Tuesday 12 August 2014

SEO Periodic Table


Monday 12 August 2013

Saturday 8 June 2013

Google Adsense Tricks:Get Approval in Just 2 Days

Just creating the blog and writing articles will not earn you money from internet. Placing ads and affiliate marketing helps you to earn good from your blogs and that too with no investment. Just attract more visitors or readers to your blog and earn good amount from your web property. But now a day Google is very strict for the approval of google adsense account and other all revenue sharing ads programs are not so successful as adsense.
People are trying hard to get approval from adsense but are not able to do so. In the start i had also tried for 3 times but all time my application was rejected.
After that i found 2 tricks to get Google adsense approval in just 2 days and that too with no need of website. So i thought to share the same with all and help all to generate revenue from their blog. You have to just follow few steps and then you get google adsense approval in just 2 days.

Trick 1:
Just follow the below mentioned steps and you will get adsense approval in just 2 days.
  1. Go to http://www.flixya.com. It’s a Video sharing website.
  2. Register your account there and share at least 3 videos or PPT Presentations. Create blogs and share your articles from that blogs, also share some images and photos.
  3. Then when you create your profile on this website you get a new form in the 2nd step, i.e. the google adsense registration form. Enter a valid email address to open a adsense account. I prefer gmail for better results.
  4. After you sign up it gives you a publication Id and then after 2 days your account will be approved.
This is one of the tricks to get you google adsense approval in just 2 days.
Trick 2:
If you do not have any videos or PPT presentations to share on the above website then i have another trick to get you approval of adsense in just 2 days. You have to just follow the mentioned steps and that all done.
  1. You all may be aware of Indyarocks, the 1st step is to go to http://www.indyarocks.com/ and register a account with them.
  2. After you register sign in to your account and click on earning link on the right sidebar in your profile.
  3. Indyarocks is a channel partner with google adsense which helps you to earn revenue with them by sharing and creating blogs. But you need to satisfy their following conditions for adsense approval. Note the below mention conditions of indyarocks to be full filed for adsense approval.
  • Your Profile must be at least 80% complete.
  • Your profile privacy should be set to everyone.
  • You must upload at least 10 photos to your profile and the privacy of the photos must be set to everyone.
  • You must post at least 2/3 blogs and the content must be unique and the privacy of the blogs must be set to everyone.
Just statisy these above mentioned conditions and then apply for google adsense account from indyarocks, you will get a confirm approval in just 2 days.
Hope you all may benefit from the above mentioned tricks and get approval of google adsense account in just 2 days and earn a good amount from your web property. [original work of nikhildaiya of  http://www.expertseoguide.co.cc/ ]

Next Step

Once you have acquired your google adsense account for your blog, its time to deploy a google optimized wordpress theme, 15 best google adsense optimized wordpress theme can help you to increase click through rate on your ads as well as it can increase your adsense earnings by 200%.
Do no hesitate to raise your queries, if yo like this article, please share on your social media network.

Article Source

Monday 27 May 2013

Google Penguin 2.0 Updated on 22-May-2013

Google Penguin 2.0 tell us to focus on Great Content


The Google Penguin 2.0 Update of the Penguin webspam algorithm was released 05/22/13 and the rollout is complete.  Google has updated the Famed Penguin update 3 times in the past, but this is the first change to the algorithm and why it has been dubbed the Google Penguin 2.0 Update. As usual Google, and Matt Cutts are pretty vague about what they are really changing.  
According to Matt Cutts, “About 2.3% of English-US queries are affected to the degree that a regular user might notice.” 

Google Penguin 2.0 Update Summary

As you can watch in the video below:
  • Matt starts off reminding everyone that if you build a quality site, with great content you will be rewarded.
  • Penguin 2.0 will have a deeper impact on web spam than did Penguin 1.0.
  • Paying for an ad space just for SEO benefit will be affected.  (In other words sites that are charging a fee for you to place a link on their site just for the purpose of SEO)
  • Stricter on Payday Loans and Pornographic search queries (I don’t think this will have any effect on my readers)
  • Better detection of Hacked sites, and better communication with the owner of hacked sites.
  • Doing a better job of recognizing when someone is an Authority in a particular niche or space.
  • Help for legitimate sites that may have been hit by Panda… which is being penalized for having links on low quality websites.
  • Less likely to see multiple clusters of the same website.
  • Work on getting more information in general to website owners.
For the most part as long as you are not using “Black Hat” SEO techniques you should be just fine with the Google Penguin 2.0 Update. 

