How does real time web benefit your small business? As most know about bulbwired.com, we are committed to helping small business and we do that mostly through Social Media Integration. Bing is MSN’s search and decide engine and in in experiment with Twitter to bring value to real time search. And of course you didn’t think Google was going to miss the party did you.
Where we see it benefiting you business is; if your name/brand is in a conversation of Twitter, Facebook and/or all of the other Social Media outlets that are all tied together, you can then me search-able. All this creates “link juice” better known as back-links. If you don’t know what all this means trust that we do and can bring it all together for your business.
The following 2 excepts are posts on the issue, reported from the Bing blog and Goggle blog; enjoy and ask questions.
One of the most interesting things going on today on the Internet is the notion of the real time web. The idea of accessing data in real time has been an elusive goal in the world of search. Web indexes in search engines update at pretty amazing rates, given what it takes to crawl the entire web and index it for searching, but getting that to “real time” has been challenging.
The explosive popularity of Twitter is the best example of this opportunity. Twitter is producing millions of tweets every minute on every subject you can imagine. The power of those tweets as a form of data that can be surfaced in search is enormous. Innovative services like Twitter give us access to public opinion and thoughts in a way that has not before been possible. From important social and political issues to keeping friends up to date on the minute-by-minute of our daily lives, the web is getting more and more real time.
“We believe that our search results and user experience will greatly benefit from the inclusion of this up-to-the-minute data, and we look forward to having a product that showcases how tweets can make search better in the coming months. That way, the next time you search for something that can be aided by a real-time observation, say, snow conditions at your favorite ski resort; you’ll find tweets from other users who are there and sharing the latest and greatest information.”
Google isnt the only search engine to get its hands on this valuable data, Bing was also included in the agreement and have been quick to act with Bing Twitter Search already available for US searchers. So if you’re based in the US, feel free to take Bing Twitter Search for a test drive here.
If all this is a blur and you are trying to figure out what it all means to my Small Business and you find yourself asking “Can this type of media marketing bring me an ROI? Consider 2 things;
1) To begin with, simply being on the net is not enough, you need to drive traffic to your
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information, But more importantly, that type of exposure seldom offers you the credibility, validation or build brand trust as being featured as a top level search result will. The most effective approach is a strategic online marketing mix. You can reach your target market and gain validation and credibility through effective online PR, and then utilize the this to leverage your message. That is the marketing strategy that you now need in order to build your business, land more customers and make more money.
2) Come and see our weekly webinar and we’ll lay it all out for you in layman’s terms and show you our commitment to helping drive more business to you!
Link Popularity is one of key area to increase your site page ranking and search ranking. Incoming links are just like votes in election for your website however there is point as we have to emphases on quality links rather quantity. Valuable links are like 100 of poor links equals to 1 quality link. In this article, I would like to explain how differentiate quality links and how to get them which will effect and improve and strengthen your website ranking.
Mistakes in Link Building
It is never too late to focus on the right direction to get qualified incoming links. Here is few mistakes those may follow by SEOs, Link Builder or website owner and webmasters.
1- Focus on Quantity than Quality: It is the quality of incoming links that will bring your website at 1st page so always you should look for qualified incoming links rather quantity. 2- Link Exchange or Reciprocal Links: Link exchange or reciprocal links should be avoided. 3- Ignorance of Check and Balance for Links: If you don’t check and balance your listings periodically, you may lose your hard gain incoming links 4- Purchase Bulk Links: Search engines become very intelligent these days, you can’t make them fool by purchasing bulk links, because search engine check your incoming links frequency as well with time 5- Paid Links: Paid links can be very healthy but if they are used as a part of the strategy, if you have no idea of how many paid links you are going to have, that can upset your link building campaign.
Do You Have Categorized and Simplified Database?
In link building campaign, your database is your key to success; it is the backbone of your overall link building strategy. If you have a poor database, which is not categorized and simplified, you can’t be comfortable from your link building strategy.
Try to have categorized and simplified database, make a master database with following mentioned fields.
Important Fields for Master Database for any Link Building Campaign
1. URL
2. Direct Link (Direct Link of Submission or Registration)
3. Industry Type (Show Biz, Construction, Telecommunication…)
4. Link Type (One Way, Reciprocal, Paid)
5. Link Style (Anchor link, Title Hyper Link, URL Link, Vote Link)
6. Link Period (1 Year or Life time)
7. PageRank (1, 2, 3…10)
8. Title Limit (Characters Limit)
9. Description Limit (Characters Limit)
10. Keywords Limit (Characters Limit)
Insertion & Update Your Master Database!
