Monday, April 27, 2015

TRAI Foolishly Released Over 1 Million E-Mail Ids


Link : http://trai.gov.in/Comments/Comments-List003.pdf

Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (Trai) has released the list of email IDs from which it received responses regarding net neutrality or the #SaveTheInternet campaign that rallied the country�s attention around the Net Neutrality issue.

The e-mails leaks happens that all of the emails sent to the TRAI are now publicly visible.

TRAI on March 27 had put up a consultation paper on its website asking users from India to give their views on net neutrality in India. The last day to vote for the campaign was April 24. The list is published on TRAI website and has emails categorized by date; the data is available for all dates between March 27 and April 24, except April 14 and 15. The document can also be searched via keywords.

Every person who has sent an email to TRAI has their email address listed onthis TRAI page, for example, which has a list of 10,801 emails from that campaign. That�s not all;, the TRAI has 16 such lists, and your mail to them might just be within one of those. Further, clicking through the links on this these pages leads to complete emails, many of which have addresses, phone numbers and other personal details in the signatures.

But the worst part of the story is that TRAI website has been attacked soon after #netneutrality email addresses revealed publicly by TRAI itself which means all the email-ids must be with the hackers by now.

Most of the responses sent to TRAI were via �Savetheinternet.in� � a site created by a few proponents of net neutrality in India. unwittingly or is it foolishly TRAI has exposed email address of all those who had submitted their responses and made them publicly available for spammers to scrape. But no one thought their emails would be public when they sent their responses in.

Thanks to TRAI, spammers and database sellers now have email ids of a cohort of 1 million Indians who (largely) support #NetNeutrality.


Tuesday, April 21, 2015

Google Mobilegeddon Algorithm Update




"Mobilegeddon could be bad news for 40% of top websites"

USATODAY.com


Mobilegeddon has arrived. Google today updated its algorithm to rank sites it labels as �mobile-friendly� higher on mobile search results. Because the company�s search engine drives so much traffic, many are worrying, panicking, and even calling the update �Mobilegeddon� (a not-so-clever play on the terms Mobile and Armageddon).


Is that your site Mobile Friendly ? Test It Here
How it will affect ?

This means that people who use Google to search on their smartphone may not find many of their favorite sites at the top of the rankings. Sites that haven't updated could find themselves ranked way lower, which in turn could mean a huge loss of business

So who all uses a mobile for Searching?

  • 46% of Searchers Now Use Mobile Exclusively to Research
  • New Google research says that 50 percent of mobile users are most likely to visit after conducting a local search, while 34 percent of consumers on tablets or computers will go to a store.



Thanks for the info : 
+Santhosh Thomas 
sandotnet.blogspot.in


Separate SEO URL words with a hyphen, or an underscore?

The recurring question in SEO URLs is whether to use a hyphen, or dash, (these-are-hyphens) or an underscore (these_are_underscores) to separate your words. Does Google recognize both of them as word separators?

The short answer is that you should use a hyphen for your SEO URLs. Google treats a hyphen as a word separator, but does not treat an underscore that way. Google treats and underscore as a word joiner � so red_sneakers is the same as redsneakers to Google. This has been confirmed directly by Google themselves, including the fact that using dashes over underscores will have a (minor) ranking benefit.

Again, SEO URLs should use hyphens to separate words. Do not use underscores, do not try to use spaces, and do not smash all the words together intoonebigword. As of 2012, dashes are still the best way to optimize your SEO URLs.



Credits : ecreativeim 

Monday, April 20, 2015

Why use Google Tag Manager?


Google Tag Manager is free and easy, leaving more time and money to spend on your marketing campaigns. You manage your tags and configure your mobile applications yourself, with an easy-to-use web interface, rather than forcing you or your IT department to write or rewrite code.


it friendly

IT trusted

Google Tag Manager is designed for marketers, but webmasters and IT teams will love it too, thanks to features like user permissions, automated error checking and the Debug Console.
mobile-read

Mobile-ready

Google Tag Manager works smoothly across devices, supporting mobile websites and native mobile apps. You can even reconfigure your app tracking after a user downloads it, ending tedious release cycles.
easy testing

Error-proof

The Debug Console and Preview Mode let you verify new tags before you publish them. Marketers can make sure their tags fire; webmasters can breathe easy.
plays well

Plays well with others

Plays well with others tags, many with built-in templates. You have the freedom to use the tools that work for your business.
agency friendly

Agency friendly

Multi-account support and user permissions make it easy for agencies to manage tags and for clients to review their changes.
rule driven

Flexible tag firing

You depend on your tags to collect the right data at the right moments. That�s why Google Tag Manager lets you create custom rules and macros or use auto-event tracking to follow user actions in all the detail you need.

SEO Salary in India 2015


Salary of an SEO in India varies as per company size and your knowledge. Also if you want to reach at good level never compromise with your starting package and always try to take growth of at least 25% to 30% while switching company. Do not change the company too frequently for increasing your salary as this might have negative impact on your career in the long run.