Tuesday 25 December 2012

SEO Technical Terms Alphabetically - G










Ø  GAP - Google Advertising Professional

o    Google Advertising Professional is a free program, offered by Google, for professionals wishing to manage multiple Google Adwords clients.

For More: Google Advertising Professional

Ø  Gateway page

o    Also called a "doorway page" or a "bridge page". A gateway page is a low quality web page that contains very little content and exists solely for the purpose of driving traffic to another page. This is done through spamdexing, spamming the index of a search engine. Gateway pages are often easy to identify in that they have been designed primarily for search engines, not for human beings.
 
Ø  Geo-Targeting

o    Advertising that is distributed based on geographic location. Online advertising allows for targeting of countries, states, cities and suburbs (in some markets).  

Ø  Google

o    Google is the world's number one search engine with a 50.8% market share, ahead of Yahoo! 23.6% and Live Search 8.4% (Dec 2006).Google was founded by Stanford University students Larry Page and Sergey Brin in 1998. At the time of the company’s initial public offering in August 2004 $1.67 billion was raised, making Google worth $23 billion. Google’s success should be attributed to its unique algorithmic ranking system PageRank – a system that assigns a score to a web page based on the number of links to that page. Based in Mountain View, California the company now employs 13,748 people. The company has a relaxed corporate atmosphere that is illustrated in the companies philosophy "Don't be evil".Central to Google's profitability isGoogle Adwords launched in 2000. Google Adwords are text-based contextual ads relevant to keyword searches. In 2006 the company earned $10.492 billion in total advertising revenues about 90 times the revenue from other Google ventures.Google has acquired several start-up companies over the past few years including:

Ø  Pyra Labs creators of Blogger in 1999

Ø  Upstartle, creators of Writely in 2006.

Ø  Measure Map, a weblog statistics application in 2006.

Ø  YouTube for a huge $1.65 billion in stock in 2006.

Ø  JotSpot a developer of wiki technology in 2006.

Ø  DoubleClick purchased for $3.1 billion in 2007.

Ø  Postini an enterprise messaging security company in 2007.

Current Google applications include: Web search, Image Search, Google News,Google Product Search, Google Groups, Google Maps, Gmail, AdWords, Google Video, Google Checkout and Google Earth.

Ø  Google AdSense

            o    Paid ads webmasters may place on their websites.

Ø  Google Analytics

o    Google Analytics is a free web analytics tool offering detailed visitor statistics. The tool can be used to track all the usual site activities: visits, page views, pages per visit, bounce rates and average time on site etc. But it can also be used to specifically track Adsense traffic – therefore helping webmasters to optimize Adwords adverts based on where visitors come from, time on site, click path and geographic location. Modeled on Urchin’s analytics tool, after Google purchased Urchin Software Group in 2005,Google Analytics was first rolled out in late 2005. The response was overwhelming and Google had to suspend sign ups only a few days later. After a short period using a lottery type of invitation system – the tool made generally available in August 2006.

Features Include:

*Updates in less than one hour
*Users can add up to 50 websites
*Integration with Google Adwords
*User friendly interface - Dashboard format

Ø  Google bombing

o    Google Bombing is when a group of sites such as blogs join forces to link to an unflattering page about a company such that this page rises to the top of the search results in Google. Google bombing takes advantage of the power of hyperlink text and of PageRank. For example, if a group of sites with high PageRank all link to a page about XYZ Company's inappropriate behavior with hyperlink text of "XYZ Company sucks" then the linked page can shoot to the top of Google's search results for the term "XYZ Company."  

Ø  Google Bowling

o    Google Bowling is a black hat SEO technique used to knock competitors down or out of search engine results.It is a form of SEO sabotage that is conducted by pointing hundreds of questionable links from low quality sites at a competitor's site so they end up banned or penalized by Google.Generally newer sites are more susceptible to Google Bowling as older sites are better established with a range of existing high quality links.

