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List Moderator:                     Published by:
Adam Audette                          LED Digest
adam, led-digest.com     http://www.led-digest.com
..............................................
March 16, 2007                     Issue no. 2369
..............................................


            .....IN THIS DIGEST.....


======= NEW ====================

        --== Image Protection ==--

                ~ Mal Bailey
"...I stumbled across a relatively good way of
reducing image theft..."

                <Moderator Comment>


==== CONTINUING =================

        --== Marketing with Press Releases ==--

                ~ John Smart
"I saw over 100 press releases a day, and
got some good insight."

        --== Design Change Shortcuts ==--

                ~ Mike Collins
"I use php includes for navbars, footers,
adsense units..."

                ~ Bree Weasner
"I use Frontpage's Shared Borders!"

                ~ Phil Scimone
"I started out many years ago building
Macromedia Dreamweaver templates..."

                ~ Steven Birk
"...the more SSI you use on a page, the greater
possibility your page can load slower..."

                ~ Francisco Becerra
"Dynamic Web Templates .dwt is the way
to go for html pages."

        --== Moving Sites ==--

                ~ Brad Waller
"A few years ago we sold the EP.com domain
and moved all the content over to EPage.com."


==== BULLETIN BOARD =============

        --== Help Wanted: MarketingSeeker.com ==--
                ~ Adam Boettiger


========== NEW ===================================

From: Malcolm Bailey
Subject: Image protection (again)

Hi LED'ers,

During research for another project I stumbled across a relatively
good way of reducing image theft, and certainly a way to stop users
hotlinking to images.

Now I don't actually have any use for this myself, but I recall that
this topic has been raised on LED several times with some people
really looking for ways to prevent this as their business is image
based...

At the moment I've just made a simple proof of concept (email me if
you'd like access) that was manually created with a bit of work. I'd
be interested to hear how many LED'ers would be interested in
utilizing a system and what they'd be willing to pay. (It would
require some server side development work to automate the process
and make it even more secure)

Downsides I'm aware of:

1. Determined people will always be able to get a copy, it's about
raising the bar to stop as many people as possible

2. Your images wouldn't be viewable in google image search.

Thanks in advance,

Mal Bailey
www.aethon.co.uk

<Moderator Comment>

Speaking of protecting content, we recently had a discussion that
referenced Copyscape.com (see issue 2362: Dealing with Content Theft
http://www.led-digest.com/content/view/1763/55/ ).

This week an LEDer sent me a neat alternative service: Article
Checker allows you to insert text or upload files to compare while
it spiders the Web for dupes. Pretty neat tool:
http://www.articlechecker.com/

(tip of the 'ol LED cap to Jeremy!)

Have a great weekend,
Adam


======== CONTINUING ===============================

From: John Smart
Subject: PR Services

I was the 1st copy editor at m2 PressWIRE (m2.com). I saw over 100
press releases a day, and got some good insight.

1 page is good, 2 pages can be okay, if the content is good. 3 pages
is shredder fodder unless it is major (Bill Gates arrested for
throwing eggs at IBM major).

You can cheat a little on this - a one page 3 paragraph release is
good, the Headline is essential - as is the 1st paragraph.

My job was to take all the press releases, put them all into a
database, and pass on the good ones to the editorial team. If the
headline and 1st paragraph didn't get me, it never made the
editorial desks.

A good press release should be:

Excellent headline. Do not try to be funny if you are not funny - it
never works. If you are funny, go for it! Be relevant, brief and
precise. 10 words to define your news - and the headline should tell
me most of what I need to know to understand what the press release
is about.

1st paragraph - who, what, where and why. Today, this person at this
company did this good thing

2nd paragraph - why it is a good thing, why it is the right person /
company to do it.

3rd paragraph - extra details - how this came to be, why you want to
know about it.

Then for the very rare occasions when the journalist wants to do
some work, notes to editors. This would be (in our case) something
like:

--------------------
Internet Design has been in the web development industry for over
nine years, and has offered world class hosting for the past 7
years. Internet Design can be reached at www.InternetDesign.com or
by calling (555) 555-5555
--------------------

Do not forget to include a contact method in the press release in
case they just print it verbatim.

