Authorising sites

Authorising sites~tip’

Important 1stPro tip,

Authorising sites Google makes the impossible seem simple and the simple impossible.

On your Google AdSense page, Under :- Home, Under :- Account settings, Under :- Access and Authorisation,

Under :- Sites authorised to show ads,  Under this :- {?}

You may not find this link  :-

http://support.google.com/adsense/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=65062

Authorizing sites to display your ads

from 1stPro tips:

AUTHORIS YOUR SITES OR YOU WILL NOT GET ANY PAY.

Authorizing your sites

  1. Sign in to your account.
  2. Visit the Home tab, then Account settings in the left hand panel.
  3. In the “Access & authorization” section, next to “Sites authorized to show ads,” click edit.
  4. Check the box marked Only allow certain sites to display ads for my account.
  5. Enter the URL of the sites that you want to authorize, then click Save

Your changes should take effect within 48 hours.

 

Please note our systems might attribute a few impressions to sites that you do not control and that do not directly have your ad code on them. Check possible reasons for this.

If you don’t add a site to the authorized sites list, and you place your ad code on it, ads will continue to appear on the site but you won’t earn from them. So please enable this feature with caution to avoid missing out on valid revenue.

What happens to sites I don’t authorize?

Important 1stPro tips Authorising sites If a URL displaying your AdSense ad code is not on your list of authorized sites, ads will still show on that URL, and impressions and clicks will be recorded. However, advertisers will not be charged, and you will not receive any earnings for that site.

 

Site authorization is an optional feature that allows you to identify only specific sites that are permitted to use your Google ad code. If you’re particularly concerned about malicious use of your ad code by others, you may wish to use this feature as a precaution.

from 1stPro tips :

AUTHORIS YOUR SITES OR YOU WILL NOT GET ANY PAY.

Important 1stPro Tips to Slug or not to Slug

Important 1stPro Tips to Slug or not to Slug

It’s good to pay attention to the post slug feature inside WordPress, a post recently submitted  to : -

Brian over Copyblogger. The post was titled “Six Common Punctuation Errors that Bedevil Bloggers.” The URL, however, was http://www.copyblogger.com/punctuation-mistakes/

You can see the potential of this little Slug feature. So simple, yet so useful.
If you publish a post on WordPress without specifying the post Slug, W/Press will create a URL that is equal to the post title (provided you are already using an optimal URL structure).

Most of the times, however, that URL will not be search engine optimized.

Important 1stPro Tips to Slug or not to Slug
You probably want to write your headlines and post titles with humans in mind. After all, you need to make them catchy and motivate the reader to check the rest of the content. The same is not true for URLs. While a clean URL structure that contains a description of the page might benefit human users, usually they are more relevant to search engines.
That is where the WordPress post Slug feature comes into play. On the little box that appears on the right of your text editor you can manually set the URL structure for that post. As you can see from the example I mentioned, Brian knew that many of the words used in the title of the post would not be used by users searching for similar information. He decided, therefore, to use just the keywords “punctuation” and “mistakes” in the URL.
When crafting your post Slug try to focus on the keywords that are used on popular search queries, and remember that the fewer keywords you use, the higher their relative value.
Some people were already aware of this trick, but we think it was worth sharing this Slug again.

 

image green slug Important 1stPro Tips to Slug or not to Slug

Important 1stPro Tips to Slug or not to Slug

 

Important 1stPro Tips to Slug or not to Slug

 

 

Important 1stPro tips Categories or Tags

Categories and Tags what’s the difference

 

Categories versus Tags – What’s the Difference and Which One do you use?

 

Categories and Tags are for your visitors, not just search engines.

Think of your visitors’ needs first.

Categories and Tags are about navigation and sorting, grouping your content to help visitors find related information.

Categories and Tags are not fashion statements. Don’t be colorful or imaginative with either.

 

Important 1stPro tips Categories or Tags:-

Categories are your site’s table of contents.

Categories help identify what your blog is about.

Categories represent your body of work on the subject.

Categories are not for you, they are for your reader.

Categories help reader know if they are in the right place.

Categories must encompass collected groups of information.

Categories must be specific enough to help visitors understand the content within, while not being too general or vague.

A category that dominates a blog may need to be spun off to a separate blog. o Categories with only one post tells the reader you don’t know much about that topic.

Important 1stPro tips Categories or Tags:-

Tags are your site’s index words.

Tags are micro-data or meta-data, more specifically micro-categorization for your site’s content.

Tags were indexed by Technorati and others as “keywords” and today are just part of the collection of content they index. They are not indexed nor score “extra points” by other indexing services.

Search engines do not recognize or reward the rel=”tag” which identifies a tag.

If you can’t write five blog post titles/ideas on a topic, then you don’t have a category.

If enough posts have the same tag, and it represents your blog purpose and goals, it’s a category.

PLEASE NOTE :  All categories and tags will link to content on your site, through built-in features or WordPress Plugins. Not sure if they link to your content, test it.

Important 1stPro tip Authorising sites

Important 1stPro tips Authorising sites Google makes the impossible seem simple and the simple impossible.

On your Google AdSense page, Under :- Home, Under :- Account settings, Under :- Access and Authorisation,

Under :- Sites authorised to show ads,  Under this :- {?}

You may not find this link  :-

http://support.google.com/adsense/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=65062

Authorizing sites to display your ads

1stPro tips:

AUTHORIS YOUR SITES OR YOU WILL NOT GET ANY PAY.

Authorizing your sites

  1. Sign in to your account.
  2. Visit the Home tab, then Account settings in the left hand panel.
  3. In the “Access & authorization” section, next to “Sites authorized to show ads,” click edit.
  4. Check the box marked Only allow certain sites to display ads for my account.
  5. Enter the URL of the sites that you want to authorize, then click Save

Your changes should take effect within 48 hours.

 

Please note our systems might attribute a few impressions to sites that you do not control and that do not directly have your ad code on them. Check possible reasons for this.

If you don’t add a site to the authorized sites list, and you place your ad code on it, ads will continue to appear on the site but you won’t earn from them. So please enable this feature with caution to avoid missing out on valid revenue.

What happens to sites I don’t authorize?

Important 1stPro tips Authorising sites If a URL displaying your AdSense ad code is not on your list of authorized sites, ads will still show on that URL, and impressions and clicks will be recorded. However, advertisers will not be charged, and you will not receive any earnings for that site.

 

Site authorization is an optional feature that allows you to identify only specific sites that are permitted to use your Google ad code. If you’re particularly concerned about malicious use of your ad code by others, you may wish to use this feature as a precaution.

1stPro tips :
AUTHORIS YOUR SITES OR YOU WILL NOT GET ANY PAY.