Your master database (structure) is ready, now You need to make it valuable by inserting data to it, it requires an on-going updates. Don’t let anything go away as it can be used for your current asa for new projects
Ok, we all know backlinks are a huge part of determining your site worth to most search engines. Each backlink to your site is a vote for it. Backlinks are the building blocks of SEO itself. We’ll look into what should be on your mind as you are acquiring backlinks.
The first intuition is to see how many you can get. That’s just one piece of the whole backlink pie. Search engines like Google have been around some time and have a lot of brilliant minds working for them. A higher quality backlink is worth more towards higher search engine rankings.
Some things to consider about backlinks:
1. Age affects all backlinks. Google specifically weighs a backlink more with age. Backlinks gain in weight over time until after around 6 months they reach their full weight. Basically, it means that the effort you do building backlinks will be worth more and more.
2. Anchor text is hugely important. The words on the backlink itself from the other site also play into it appears the other site views your site. When the keywords you are optimizing for are used, the link gains a much higher quality. The thing to watch out for here is that the text is varying. Google picks up on when all of you backlinks have the same exact text.
3. Getting backlinks from sites with the same theme as yours will benefit you much more than non-relevant sites. This makes sense since a link to your health food site from a car site about old Mustangs isn’t going to do much for a visitor, so it won’t for Google either.
4. The better the reputation or Page Rank of a site that links to you, the higher quality it is. Fairly obvious. If CNN or Slashdot linked to you, that one backlink would likely outweigh all your other backlinks together.
5. The physical location of a backlink on the page can also be a noteable factor for search engines. Google in particular lends more weight to links the higher towards the top of the page. If there is surrounding content the links appear more natural so they are valued higher.
Reciprocal links are always the hot topic when talking SEO. The truth is, reciprocal links are still alive and going well. Reciprocal links between websites with similar themes is natural and expected. Though I have read many many times of claims that reciprocal linking is dead, rest assured that quality reciprocal links are not going away anytime soon. Google for instance has its sights set on backlinks that were bought, and from link farms where 5 minutes after paying some money you have thousands of sites pointing to yours.
While there are many other factors such as the age of your website and how much content is on your website, those will be left to another article.
Backlinks are indeed the cornerstone of getting a website established on the Internet. Without enough backlinks visitors won’t know your site exists, and search engines will put little weight to your website resulting in a further loss of potential traffic, which could make or break your site. The key is to go out knowing what backlinks you want and spend enough time to make your site known. Properly setup, your backlinks will keep your site popular with visitors for a long time to come.
There are many ways to market your business on the Internet, and using search engine optimized articles has to be one of the “keeper” strategies for getting pre-qualified ‘natural’ search engine traffic to your web site.
Now, I’m sure you’ve heard all this before, “people search the Internet looking to information (aka articles) on how to solve a particular problem”. People just don’t search the web to buy your ’stuff’!
If you truly understand this search “path” then you understand the meat and potatoes of how the web works, it’s an information resource for people.
To completely understand the above concept ‘follow the money’. Search engines need content to be able to rank web sites, so that they continually get searchers BACK to their engines. The more searchers they have searching for relevant content on a search engine means more revenue for that search engine (e.g. the success of Google adsense).
This is why blogs and RSS have become the “buzz”. Blogs and RSS make the content (copy, words) “fluid”… meaning that the content changes often. This means that the search engine bots love these technologies, visit more often, and then rank the content well (if the blog articles are keyword optimized).
To see how this works go to any news site. News sites have a volume of ever-changing content. For example CNN gets spidered (visited) by the Googlebot something like 28,0000 times a day.
Why? Because of CNN’s ever changing content, and I guess the ‘bots’ are ‘lazy’? They go to where the good, and changing content is more often.
The SEO aspect of article writing.
Think of SEO as “filing”. What I mean by this is that good search engine optimization strategies help the search engine to “file” your content appropriately. Good keyword analysis gives you the information to enable the search engine bot with the ‘right’ filing.
There are no smoke and mirror tactics here. Your Mother was right when she told you that ‘telling the truth is always better in the long run’. This principle especially applies to good SEO practice.
Now, how do we take this concept of “fluid”, search engine optimized content and turn it into a Links IN bonanza for your own web site (thus sending your rankings through the roof over time, so to speak)?
