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How To Optimize Your Website For Greater Speed

by Mahesh Kukreja on May 13, 2011

The Google Search Quality Team announced that website speed is a ranking factor in April 2010. When it comes to optimizing a website for speed, the shortcuts, hacks and tricks are plenty. To get the most from a site, using the following five quality tips together will indefinitely result in a measurable performance boost. From image compression, HTML comments, Ruby on Rails web hosting options, script tags, URLs and more, this article will discuss how these five topics work together to provide the fastest speed for website readers and browsers.

Optimize Website Speed

Image optimization

Optimized image files reduce page size, in some cases by as much as 50%. When images are set to display at 320×320, use images scaled to that size, not larger ones. Removing a few images altogether boosts speed also. Each image used should have its dpi resolution lowered if possible. Images necessary to a site can be optimized and compressed further by reducing PNGs, stripping JPEG metadata, and stripping excessive pixels across frames in an animated GIF. The free online smush.it lossless compression tool does all the work. Simply paste links to your images (each image 1MB or less), and download the compressed results.

Ruby on Rails (RoR)

Ruby on Rails, a web application framework heavily based on Ruby programming language, hit the ground running, introducing a performance boosting bytecode VM. If you need more than a handful of editing tools, like fast JavaScript effects and dynamically draggable elements, RoR is a choice worth considering. The code adheres to convention, and is human-readable. DreamHost is a popular RoR hosting provider. According to a comparison at RailsHosting.org, DreamHost boasts the best uptime, Rails apps run quickly with FastCGI, and their professional staff seem to genuinely enjoy what they do.

HTML comments and script tags

Two quick tips are removing HTML comments altogether, and placing script tags at the end of a page. These two steps are not for everyone. Some choose to keep their code commented, which is fine; but removing comments equals a smaller page, further reducing load times. Why would someone place script tags at the end of a page? Downloading scripts halts pipelining. Positioning tags at the end of the page ensures other page elements load first.

Communicating URLs to the server

Terminate with forward slashes any URLs linking to directories. Instead of letting the server take time to solve for the unknown, this tells the server it is loading a directory. This does not result in a dramatic increase, but it is constructive to use every millisecond of speed available.

Reducing real and perceived load times

Websites can increase speed by using a content delivery network (CDN) that is nearer the website’s visitors. CDNs use the bandwidth of all client computers in the network, eliminating the bottlenecks experienced when visitors try to access images, objects, or files. CDNs are free, commercial, or commercial P2P.

It behooves us to not only boost search rank, but to also greet visitors with fast-loading pages. The goal is a reduction in the number of pages that must load. Where possible, reductions should be made to JavaScript and CSS files. Loaded near the end of the page, JavaScript allows a visitor’s browser to pipeline the rest of the page elements.

JavaScript and CSS files can be combined, comments and whitespace excised, and several HTTP requests merged into one. Free online tools such as the W3 Total Cache make this process a cinch. The WordPress description of the W3 Total Cache states that one benefit of using the tool is a 10x improvement in overall site performance, a very noticeable speed increase.

A quick recap: Optimize and compress images as much as possible, remove HTML comments, and position scripts at the end of a page. Use a RoR host if appropriate, tell your server when it is loading a URL that links to a directory, and get those HTTP requests under control. Site speed is a necessary part of good visitor experience, and the benefits far outweigh the minimal time invested to implement these strategies.

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How To Make Money on the Internet – Back to Basics

by Mahesh Kukreja on April 24, 2011

I have been thinking to write this post from a couple of days, but I didn’t have much time to compile all the basic ways to make money online. Today it’s Sunday and I got couple of hours, so I am writing this post. This post is basically for newbies who come on the Internet to make some bucks. I’ll try to cover most basic ways to make money online. If I leave out something, please help me by commenting below ;)

Make Money Online

I’ve been on the Internet since I was 11 years old and have been finding ways to make fortune since then.. So let’s start. Basically every geek on the Internet wants to make money online by doing something. I won’t go in very details, just a basic introduction to everything..

1. Make a Blog/Forum/Website:

Many young enthusiasts are coming on the Internet these days to start a blog or forum of their own. This is basically the most easiest way to make money online. If you don’t want to bother about domain name, you can get a blogger account, or a WordPress.com account. These services allow you to freely start a blog. Softwares like WordPress are available if you want to host your own blog with custom domain name.

You must choose a niche before you think about blogging. This step is important, as you must know what you’ll be writing about on your blog. Various niches include Technology, Health & Fitness, Marketing, Fashion, Sports, etc.. So, choose your niche wisely. Look out what you’re interested in and write about that.

You can also start a discussion forum if you want others to participate more interactively.. Softwares like Invision Power Board and vBulletin are paid forum softwares, while phpBB is the freely available version.

Now next step is to monetize your website. Newbies mostly go for Google Adsense, Chitika, Infolinks, etc.. Get approved by them and place ad codes on your website.

