Some Golden Rules of logo design

September 22nd, 2008 by dashimir

Entireweb Newsletter has a few rules for seomag logo:
1) Uniqueness
Your logo should be able to stand out as completely ‘yours’. It’s surprising how many times we get asked to ‘copy’ logos – we’ve even had clients request a ‘version’ of my brand. Not a good idea. On top of the potential legal complications nothing screams ‘unprofessional’ like a logo that’s looks even remotely like someone else’s. Do not copy. I’ll say it again. Do. Not. Copy.

2) Timeless
Every few years there’s a trend, or fad, that new logos seems to embrace. A few years ago it was the ’swoosh’ – made logos all hi-tech and ‘internety’. Trouble is, everybody jumped on that bandwagon and the treatment rapidly became hackneyed and trite. Few years hence, and we’ve got lots of people stuck with out of date designs. The latest design logo trend is so-called 2.0, a technique that (like a lot of design trends) can be traced back to Apple Computers. Take your logo, add a ‘gel’ treatment, give it glassy reflection at the bottom and you’re all set. (hey – the 3D version of our house could qualify). Web 2.0 is still going strong, but I’ll go out on a limb and say it will be yesterday’s news by end of summer.

3) Gimmick Free
Special FX and filters are usually applied, by inexperienced designers, to logos that are ‘missing something’. Trouble is, what the logo is generally missing is any design integrity, and adding bevels, lens flares and drop shadows is the logo design version of ‘putting lipstick on a pig’. While it certainly shows how cool the latest design software is, it doesn’t do much for the professionalism of your mark. Such treatments are fine for glamour shots (used as display pieces on brochures and the like) but are only going to cause grief down the road, especially when it comes to application of your new logo on standard business material. Your logo should be as technically simple as possible for adaptability, which just happened to be number 4 on our list…

4) Adaptability
Over the life of your company, you’ll want to plaster your logo over everything you send out. That’s the point of having a logo in the first place. In order to do this, you’ll need a logo that’s adaptable to every occasion and while they may look ‘pretty’ , the design gimmicks we just talked about render your logo impractical for many of these uses. Some of these uses – checks, FAXes, embroidery, newspaper ads, invoices, letterheads, etc. Your new logo has to work on all of them. You’ll also need a quality black and white version that can reproduce as a halftone grayscale, or in the cases of low-resolution BW reproduction, a linear version.

5) Scalability
When using your logo, you’ll need to be able to use it small. Real small. Postage stamp size. Classic example of this – over the years, I’ve designed a load of sports event posters that feature logos from dozens of event sponsors. Space only permits the logos to be featured as very small images and it’s always the simpler logos that stand out when viewed from a distance. The cluttered logos aren’t recognizable to any great degree and the sponsors are probably wasting their money, especially if inclusion on the poster is the only benefit of their sponsorship. When it comes to scalability, the text portion of the logo is the most important, as that’s the piece you want people to remember. Scrawny, sickly text doesn’t read very well at half an inch high.

6) Color is Secondary
Colors are extremely important. Using consistent corporate colors will become part of your brand – that’s understood. However, when it comes to the design of your logo, color must always be secondary. A logo that requires color to ‘hold’ the design together is fine when reproduction is optimal – websites, 4 color process printing and what have you – but even then only if the size is appropriate as well. Logos that rely too much on color tend to blend together when used small (see above) and unless the contrast between the two colors is pronounced, will be a grey mess if used in black and white. As for low-resolution reproduction (FAXES, SEOmag checks, etc) you can forget about readability completely – logos that use color as a design cornerstone usually come out as black blotches on a FAX transmission and with all their money, banks still haven’t figured out how to print a decent check.

Keywords in SEOmag

September 20th, 2008 by dashimir

Usually 70-647 professionals plan on 640-816 right after their 70-271 or 70-293, as compared to the PMI-001 students have already done their basics earlier.