These are the core principles…
1. Ensure that the link for your article is on a web page hosted on a unique IP address.
2. Ensure that the link for your article is on a web page that has a unique, wholly independent set of backlinks.
3. Ensure that the link is on a web page that is at least loosely relevant to the topic of your own web site.
You see, it’s not just a matter of having your articles on just any article directory. Your articles need to be in a category (and preferably a specialist directory) that is within “theme’. In other words you would never post your article on ‘looking after your cattle dog” on a directory that was focused on Financial Management.
In addition to placing your articles on article directories one can also run your articles on press release service sites, and of course there are RSS strategies (but that’s a whole other story, and another article).
About the Author
Kenneth Doyle Is A Writer And Internet Marketing Consultant,Find Out About His [Keyword Optimized] Article Writing And Submission Service Gets Thousands Of Prospects To Read YOUR Web Site Offers, Here…*Keyword Optimized Article Writing Submission Service*
Does anyone else find it surprising that so many site owners are reluctant to provide outgoing links on their website. Somehow they have come to believe that providing relevant outgoing links from their site can be harmful to their results in the search engines.
When you send your visitors to a relevant resource, this is not a bad thing. This is a good thing.
Relevant sites does NOT mean competitive sites.
Definitions of Relevant on the Web:
Having a bearing on or connection with the subject at issue; “the scientist corresponds with colleagues in order to learn about matters relevant to her own research” wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn
Evidence or information that has enough value to prove something significant to a case.http://www.attorneykennugent.com/library/r.html
If you write an article and would like to provide evidence of what you are saying, you should provide your resources within the article. Those MUST be credible resources. For example, if I write an article about website credibility, the site I point to in order to back up what I am saying must be an EXPERT on the topic, such as the Stanford Guidelines for Website Credibility. This method (used properly) gives your pages MORE value, not less. It also adds to the relevance of your page to the topic.
Incoming and outgoing links are not just about making pages filled with links. It is something that can be blended into your website in multiple ways, as it pertains to the specific page.
Think about the common interests of your target visitors and you will have no trouble deciding if a link is relevant to your site.
The following post is just a few thoughts about On-the-Page Optimization …
… and an attempt at a checklist.
Links vs On Page SEO
When optimizing a page for competitive terms, the bulk of the ranking algorithm will be based upon link analysis and site authority. Effective link building has no limit to how much it can help your rankings for competitive keywords you are targeting. Good on page optimization helps you rank for a wide array of less competitive keywords.
Keyword Density (KD) is Overrated
Some people think that more is better, and more is better, and more is better. This is not true with on-the-page keyword density. The algorithms for grading page copy are based on a bell curve. Some pages will have near-perfect term weights. But after some point, added placement of certain words does not make a page any more relevant; in fact, it can make a page become less relevant and appear more likely to be spam.
Why Focusing on Keyword Density is a Waste of Time
About half of all search queries are unique. Many of the searches that bring visitors to your site are for keyword phrases you never would have guessed. If a site is not well-established, most search traffic will be for long, multiword search phrases.
When webmasters start thinking about keyword density, many of them tend to remove descriptive modifiers and other semantically-related terms. Since some of those terms will no longer appear on the page, the “optimized” page no longer ranks well for many queries it once ranked for.
People write, search, and use language in similar ways. Thus, if you write naturally, you are going to be far better optimized for long-tail searches than some person who wastes time on keyword density will be.
If the content sounds like it was designed for engines instead of people, then less people are going to want to read it or link to it. Time spent tweaking keyword density would usually be better spent creating additional useful original content.
Over-optimizing a Page Makes a Page Likely to be Flagged as Spam
Some places try to optimize content so aggressively that the copy reads like rubbish. Traffic means nothing if people do not talk about your business or convert on your offers. Obviously, that is no good. But it gets even worse than that…some pages that are over-optimized don’t even get traffic.
Imagine a page that starts its page title, meta description, first header, first paragraph, and second paragraph all with the same word or phrase. Does that sound like natural quality information? Or perhaps more like someone trying to game the relevancy algorithms? If it looks and smells like spam then it is likely to get filtered out of the search results.
Natural On Page SEO
You have to mix it up. Sure, make the page title relevant, but don’t forget to
mix up your phrase order
use a few subheaders that are not keyword rich
use modifiers and related terms in some of your subheaders and throughout the page copy
The more your writing sounds like it was crafted for humans instead of bots, generally the better it will rank. Search engines want to rank high-quality information. Think news articles more than optimized pages. If your content looks more like a newspaper article than a piece of obviously SEOed text, you are on the right track.
