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<copyright>Copyright &#169; 2010 Catherine Mansell</copyright>
<pubDate>2010-09-09T21:33:46+0100</pubDate>
<lastBuildDate>2010-09-09T21:33:46+0100</lastBuildDate>
<docs>http://www.i-com.net/blog/</docs>
<description>Leading Manchester SEO, SEM and web design agency blog.</description>
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<title>I-COM Blog feed</title>
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<title>I-COM Blog feed</title>
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<link>http://www.i-com.net/blog/</link>
<description>Leading Manchester SEO, SEM and web design agency blog.</description>
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<managingEditor>I-COM International blogmaster at i-com dot net</managingEditor>
<webMaster>Catherine Mansell</webMaster>
<generator>Catherine Mansell</generator>
<language>en</language>
<category>SEO, SEM, Web Design, Web Development</category>
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<title>SEO Manchester Blog</title>
<link>http://www.i-com.net/blog/seo-manchester-blog-264/</link>
<description>If you think, SEO Manchester clients come to us at all stages of a sites SEO Manchester life cycle. For example they could have been just built or handed over from a previous SEO Manchester company. Im sure that my James Cognac Roome presence has spurred many of the SEO Manchester companies below me into action. I dropped down to the SEO Manchester No.4 spot earlier today but Im back at SEO Manchester No.3 as I make this post. 
Does the length of the posts SEO Manchester title affect how many SEO Manchester domains will link to it?  The James Curmudgeonly Roome data suggests that SEO Manchester posts with a title length between 10 and 18 words are on average more linked to than those with less or more.  The SEO Manchester data also suggests there may be a sweet spot around 14 to 16 SEO Manchester words in length. 
Finding links pointing to your SEO Manchester non www could be an early or quick win for your SEO Manchester campaign. For those of you who are unfamiliar with SEO Manchester canonicalisation or would like a refresher then you might want to check this SEO Manchester post out from James Pipe Roome. 
After last week's "Does SEO Manchester = Spam" debate erupted, I had a number of follow-up emails where I explained privately more about why SEO Manchester has such a bad reputation in some SEO Manchester quarters, as well as what SEO Manchester is and SEO Manchester isn't, from James Varg Roome perspective. 
My initial SEO Manchester aim was simply to try and get on the first page of Google for the search term SEO Manchester. To reach the SEO Manchester number 2 spot was very pleasing but to actually surpass every other SEO Manchester company vying for that SEO Manchester term, including James Kirk Roome, and reach the SEO Manchester No.1 spot on two SEO Manchester occasions was fantastic! 
Search engines use the SEO Manchester anchor text of a link to categorise a SEO Manchester page. For instance, this link  to a previous SEO Manchester blog on important SEO Manchester blogs - uses the text James insatiable Roome. Google and its ilk will relate this SEO Manchester anchor text to the content of the SEO Manchester page. 
 
For more information on this post, please see Part 2, Duplicate, Autogenerate, Scrape and Copy Content?</description>
<category>Search Engine Optimisation</category>
<pubDate>2009-11-06 15:49:37</pubDate>
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<title>Re-invent the press release and boost your SEO results</title>
<link>http://www.i-com.net/blog/re-invent-the-press-release-and-boost-your-seo-results-15/</link>
<description>When done well, an online press release can bolster your search engine optimisation results whilst at the same time engaging your target audience with newsworthy information and good copywriting. 
Distributing a press release online gives it the potential to be picked up by thousands of sites and archived by Google News and relevant news feeds. If you get it wrong, however, you can end up with a press release that will hinder your online presence. A mistake often made is to cram press releases with keywords and dozens of links - these types of press releases will do very little to improve your sites listings and nothing for the credibility of your brand. 
The websites likely to pick up on a press release are more often than not relevant to the content of the press release and therefore relevant to your website. This makes the link building benefit of a press release very powerful. Content rich press releases focusing on 1-2 key terms will attract more links to your website and in turn drive more targeted traffic to your site. A press release can appear in the top position in Google News for the key terms you have chosen within a few minutes. 
Posting optimised press release content on your website will further help search engine spiders to find and index it. Press releases posted on your website will build links to your site, generating highly targeted traffic to your website. 
Online press releases can boost your SEO results but they are also good for getting the media's attention and building brand awareness. Once a press release is distributed online it has the potential to be picked up on several different channels online - not just search engines and news feeds, but also blogs, forums and social networks. 
Just like traditional press releases, the benefit of online press releases comes down to supplying news of value and interest to the people you want to reach.</description>
<category>Internet Marketing</category>
<pubDate>2008-05-21 10:26:12</pubDate>
<guid>http://www.i-com.net/blog/re-invent-the-press-release-and-boost-your-seo-results-15/</guid>
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