Ø  Google Checkout

o    Google's online payment processing service, Google Checkout, was designed to simplify the online purchase/payment process.It works by allowing users to store their credit card and shipping details on their Google Account. Therefore minimizing the amount of information they need to input at the point of purchase. Purchases can be made at the click of a button.

Features include: 

* Fraud protection
* The ability to track purchases
* Easy transactions

Ø  Google Dance

o    The Google Dance refers to when Google indexes are updated. This period of time often results in fluctuations in the index size and some noticeable changes in search engine result positions.The term Google Dance was adopted as while an update is being processed the position of a website in Google seems to "dance" as it fluctuates. The fluctuation is due to each of Google's nine datacenters being updated out of sync - meaning for a time the results are different.

Ø  Google Juice

o    Internet slang to refer to the substance which flows between web pages via their hyperlinks. Pages with lots of links pointing to them acquire much 'Google Juice' and pages which link to highly 'juicy' pages acquire some reflected 'Google Juice'. 

Ø  Google Labs

o    Google Labs is the home to Google's latest innovations and beta products. It is a testing ground for new services in development.A number of popular products are graduates of Google Labs including: Google Reader, Google Docs & Spreadsheets, Google Video, Personalized Search, Google Desktop and iGoogle.

Current Google Labs products include:

* Google Code Search
* Google Transit
* Google Music Trends
* Accessible Search
* Google Extensions for Firefox
* Google Trends
* Google Mars
* Google Page Creator
* Google Dashboard Widgets for Mac
* Google Web Accelerator
* Google Ride Finder
* Google Suggest
* Product Search for Mobile
* Google Sets

Ø  Google Pack

o    Free software specifically selected by Google. There are no trial versions or spyware and it's ready to use in just a few clicks.

Currently includes:
      - Google Earth
- Spyware Doctor
- Google Photos Screensaver
- Star Office
- Norton Security Scan
- Google Desktop
- Google Talk
- Picasa
- Adobe Reader
- Firefox with Google Toolbar
- Skype
- Real Player

Ø  Google Supplemental Index

o    Google's Supplemental Index, is a secondary database containing Supplemental Results – pages deemed to be of less importance by Google’s algorithm or are less trusted.The primary measure of a pages importance is the number and quality of links pointing to that page. Pages in the Supplemental Index can still rank in search results, but this will depend on the number of pages in the main index relevant to the search.

Some reasons pages may be in the Google Supplemental Index:

* Duplicate content
* Low PageRank
* Lack of trust
* A site with a large number of pages
* Page freshness
* Excessively long URLs

As of July 2007 Google discontinued the practice of placing a “Supplemental Result” tag on search results making it near impossible to tell whether a result is in the supplemental index or the main one.
 
Ø  Google Toolbar for Internet Explorer

o    Google Toolbar is Internet browser add on available for both Internet Explorer and Mozilla Firefox.

Features for Internet Explorer Google Toolbar include:

- Search Settings Notifier
- Pop-up blocker
- Address bar browse by name
- Google search box
- Google Suggest
- A SpellCheck
- AutoLink & AutoFill
- PageRank display
- Google Account sign-in
- Google Bookmarks ]

Ø  Google Toolbar for Mozilla Firefox

o    Google Toolbar is Internet browser add on available for both Mozilla Firefox and Internet Explorer.

Features for Mozilla Firefox Google Toolbar include:

- Access to Google Docs & Spreadsheets
- Customize the layout options
- Handle mailto: links with Gmail.
- Google search box
- Google Suggest
- A SpellCheck
- AutoLink & AutoFill
- PageRank display
- Google Account sign-in
- Google Bookmarks

Ø  Google Traffic Estimator

o    Google Traffic Estimator is a tool that indicates the number of clicks to expect on Google Adwords ads for particular keywords. The tool can be used to indicate search volume, average cost per click, estimated ad positions, estimated clicks per day and estimated cost per day.
Google Traffic Estimator does not provide a numeric estimate of the number of search queries, instead it offers only a visual estimation of search volume in a small graphic.

