Dec 30

A little over a year ago, I posted about my frustration, both with the speed and stability of Time Matters with Billing Matters Plus v7 and with the CIC Solutions Forum, which purports to be a place where users can get support from certified consultants, but where my post about how to speed up TM7 was quickly quashed.

The post has been popular, attracting a significant portion of the search engine traffic to this site and a number of posts from similarly-frustrated Time Matters users and IT professionals.

I have not used Time Matters since shortly after that post. While I said there that Time Matters was a time saver, even with its flaws, I quickly found the opposite to be true once I stopped using it. I used the Billing Matters portion until last September, when I switched my business form and closed out my books, but those were frustrating months, even though I hired a consultant to work with me.

I have never been happier. Case management is much easier without Time Matters, and a good deal faster. I use Outlook, Evolution, Thunderbird with Lightning, or several other programs as they catch my fancy. I am much happier keeping my books using GnuCash, although I would use Freshbooks if I had more hourly-fee clients to bill.

Commenter Wells Anderson is undoubtedly right that Time Matters is a popular piece of software. So is Internet Explorer 6. Neither are particularly good programs; many users simply are not aware that there are better alternatives. Or don’t care.

Dec 29

One of the great things about using WordPress is that it automatically creates keyword-rich, spider-friendly URLs for your posts (as long as your Permalink settings in the Options tab of the WordPress admin are configured properly). Many times, though, these URLs are TOO keyword-rich. In other words, the URL has too many words in it. That happens if you create a long title to your post, because every word in the title is worked into the URL automatically by WordPress.

But how long is “too long” for a URL? For the answer to this question, I went to the source: Matt Cutts, head of Google’s webspam team. In my interview with Matt Cutts, I asked:

“What is excessive in the length of a keyword-rich URL? We have seen clients use keyword URLs that have 10 to 15 words strung together with hyphens; or blogs - we have seen them even longer there. A typical WordPress blog will use the title of the post as the post slug, unless you defined something different and you can just go on and on and on. Can you give any guidelines or recommendations in that regard?”

Matt answered:

“Certainly. If you can make your title four- or five-words long - and it is pretty natural. If you have got a three, four or five words in your URL, that can be perfectly normal. As it gets a little longer, then it starts to look a little worse. Now, our algorithms typically will just weight those words less and just not give you as much credit.

The thing to be aware of is, ask yourself: “How does this look to a regular user?†- because if, at any time, somebody comes to your page or, maybe, a competitor does a search and finds 15 words all strung together like variants of the same word, then that does look like spam, and they often will send a spam report. Then somebody will go and check that out.

So, I would not make it a big habit of having tons and tons of words stuffed in there, because there are plenty of places on a page, where you can have relevant words and have them be helpful to users - and not have it come across as keyword stuffing.”

Based on this new information from Matt, you can see that even your blog post slugs have the potential to appear spammy and “keyword stuffed,” which doesn’t look great for your readers and may end up getting flagged as “spam.” So how can you prevent your blog from appearing spammy?

I’d strongly recommend that you curb the length of your URLs. There are a couple of different approaches to this in WordPress:

  1. Hand-craft your own “Post Slug” when you are writing the post. To do so, simply type in your desired post slug into the “Post Slug” field found on the right-hand side of the “Write Post” page in the WordPress admin (you probably will have to hit the + sign to see the field). You can mirror your post’s title but drop throwaway words like “the” and “and”. You can take the first four words or so of the title as your slug. Heck, you could even write something totally different that doesn’t resemble your post title.
  2. Use a WordPress plugin that will trim your post slugs down to a more manageable size, i.e. to five or six words. There are two plugins to choose from that will accomplish this: the WordPress Slug Trimmer plugin or the Automated SEO Friendly URL plugin.

For more great tips from Matt Cutts, I invite you to listen to my audio interview in MP3 format or read the full transcript. The interview is a little over 30 minutes long, and it has some invaluable advice.

Enjoy, and happy search engine optimized blogging!!!

Dec 27

Google has released their voice local search called Goog-411, and it works great !

There has been some mention of this in the past, but this appears to be the first “experimental” release.

I tried it immediately and was very impressed with the interface and response.

And it’s free. Google doesn’t charge you a thing for the call or for connecting you to the business. Regular phone charges may apply, based on your telephone service provider.

Note: Google Voice Local Search is still in its experimental stage. It may not be available at all times and may not work for all users. We’re fine-tuning the service to get better at recognizing your requests. It’s currently only available in English, in the US, for US business listings. Source : Google Voice Local Search

ShareThis

Dec 23

Ok, this is probably for the first time i will use this blog to find help from you.

I got WordPress blog with 450 exactly the same posts (i mean the post structure) and want to add “this text” to every post (450) in the same place on each post structure.

My posts looks like this:

-post title-
-image-
-text1-
-text2-
-text3-

and i want to have:

-post title-
-image-
-text1-
-text2-
-”add this text”-
-text3-

Any help from you ?

Dec 21

I found a video recently that represented brilliantly what happens to a website when it’s hit with a Google penalty. It serves to explain the point: don’t misbehave. Whether or not you know you’re misbehaving is irrelevant. Look what happened to this innocent little girl while the Google breaker was just doing his thing (not being evil).

Dec 20

If you thought the whole Yahoo! - Microsoft saga was over, guess again. Yahoo! shareholders are now suing Yahoo! for neglecting to take into account the company’s main responsibility, looking out for the shareholders. It seems Microsoft will have Yahoo! all to itself pretty soon.

Dec 17

The success of blogging is all about writing and posting. What if you don’t like to write, but good at talking? Then podcasting is a better choice for you. Podcasting is a way of sharing your blog in an audio format, which means you just record your voice on some topic and distribute it from your blog, no writing, just talking and posting. Your WordPress can handle this easily. (more…)

Dec 15

I’m offering free banner advertising on the Info Vilesilencer Forum, for directories (and associated) sites. See details below:

The Offer: 50 free banner ads, in rotation, run-of-site on Info Vilesilencer Forum

Availability: 43 remaining (at time of writing)

Valid period: The ads will run from November 16th until the new IVS site is launched (~approx Mar-Apr 08).

Whose Eligible?:
- Directory Owners (Free, Paid, Niche, Whatever)
- Directory Script Owners
- Directory of Directory Owners
- Directory List Owners
- Directory Forum Owners
- Directory Blog Owners

Price: Free

Catches:
- 1 ad per IVS member.
- Banner size is (480 x 60), no exceptions.
- 20 Post Count minimum - let’s face it, that is NOTHING!

If you are interested in signing up for this free advertising offer, please visit THIS THREAD on the forum.

Dec 12

Since I spend so much time working and talking about API’s I thought it would be a good idea to show others what an API is, and what it does.

This video does a good job of explaining in very easy terms how API’s work. Whether you are interested in the Google, YouTube, Facebook or almost any other system an API can give you the access to a wealth of information to mashup your data and ideas with.

Check it out and let me know if you find it helpful.

ShareThis

Dec 10

The winners have been posted here.

Our site droped out of the listings about a week ago. I think they got way too many back-links too fast. GoogleBowling. Not good!!!

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