Andy Jenkins “The Video Boss” Review
Click Here If You Are Looking For The Official “Video Boss” Website
The Video BOSS is an 8-week hands-on coaching program that’s being taught by Andy Jenkins himself.
For the last 4 years, Andy has been making online video that’s crushed it for traffic and sales, and this is the program where HE GIVES IT ALL UP…
- He will teach everything he knows about Video -
…Including going behind the scenes on the some of the massive launch videos he’s done (Jeff Walker’s “Product Launch Manager” and Amish Shah’s “Magic Bullet System”, just to name a few).
Here’s a quick (And by no means complete) list of what ‘The Video Boss‘ covers:
Module 1 – The Video Universe – Learn how to make crushingly awesome videos.
Module 2 – The Video Lab – Look Over My Shoulder as I do my thing.
Module 3 - Live Video Production – Lights, Camera, Sets
Module 4 – Traffic Boss – SEO For Video, Link Building for Video, Social Media Traffic with Video
Module 5 – Andy Reviews Your Video and makes a video review of it.
Module 6 – Create your OWN Video Information Product Empire
Module 7 – Step-By-Step – How I created and marketed The Video Boss, and secrets from Product Launch Manager, Magic Bullet, Formula Five, StomperNet, etc.
Module 8 - Advanced Video Secrets – Green Screen, Animation, Music Composing, etc.
PLUS
Weekly Coaching and Q&A Calls
The Video Boss LIVE Workshop in San Diego
Some Powerful Tips for Blog Online Marketing
Now, I am going to give you 9 powerful tips you must take into your action seriously for your blog online marketing. With those tips, you can build highly successful and profitable blog online and earn money on the internet. All you have to do is to take those tips in your action and marketing plan seriously. My investigations show that blog is one
Some Powerful Tips for Blog Online Marketing
Now, I am going to give you 9 powerful tips you must take into your action seriously for your blog online marketing. With those tips, you can build highly successful and profitable blog online and earn money on the internet. All you have to do is to take those tips in your action and marketing plan seriously. My investigations show that blog is one
Some Powerful Tips for Blog Online Marketing
Now, I am going to give you 9 powerful tips you must take into your action seriously for your blog online marketing. With those tips, you can build highly successful and profitable blog online and earn money on the internet. All you have to do is to take those tips in your action and marketing plan seriously.
Some Powerful Tips for Blog Online Marketing
Now, I am going to give you 9 powerful tips you must take into your action seriously for your blog online marketing. With those tips, you can build highly successful and profitable blog online and earn money on the internet. All you have to do is to take those tips in your action and marketing plan seriously.
Announcing the New SEOmoz Toolbar – Plus 5 New Features
Posted by adamf
First, let me make a quick introduction. Normally, I spend my time focused on new products at SEOmoz, working with a great team of people that design and build our new tools and features. Today I am excited to use my first blog post to announce our new SEO toolbar, and tell you about some of the powerful features we have added.
As a quick reminder, all of these new features are free, and will be available to anyone who downloads the SEO Toolbar! However, we still reserve advanced link data for PRO members.
So, on to the features. To add a little color to my descriptions, I’ve also asked some SEO experts you may recognize to preview the toolbar and talk about how they use the new features.
1. New SERP Overlay
This new Search Engine Results Page overlay was designed to offer the most relevant link data without getting in the way. You can now use our toolbar to see which search results are getting the most links, and click Explore to run a full analysis in Open Site Explorer. To turn on this overlay, click the settings button on the toolbar, and select SERP Overlay.
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"I get the best ‘feel’ for abstract metrics by seeing them in familiar places. I find it easiest to understand the new metrics by seeing them on search results I’m familiar with; as an added bonus, this is one of the most helpful analyses you can do when looking at a new SERP for the first time." –Will Critchlow
2. Page Authority and Domain Authority
Page Authority and Domain Authority have taken their place as the primary metrics in the toolbar. These two predictive metrics will give you the best indication of how authoritative pages and domains are. If you miss having mozRank and mozTrust available at a glance, don’t despair! You can add these back into the toolbar by selecting them from the settings menu.