Ø  Google Trends

o    Google Trends is a tool from Google Labs. It allows you to see how Google search volumes for a particular keyword have changed over a period of time. It shows the popularity of search terms from the beginning of 2004 onwards.Google Trends data is presented in a line graph. The horizontal axis represents time and the vertical axis shows how often a term is searched for. Data can be broken down further by region, city and language. You can also compare multiple search terms.

Ø  Google XML Sitemap

o    Google Sitemaps are XML files that list the URLs available on a site. The aim is to help site owners notify search engines about the URLs on a website that are available for indexing. Webmasters can include information about each URL, such as when it was last updated and its importance in the context of the site. You should try to make all pages on your site easily accessible to search engines without the use of google sitemaps. But there are situations when your site might benefit from Sitemaps Protocol like for instance if your site is built in rich AJAX or Flash, or if you have a large database driven site that isn’t well linked.

Ø  Googlebot

o    Googlebot is a search bot used by Google. It collects documents from the web to build a searchable index for the Google search engine.If a webmaster wishes to restrict the information on their site available to a Googlebot, or other well-behaved spider, they can do so by with the appropriate directives in a robots.txt file. 

Ø  Googleware

o    The assortment of tools produced by google that can be used to search, report, play, research

Includes (but is not limited to):
      Blogsearch
Google Analytics
Adwords
Adsense
Google Video
Google Scholar
Google News
Google search
Froogle
Google Maps
Google Images
Google Earth 

Ø  Googlewhack

o    A Google search query consisting of two words, that returns a single result. 

Ø  Grey Hat SEO

o    SEO using both Black Hat and White Hat techniques. 

Ø  Seth Godin

            o     Seth Godin is a author, blogger and internet entrepreneur. Godin founded Yoyodyne, one of the first online marketing companies in 1995, the company was sold to Yahoo! in 1998. He is the author of several bestselling books. Permission Marketing was an Amazon.com Top 100 bestseller for a year. Ideavirus is one of the most popular ebooks ever written with over 1,000,000 people downloading the book. Recently Godin founded the website Squidoo. Godin holds an MBA from Stanford.

Free Seo Tools


Helpful for Web-site's Initial Report
Free SEO Tools
SEO Tools by Google
BEST DIRECTORY LIST


Friday 21 September 2012

.htaccess for non www to www


AddType application/x-httpd-php5 .php .htm .html
RewriteEngine On
RewriteCond %{HTTP_HOST} !^www\.
RewriteRule ^(.*)$ http://www.%{HTTP_HOST}/$1 [R=301,L]

RewriteEngine on
RewriteCond %{HTTP_HOST} !^www.luxuryislandcollection.com$ [NC]
RewriteRule ^(.*)$ http://www.luxuryislandcollection.com/$1 [L,R=301]
RewriteRule ^(.*)index.html$ http://www.luxuryislandcollection.com/$1 [R=301,L]
RewriteRule ^(.*)index.php$ http://www.luxuryislandcollection.com/$1 [R=301,L]

Monday 12 September 2011

Important jobs

To create Facebook User Id : http://www.facebook.com/about/messages/

To make tiny url : http://www.tiny.cc

Saturday 3 September 2011

Search Engine Optimization Plan

A complete guide to search engine optimization would be book-length, and would be out of date as soon as it was published, but here are several tips for building a website with search engine optimization in mind:
1. Every page on your site must have a unique HTML title tag, meta keywords tag, and meta description tag.
2. Follow W3C recommendations for HTML document structure. Begin the body copy of your page with your keyword phrase, and repeat it as needed as the theme of the page throughout your copy. Feature your keyword phrase prominently by including it in headers and making it bold or italics.
3. Use text navigation on your site, and use the keyword phrases you have selected as the links. If you cannot use text navigation, include a footer on every page using text links.
4. Build a text site map, and link to it from every page of your site.
5. Organize your navigation according to the importance of your keyword phrases. If you break your site into many pages, link to the most important pages from every page of your site, and link to the other pages from section header pages and the site map.
6. Establish your site by submitting to the major directories, The Open Directory and the Yahoo! Directory, then build your link popularity by submitting to web directories, search engines, and requesting links from related websites.
7. Be patient. A search engine optimization project can take quite some time to work.
For Google's suggestions on search engine optimization, see Google Information for Webmasters - Webmaster Guidelines.

