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Showing posts with label algorithm. Show all posts
Showing posts with label algorithm. Show all posts

Just Pin It to Drive Traffic

Posted: 7/03/2013
When a writer holds the pen or scribbles something on the notepad of his computer, he wants to write what he visualizes in his mind. When he portrays it down, his creativity and art try to hold the image so that it becomes easier for the readers to understand what the writer is trying to say.

However, a common question that strikes our mind often - Does the reader understand what the writer is trying to convey?

When you see the actual picture of a writer’s imagination through illustrations, you tend to differ as your imagination fails to match with him. Well, if a writer tends to provide the suitable sketch of his imagination in the form of photo, picture or graphics, will you be able to visualize better?
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It's almost mid year and your new year resolutions to top the search results and rankings are all over the place. Your online visibility is hitting a lean patch. Add to this the latest Google update to its algorithms.

That's a mini Pandora's box waiting to explode!

Since the business team is the main handler of any problem that they face, what new can they do to enhance their visibility so that the search engines re-engage with you systematically?
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With the revamping of Facebook's outlook and the melee of changes rolled out this year, Facebook pages have time and again encountered some glitches.

In fact, this past week, I stumbled across disclaimer notices on some Facebook pages I subscribe to, stating that the posts shall be visible to subscribed followers but not on the Page. The glitch was a minor technical fault but it surely rattled the daylights of many Facebook pages and their admins.

If you are a business with a Facebook page (that makes everyone of us!), more's the problem. To share a valuable piece of information here. According to a 2012 data, nearly 40% of the time spent on Facebook goes to the News Feed as compared to a paltry 27% in 2011.
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With the advancement of hacking techniques by black hats, one would have expected a more prudish and grammatically-correct password for your user accounts to ensure greater safety. Strangely that's not the case.

If the latest study by researchers at Carnegie Mellon University, titled as "Effect of Grammar on Security of Long Passwords" is to believed, users need not bother with longish or correctly spelled out passwords any more!

Researcher Ashwini Rao informs that the team has worked with 1500 users, of which 18% showed preference for absolutely easy phrases as their passwords such as personal details, street address etc. 

While for users like me with amnesia-like memory, its no doubt a boon. Saves a lot of muscle-wracking exercise every time that one logs onto a social media site asking for account details!
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