3. Surf Like a Search Engine
We have added new settings that allow you to hide images, turn off JavaScript, and even set your user agent. This will help you see pages like the search engines do, and identify potential bad page behaviors. And just to help out, we’ve added a handy little overlay to keep you aware of when any of these features are set. Just click the link in the overlay and all of your settings will return to normal.
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"The new user agent switching means I’ve removed another plug-in from Firefox. I love my SEO plugins but I also think there’s such a thing as having too many. Go for simplicity is what I always say. Special love goes out to disable JavaScript, too – I actually caught a nice bit of hidden link spam with this last week! Disable images is a sure fire way to check out the image alt attributes on a web page too. Nice." –Richard Baxter
"I don’t want to take credit for an awesome feature. OK. I want to take credit for an awesome feature. After constantly forgetting I was surfing as googlebot and getting chucked out of Google calendar etc I asked for this feature and it’s just as awesome as I hoped it would be. "
4. New Data in the Analyze Page Overlay
Our analyze page overlay has also been enhanced with a number of new, useful data points, including
- Page Download Time – this becomes more important with Google’s announcement that speed matters.
- Text to Code Ratio – Is there more code on your page than content? Don’t make the search engines sift through too much code to find the relevant content.
- HTTP status codes – Find out the status code of the current page, and learn which redirects were involved in getting you there.

"The overlay is still the most valuable thing for me. I must use it 5+ times every day to get quick info about how many links are on a page, whether it’s using rel="canonical" or whether the keywords are properly included in the right page elements. I hate using ‘view source’ and searching through code; overlay FTW!" –Rand Fishkin
"The http status codes feature is my favourite new addition to the tool. There’s not more reloading and hunting through LiveHTTPHeaders reports – this lets me very easily see the redirect route taken in getting to the current page." –Rob Ousbey
5. Quick Access to Tools from SEOmoz and Third Parties
The tools dropdown has been expanded to include fast access to the latest SEOmoz tools as well as a wealth of other helpful resources, including traffic data, Twitter tools, and domain info.

I hope you enjoy the new toolbar. Please give it a try, and be sure to send feedback so we can keep making it better. You can easily send feedback by clicking on the light bulb icon
on the toolbar.
Tips to Drive more Traffic with Appropriate Keyword Research
It is a world of internet marketing that help in promoting a website over the internet. The internet marketing actually depends on the SEO services of a professional SEO company who would be able to optimize their business according to market trends and make your website rank higher in search engine result list.
Top Tips Using Article Marketing to Drive Targeted Traffic
Article marketing is the evergreen method to help direct Internet traffic in your website. It is the best resource in generating unlimited number of traffic online. Once you posted your article, they stay there forever to bring traffic to your website. In order to get the more website traffic, here are some pointers…..
An Illustrated Guide to Matt Cutts’ Comments on Crawling & Indexation
Posted by randfish
Late last week, Eric Enge of Stone Temple (and a co-author of mine on The Art of SEO) published a fascinating interview with Google’s head of Webspam, Matt Cutts. I think the whole of the SEO community can agree that Matt taking time for these types of interviews is phenomenal and I can only hope he does more of them in the future. Understanding more about Google’s positions, their technology and their goals will benefit website creators and marketers dramatically.
The interview itself is certainly worth a read, but as one mozzer noted to me during the email string on the subject "I’m embarassed to say I couldn’t make it all the way through." Fair enough; and that’s why I’m presenting Matt’s primary points in graphical, cartoon format. I’ve also included some adlibbing, interpretation and fun into these. Only the bits surrounded by quotes were actually taken directly from Matt’s words, so please do keep in mind that this is my opinion of what Matt means (along with the occassional editorial).
#1 – There is No Hard Indexation Cap; But Indexation Has Limits