Tips to Increase Site Visitors

Here are 26 sure-fire ways to increase web traffic and site visitors to your website. Use some or all of them, and let us know which ones worked best for you.
  1. Optimize your site (SEO).
    Win on the search engines when people search for keyword phrases related to your products or services.
    (More about search engine optimization.)

  2. Get your site listed in directories.
    Submit your site to all the major web directories. This will generate traffic directly from the directories themselves and will also help to improve your link popularity. That helps you win on Google!
    (More about web directories.)

  3. Get listed in search engines.
    Submit your site to all the major search engines.
    (More about search engines.)

  4. Get links to your site.
    Get people with complimentary sites to link to yours. You offer rental kayaks on the beach. Ask the local restaurant owners to link to you, and offer to link to them. Ask the local tour guides, the real estate agents, the night clubs, and everyone else. Links lead to clicks onto your website and help to improve your search engine rankings.

  5. Buy links to your site.
    Buy text links on other websites. That means more spiders stopping by, more people clicking through, and better search engine rankings.

  6. Buy banner ads.
    Buy banner ads on other websites. It helps to build brand recognition.

  7. Participate in a banner exchange program.
    It won't cost you anything, and will lead to a few extra visitors. Plus, you're spreading your brand all over the place.

  8. Participate in a WebRing.
    Connect your site with other sites in your niche.

  9. Pay for clicks to your site.
    Pay for clicks or inclusion on the search engines so that people will see your site in the sponsored links section of the search results when they search for keyword phrases related to your products or services.
    (More about pay per click.)

  10. Set up an affiliate marketing program.
    With affiliate marketing, you can either pay per click, pay per lead generated, pay per sale, or pay per customer acquired.

  11. Use smart public relations (PR).
    Get news coverage of your business and your site. Approach online and traditional media. This will often lead to others placing links pointing to your website, which leads to more clicks and also to improved search engine rankings.

  12. Use E-mail marketing.
    Ugly, but effective for the cost. Blast out your special offers, but be nice about it.

  13. Use off-line marketing.
    Promote your site. Put your url on all your license plates. Paint it on your car. Buy newspaper and yellow pages ads with your url. Put up flyers and stickers. Sponsor a little league team. Do anything and everything to spread the word about your website around your city.

  14. Run regular promotions.
    Stage regular giveaways and spread the word about it.

  15. Get published.
    Write articles for publication on other websites. The author profile will link to your site. The article will show that you're an expert.

  16. Publish yourself.
    Write articles for your own site regularly. This will help you to win on the search engines and gives your visitors a reason to come back over and over.

  17. Ask for reviews.
    Ask for reviews of your self-published articles on other webmasters' websites. Ask for reviews of your website, your products, your software, your services. These will usually include links to your articles.

  18. Write briefs.
    Write daily or weekly news briefs focusing in on your industry or specialty area. This keeps your site "fresh" in the eyes of the major search engines and helps you to spread a wide net when fishing for top search engine positions.

  19. Create a newsletter.
    Ask your visitors to sign up for your newsletter, and encourage them to send it along to people they know. Send a newsletter regularly with teasers or lead-ins to your in-depth new articles or with special offers and the latest products.

  20. Post in chat rooms.
    Become active in bulletin boards and chat rooms focusing on your industry. Leave inciteful comments, and people will click on your profile, then visit your site.

  21. Give away free stuff.
    Offer something people want at your site. Give them a reason to come back and get more. Offer free downloads and update them regularly. Offer coupons or discounts. Content content content.

  22. Give awards for excellent sites in your niche.
    This builds more links back to your site and establishes you as a credible reviewer, an expert in your space.

  23. Run a contest and promote it.
    Photo contests, essay contests, goofy contests, random drawings, anything. Example: Messiest Garage in America contest on OfftheFloor.com.

  24. Join your local business organizations.
    Chambers of Commerce and other organizations will often add your site to their member directory. That's an added advantage over the obvious business-building and networking opportunities.

  25. Create an RSS feed.
    Give people another way to interact with your content.

  26. Be accessible.
    Build your site so that it is accessible to all browsers and to PocketPC and Palm Pilot users. Don't forget, people with disabilities buy things too. Make your site Section 508 complaint. Your competition probably hasn't.