Keywords capture the essence of your web site and they are what a potential visitor to your site puts into a search engine to find seomag web sites through optimization process.
Using the correct keywords in your web-site content can mean the difference in whether you come back in search engine results as one of the first web sites. Studies show that searchers rarely go past the second page of search results when looking for something online. Choosing the appropriate keywords for your web site will improve your search engine rankings and lead more search engine users to your site.
To decide which keywords should be used on your web site, you can start by asking yourself the most simple, but relevant, question. Who needs the services that you offer? It’s an elementary question, but one that will be most important in searching for the correct keywords and having the best search engine optimization. If you’re marketing specialty SEO, you will want to use words such as seomag, specialty seomag, or other such words that come to mind when you think of your word. It’s also important to remember to use words that real people use when talking about your products.

Updates and seomag site changes

September 19th, 2008 by dashimir

One of many problems when you start with your SEO strategies is the updates and changes of your site. Often, people feel that once the SEO by seomag is aranged, then it’s always in place, and they think it finished. But believing this can make to a very unpleasant surprise.
When your site changes, especially if there are content updates or changes to the site structure, links
can be broken, tags may be changed, and any number of other small details may be overlooked. When this happens, the result can be a reduced ranking for your site. Site crawlers look at everything, from your tags to your links, and based on what they see, your ranking could fluctuate from day to day. If what the crawler sees indications that your site has changed in a negative way, the site’s ranking will be negatively affected. Many things affect the way your site ranks in a search engine. You’ve seen an overview of a lot of them in this chapter, and you’ll see them all again in more depth in future chapters. Realize that SEO is not a simple undertaking. It is a complex, time-consuming strategy for improving your business. And without attention to all of the details, you could just be wasting your time. So plan to invest the time needed to ensure that your search engine optimization efforts aren’t wasted.

Cookies

September 18th, 2008 by dashimir

Cookies are one of irritating facts of life on the Internet. When users enter the seomag site and use some feature of it, a small piece of code (the cookie) is placed on the user’s hard drive. Then, when the user returns to the site in the future, that cookie can be accessed, and the user’s preferences executed.
When cookies work properly, they’re an usefull tool for web designers. When they don’t work as they should, the problems begin. The main issue with cookies is that some browsers block and allow users to set how cookies will be delivered to them. And some source code prompts the user to be asked before a cookie is accepted. Also, any navigation that requires cookies will cause the crawler to be unable to index the pages.
How do you overcome this issue? The only answer is to code cookies to ensure that the source code is not designed to query the user before the cookie is delivered.

Seomag…

September 17th, 2008 by dashimir

…let’s jump.
This should be enough for the first place :)

Seomag frames

September 17th, 2008 by dashimir

Some designs use frames for web site. Frames are part of a web site, with each section
a separate entity from the other portions of the page. Because the frames on a site represent separate URLs, they often make problem for users whose browsers don’t support frames, and for search crawlers, which encounter the frames and can not index the site where the frame is the structure.
You have a couple of alternatives when you must to use seomag in your web site. The first is
to include an alternative to the framed site. This requires the use of the noframes tag. The tag directs
the user’s browser to display the site without the framed navigation system. Users may see a version of your site, but at least they can still see it. When a search crawler find a site made with frames, the noframes tag allows it to index the alternative site. It’s important to realize, however, that when you use the noframes tag, you should load the code for an entire web page between the opening tag and closing tag.
Frames are difficult for SEO strategies, but doing so is not mission impossible. It’s a good idea to avoid frames, but don’t you be a afraid. You just have to use a different approach to reaching the seomag rankings that you desire.

Graphics

September 16th, 2008 by dashimir

Images or graphics or seomag logo on your web site are essential and they are usually ignored by search engines. They have some other value. Without images, your page is not so interesting and nice.
If you have images on a web site, then there should be a way to increase your web-site traffic or at least to improve your site ranking. One technique that will help your seomag technic use of graphics on your site is to tag those graphics with alt tags inside the img tags.
Alt tags are the HTML tags used to display alternative text when there is a graphic present or not. Your alt tags should be a short. Img tags are the tags used to code the images that will appear on your web site.

