways.

But how should readers identify and choose content written by an authority over another writer’s work?

Google made it easy to identify the work of certain authors on the premise that ‘some people are smarter than others on certain topics’. It introduced the ‘Google Authorship’ program with the aim of giving authors who were better informed on their subject matter greater importance in search engines.

Google Authorship permitted authors to include structured data mark-ups in their website’s code which would display an author’s image with their name next to a content price so it is visible to readers who is behind the piece and make a decision according to the person’s work.

The U-turn by Google

After a multi-year experiment with Google Authorship, the search engine company has pulled the plug, and the feature is no longer available.

Google removed all author photos at the end of June 2014 from global search, and just left bylines at that time. John Mueller, Webmaster Trends Analyst, href="https://plus.google.com/+JohnMueller/posts/PDkPdPtjL6j" target="_blank">stated in a Google+ post the images were removed because Google was taking a more unified approach towards mobile and desktop search, and author images were not working well for the limited screen space on mobile.

Later, Google removed the Authorship information from search results altogether. href="https://plus.google.com/+JohnMueller/posts/HZf3KDP1Dm8" target="_blank">Muller said in a Google+ post that the reason behind ending the project was that the feature was not as valuable to readers as the company hoped and sometimes even posed a distraction.

class="wp-image-10952 size-full aligncenter" src="http://whsr.webrevenueinc1.netdna-cdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/21.png" alt="2" width="521" height="129" srcset="http://whsr.webrevenueinc1.netdna-cdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/21.png 521w, http://whsr.webrevenueinc1.netdna-cdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/21-300x74.png 300w" sizes="(max-width: 521px) 100vw, 521px" />

Perhaps this was coming as neither readers nor authors every really took Authorship seriously enough. href="https://plus.google.com/+RayHiltz/posts/8DHh2a7ihsZ" target="_blank">Its adoption rate was low, and it was only working for authors who had set up a Google+ profile and markup in their site or the sites they contributed to (rel=author) linking to their Google+ profile. For something this technical there was only ever going to be a fairly limited adoption.

But whilst this experiment into giving authors added benefits based on the authority of their work may not have proved fruitful, you would not discount Google from abandoning the idea all together, especially when it provided a logical way of increasing the trustworthiness, relevancy and authority established authors provide to their users.
It appears Google still has a way of determining author value with ‘Author Rank’.

What is Author Rank?

Author Rank, independent from Google Authorship, is a search algorithm that will score authors based on factors such as the social sharing of their posts, quality of backlinks to their content, interactions with their content, PageRank and the authority of publishing sites.

Within search rankings, information tied to these factors would rank higher than content not having an association with such factors, which will result in established authors gaining a higher visibility in search engines.

Author Rank doesn’t require implementation of any new code on your website. Essentially, Google will be accessing a value of an author based on this rank, so a user who is well-informed, well-engaged, writes great content, and is recognized by a large community, will enjoy a higher author ranking.

href="https://twitter.com/mattcutts/statuses/443560265808756736" target="_blank">Matt Cutts tweeted Author Rank is not implemented on every single page, but ‘it does come into play in some ways. For example, in-depth articles use that data, I’m pretty sure.’

The reason Google Authorship came into existence in the first place was due to the difficulty in filtering out individual authors. So how does Google go about helping readers correctly identify which authors are which, and which are important, is what the topic of Author Rank will center around.

Author Rank after the death of Google Authorship

class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-11087" src="http://whsr.webrevenueinc1.netdna-cdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/author-rank.jpg" alt="author rank" width="750" height="254" srcset="http://whsr.webrevenueinc1.netdna-cdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/author-rank.jpg 750w, http://whsr.webrevenueinc1.netdna-cdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/author-rank-300x101.jpg 300w" sizes="(max-width: 750px) 100vw, 750px" />

Crucially, authors will be judged in more natural ways about how useful they are to search engine readers. Some ways in which Google is looking to do this has already started to appear.

In addition to the gradual move towards sematic search, Google is likely to utilize Author Rank factors to identify certain ‘entities’ that are separate from each other in an effort to filter authors akin to its Authorship program closure in a more natural way.

How can it be, when Google has completely ignored Authorship markup at the same time?

Google considers it a better approach to identify authoritative figures in search results based on the factors that make up Author Rank.

Google will likely give more consideration to bylines, which existed long before Google Authorship. So in case you’re an author who is concerned that more Author Rank use will likely be the future, start believing. This is going to be the chief technique signaling who is the most established author of a content piece.

What the pros are doing and suggesting

href="https://plus.google.com/+KevinDuncan" target="_blank">Kevin Duncan

We bloggers cannot control what Google does, but we can take the things which made Google Authorship so effective in search results, and apply them to our blogs.