SEO SALARY DETAILS (2015)


SEO ExperienceSEO Salary in MetrocitySEO Salary in Rest of India
6 MonthsRs 12000 / MonthRs 6000 / Month
1 YearRs 18000 / MonthRs 12000 / Month
2 YearsRs 24000 / MonthRs 16000 / Month
3 YearsRs 30000 / MonthRs 20000 / Month
4 YearsRs 38000 / MonthRs 30000 / Month
5 YearsRs 45000 / MonthRs 35000 / Month
6 YearsRs 55000 / MonthRs 40000 / Month
7 YearsRs 65000 / MonthRs 45000 / Month
8 YearsRs 75000 / MonthRs 50000 / Month
9 YearsRs 90000 / MonthRs 55000 / Month
10 YearsRs 1 Lac / MonthRs 60000 / Month
 SEO is growing field in India and hence getting job in SEO is easier than compared to web developer jobs. SEO Salary in India and Job opportunities are growing day by day as company and business owners are becoming aware of Internet industry and its importance for marketing the product. As per my knowledge SEO salary in India is better than web developer.
Many Company gives you good designation and try to negotiate with salary. Never think much of designation while availing new job or while increment rather concentrate more on Salary as money is what will buy bread and butter for you and your family .
I would recommend to start your SEO career with at least 2 agency job and than opt for in house SEO company.  SEO agency will have lot of work as well as mental pressure but this will make you a big player in industry and also salary of SEO agency in India is also better as compared to in house jobs.
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Thanks to Online Marketing Tips and Anil Varma for the post and Survey...

Sunday, April 19, 2015

In 2015, Your Job As An SEO Isn�t Actually SEO


Regardless, the title is accurate � in a sense. Yes, you are still responsible for driving organic traffic. That isn�t going anywhere. But because the way to drive organic traffic isn�t anything like the way we used to drive organic traffic, SEOs have to become more cross-functional. These days, when you say you �do SEO,� you really do about a million other things that historically aren�t considered SEO.

If that�s the case, then what else is in our job description?

Content Developer
This part of an SEO�s job should not come as a surprise to you given how ingrained �content is king� has become in our heads.


There is no way you can rank well in search engines without good content, and I see more copywriters being directly integrated into the SEO team rather than living on a different team. In many cases, the requirements of being a non-technical SEO now include content writing.

Quality content can be hard to create; it�s not exactly something you can teach. There�s no formula you can follow (although Nate Dame does have a pretty good list of what makes quality content), and it does take a lot of time (I�ve spent 15 minutes on one Facebook post), so don�t assume that good content is something we just have lying around.

User Experience Advocate
SEO and user experience (UX) got off on the wrong foot, and I blame SEO. The spammy things we were doing years ago to manipulate the algorithm were the furthest thing from a good user experience, so it�s no wonder UX professionals hated us.

Things are totally different now. Search engines want to see what users want to see.

Though Google hasn�t come out to say that good UX impacts your search rankings, there�s a lot of speculation that it will be adding mobile UX into its algorithm. That means that if you want to drive more organic traffic to a page, that page has to provide a good user experience.

Digital Strategists
Over the past year or so, I�ve noticed a fundamental change in how SEOs operate � specifically the marketing side of SEO, not the technical side.

We�re becoming more thinkers than doers. Instead of taking direction from what others have decided will change on the site, we�re getting more involved in shaping that conversation. If you�re not, then you need to push to be.

We spend so much time on the site and so much time obsessing over every data point on how customers are using our site that it�s completely fair to say we know what�s best for the site. Of course, I�m not advocating for SEOs to be the sole decision maker, but SEO today means playing a larger role in overall site strategy, and that�s something we need to be prepared for.

Unfortunately, there are still a lot of people who view SEO in a silo, so it�s up to us to not pigeonhole ourselves into just keyword research or title tag updates.

Creative Marketer
It used to be so easy to get links: a few directory listings, some press release submissions, a handful of articles posted to EzineArticles. Mindless work, yes, but boy was it easy.

There is definitely no such thing as easy link now. Every link, whether manually or organically acquired, requires a lot of thought and a little bit of work, and we have to be more creative in the way we�re getting links.

Instead of �building links,� we�re building things people naturally want to link to, and that�s forcing SEOs to think more like marketers. What does our target audience want?

Thinking like this, you�re not creating SEO campaigns or link building campaigns; you�re creating marketing campaigns that build brand awareness, boost social mentions, generate PR buzz and yeah, builds some links. Here are some great examples;

The You vs. John Paulson campaign MahiFX ran in 2011 (Moz has a good write-up of the case study).

Expedia�s Find Yours Campaign � 68 linking root domains (LRDs), 196 total links, ~1,000 social shares.

Froont�s brilliant GIFS about responsive design � 273 LRDs, 2,473 total links, ~11,000 social shares.

Union�s employee appreciation day � 56 LRDs, 468 total links, ~12,00 social shares. (Sadly, the Vimeo link got all the action, but all the press buzz secured a handful of home page links.)

Obviously, you can�t run things like the above by yourself. You�re going to have to rely on other departments � and that brings me to probably the most important job of any SEO in 2015�.

Cheerleader
One of my boss� favorite sayings is, �The best SEO�s will put themselves out of a job.� While that�s not exactly motivating me to be the best SEO (I kid), the point is that the best SEOs have done such a good job at educating other teams on SEO that, after a while, there doesn�t need to be someone advocating for �right thing for SEO� because that�s naturally been weaved into the fabric of every digital professional�s job.

Do I think we�re ever going to get to that point? Not in the next 10 years, but the fact remains that SEO in theory isn�t hard, no matter how many people try to tell you it�s a Jedi magic trick.

Everything you do online could have some effect on your organic traffic, so SEOs have to rely on other teams to understand how their actions affect our KPIs. You have to rally these evangelists in creative, in social media, in development, in IT, and in copywriting, educating them on how what they do is actually SEO. That�s the only way you�re going to be able to meet your goals.



Thanks to search engine land and Erin Everhart for the post