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When you launch a new site, one of the first things you need to do is tell people about it. You probably start by submitting

a URL to search engines and directories. Don't stop there, though. If you do, you're missing out on opportunities.

Planting the seeds of success To really build awareness of your web launch, you need to plant seeds in many different places.

Too often, developers use a shortcut site submission service to submit their URL to the major search sites, such as Google,

Amazon and Yahoo. This means your front door is probably being indexed, but doesn't do much to drive traffic to other

sections. There's much more you can do to bring in visitors. This approach involves submitting to the top search sites, but also employs other methods.

These can include some of the following: · Seeking out subject-specific outlets · Contacting appropriate editors and site reviewers · Optimizing HTML markup for specific search engines · Submitting the site's features or sections individually The last approach can be very effective. Start by looking at your site's features. For example, do you have an email

discussion list you could promote separately by submitting it to directories such as Lizst and Tile.Net? Focusing in on your

site's features and sections can increase your submission options.

Where to begin

For every Web launch, there are search engines, directories, guides, e-zines, site reviewers, announce sites, and other

outlets that will want to know about it. Some may be interested in the broad subject coverage you offer, while others

will be drawn to specific features. To achieve a holistic approach to site promotion, you'll need to target both types. I want to talk about... everything,sex,money,vacation,dreams,wow... and mostly about what is going on in NY and maybe around the world.
Google blogger slams Michael Moore’s Sicko

By Stevie Smith

Jul 3, 2007, 13:32 GMT



No stranger to controversy with his own particular brand of movie making, Michael Moore and his latest offering, Sicko, 

have this week come under fire from Google blogger Lauren Turner in a piece titled "Does negative press make you Sicko?" 


Turner, writing in Google’s new Health Advertising Blog, openly chides Moore’s new investigative documentary by saying that 

it "attacks health insurers, health providers and pharmaceutical companies by connecting them to isolated and emotional 

stories of the [health] system at its worst." She also goes on to accuse Moore of portraying the medical and pharmaceutical 

industries as being "money and marketing driven" while failing to focus in on "interest in patient well-being and care," 

throughout the film.


A related Forbes report relays that Turner has suggested health care companies battle criticisms levelled at the industry by 

Moore’s latest movie by investing in Google ads to be shown over "Sicko" search results. However, this has not been well 

received by the blog community. Moreover, Google has been accused of "pandering" to the health care insurance industry 

despite Turner offering up another blog entry insisting that her comments (on an official corporate blog) in no 

way reflected Google’s views on the subject.


While not written on a personal blog, with no such disclaimer, Turner’s presently spot lit criticism of Sicko doesn’t help 

Google in terms of scrutiny of its closely formed relations with corporate advertisers or the validation of its usage of 

various blogs – both those that are official or personal to its staff members – in the convenient delivery of PR.


For example, Forbes outlines that numerous high-ranking members of the Google team have supposedly personal blogs that state 

written views are their own and not Google’s, although those views lend themselves to rallying behind the 

search engine giant in contentious legal issues. 


A senior software engineer at Google writes a hugely popular personal blog that explains official decisions made by the 

search behemoth and has also openly criticised a recent report highlighting concerns with Google’s privacy policy while 

illustrating privacy issues related to rivals Yahoo! and Microsoft.


"They'll get news out through a personal blog, so that it doesn't carry as much weight and attention," comments Danny 

Sullivan, search industry analyst and fellow blogger. "There are cases where these bloggers have definitely been cooperating 

with Google PR."


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