Duncan advices authors to add the perception of authority to their sites/blogs. If there is social proof about your authority, use that to your advantage. For example, you can show the comments received on your blog by the comments counter stand out in your blog’s design, or flaunt the number of followers you have on social media, like Darren Rowse has done on ProBlogger: he has proudly displayed 300,000+ subscribers and 66,000+ Facebook fans in his blog’s sidebar. Likewise, Adam Connell has an image of his connections to KISSmetrics, HuffPost, and more in his sidebar.

href="https://plus.google.com/+PamAungst" target="_blank">Pam Aungst

It may not be called “Authorship” anymore, so sure – go ahead and call that *word* dead, but author influence is very much alive.

Aungst’s strategy is to continue making efforts to increase the Google+ presence of her company’s SEO clients. She reminds that search users will still see Google+ posts from pages and friends when they’re relevant to queries, so Authorship’s death doesn’t impact these social features. That means the more audience in your target market are connected to Google+, the more likely you are going to receive recognition as an author for the content posted on Google+.

href="https://plus.google.com/101669415833397825384" target="_blank">Sam DeBord

The end of Authorship might leave us thinking that the remnants of Authorship code strewn across the Web are just a reminder of Google’s fickle behavior, but there is some really important direction left in the overall trend of the project.

DeBord suggests it may be a good idea to follow the usual clichés: create quality content; promote it; connect and engage with the right people. And just make sure Google sees you making these efforts. You can’t generate a good Author Rank without generating good material, so start publishing quality pieces. If Google recognizes who you are, and you continue doing it right, you’ll be rewarded eventually.

More Readings

  • href="https://plus.google.com/+EricEnge" target="_blank">Eric Enge’s post ‘href="http://searchengineland.com/goodbye-google-authorship-201975" target="_blank">It’s Over: The Rise & Fall of Google Authorship For Search Results’
  • href="https://plus.google.com/+MarkTraphagen" target="_blank">Mark Traphagen’s post ‘href="http://elifennell.com/google-authorship-search-extraterrestrial-intelligence/" target="_blank">End of Google Authorship Is NOT the End of Author Authority Online’
  • href="https://plus.google.com/+EliFennell" target="_blank">Eli Fennell’s post ‘href="http://elifennell.com/google-authorship-search-extraterrestrial-intelligence/" target="_blank">Google Authorship & the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence’
  • href="https://www.linkedin.com/profile/view?id=30858233" target="_blank">Joey Hall’s post ‘href="http://enveritasgroup.com/2014/09/18/authorship-died-sucks-man/" target="_blank">Authorship died. And it sucks, man.’
  • href="https://plus.google.com/+NateDame" target="_blank">Nate Dame’s post ‘href="http://propecta.com/google-authorship-what-we-still-dont-know" target="_blank">What We Still Don’t Know About the Death of Google Authorship’

So, given the propensity of Google to consider new elements when ranking authors, it seems the best long-term play is to ensure that your digital wingspan places a focus on factors that affect Author Rank.

you should…

  • Share your content on social networks, and encourage your followers to share your posts further.
  • href="http://www.webhostingsecretrevealed.net/blog/inbound-marketing/how-to-drive-massive-traffic-to-your-blog-via-guest-blogging/" target="_blank">Contribute to other blogs, websites, magazines, etc. Your contributor byline will play an important role in getting your figure recognized and the anchor link used in that byline can be used to gain backlinks to your other content pieces.
  • Promote yourself as an author in online communities other than social networks, such as forums and comment sections of other websites.
  • Write data-rich content, for a chance to be featured in the ‘in-depth’ section of Google Search.

More about in-depth content

Why I suggest focusing on getting yourself featured in Google’s in-depth section?

The main reason is that it contains pieces that are published by highly established authors. These pieces include detailed business reports, whitepapers and case studies; this form of content requires a lot of effort on the author’s part and Google recognizes that. The search giant’s Hummingbird algorithm even places more emphasis on rich content, so in-depth content pieces are a great way to increase your author value.

So, how do you get closer to achieving recognition in the in-depth section? Here are some actionable tips that should help:

1. Implement Schema.org markup

Google recommends adding a piece of code to your publication marking its

  • Alternative Headline
  • Headline
  • Description
  • Date Published
  • Crawlable and Indexable image
  • Article Body

Ready-made templates are available at Schema.org/Article.

2. Use Google Authorship

I assume most of you reading will already be doing this. href="http://www.copyblogger.com/wordpress-google-authorship/" target="_blank">Get it back if you’ve removed Authorship for the content you create.

3. Use pagination

If you create an in-depth piece that is spread across multiple pages, let Google know these pages make up a single article by using pagination. href="http://googlewebmastercentral.blogspot.com/2012/03/video-about-pagination-with-relnext-and.html" target="_blank">See this video from Maile Ohye.