  27. We really couldn't stop at Z. This last suggestion is our most important one: Be a good Internet citizen. Provide useful resources on your website, resources that make people feel thankful that you put in the time and effort. Help every person who ever calls you on the telephone or emails you a question. When they ask "How can I ever thank you?" just say, "If you like my site and think it's useful, why not link to it?" (More about good Internet citizenship.)

    Friday 2 September 2011

    Meta Tag


    META Tags or what are officially referred to as Metadata Elements, are found within the <head></head> section of your web pages. META Tags are still relevant with some indexing search engines.

    (1). TITLE Element - Page Titles
    Every html document must have a TITLE Element in the head section. Some refer to the
    <title> element as a meta tag (title tag) when it is not.
    <title>META Tags Tips - Metadata Elements</title>

    (2). ·  META Description Tag
    Some search engines will index the META Description Tag found in the
    <head></head> section of your web pages. These indexing search engines may present the content of your meta description tag as the result of a search query.
    <meta name="description" content="META Tags or what are officially referred to as Metadata Elements are found within the <head></head> section of your web pages. The following is a partial list of metadata elements that may be used in the overall site structuring, organization, and search engine marketing strategy.">

    (3). ·  META Keywords Tag
    The META Keywords Tag is where you list keywords and keyword phrases that you've targeted for that specific page. There have been numerous discussions at various search engine marketing forums surrounding the use of the keywords tag and its effectiveness. The overall consensus is that the tag has little to no relevance with the major search engines today.
    <meta name="keywords" content="META Tags, Tips, Metadata Elements, META Description Tag, META Keywords Tag, Language Tag, Link Relationship Tag, Title Element">

    (4). ·  META Language Tag
    In HTML elements, the language attribute or META Language Tag specifies the natural language. This document is mostly concerned with how to specify the primary language(s) (there could be more than one) and the base language (there is only one) in HTML documents.
    <meta http-equiv="content-language" content="en">

    (5). ·  META Link Relationship Tag
    It is helpful for search results to reference the beginning of the collection of documents in addition to the page hit by the search. You may help search engines by using the link element with
    rel="start" along with the title attribute. The META Link Relationship tag is part of the metadata that appears within the <head></head> section of your web pages.
    <link rel="start" href="/meta-tags/" title="META Tags Tips - Metadata Elements">

    (6). META Robots Tag
    The Robots META Tag is meant to provide users who cannot upload or control the
    /robots.txt file at their websites, with a last chance to keep their content out of search engine indexes and services.
    <meta name="robots" content="noindex, nofollow">
    • META Robots Tag for Googlebot
      Googlebot obeys the
      noindex, nofollow, and noarchive META Robots Tags. If you place these tags in the head of your HTML/XHTML document, you can cause Google to not index, not follow, and/or not archive particular documents on your site.
    <meta name="googlebot" content="noindex, nofollow, noarchive">
    • META Robots Tag for MSNBot
      MSNBot obeys the
      noindex and nofollow Robots META Tag. Placing these tags in the heading of your HTML document prevents MSNBot from indexing or following specific documents.
    <meta name="msnbot" content="noindex, nofollow">

    (7). ·  META Revisit-After Tag
    The revisit-after META tag is not supported by any major search engines, it never was supported and probably never will be. It was developed for, and supported by, Vancouver Webpages and their local search engine searchBC.
    <meta name="revisit-after" content="7 days">

    Below is a listing of the Dublin Core Metadata Element :
    Label: Title
    Definition: A name given to the resource.
    Comment: Typically, Title will be a name by which the resource is formally known.
    <meta name="DC.title" lang="en" content="DC Dublin Core META Tags - DCMI Dublin Core Metadata Initiative">

    Label: Creator
    Definition: An entity primarily responsible for making the content of the resource.
    Comment: Examples of Creator include a person, an organization, or a service. Typically, the name of a Creator should be used to indicate the entity.
    <meta name="DC.creator" content="Administrator">

    Label: Subject and Keywords
    Definition: A topic of the content of the resource.
    Comment: Typically, Subject will be expressed as keywords, key phrases or classification codes that describe a topic of the resource. Recommended best practice is to select a value from a controlled vocabulary or formal classification scheme.
    <meta name="DC.subject" lang="en" content="DCMI; Dublin Core Metadata Initiative; DC META Tags">


