The polls are open and voting underway for the 2007 Search Blog Awards.
The Link Spiel has been nominated in the Link Building Blog category and we’d love to have your vote!
The polls are open and voting underway for the 2007 Search Blog Awards.
The Link Spiel has been nominated in the Link Building Blog category and we’d love to have your vote!

With Barry griping about being bored every five minutes on Twitter I thought I’d help out and give him something to do by suggesting he ask around for people’s 2008 predictions.
And amazingly, he did!! :
http://www.cartoonbarry.com/2007/12/send_me_your_search_prediction.html
After thinking about it, I have a couple more predictions to add:
Happy New Year everyone. I wish you good health, family happiness and online business success.
And for Barry I wish no day ever be boring.
~ Debra.
“Matt, using VPN, surfed into Google’s network (without showingthe audience his screen) to come up with the internal number oflinks the site was actually being credited for towards rankings.The number? Three links.”
This is an extreme example of what has been the reality of paidlinks for a long time. Google is very good at detecting andfiltering paid links.When Matt said a while back that they were catching 95% of paidlinks already, the text link industry and their flacks in theblogosphere jumped all over it, accused Matt of lying, trying touse FUD to control webmasters, etc.Here’s the truth: the paid text link industry has become nothingbut a big scam. Those who profit by it, and there are many,don’t want to admit that. They want to shift the discussion andattention away from the truth.
Here’s the truth: renting links has never been a “standard and accepted SEO practice.” Bob Massa remembers. Danny Sullivan remembers. No amount of spin and noise on the part of the link peddlers can change the reality of the situation.
If you want links, build something worth linking to and market the hell out of it. It’s easier, it’s cheaper, and it works. ~ Dan Thies.
This morning I got an alert from the Center for Media Research with a survey recap from the Online Testing Exchange with some interesting numbers as they relate to the way people will watch TV (or not) as the strike goes on.
But the most interesting number IMO was this one:
16% said they’ll watch more original content on the Internet as a way to keep themselves entertained during the strike.
If you’ve thought about creating a video now might be the time to get it going. With universal search the topic du jour and the writers strike possibly re-channeling people online, you stand a pretty good chance of being seen — and linked to.