We are very happy to share with you that we are ranked among the Top 3 in Yahoo! International & Yahoo! Singapore for about a list of keywords that we have been targetting.
These keywords that we targetted are highly sought after keywords that most companies would kill for.
As such, nothing beats the satisfaction that results from your hard work and patience for obtaining high search engine rankings. The best part is, we did it on our own. There, so that’s prove of what we are capable of!
If you are interested to achieve high rankings in search engines for your company’s website, feel free to drop us a mail at sales@sgwebdesigner.com.
Alternatively, you can also find out more on our Search Engine Optimization services and have a look at the list of keywords that we rank high for.
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Our blog lately have been continously spammed by so many other websites, especially a website which is currently hosted with NetFirms.
We take this as a serious matter and have alerted the relevant webmasters of the said site to stop spamming, but they have ignored our request.
As such, we have gone directly to NetFirms with the most errant spammer and their url.
So, as the saying goes, Be Responsible!
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Under the arrangement, sales representatives from Verizon will be able to offer potential advertisers not only print ads, but AdWords campaigns too.
Google’s latest push into local search embraces a very old-school concept - the salesperson. With Verizon signing on with Google as an AdWords Reseller, Google gets a valuable ally in reaching small businesses it may not reach otherwise.
Call it the Wal-Marting of AdWords. If Google can extend its healthy search advertising business to scores of small businesses with tightly focused campaigns, the volume could cushion drops in large-advertiser revenue.
A Verizon executive illustrated how the new program will work for its advertisers:
“We may have a local advertiser today that has said, ‘I want to spend $200 a month with you with your PPC program,’” explained Eric Chandler, president of the Internet division of Verizon Information Services. “When we look at our inventory, we can only spend $100 a month. This deal will allow us to take that excess budget that we have and plug that advertiser into the Google environment.”
“We know our environment drives the best inventory,” said Chandler. “We’re able to maximize the distribution in our environment. Our interests are aligned with our advertisers.”
CNet reported the deal, which was announced at The Kelsey Group Drilling Down on Local conference. Kelsey Group’s Greg Sterling noted in the article how important the deal is for Google:
Deals like this “are critical to move the local search market forward because these businesses would not go on their own to Google or Yahoo,” said Greg Sterling, managing editor at The Kelsey Group.
“There is a lot of inertia in the small-business market, which relies on sales representatives to call them or visit,” Sterling said.
The report also noted how the Verizon-Google hookup extends to AOL and Ask.com. Both sites display Google’s search advertising.
Google has made other moves that appear to focus on the small-business market. Recently they introduced AdWords Starter, a simplified one-page process for signing up for a Google AdWords campaign.
The deal also helps Google keep pace with Yahoo, which signed a deal with Verizon rival YellowPages.com in January to place its listings on Yahoo’s local search.
Online advertising, particularly in the local search arena, stands to increase greatly in its competitiveness. Yahoo’s Overture unit has been battling Google for some time. MSN ditches Overture in favor of its adCenter service that debuts this summer. Even Amazon.com has been quietly testing an ad publishing service as well, though its intentions toward local advertising are not known.
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