Each search engine has its own algorithms, and they do not all align with one another. Thus, the most effective way to improve your rankings on all search engines will be via link building, but proper page structure and on-the-page optimization play important roles in gaining targeted traffic, especially for non-competitive keyword phrases or in search engines that rely heavily on page content.
Page Specific Relevant Content
Almost every page is going to have navigation and design elements. For search engines, the portions of the page that matter most, and that you have the most control over, are the textual content parts. Make sure that every page that you want to rank has enough page specific content on it that a search engine can tell that the page is focused on that topic. If a page consists mostly of repetitive sitewide navigation or illegible images it is hard for search engines to trust it or know what it is about.
You can create this kind of content by adding manufacturer details, editorial reviews, customer product feedback, product comparisons, and lists of recommended similar or compatible parts.
Use Keywords in Headings
Use keywords in headings and subheadings throughout the page—this heading should capture the person’s attention and tell them they are in the right place. Think of these headings like you would a heading in a newspaper; a classic, straight SEO approach might be
<h1>Optimize Web Pages – Learn SEO Copywriting</h1>
You may wish to use something with a call to action as well. That would appear more like
<h1>Learn SEO Copywriting Techniques that Drive Killer Converting Search Engine Traffic </h1>.
Heading tags go from H1 to H6, with the biggest tags being the smallest number (i.e., h1 renders the biggest font). You can change how the text appears with CSS. I usually try to get some of my primary and secondary keyword phrases and similar phrases in my page heading as well as in many subheadings.
I recommend using a single H1 tag on each page. I also try to use many H2 or H3 tags to break up the page copy and help structure the data.
Break the Page Into Pieces
h1 (consisting of primary keywords and a modifier or call to action) Only use one h1 tag per page and do not bold or emphasize it. It probably works best if it is different than your page title – different phrase order, singular vs plural, and substitute synonyms where it makes sense.
Examples of subheadings can be as follows:
h2 (similar subtopic idea with some related keyword phrases in it)
paragraph blah blah blah
h2 (another subtopic with some semantically related words)
paragraph blah blah
paragraph blah blah blah
h2 (Many subtopics do not have the same keywords as the page title and main heading. If you are writing for conversion, not all of them will, which is also good for SEO. If your page title and your headings contain the exact same keyword phrase it may look like an attempt to manipulate search relevancy. Mix it up. Keep it natural looking.)
h2 (Don’t forget to change word order and use plural and singular versions)
unordered list
paragraph blah blah
h2 (another subtopic focused on another niche)
paragraph blah blah blah
paragraph blah blah blah
Usually the subheadings will focus on a keyword phrase that is slightly more specific than the main heading.
The next example set is going to contain a bit of self-promotion, but that is not really the intent. It is hard for me to think of structuring content without thinking about a topic, and it doesn’t make a whole lot of sense to tell people to copy any of my pages or client sites.
Example of a Liberal Use of Subheadings
Descriptive, reader-focused subheadings improve the usability of your website, both for search engines and people. If I wrote a page about applying for a job, the page title and headers might look something like this:
<title>Search Engine Optimization Guru Looks to Help 1 Lucky Client</title>
<h1>Online Search Engine Optimization Expert for Hire</h1>
<h2>Aaron Wall: Your SEO Expert</h2>
<h3>Author of SEO Book: A Well-Known Search Blog</h3>
content
<h3>Top Selling Marketing Book Author</h3>
content
<h2>History in the Search Community</h2>
<h3>Speaker at Search Engine Strategies & WebmasterWorld</h3>
content
<h3>Directory Editor at Major Directories</h3>
content
<h3>Moderator at Many Professional Webmaster Discussion Forums</h3>
content
<h2>Search Engine Ranking Achievements</h2>
<h3>Search Marketing ROI Results</h3>
content
<h3>Client Testimonials</h3>
content
Don’t Go Crazy
Headings help structure the information, but you shouldn’t overdo it. If you start doing things like placing all your content in an H1 tag, bolding the H1 tags, or bolding all occurrences of your keywords, then you are doing things that would give search engines a reason to discount your page. Thus, the combined effect will be more likely to hurt your rankings on multiple fronts, since your content may look less appealing to search engines and site visitors will be less likely to buy from it or link to it.
