Treasure Cart

Treasure Cart
Todd, I'm looking for you on that?

I liked your suggestions about the latter. What do you suggest this? (Maybe then you I write them for me!) The Good Life A homeless man some call it, ragged beard and shoes that do not match. Use the same clothes for three months, but not track. He makes his home behind a bush under the highway bridge across the stream. Nearby a car with squeeky wheel has only the life of your possessions – a sleeping bag and pillow improvised dirty carefully folds it and places in the car every day. Start your search for treasures in every box that passes, leading discussions with anyone in particular, ignoring the stares of passing cars on busy city streets. He finds a few empty beer cans and the remains of a lunch, it was a good day. He shivers with cold as the rain begins to fall and goes to the comfort of home, ending another day of requesting and receiving nothing less.

Hi, well I know you're joking, but I would not like to write for you. Just try to do light editing and suggestions to push in one direction with the words already has begun. There is always a danger with a narrative that either will be too distant, or more than a short story. My suggestion to you is think about the title: Good life (which is ironic and effective), and put your main character in the piece mentality. He looks a little delirious, so maybe move in their thoughts, and do see it as the good life. Here is a brief example of one possible approach. The I use line breaks can not be the best at this time – I'm trying to give a state of mind and a tone of work with the rewrite: Amazing what people throw a man with his wits could live like a king. What is a little orange juice and cat litter for a new jacket? Discard shoes – when only the right is bad, a waste. A nine is a bit small, but we must work with them can not be up. Giving up is easy. Nothing worth anything should be easy. Something like that maybe. When you move to the immediate first-person view. This is an early version of one of my poems I posted on YA where I did something similar (reviewed at this time, but I think that is yet another example for you) http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index; _ylt = AmGlyceNn8SEapg.mfTvwK_ty6IX; _ylv = 3? qid = 20070815205336AA4pOCO wait to see what you come with.

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Treasure Trove of Website Tips

Recently people have been asking for advice and "Do's and don'ts" for the design and web content.

If you are building a new site or redesigning an existing site, is a collection of tips that you'd be wise to follow:

– Create a site with a clear hierarchy and interconnection of the pages.

– Your most important message that should never be more than a click away your homepage.

– Each page should be reachable from at least one static text link.

– Offer a site map for users links that point to the important parts of your site. If the site map is larger than 100 links, you may want to break the site map into separate pages. I'm conservative I do not like more than 50 links on a page.

– Try to use text instead of images to display important names, content or links. The Google crawler does not recognize text in images.

– If using images, the name with your keyword phrases.

– Avoid frames.

– Avoid all Flash site. Never mind that Google can read and index Flash. You are still better than not having a site that is all Flash.

– Optimize your website

– If you do not know how

– Hire someone.

– Create a plan for adding content

– Maintenance of your current site with fresh content is good for engines and site visitors.

– If you decide to use dynamic pages (ie the URL contains a character "?"), Note that not all search engines spider crawls dynamic pages as well as static pages. Help keep the parameters short and scarce.

– Use a text browser such as Lynx to examine your site, because most spiders search engines see your site much as you would Lynx. If fancy features such as JavaScript, cookies, session IDs, frames, DHTML, or Flash keep you from seeing your entire site in a text browser, then spiders Search engines have trouble crawling.

– Allow search bots to crawl your sites without session IDs or arguments that track its path through the site. These techniques are useful for tracking individual user behavior, but the access pattern of bots is entirely different. Use of these techniques may result in incomplete indexing of your site, as bots may not eliminate URLs that look different but actually point to the same page.

– Check your site for broken links and errors

– Nothing scares off-site visitors as a site that is not well maintained.

– Test your shopping cart frequently to ensure that no errors that are causing the loss of sales.

– Do not waste your thank you page

– Make up-sell offers in your thank you page. People have already bought from you and should be open to other offers.

– Test, test, test. You must be divided or several tests to test your pages to improve performance.

– Make your opt-in box prominent and convincing. Building a list is vital to your business.

– No changes lead to large site before an ad or campaign on vacation unless you are sure you have time to complete the changes and test the pages.

– Do not wait too long to start the commercialization of holidays. Some campaigns (like SEO) take time to gain momentum. End of Summer (by) is when you should start.

– Avoid Builders site unless absolutely necessary to use a

– And then before you do, be sure to let you do everything you need to get your site optimized. (I have written articles on this, it is very important!)

– Do not use jargon or language that was too confusing. Talk to visitors of your site in a language they understand and relate to a.

– If possible, consult an expert in marketing to ensure that your site is in the best shape. Remember that many designers know design, but not marketing – and your site may be missing some of the directors marketing and basic techniques.

Too much, I know, but everything is very important to the success of your site. Print this article and keep it handy in a reference sheet. Stay tuned for future tips and advice – there is still much more!
About the Author

Jennifer Horowitz is the Director of Marketing for EcomBuffet.com. Since 1998 Jennifer’s expertise in marketing and Search Engine Optimization (SEO) has helped clients increase revenue. Jennifer has written a downloadable book on SEO and has been published in many SEO and marketing publications. Jennifer is the editor of the popular Spotlight on Success: SEO and Marketing newsletter. Follow Jennifer and stay current on SEO, marketing, social media and more. http://twitter.com/EcomBuffet

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