#2 – Duplicate Content Might Hurt Your Indexation

#3 – Lots of Qualifiers on Whether Affiliate Links Count

#4 – 301 Redirects Pass Some, But Not All of a Page’s Link Juice

#5 – Low Quality, Non-Unique Pages Might Drop Your Indexation

#6 – Faceted Navigation and PageRank Sculpting are Thorny Issues


Personally, I liked how much Eric pushed Matt with scenarios that would require some advanced methods of showing faceted navigation to users but not search engines. However, I also understand that Matt needs to take a position that’s right for 95% of site owners 95% of the time or risk creating a new "PR sculpting" issue.
One other item that really stood out and got me excited was this response:
Matt Cutts: (with regard to links in ads) Our stance has not changed on that, and in fact we might put out a call for people to report more about link spam in the coming months. We have some new tools and technology coming online with ways to tackle that. We might put out a call for some feedback on different types of link spam sometime down the road.
That sounds really good – a huge frustration for the SEO world has been the fact that so many SEOs perceive their competitors to be outranking them with black/gray hat linking techniques and feel they must engage as well is order to stay competitive. Shutting this down or making SEOs feel that Google is taking consistent action when obvious manipulation is reported would go a long way to quelling this thorny problem.
My last recommendation is that you check out Eric’s 29 Tidbits from my Interview with Matt Cutts; a post that summarizes a lot of the critical information and takeaways quite neatly.
To end, I thought I’d add the four questions I wish Eric would have asked Matt (maybe next time!):
- With Google’s new recognition of internal anchor links and listings of those URLs in the search results, is it still safe to link to internal anchors on pages and trust that the link juice will flow to the page as a whole, or are content blocks inside individual pages now being treated as unique entities?
- With the handling of nofollow changing and Google crawling/executing Javascript, what’s the best way to link to a document on the web so human visitors can access it but search engines cannot WITHOUT wasting link juice/PageRank (robots.txt, for example, couldn’t do this) or cloaking?
- Does Google now (or will you in the future) consider the sharing/linking activities happening on Twitter, Facebook, etc. to have any impact on the overall link graph of the web (assuming we’re talking only about those links that don’t make their way onto standard web documents)?
- When people ask the question, "why is my competitor ranking so well with low quality/manipulative links?" you often reply that they should be careful in presuming that Google hasn’t already discounted the value of spammy links and the competitor is actually ranking on the basis of quality link sources. This creates an environment where marketers are constantly trying to discern which links pass value and which don’t – could you give advice for relatively savvy, experienced SEOs to help them make those determinations so they can pursue the right links and stop paying spammers for the wrong ones?
If you’ve got thoughts to share, questions outstanding from the interview or my amateur drawings or things you wish Eric had asked Matt, feel free to post them below.
Using Anchor Links to Make Google Ignore The First Link
Posted by Errioxa
This post was originally in YOUmoz, and was promoted to the main blog because it provides great value and interest to our community. The author’s views are entirely his or her own and may not reflect the views of SEOmoz, Inc.
In the past, I have tried several different ways to skip the first link that Google takes into account for a given URL (nofollowed links, links with 301 redirections, etc). However, all these attempts had little success (301 works but it’s very suspect). Recently, I ran a test to see how Google handled the anchor links (links to different sections within the same page, eg: <a rel="nofollow" href="http://example.com/index.php#anything)">example.com/index</a> and was surprised by the results I found. In the setup I tested, Google completely ignored the first standard link and instead credited the second anchor link.
The Test
For my test, I included several links on a page (Page A),
- the first link is a simple link. (<a href="http://example.com/category/product.php">text</a>)
- the second and third link are anchor links. (<a href="http://example.com/category/product.php#anchor-example">other text</a>)
Or in graphic form: 
Results for Test 1
If you search for the first linked text we can see that we don’t get the results of the destination page (Page B) . This link is not an ‘anchor link’, this link is a link to a ’simple URL’ (that´s how I named it) but it is ignored.
SERP for first link: simple link (no # mark) 
Instead, Google takes the next two anchor links (this and this) and shows the page they point to in the results. Although the apparent ignoring of the first link is odd, the way the link is displayed is even weirder. As you can see the URL that shows in the SERPs (See red box in image above) does not take to the anchor link, but to the simple link.
SERP for second link: anchor link (#)
SERP for third link: anchor link (#) 
Results for Test 2
SERP for first link: simple link

SERP for second link: anchor link (#)