I saw thousands of press releases, and I remember two of them. One
was very nerdy from IBM, it just caught my interest! The other one
included a tea bag. It said across the top - this news is so good,
you will want to make a drink, sit down and read this. I showed that
one to everyone - use your imagination, make it memorable.

Finally, get a trade magazine - most of the 'news' in those is press
releases. get a feel for what works, especially for your industry.

I hope this helps.

John Smart
InternetDesign.com


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-------- new post - new topic ---------

From: Mike Collins
Subject: Design

> Having an external .js file?
> Frontpage extensions?
> Wordpress or blog format?
> Server side includes?
        - Richard Graham, LED Digest 2368
        - http://www.led-digest.com/content/view/1769/55/

I like server side includes. I only need to update one simple file
to make changes across my entire site. SSIs are seamless to both
human eyes and SE spiders, and they keep your source code clean and
easy to understand.

I use php includes for navbars, footers, adsense units (great for
testing to see what converts best), and anything else I think I may
want to update at a later time.

Mike Collins
http://www.webtrafficsecretsexposed.com


-------- new post - same topic --------

From: Bree Weasner
Subject: Design

> What method do you all use for separating the content
> and navigation of your pages? ( i.e. so you don't have to
> re-edit every page if you want to change the left hand menu)
        - Richard Graham

Richard,

I use Frontpage's Shared Borders!  When you save the change, all
pages are automatically updated and saved.  Just remember when you
add a new link or edit any of your shared borders, you've got to
upload all the pages of your site.

You can take a peek here (I'm using top, left and bottom shared
borders): http://www.preciouspets.org

Bree Weasner


-------- new post - same topic --------

From: Phil Scimone
Subject: Design

I started out many years ago building Macromedia Dreamweaver
templates and putting all the main navigation elements into the
template. When I needed to add a new navigation element, I simply
added it to the Dreamweaver template. Dreamweaver would then
regenerate all the pages that used the template. Dreamweaver knows
which pages use the template because it embeds template comments
into the page.

Over the years, those Dreamweaver Template driven pages have been
abandoned to use Server Side Includes. I find SSI easier to use and
more robust. Managing navigation elements are a breeze but it is
really only second to the benefits of easily generating chunks of
information extracted from backend database operations.

For instance, several of my sites use a Partners page for link
exchange. I have a form on my sites to accept link exchange requests
which are submitted into a mySQL database. I get notification of the
submission and I can just login to my site manager application
(custom built), locate the request, approve or deny, and then
republish that page for the specific site.

The republish operation simply re-generates the SSI file. When a
visitor goes to the partners page, the server "includes" the file in
the content area of the page where I've embedded the include
statement. It's simple, clean, and easy to automate and integrate
into backend processes.

Regards,

Phil Scimone
www.orangetreeweb.com


-------- new post - same topic --------

From: Steve Birk
Subject: Design

I use Server Side Includes (SSI) to put my top, left, right and
bottom navigation into all my pages.

For example... for my top navigation, I'll just have a file called
nav_top.html that resides on my server. In that file will be just
the code that I want to appear at the top of my page (no title,
keywords, etc... just the actual code of what the top navigation
should look like).

Then inside all my pages where I want this nav_top.html code to
appear, I put in the following:

<!--#include virtual="nav_top.html" -->

If some of your pages are in a subdirectory, i.e.
http://medcenternews.com/emergencycard/index.shtml , the include
virtual code would have to look like this on that page so it can
find the nav_top.html file:

<!--#include virtual="../nav_top.html" -->

Then when someone goes to that page, the server will include this
nav_top.html code into that page. If you want to change your top
navigation, you change one file, the nav_top.html file, and every
page will then have the updated top navigation.

Your file names of your pages do need to end in .shtml for SSI to
work. I would imagine that most web hosts support this, but you
would have to check. Also, the more SSI you use on a page, the
greater possibility your page can load slower due to the server
having to put the code into your page before your visitor can see
your page. Be interesting to hear what others more experienced in
using SSI have to say about this.

Regards,

Steven Birk
http://medcenternews.com


-------- new post - same topic --------

From: Francisco Becerra
Subject: Design

Dynamic Web Templates .dwt  is the way to go for html pages.

Also, MS Expression Web (new product) is leaps ahead of FrontPage. I
really can't use FP anymore.