Place Your Keywords Where it Makes Sense
After the headings, the rest of the page copy is usually written with sales conversion in mind, and I do not pay too much attention to optimizing it for search engines other than adding in a modifier here or there and making sure that I have mixed up the phrase order of core keywords in some spots. Natural writing should cause you to use your keywords throughout the text.
If you are struggling to get your keywords into the page here are some ideas:
Place keywords in normal body content.
Place keywords in heading tags.
Place keywords in img alt tags.
When the word is part of a small statement making a specific point, you may bold it or italicize it.
You may also want to include your keywords a few times in bulleted lists.
When possible, place the keywords in links, and don’t forget navigation.
Don’t focus on just one core keyword over and over again. Mix in many variations.
The key focus of the page should be on readability. If the page does not make sense to human eyes, then it is no good for a search engine and it will not make sales. You want to use keywords, but not to the point where it sounds like you are writing for the search engine and not the user.
When in doubt, ignore the keywords, write your article for people, and then come back to it and make sure you covered all the important topics you wanted to cover.
Use Variation
Since latent semantic indexing-type algorithms may be able to detect unnatural copy that lacks related terms and will score hyper-focused repetitive unnatural text as being less relevant, it is important to use some mixture of terms and phrases (i.e., in some spots you want to use terms related to your keywords and not just your keywords).
If you took your core keyword out of the page copy and replaced it with blanks, would humans to be able to understand what the document was about? If they could, you are in great shape.
Be Creative
There are so many creative ways to mix in your keywords. Assuming we wanted to target eat cheddar, we could write the following:
Spread Your Keywords Throughout the Page
Some of the more recent algorithms may have the ability to look for natural language patterns. In natural language, the different words in a keyword phrase will appear spread apart from one another in some occurances. To boost your rankings in these algorithms, you will want to use the word eat in some spots and cheddar in other spots.
Often your keywords will appear next to each other naturally. Some words like peanut and butter often occur together, but in general, all of your occurrences of the keywords should not be together unless that is how they would appear in a newspaper article about your topic.
Keywords Near the Beginning of the Source Code
Keywords near the top of the page, and before your navigation, may be weighted more heavily and enhance your search engine rankings. Search engines care about the order the content appears in the page code more than on the screen.
Reorganizing the text can easily be accomplished by writing a sentence above your branding images or through using a floating DIV or another CSS technique. When using tables, some people use a blank cell technique to make the search engines see the body content before navigation. If search engines weight where the keywords are on the page, then they most likely use the order of the words in the actual page source code and not the visual display of the pages.
Microsoft did research into visual page segmentation, and Google hired some lead Firefox programmers away from Mozilla. As computer clock cycles get more efficient, if they can improve relevancy by looking closer at how words appear on displayed pages, they will factor that into their algorithms. But likely they have easier relevancy wins elsewhere.
Page Copy Length
Clarity and formatting are more important than shear length of copy. Rather than aiming for an arbitrary word limit or cut off, you should write pages of varying length based on the goals of the page. For example, if you want to make a page look comprehensive and use that idea as part of your marketing strategy it makes sense to make that page longer than it needs to be. If you are trying to quickly communicate an important idea it does not hurt to publish that page with less text on it.
No matter how long you make it, ensure you use sub-headers, short paragraphs, bulleted lists, graphics, and other goodies that help break up the text. Most people scan before they read.
If you want to see your money fly away try these more than common mistakes in PPC. These mistakes will give your money wings faster than a Redbull, you want to get really stupid with it add Vodka. Pay per click advertising can be a quick way to get targeted traffic and GEO targeted for that matter. Plug in a list of keywords, write an ad, set a daily budget and let it rock.
If you can get a listing towards the top of page one, you can potentially get hundreds if not thousand of visitors. However, you can also get your butt handed to you. Here is couple of pay per click (PPC) adventures gone wild. Hopefully you can avoid these very fundamental mistakes.
I had this product all ready to go and was determined to use pay per click advertising. The product was great, I felt that there was no way it wouldn’t sell. So I lined it all up, set a daily budget, got a list of keywords, wrote a couple of ads to do an A/B split test and let the campaign go live.
That month, I ended up spending well over $1,500 and all of 4 sales made. Losing money is not one of my favorite things to do. Well, after some examination and a course in SEO and PPC I realized I made 2 very simple mistakes, critical yet simple. The first was that I didn’t restrict the ads to justthe US and Canada or English speaking countries for that matter. I had them going all over the world and getting loads of traffic, however, to places that couldn’t possibly want my product. The other blunder was, I ran the ads on content sites where the CTR is notoriously high and conversions horribly low. The combination smoked me out on this product very quickly.