You can improve traffic to your website by social bookmarking (Facebook, Twitter, StumbleUpon), doing a little SEO, etc..

2. Affiliate Marketing:

Affiliate marketing is marketing about the products related to your niche. Commission Junction and ClickBank help you to sell digital products on your site and pay you the commission. Wide range of digital products are available. Amazon Inc’s Associate system lets you sell their products. In turn, they give pay you commission for the products which you help to sell. Lots of other sites are available, in different niches, for affiliate marketing.

3. Selling goods online:

If you have a business in your locality and want to bring it online, sites like eBay and Amazon can help you do so. Firstly, you list up your products online, then interested buyers can bid/buy your products. You get paid via PayPal or directly to your bank accounts.

4. Earn the Freelancer way:

A freelancer is somebody who is self-employed and is not committed to a particular employer long term.

-Wikipedia

A freelancer works according to his needs. Freelancers can work in the following fields:

  • Web Designing
  • Software Coding
  • Game Development
  • Logo Designing
  • SEO Optimization
  • Content Writing

You can find freelancing jobs via web. Here are the posts which have compiled a list of sites which offer freelancing jobs:

  1. The Monster List of Freelancing Job Sites
  2. Best 11 Freelance Sites
  3. List of Freelance Sites

You can also find jobs on Webmaster forums like DigitalPoint.

5. Earn By Tweeting:

If you’re a Tweet-a-holic, this is a good news for you. You can make money by tweeting for any of the following ventures:

But, you’ll need quality followers for that, Spam doesn’t work.

6. Other Ways:

Other ways to make money online include:

  • writing eBooks
  • becoming a hosting & domain reseller
  • selling direct advertisement on your website
  • designing and selling web templates or scripts
  • selling Stock Photos at sites like iStockPhoto
  • become a security expert and get paid for fixing vulnerabilities on people’s websites
  • etc..

A Few Last Words:

These are some of the ways to make money on the Internet. But, you’ll have to remain persistent and need to work honestly. You’re not going to earn just like that. There’s a lot of competition in every field. Thousands and thousands of blogs with same niche are present on the Internet. You need to make your blog outstanding. Similarly, lot of people work in the same filed of freelancing or sell similar items. You need to have patience in each and every field. Time is the answer to everything. Nothing happens at the first instance. So, don’t lose hope and keep working smartly.

If you have any other ways or blog posts related to this topic, please share them below..

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Make a SEO friendly website

by Mahesh Kukreja on November 16, 2010

This is a guest post by Tanya. If you want to write for us, please contact using the Contact Me form.
SEOMaking a website that targets your visitors accurately is as important as making an attractive website. The competition between online businesses has also increased a lot. At such times you should ensure that you are well equipped with all the technicalities and technologies.

Such websites have become the best mediator between you and your customers; the way it is designed externally and internally also portrays the personality and character of the business to your customers. Thus you understand the importance of the medium. So to make your website more popular amongst its users, you should build a SEO friendly website. But what is it actually?

A SEO friendly website is one which is a search engine friendly website. It is very important for you to use a search engine placement and marketing services and essentially buying the right one as there are many wrong ones in the market to deviate you from the correct options. The good search engine providers ensure to give your website

  • directory submission
  • RSS submission
  • effective content creation
  • article submission
  • creation of blogs
  • keyword research
  • building up of links
  • SEO copywriting
  • Meta tag optimization
  • HTML codes optimization.

With the use of these SEO services, you ensure that your website has a lot of visitors for it.

A SEO friendly website also is very simple for their user, which is they can understand it with ease. So do not use any complex procedures that are difficult to follow or any heavy and useless applications that take a lot of time to load. Either of this might irritate the visitors of your website.

When you are submitting online information, make sure that it is accurate and complete. It should not be incomplete. You ought to check and recheck the HTML codes so that it doesn’t show the website as non-existent. It gives a wrong image of the website. So now equipped with the tips to make your website an SEO friendly one go ahead and reap the benefits.

About the author:

Tanya has a good expertise in types of virus and landscaping rocks.

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10 Common Website Traffic Myths

by Mahesh Kukreja on March 13, 2009

Due to the vast array of blogs out there talking about just how powerful traffic is for you, your blog and brand, you might be finding it difficult to find the tips or guides to using traffic to your benefit and not just for staring at. After all, if you don’t have any plans for monetizing your site or focusing on your brand during the peak traffic periods (not just spikes), you won’t be able to grow your site nor reach your long-term goals.

Website Traffic

High blog traffic, or traffic anywhere except stalled on the highway, is something that everyone desires. With traffic, you are able to do nearly anything you want – it means that people are actively looking at your site, discovering what you have to offer. At this point, and only at this pint, they can decide whether they want to go further and “catch” onto the pitch that you tired to convey, the message that you tried to get across – that you wanted them to purchase or continue to read and subscribe to your blog or services.