4. Add a logo

Specifiy your company’s logo to help your piece in getting selected for the in-depth section. This can be done either through

href="http://schema.org/Organization" target="_blank">Using Organization markup from Schema.org, or
href="http://www.google.com/+/business/?rd=1" target="_blank">By linking your Google+ page to the website

5. Produce rich content

This is the most important step to ensure that your in-depth articles get picked up by Google for having detailed, informative and rich content within them. All the stats, data and information needs to be updated if you’re going to achieve some recognition as an influential author, because you’ll be competing against some of the biggest names in your industry… authors from the likes of The Huffington Post, Wall Street Journal and New York Times. Also, remember to follow href="https://support.google.com/webmasters/answer/3280182?hl=en" target="_blank">Google’s recommendations on marking up critical details about your in-depth content piece.

Conclusion

The good news is if you’ve already been spending time building yourself as a leading author in your niche, your work towards these factors is already likely cut short.

Author Rank and factors that affect it may currently be a minor ripple on the sea, but with the death of Google Authorship, it is the only practical thing to lean on.


Page 11 – Web Hosting Secret Revealed




Web Hosting News Updates: EIG Reports Increasing Revenues, Microsoft Patches Bug After 19 Years, and More



alt="Web Hosting News Updates: EIG Reports Increasing Revenues, Microsoft Patches Bug After 19 Years, and More" src="http://whsr.webrevenueinc1.netdna-cdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/11/microsoft-windows-500x291_c.jpg" />

The colder weather and shorter days may find you wanting to do a little house cleaning – on your website. This is a good time of year to revamp your design and get up to speed on some of the latest Internet news. There has been quite a bit going on around the world wide web, which is typical. Some of the more interesting stories we’ve noticed have been increased earnings in cloud-based provider companies, Microsoft fixing a bug that goes back 19 years and the House killing a bill that proposed an Internet sales tax.

Endurance Intelligence Reports Record Profits

Endurance Intelligence recently released a href="http://ir.endurance.com/releasedetail.cfm?ReleaseID=880160" target="_blank">report stating that their earnings far exceeded what they even expected for their third quarter, which ended on September 30th. You’ll probably remember that Jerry Low href="http://www.webhostingsecretrevealed.net/blog/interviews/web-host-interview-arvixe/" target="_blank">interviewed Arvand Sebatian, the founder and CEO of Arvixe Hosting, recently about his web hosting services.

In the third quarter, Endurance Intelligence also acquired Arvixe along with Webzai, Ltd. and the assets from BuyDomains. The estimate for all three of these additions was around million. They saw an increase of about 12% over 2013 third quarter subscription rates and have seen a steady growth over the last several years.

Endurance Intelligence, overall, is a subscriber-based company. It will be interesting to see if the growth continues into 2015.

Microsoft Finally Fixes Nearly Two Decade Bug

The href="http://www.bbc.com/news/technology-30019976" target="_blank">BBC reported that Microsoft just recently patched a bug that has been in the software since Windows 95, making it 19 years old. The defect was found by IBM researchers in May and they worked with Microsoft to fix the problem before releasing an emergency patch and announcing the problem.

The bug allowed hackers to control a user’s PC remotely and to ask them to download “updates”. This allowed for drive-by attacks that forced people to download malicious software without realizing it.

The bug was called “WinShock” and the patch was released along with around a dozen other fixes. On the Common Vulnerability Scoring System (CVSS), which rates how serious of a threat a security flaw is, WinShock rated a 9.3 out of 10.

The vulnerability is related to Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) technology, reminiscent of Heartbleed.

id="attachment_11486" style="width: 310px" class="wp-caption alignright">href="http://www.webhostingsecretrevealed.net/blog/hosting-updates-news/web-hosting-news-updates-eig-reports-increasing-revenues-microsoft-patches-bug-after-19-years-and-us-house-nixes-internet-sales-tax-bill/attachment/house-of-representatives/" rel="attachment wp-att-11486">class="wp-image-11486 size-full" src="http://whsr.webrevenueinc1.netdna-cdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/11/house-of-representatives.jpg" alt="house of representatives" width="300" height="250" />class="wp-caption-text">photo credit: href="https://www.flickr.com/photos/theqspeaks/4456188446/">theqspeaks via href="http://photopin.com">photopin

US House of Representatives Kills Internet Sales Tax Bill – For Now

Last year, the US Senate passed the Marketplace Fairness Act. However, this week, Speaker of the House, John Boehner, announced that the House of Representatives does not plan to pass this bill. The bill would have forced online retailers to collect sales tax.

Brick and mortar retailers have lobbied strongly for an Internet sales tax, stating that the reasons for making Internet sales exempt has long since passed as Internet shopping is not a strongly established force in the industry.

However, those opposed to the Marketplace Fairness Act complain that imposing a sales tax will simply make it difficult for online retailers to compete with foreign competitors who are under no such compunction to tax purchases.

This is an issue worth keeping an eye on as it could change the way any US-based online businesses collect revenue and drive away part of their customer base.


Page 11 – Web Hosting Secret Revealed