The other fundamental mistake I made, and BTW, I only made these mistakes once. I didn’t set the cost per click to a max amount and set my daily budget to some astronomical figure. I won’t even go into how much money I lost on that one until I realized what the heck I did. My journey in this sector of Internet marketing has been a nightmare even though it didn’t need to be. I have learned a great deal from Aaron Wall’s course SEObook.com, the money I spent with him has been saved many times over.
Pay per click advertising can be extremely effective, but you MUST know what you’re doing. Two things I will leave you with here;
1) “Do not try this at home” – hire a pro or learn from a pro!
2) My Dad used to say, “Don’t go to a Dentist to get your haircut”, I think you get my point.
Link building is still one of the biggest obstacles in improving your website ranking and traffic. If that is the case then the natural next question is; how do you build them?
A good place to start is to submit your site to web directories and directories in your niche. Sound simple, doesn’t it? Well it isn’t, most of us look the most obvious places, this certainly is a good place to start, however you need to look for the hidden gems inside your business category. Many of the best directories exist on sites like manufacturers you sell or buy from, or your own local Chamber of Commerce. The point here is the amount of weight Google puts on “Link Relevancy is huge. So try to avoid just blindly buying or link exchanging, etc. Be smart here and it will pay off. SEO is not for the “Immediate Gratification” folks, I wish it were. I would be gratified by now I think.
One part of your link building strategy can be “Dofollow Blogs”. If you have anything credible to say inside of your business you need to start saying it. The way to get some buzz around your product, service, brand etc is to find likeminded blogs that dofollow,
(DoFollow – This is given in the HTML page or the Robot.txt of the website, in order to direct the search engines to follow that particular web page.)
If you happen to be already blogging and commenting of others blogs by all means you should be getting some bank for your buck. Look for sites that have a relatively high page rank and comment on the ones inside your business. If you sell blue-left-handed widgets do not comment about “Things in the Solar System”. And please for goodness sake say something more than “nice post” or “kewl”, I know many guys with blogs will just delete you as “spam”. You may find some decent “dofollow sites” here. The last I’ll say about this right now is;
Don’t Be A Spammer – Be A Value Provider!
Spamming Dofollow resources will not give you results…not only that, it hurts the entire community, and forces Dofollow providers to convert their sites to Nofollow. Be sure that all of your link-building exploits are done so tastefully and honestly. If you don’t cram keywords and give an honest account of what your site is about, search engines will reward you for it!
The following is a quick rundown on what a DoFollow actually is:
Nofollow’ is a HTML attribute attached to hyperlinks in order to ensure that the specific link in question does not pass any value that will help improve the target site’s search engine rank.
It was first created by Google in 2005 as a means to combat keyword spam, particularly on webpages where users can add links by themselves. Other search engines like Yahoo and MSN Live both respect the nofollow attribute as well.
More details from Google’s official blog:
If you’re a blogger (or a blog reader), you’re painfully familiar with people who try to raise their own websites’ search engine rankings by submitting linked blog comments like “Visit my discount pharmaceuticals site.” This is called comment spam, we don’t like it either, and we’ve been testing a new tag that blocks it.
From now on, when Google sees the attribute (rel=”nofollow”) on hyperlinks, those links won’t get any credit when we rank websites in our search results.
This isn’t a negative vote for the site where the comment was posted; it’s just a way to make sure that spammers get no benefit from abusing public areas like blog comments, trackbacks, and referrer lists.
In its most basic definition, dofollow is just a way of referring to links that do not use the ‘nofollow’ attribute. In other words, these are normal links which pass value and credit towards improving search engine ranks.
The origin of the term ‘dofollow’ appears to stem from a movement by bloggers who believe that comments are legitimate contributions by readers, therefore the wholesale marking of every comment as spam by default through the ‘nofollow’ tag is not fair and justified
As such, these bloggers or other non-blog websites override the existing platform defaults by removing the nofollow attribute, making all the links ‘dofollow’.
These dofollow blogs and websites have consistently been a target of webmasters and spammers who leave keyword links with their choice of anchor text in order to enhance their search rank. You can find dofollow blogs through a simple google search. Let me wrap this up by cautioning you to not be obsessed with Dofollow’s it is just a small part of the overall picture in building a long term “Luv Presence” on the net. Long live ya! Thanks for letting me yak all over you.