I ran two more tests to see if the test could be reproduced. Both of the other tests had the same results!
Conclusion
It is interesting to see the impact that link order has on rankings. Keep this in mind going forward and I hope you find this as interesting as I did.
Note from Jen: Errioxa had an updated version in the queue that I missed that explains this all a bit better. I have updated this post with the new version. 3/16/10
Tips to Select the Best SEO Services
Each and every business owner, wants their business to be at a top ranking in search engine with the use of best SEO services. As internet is becoming very popular nowadays with its vital role played in every business niche. The importance of online marketing is becoming very popular and useful in public as well as for business owners and companies
I Want To Be Like Rhea Drysdale
Posted by Sarah Bird, Esquire
May It Please the Mozzers,
I haven’t written on the blog in months, but I simply couldn’t let today pass by without acknowledging the courage and perserverance shown by Rhea Drysdale in her pursuit of justice. She’s my hero and I want to be just like her–A woman of action and humble fortitude.
Rhea announced victory against Jason Gambert in a trademark dispute lasting more than two years. She fought to prevent "SEO" from becoming trademarked for one mysterious man’s private use. She fought on behalf of all of us who work in the SEO industry. Like many of you, I feel sad and ashamed I couldn’t do more to support Rhea–but we’ve had other legal trouble to sort out at SEOmoz that consumes our limited legal resources.
Lawsuits are expensive, stressful, and very time consuming. There is nothing glamorous or certain about them. Even when you’re in the right, you have to keep worrying about whether justice will prevail, and whether you’ll be broke or demoralized before it finally does.
I’m feeling really jazzed and happy today because Rhea has bolstered my belief in people, the SEO industry, and the justice system. As Joanna Lord said earlier, "Its a good industry-day folks, good industry day
" It just feels warm-and-fuzzy to work in a community of people like Rhea who sacrifice a lot without hope of any financial gain. And of people like Aaron Wall, Michael VanDeMar, Barry Schwartz and many others who’ve publically supported and recognized Rhea for her efforts both today and in the past.
I just wanted everyone out there in blogland to know that we have a big crush on Rhea and a big crush on the SEO industry. It’s so great to see everyone coming together to support Rhea and recognize what she’s done for all of us.
You can show your support by helping Rhea recoup some of her legal fees. She’s updating her blog with the best way to donate to her (without inadvertently giving her some tax grief!) on the OutSpokenMedia blog.
Group Hug!
Sarah Bird
Chief Operations officer and Erstwhile Legal Blogger
SEOmoz, Inc.
Double Your Fun with Double the SEOmoz API
Posted by Nick Gerner
I know, I promised a Linkscape update by last week. And I missed it. But there’s an update today! Do you forgive me? No? Not enough? Well how about doubling the volume of data available in our free API? You might have gotten a totally awesome email last week announcing that the free SEOmoz API is now serving up to 1,000 links. This email was so awesome I just had to share it (nice work Scott!)
- Up to 1,000 links to a page, subdomain or root domain (sorted by Page Authority of the linking page)
- Anchor text for those 1,000
- Aggregate anchor text counts across all links in our index
- HTTP status code
- nofollow indicators
- Plenty of metrics for data junkies
We’ve got a community submissions page on our wiki, and we love to share neat apps. So if you build something on our API, send it our way and we’ll make sure the community hears about it.
What makes a successful online markter? | Reggie Barnett Liv
I was doing some reading today and I noticed many people are getting into online marketing, but are really lost. And I know many new people need to understand the principles of network marketing. So I thought I should share some tips I recently learned on how people dominate the internet. 1. Build a list (best to own the list yourself so if your co


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"I get the best ‘feel’ for abstract metrics by seeing them in familiar places. I find it easiest to understand the new metrics by seeing them on search results I’m familiar with; as an added bonus, this is one of the most helpful analyses you can do when looking at a new SERP for the first time." –Will Critchlow
"The new user agent switching means I’ve removed another plug-in from Firefox. I love my SEO plugins but I also think there’s such a thing as having too many. Go for simplicity is what I always say. Special love goes out to disable JavaScript, too – I actually caught a nice bit of hidden link spam with this last week! Disable images is a sure fire way to check out the image alt attributes on a web page too. Nice." –Richard Baxter
"The overlay is still the most valuable thing for me. I must use it 5+ times every day to get quick info about how many links are on a page, whether it’s using rel="canonical" or whether the keywords are properly included in the right page elements. I hate using ‘view source’ and searching through code; overlay FTW!" –Rand Fishkin
"The http status codes feature is my favourite new addition to the tool. There’s not more reloading and hunting through LiveHTTPHeaders reports – this lets me very easily see the redirect route taken in getting to the current page." –Rob Ousbey