    Label: Description
    Definition: An account of the content of the resource.
    Comment: Examples of Description include, but is not limited to: an abstract, table of contents, reference to a graphical representation of content or a free-text account of the content.
    <meta name="DC.description" lang="en" content="Examples of Dublin Core META Tags.">

    Label: Publisher
    Definition: An entity responsible for making the resource available
    Comment: Examples of Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service. Typically, the name of a Publisher should be used to indicate the entity.
    <meta name="DC.publisher" content="SEO Consultants Directory">

    Label: Contributor
    Definition: An entity responsible for making contributions to the content of the resource.
    Comment: Examples of Contributor include a person, an organization, or a service. Typically, the name of a Contributor should be used to indicate the entity.
    <meta name="DC.contributor" content="DCMI Dublin Core Metadata Initiative">

    Label: Date
    Definition: A date of an event in the lifecycle of the resource.
    Comment: Typically, Date will be associated with the creation or availability of the resource. Recommended best practice for encoding the date value is defined in a profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF] and includes (among others) dates of the form YYYY-MM-DD.
    <meta name="DC.date" scheme="W3CDTF" content="2004-01-01">

    Label: Resource Type
    Definition: The nature or genre of the content of the resource.
    Comment: Type includes terms describing general categories, functions, genres, or aggregation levels for content. Recommended best practice is to select a value from a controlled vocabulary (for example, the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCT1]). To describe the physical or digital manifestation of the resource, use the FORMAT element.
    <meta name="DC.type" scheme="DCMIType" content="Text">

    Label: Format
    Definition: The physical or digital manifestation of the resource.
    Comment: Typically, Format may include the media-type or dimensions of the resource. Format may be used to identify the software, hardware, or other equipment needed to display or operate the resource. Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to select a value from a controlled vocabulary (for example, the list of Internet Media Types [MIME] defining computer media formats).
    <meta name="DC.format" scheme="IMT" content="text/html">

    Label: Resource Identifier
    Definition: An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.
    Comment: Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string or number conforming to a formal identification system. Formal identification systems include but are not limited to the Uniform Resource Identifier (URI) (including the Uniform Resource Locator (URL)), the Digital Object Identifier (DOI) and the International Standard Book Number (ISBN).
    <meta name="DC.identifier" content="/meta-tags/dublin/">

    Label: Source
    Definition: A Reference to a resource from which the present resource is derived.
    Comment: The present resource may be derived from the Source resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the referenced resource by means of a string or number conforming to a formal identification system.
    <meta name="DC.source" content="/meta-tags/">

    Label: Language
    Definition: A language of the intellectual content of the resource. 
    Comment: Recommended best practice is to use RFC 3066 [RFC3066] which, in conjunction with ISO639 [ISO639]), defines two and three letter primary language tags with optional subtags. Examples include "en" or "eng" for English, "akk" for Akkadian", and "en-GB" for English used in the United Kingdom.
    <meta name="DC.language" scheme="RFC1766" content="en">

    Label: Relation
    Definition: A reference to a related resource.
    Comment: Recommended best practice is to identify the referenced resource by means of a string or number conforming to a formal identification system.
    <meta name="DC.relation" content="/meta-tags/">

    Label: Coverage
    Definition: The extent or scope of the content of the resource.
    Comment: Typically, Coverage will include spatial location (a place name or geographic coordinates), temporal period (a period label, date, or date range) or jurisdiction (such as a named administrative entity). Recommended best practice is to select a value from a controlled vocabulary (for example, the Thesaurus of Geographic Names [TGN]) and to use, where appropriate, named places or time periods in preference to numeric identifiers such as sets of coordinates or date ranges.
    <meta name="DC.coverage" content="World">

    Label: Rights Management
    Definition: Information about rights held in and over the resource.
    Comment: Typically, Rights will contain a rights management statement for the resource, or reference a service providing such information. Rights information often encompasses Intellectual Property Rights (IPR), Copyright, and various Property Rights. If the Rights element is absent, no assumptions may be made about any rights held in or over the resource.
    <meta name="DC.rights" content="/legal/terms-of-use.htm">