Francisco Becerra, Director

Sombrero Brasil
www.sombrerobrasil.com


-------- new post - new topic ---------

From: Brad Waller
Subject: Moving sites

A few years ago we sold the EP.com domain and moved all the content
over to EPage.com.  Between branding being better for EPage and the
offer for the old domain, it made business sense to do this.  We
negotiated lots of things and had time to set up the sites before
the transaction completed.  We owned both sites simultaneously for a
while and had an unsuccessful venture on the EPage.com site, which
made it a lot easier to manage the changeover on our terms.

We completely moved everything from EP.com to EPage.com with no
changes so that all content, URLs, etc. were exactly the same as on
EP.com.  We even changed the IP address over from the old domain to
the new one.  We then used an NSAPI to create a dynamic 301 redirect
that would detect the incoming URL and set up the redirect to the
identical page on EPage.com

We sent all our users and affiliates email notices, and made sure
that there were notes about this change in all communications
(newsletters, affiliate stats messages, etc.) before the changeover.
 I personally emailed our top 100 affiliates to make sure that they
knew about the change and what to do. We updated (or attempted to
update) all links to us in directories such as Yahoo!, DMOZ, and
Affiliate industry related sites.

We monitored the log files and dynamically inserted a large red
notice to the top of status emails to all affiliates who had not
updated their links. We also looked to see which sites that linked
to us had not made changes so that we could contact them and ask to
have them update their site.  To this day, we still find active
sites that have not updated their links (I found one last week), and
then I contact them to make the change.

Unfortunately, there are thousands of orphaned and dead pages out
there that will never be updated that link to EP.com, most likely
with the text "Internet classifieds."  Try this without the quotes
in your favorite search engine and see where EP.com shows up almost
2 1/2 years after the change.

You can use the Alexa data comparing both sites
(http://tinyurl.com/33u875) to see what happened. There was a few
month long drop in traffic, but it is hard to say if that was from
the change or part of a drop that started earlier in the year.  If
you look back, you will also see a regular drop in traffic/reach at
the end of every year, so this could be a natural curve.  I would
say that the immediate drop was from Google retaining the EP.com
rankings for classified related content, as you can see some jumps
in the new owner's data - and I know they never promoted the site or
used it for anything other than their corporate page.  As far as I
could determine, they never monetized the new domain online or in
print literature.

I would asses some of our longer term drops to market changes
(Craigslist) as well as moderate drops in ranking because we lost
thousands of links from those dead sites, plus some of the actual
people that were not making it to us through those links.  Alexa
data or not, I would say that our traffic levels are about where
they were before the domain change, and have never been more than
30% lower.  Considering the tens of thousands of people who come to
our site through Google a month, we could have seen a much larger
drop if we were dropped from Google when the content was moved to
the new domain.

Brad Waller

Manage and Sell your own site advertising
http://adjungle.com


==== BULLETIN BOARD ===============================

From: Adam Boettiger
Subject: Help Wanted - MarketingSeeker.com

After ten plus years of agency and client-side advertising and
marketing experience, and many time-consuming hunts for contractors
and vendors, I've decided that there has got to be a better way to
identify great marketing services vendors.

Craigslist is a *wonderful* tool - I use it and love it, but I've
used it to find vendors for clients and often get tens or hundreds
of vague responses. Asking friends is also great, if they have the
time to help you and if they know who would be a good fit.

Right now I am looking for help from fellow LEDers who provide
marketing services in the following areas:

Website Design Services, Webmaster/Website Maintenance, Online
Marketing Services, Email Marketing Services, Marketing Consultants,
Sales Consultants, List Brokers, Lead Generation, Click Fraud
Services, Search Engine Optimization, Text Link Building Services,
Pay Per Click Campaign Management, Graphic Design Services, Flash
Design/Development, Press Release Services or other marketing
specialties.

MarketingSeeker.com connects clients directly with 3-5 prescreened
vendors at no cost.

I'm building my vendor referral database and would like to invite
any LEDers to fill out the vendor form at
http://www.marketingseeker.com/vendors/ to get on my radar for
potential business referrals.

If there are folks on the list who would prefer to be referred to a
small handful of screened vendors rather than be bombarded by
vendors and contractors from around the globe, please do feel free
to peruse the site and bookmark it as a free resource for the next
time you need help promoting your business.

Thanks!

Adam Boettiger
http://www.marketingseeker.com/


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