When I started blogging, I took a good look around at other
blogs, calmly chewed a cookie in my dorm room, and then vomited. I noticed the trend of new bloggers complaining about why they
couldn’t get covered by the Big Blogs.
Today, I’m going to share a strategy I’ve used to get regularly
featured in The Wall Street Journal and extremely high-traffic blogs
like Lifehacker.
You can skip right to the detailed writeup (includes examples & screenshots), but I hope the story below is useful.
This advice can be useful for getting thousands of new
readers to your blog, customers to your new startup, or to get your
dream freelance job. And you can start using it tomorrow morning.
So, back to the question: Why do some bloggers get the lion’s share
of attention, while others toil endlessly to write posts that virtually
nobody will ever read?
On a recent forum where both new and experienced bloggers share tips
for getting traffic, SEO, etc, most of the discussions were debating minutiae
about meaningless changes they could make to their blog to get more
readers. “What SEO plugin should I use?” one asked. “Does anyone think I
should
Page Rank is a link analysis algorithm which is used by search
engines to determine relative importance of your link within their
database. Here I’ll tell you how to increase page rank
How is Page Rank Calculated?
Page
Rank is calculated by various algorithms made by search engines, in
simple words, Page Rank is calculated upon the number of links on your
site; these links Include:
- Backlinks.
- Inbound links.
- Internal links.
- External links.
- No-Follow links.
- Do-Follow links.
Google
and other Page Ranking sites analyze these links and assign a numerical
page rank from 1 to