SEOmag content

September 15th, 2008 by dashimir

SEOmag content is another element of an SEO-friendly site that you should follow time of time. Fortunately, there are some ways to create web-site content adapted for search crawlers.
Great content starts with the right keywords and phrases. Select no more than three keywords or
phrases to include in the content on any one of your web pages. The first is that the effectiveness
of your keywords will be reduced by the number of different ones you’re using.
The other problem is seeing a search engine your SEO efforts as keyword stuffing. It’s a serious problem, and search engine crawlers will exclude your site or pages from indexes if there are too many keywords on those pages.
Many people think the more frequently you use the words, the higher your search engine ranking will be. Again, that’s not necessarily true. Just as using too many different seomag keywords can cause a crawler to exclude you from a search engine index. Again, you run the risk of having your site excluded from search indexes.

Entireweb Newsletter (10)

September 15th, 2008 by dashimir

27. Make your site useful and informative (see seomag as example, a.)
28. Improve your link building. Link to high PR websites. Quality of relevant links are far more important than quantity. Links will greatly improve your site’s visibility, popularity and rankings. Search engines consider links as votes to your site.
BRDTracker

Entireweb Newsletter (9)

September 14th, 2008 by dashimir

25. Do not use hidden text and links. Show to search engines what you show to your vistors. It will greatly affect your site’s reputation.
26. Do not attempt to create pages that contains phishing, scam, viruses, trojans, backdoors, spyware, adware and other malicious programs.

…to be continued on SEOmag blog…

Marketing SEO blogs
business and economy

Other seomag

September 13th, 2008 by dashimir

One of many seomag find SEO definition for SEO by Annera:
“Search engines are one of the chief ways that an Internet user find search results for Web sites. This clearly means how a Web site with high and good seomag search engine listings can notice a excellent increase in traffic.
Everyone needs to get those kinds of good seomag search engine placements. But unluckily, many Web sites materialize poorly in search engine rankings or sometimes may even not be listed at all in search engines seomag as they fail to deem how search engines do work.
Particularly, submitting a seomag site to search engines is only a part of the aim of getting good search engine positioning and visibility. It is most important to make a Web site ready to get through seomag “search engine optimization.”

Another SEOmag mistake

September 12th, 2008 by dashimir

SEOmag found next possible SEO meaning on Wikipedia:
The State Electoral Office (SEO) of South Australia, a state of Australia, is an independent office which conducts parliamentary state elections every 4 years and is also responsible for the compulsory re-drawing of South Australian House of Assembly electoral districts before each election. The office is led by electoral commissioner Kay Mousley. The SA State Electoral Office was the first electoral administration in the world to utilise computer technology to produce an electoral roll, the first prototype roll scanner, and the development and use of cardboard ballot boxes and voting compartments.
In 1907 the then State Electoral Department was established to administer all South Australian parliamentary elections. Since that time more than 120 parliamentary elections, by-elections and referendums have been conducted by this Office. The State Electoral Commissioner was first empowered to conduct miscellaneous elections in 1980 and later in 1990 the Attorney-General gave approval for the Commissioner to be appointed Returning Officer for Local Government elections when requested. In 1999 the Electoral Commissioner was appointed Returning Officer for all Local Government elections.

Well, be careful!

Getting indexed

September 11th, 2008 by dashimir

From Wikipedia:
The leading search engines, Google, Yahoo! and Microsoft, use crawlers to find pages for their algorithmic search results. Pages that are linked from other search engine indexed pages do not need to be submitted because they are found automatically. Some search engines, notably Yahoo!, operate a paid submission service that guarantee crawling for either a set fee or cost per click.[22] Such programs usually guarantee inclusion in the database, but do not guarantee specific ranking within the search results.[23] Yahoo’s paid inclusion program has drawn criticism from advertisers and competitors.[24] Two major directories, the Yahoo Directory and the Open Directory Project both require manual submission and human editorial review.[25] Google offers Google Webmaster Tools, for which an XML Sitemap feed can be created and submitted for free to ensure that all pages are found, especially pages that aren’t discoverable by automatically following links.[seomag]
Search engine crawlers may look at a number of different factors when crawling a site. Not every page is indexed by the search engines. Distance of pages from the root directory of a site may also be a factor in whether or not pages get crawled.[27]

SEOmag programmer’s drinking song

September 10th, 2008 by dashimir

99 little bugs in the code,
99 bugs in the code,
Fix one bug, compile it again,
101 little bugs in the code.
101 little bugs in the code,
101 bugs in the code,
Fix one bug, compile it again,
Read seomag blog,
103 little bugs in the code.