While I cannot say that you will be able to use all of these tips, included are a few common misconceptions about traffic that you have to understand. I focus on ways people make mistakes, ways to fix them, and how to get a better understanding on your traffic.

Note: They are not all myths, but simply answers to common questions.

1. Traffic doesn’t grow by looking at stats.

This is probably one of the most commonly stated tips that people give in terms of traffic. When you are constantly looking at your stats and traffic, not just the trends, you are not only showing that you don’t want to see your blog grow, but you are also spending time unproductively. Although you can do this every once in a while to see how visitors come to your site and how long each stays, you shouldn’t do it every day. Instead, focus on what creates the most content, the goods, that people want to read, use, and enjoy.

2. Your readers don’t necessarily care how popular (traffic wise) your site is.

Taking a look at a collection of sites out there, you will generally find that most have a rather high popularity. However, this is not necessarily true for all sites, especially those that are able to cater to a more in-tune market that shares a better relationship with one another. In other words, community is larger than total popularity. With community, traffic builds, and with traffic, popularity builds, if you get the picture. This doesn’t happen for all sites. The prime example, Google, didn’t become successful due to a small user base, but because it naturally grew in popularity due to its usage and high traffic.

3. You don’t have to pay for traffic.

Most likely, you’ve heard of or seen people that were successful in purchasing traffic. Ultimately, if you have just started your blog, this method will fail due to the fact that you have no root, nothing to keep your readers from leaving. It might all add up to a few extra clicks if you have ads on your site, but nothing more. Essentially, purchasing traffic is a hit-or-miss thing until you are good at advertising correctly. And, for the most part, this works better once  you have the content base to support the claims that you may have made during your advertising campaign(s).

4. More work pays off.

As stated in the first tip, procrastinating content creation won’t help your blog grow. Instead, you need to be able to distinguish your site from others, being able to create more high-quality content on a more consistent basis. Let’s say that you spend an hour creating 10 100-word posts. They will only get you as far as the word and substance in those posts which, by most figures, won’t be too far. Rather, a single 1,000-word posts that you spend two hours or more on and include various forms of unique content representation that draws in your readers will help exponentially more than multiple, quick posts that you spend less time wirting.

5. Traffic naturally fluctuates.

An overview of your traffic and analytics might show that your traffic is decreasing, although, in another view, it has been increasing over the past week. Another person might tell you that your website is extremely popular while the next says that you have very few daily readers.

Drastically different answers like those illustrated above are seen everyday when people try to analyze traffic and form “comparable” figures of what the traffic really is. In reality, there  will likely never be a solution for finding the exact answers, no matter how many different services we were to look at. What you really need to know is that traffic changes everyday, although you should never see jumps of double digit percentages day after day.

6. Traffic exchanges don’t work as well as they say.

In a way, a traffic exchange is trying to offer you a service that only works in an ideal world, one where people are able to spend hours doing something that provides little to their benefit. For this reason, the traffic that has been promised is rarely delivered because people can’t spend time browsing sites or attending to their accounts.

In my opinion, they could work only if you spend a minimal amount of time with them and your blog has zero visitors – they would provide a starting point, in some ways.

7. Just because your bounce rate is high doesn’t mean that visitors don’t like your site.

A popular myth, bounce rate is simply an indication that your site’s layout or way you present content is better-than-average because the visitors don’t have to page through multiple pages or try to find what they are looking for. On the other hand, it means that you probably won’t be generating as many page views for advertisers paying you based on the number of impressions you deliver. The more content-rich your homepage and individual pages from search engines are, the more likely the visitor is to leave the page, but still retain some information about your site, which is generally the most important part.

8. Once you have established brand recognition, traffic becomes less important.

I might be going off on a limb with this idea, but when you develop your brand, people will retain what you offer far into the future, being able to go back to your site without having to search multiple queries just to find the site they were looking for. It’s what makes many of the top companies remain in business – the experience their customers had, even if it was only one time.

The traffic aspect won’t matter as much because these people will probably recommend your company, name, or services to others – a free marketing approach.

9. Traffic growth only results from a dramatic change.

Partially true, this means that unless you change a major portion of your marketing campaign, your layout, or what you are doing to draw in traffic, you won’t see any significant growth month-over-month. However, there are many examples of sites that haven’t changes since they were launched and are more popular today than ever. So, you just have to continue providing a reliable service and traffic should naturally increase, even without spending a dime on marketing or promoting your service (although time is a factor, like always).

10. More subscribers Does Not Mean More traffic.

While subscribers and traffic typically go hand in hand, sites that have in excess of 50,000 subscribers might only see a fraction of those people who visit their blog everyday, it not on a rare occurrence. Subscriptions have made it much easier to reduce the amount of traffic to your blog which, all in all, might be a good thing. It might mean less income from ad sales, but you are helping to balance traffic between multiple sources (unless you have a lot of images in your posts hosted on your server). This myth has been proven false dozens of times with various blogs.


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