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A few days later, the article appeared in my Google Alerts and lo and behold

Posted: Thu Dec 26, 2024 10:54 am
by zihadhasan012
As my Dad always says, "It's better to be on page 2 in the editorial than on page 7 as an advertisement." This advice has been the guiding principle when it comes to the public relations strategy at Voices.com. In fact, I've proven this to be so effective in public relations that I've applied it to SEO as well. How does the advice translate? Many SEOs would agree that the organic results are editorial listings, generally obtained by editorial content being linked to by other editorial content, and PPC results are the ads which only appear because someone paid for the ad to show up.


This knowledge has led me to experiment with a hy georgia phone number database brid approach to public relations and SEO and simply request links from writers, journalists and bloggers when contacted for a comment, which brings me to the highlight of any SEO's week, or perhaps even their month. This past week, a writer from CNN asked if I'd contribute a few paragraphs on the Amazon Kindle 2's new text-to-speech technology, as it created quite the uproar from the Author's Guild of America.


Steve, the writer for CNN, asked for my take and I sent him 2-3 paragraphs with my point of view. there's a link. Yeah baby! HOW TO GET THE LINK Build Relationships My relationship with Steve started nearly a year ago when he reached out asking if I'd like to contribute to an article called "Internet Gives Voice to Unseen Actors," discussing the rise of freelance voice actors on the web.