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Sue Bell / May 24, 2011 5:45 am
I have a website I built with Wordpress about 8 months ago and I have some decent rankings but have stagnated with improvements. The market is either niche or micro niche and the terms I am targeting are very low competition.
Thanks to lots of coffee and some wonderful training videos I realize that every time I add a new article I am diluting the theme of my website.
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Sue Bell / January 6, 2011 6:27 pm
While creating new algorithms for the Blueprint functions in Krakken I experimented with different filters in TLKT to get an idea of the best way to code Krakken.
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Russell Wright / December 10, 2010 12:39 pm
Theme Zoom’s Krakken is the only keywords of it’s kind that uses natural language processing to sift through tens of thousands of keywords in order to find the most profitable and relevant terms related to your parent theme. These float to the top of the Krakken display screen and are considered the most interesting. You may click the “show all keywords” link to reveal the less perfect keywords algorithmically related to your word. Just because they are deeper in the mix does not mean they are less useful to your business or to your content creation.
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Russell Wright / December 18, 2009 12:57 pm
We will provide you with other videos on this application by other Theme Zoom team members, this video series is just meant to be a reminder of some of the hidden gems found within the Krakken VOMA (vertical online market analysis) application.
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Russell Wright / November 18, 2009 8:41 pm
Theme Zoom LLC is the SEO company responsible for the creation of unusually advanced online keyword intelligence software applications like Krakken. Today Theme Zoom LLC has released the full Theme Zoom Product Relationship Chart. The Theme Zoom team considers the [...]
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Sue Bell / November 7, 2009 10:21 pm
Krakken is a market analysis tool that was designed to facilitate the creation of a silo structured website. The silos created by Krakken can easily be used as a completely new site or as an addendum to an existing site, [...]
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Sue Bell / October 14, 2009 6:53 pm
Ok, I lied. I promised that my next blog post was going to be about creating a “natural search value” column in the Last Keyword Tool, and I’ll get to that, but I thought I needed to stop and show [...]
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Russell Wright / October 8, 2009 4:56 am
Hi folks, What is the difference between The Last Keyword Tool and Krakken? Here is part one of a video that covers this very generally. In this video I cover a new definition: Organic Rank Value: (ORV) is the Organic [...]
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Russell Wright / September 17, 2009 1:52 am
Hello folks, One of the most common FAQ’s we get from new visitors is: “Which Theme Zoom product should I buy . . . Krakken ™ or The Last Keyword Tool ™ ?” The following bullet points will help you [...]
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Russell Wright / August 27, 2009 8:12 pm
Hi folks, We have prepared a couple of surprises for you. Grab them before we put these white papers in a shopping cart. There is no marketing hype, just straightforward information for which we should probably charge. Here are the [...]
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Sue Bell / August 24, 2009 3:39 pm
We’ve been hard at work creating some new filters and columns for you. Some of these were inspired by the abilities we have available in Krakken. I thought I would share the filters with you today and tell you a [...]
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Russell Wright / April 26, 2009 9:44 am
For example, you really should not put a keyword in the non-visible part of your web page (meta-data and meta-tags) that is not also in the visible text of your website. In theory, this could harm your long term rankings. (All of you cloakers and black hatters can ignore this comment, because I can hear your thoughts). But the fact is that the search engines, and especially Google, will penalize you for having inappropriate keywords in your meta-data or “technical website under the hood.” This is why the “technical agenda” deserves its own keyword category. The technical agenda is a complete school of philosophy all on its own.
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Russell Wright / April 22, 2009 9:36 pm
Hello folks, We got a help desk question about Krakken’s co-occurrence column and how to use it. Here is a rough paraphrase of the question: Concerning the co-occurrence percentages what is the difference between a co-occurrence of 85.6 % and [...]
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Russell Wright / March 30, 2009 3:04 am
High level theme keywords are keywords that are worth spending the time and money to own. Low hanging fruit keywords are often times not even worth a meta-tag and description. They are still very useful to have on your website, but it is important to put them into perspective within the overall structure of your website, blog network, or inbound link campaign.