Showing posts with label Drawing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Drawing. Show all posts

Friday, 19 July 2013

Guest blog posts drawing scrutiny from Google

When it comes to blogging, the conventional wisdom says that you should get your name and material out there as liberally as possible. Any place you can stuff a backlink to your business’s website is great, particularly if it’s on a noteworthy or popular site. Guest posts have long been thought to be a great way to do that: You get to reach a broader audience and link back to your own website, improving your search engine rankings while sharing your expertise. Meanwhile, the website owner gets free content. It’s win-win.
But that conventional wisdom is changing, as many are questioning whether guest blogging may actually lead to penalties rather than better placement in search results.

For the website owner who’s hosting the guest posts, the problem is relatively easy to see. Because you have limited control over the content of the guest post, you’re taking a leap of faith that you’re going to get quality work. Any links embedded in that post are also potentially troublesome. A guest blogger (who is rarely someone you actually know) may embed what looks like an innocuous link in the post, only to redirect it later to a less than savory site. And if your website links to a spam site—whether you or a guest writer does the linking—you can be subject to Google penalties and see your search ranking plummet.

But what about the writer of the guest blog post? Well, there’s trouble emerging there, too. Posting your good work, name, and link on a questionable site can subject you to the exact same penalties as described above. And once Google starts to associate you with the gray areas of the Web, it can be hard to break that association. In fact, today, Google’s own advice is that if you do write a guest post for another site, you should include “nofollow” tags on your own backlinks in order to avoid penalties.

But wait, isn’t building followable backlinks the whole idea of guest posting? It sure is, and that’s why many are wondering if guest posting is a dying idea. If the guest post is well-written and relevant, and if the site it’s posted to is high-quality and authoritative, then there’s no problem. The trouble is that almost never happens. Either the guest post is low-grade or the site hosting it is. Rarely do both sides of that equation ever add up to anything you’d consider “quality.”

Guest posting can still be done successfully, as long as it’s done sparingly and intelligently. But doing the job right is more important than ever. If you want to host a guest post on your business’s blog—or write one for someone else—follow these key tips.

Guest posts need to be relevant for both sides. If you run an online shoe sales site, you shouldn’t be hosting guest posts about plumbing.Quality is key. If you can’t ensure top-notch quality of a guest post, don’t accept it.Check out who you’re dealing with? Good guest posts will come from those with authority on the subject matter they’re writing about. Check their social networking accounts to ensure that they promote material they write, including guest posts on other people’s websites.Length is still important—300 words is widely considered the “minimum” word count for a webpage to be included in Google’s index.Limit backlinks

Saturday, 13 July 2013

MPA: 'Twilight' and Other Studio Shoots Drawing Tourists to Canada


TORONTO – First Hollywood brought its movies and TV shows to Canada for location shoots.

Now the major studios have created a tourism boom.

The Motion Picture Association - Canada, which represents the interests of the Hollywood studios north of the border, has released a study on the “major economic benefits” of its Canadian presence that points to fan pilgrimages to local locations for popular releases like The Twilight saga and Scott Pilgrim vs. the World.

“During filming and following the release of each of the movies in the (Twilight) series, fans of the films flocked to Vancouver in the hopes of catching a glimpse of one of the film series’ stars when they were on location, or simply to be able to see and take pictures in the actual settings where the movies were filmed,” the report says of the Twilight franchise, where Vancouver doubled as Forks, Wash., just across the Canadian-U.S. border.

The MPA report added that, while most of the Twilight tourists hoping to see stars like Robert Pattinson and Kristen Stewart were Americans, they also hailed from as far afield as Australia and Europe.

Fans also came during the production of Scott Pilgrim vs. the World in Toronto and after its box-office run created buzz at the multiplex.

“A former tour operator noted that the film developed a devoted fandom in addition to existing fans of the original graphic novel, and many fans (primarily from the U.S. and other parts of Canada) travel to Toronto in order to visit the locations in the film,” the MPA report noted.

Production-related tourism also surrounded Vancouver TV shoots for U.S. series like Smallville and Supernatural, the report added.

The major studios urged Canadians to do more to follow the film-induced tourism success of The Lord of the Rings trilogy in New Zealand and the Harry Potter series in the U.K.

The report also was commissioned by the Canadian Media Production Association, which represents local indie producers.