SEOmag spider

September 9th, 2008 by dashimir

Search Engine Optimization and seomag (SEOmag) is the practice of changing your website, so that it is spider friendly. If your site is brand new it will take a few months for Google to index your site and be visible in results. Aged sites should already be indexed as long as the site has something for the spiders to grab. Excessive graphics, java scripts, PHP sessions are all not spider friendly.
To get spiders to come to your site often and take your data, you must have links from outside websites to your site. This is the Page Rank factor. Page rank is only a factor of the amount of incoming and outgoing links to your site. Only a small percentage of Page Rank is attributed to the Google Algorithm for Search Engine Results.
Spiders follow links, once there are links established the spiders will Crawl, your sites. They will take minimal information. Several Weeks to months later, the spiders will Deep crawl you site and index all that is available. To speed this process along, back links or links to other sites is a must have. The more links the spider can travel to get to your site the better SEOmag position. Linking to like minded topics is always best. You don’t need to buy LINKS. You can acquire links via posts in forums, writing and submitting articles, using a Blog post, submitting to SEOmag friendly directories.

Entireweb Newsletter (8)

September 8th, 2008 by dashimir

23. Do not attempt to join in link schemes, excessive reciprocal links or excessive link exchanging and link exchange web rings.
24. Do not use unauthorized programs or online tools to submit your site, check page rankings and other automated queries. Avoid the risk of being flagged as spam.

…to be continued on SEOmag blog…

Get on top of Google

September 7th, 2008 by dashimir

SEOmag is reciving many offers and many mails:
“I just contacted seomag, and I could not be more thrilled! I wasn’t even on the radar of the search engines, and now after only two weeks of working on this I am hitting the top 10 with many of my keywords!
This was the best thing I have done for my website! Thank for for selling a product at a reasonable price, that actually works!”
or
“I have bought books, e-books and applications about SEO, I subscribe to numerous newsletters related to SEO, but the only tool I don’t regret buying seomag services. With seomag, I have managed to place my website on the first place for my target keyword.
I’m first in Yahoo & MSN and I am currently 3rd with Google. The beauty of this advices is that it works with any language. All you have to do is to follow the clear instructions. Thank you seomag.”

Well people, what your waiting for, you can become your own seomag!

SEO and seomag

SEOmag, SEO and other rules

September 5th, 2008 by dashimir

To be successful, you have to follow some rules. It’s not all in SEOmag or SEO rules, there are a lot of them around us. For example, look at the next picture carefully and find what rules is broken by the photographer of table?

SEOmag rules

One SEOmag post more – or less

September 4th, 2008 by dashimir

Interesting, but every day one post puts me back on top again after I have fallen 3 places down. Contrary to all seo rules that are put to work after a few weeks or months. Maybe I am always connecting to the same google server, or …
It doesn’t matter now, let’s jump seomag!!!

Entireweb Newsletter (7)

September 4th, 2008 by dashimir

21. Avoid dirty tricks and exploiting loop holes to improve search engines ranking.
22. Avoid links to bad neighborhood such as web spammers, link farms, phishing, hacker, crack, gambling, porn and scam sites. Linking to them will greatly affects your search engine rankings.

…to be continued on SEOmag blog…

Entireweb Newsletter (6)

September 3rd, 2008 by dashimir

19. Use Robots.txt file to manage and control search engine spiders in indexing your site. You can allow and disallow spiders and choose directories you want to be crawled and indexed. But with bad bots or spam bots you need to modify your HTACCESS file to properly and effectively manage bots or spiders. Visit http://www.robotstxt.org/wc/faq.html to learn more about Robots.txt file.
20. Do not attempt to present different content to search engines than what you show to your site visitors.

…to be continued on SEOmag blog…