Chinese and English SEO
The most popular Chinese search engines are Baidu and Google (Chinese). There”"s nearly few difference in doing Chinese and English SEO. The most import thing is to choose the right keywords which is very difficult for non-Chinese to do so. If you have difficulty to find your ideal search term, please let me know. Actually, SEOing for Chinese terms is very easy because it is far less competitive than optimizing for English terms. Below are a few basics.
>>keywords in title
>>keep the keywords at the beginning and end of the page
>>3~10% keyword density
>>h1, h2, h3
>>bold, strong tags
>>anchor text links in internal pages, it is still very powerful for Chinese search engines.
>>external anchor text links.
Nearly all external links count, Google Chinese is not good at finding which link is an authority or expert or spam, if you don”"t have link resources from Chinese sites, your can have anchor text links from your English or other language pages. Many Chinese SEO sites get links by spamming the English blogs, wikis, free-for-all link page….and there are jus doing well.
Review of Marketing Main Event III
365 Days to the day we’re please to announce
the biggest event in the Internet Marketing
calendar is back for the third and final time.
This is so big there could never be another
like it…
Review of Marketing Main Event III
In my wanderings I have passed countless sites talking about everything
from how to host a site to hiring graphic designers. I’ve been on
countless forums… scrolling over pages of banter between programmers and
the unenlightened masses…
Trying to put together membership sites used to monetize my efforts
online, can seriously be a hassle. Even the original passion for a product
starts to subside when you start checking-off a to do list.
This is where MME3 or Marketing Main Event 3 comes to answer the call. I
did a search for “CMS Infusion” or CMSI, which basically – is used to
create niche sites, membership sites, sales letter sites – something you
use to build 99.9% of all your sites.
The thing that sets MME3 apart form other web building programs is the
graphically-driven easy to use interface, otherwise known as “The God
Panel” because of it’s powerful potential to operate an entire business by
itself.
If you are building all you sites yourself, putting up your own new
products every other day and making a fortune… you may have a better
grip on this internet biz thing then I do.
Do you thrill at putting your own sites together… or do you come away
from a night at Dreamweaver possessing only half a head of hair? Either
way, I’ve found the biggest helping hand since Tim Berners-Lee (father of
html) or Al Gore (great creator of the internet) put together.
Look it up and…Definitely check this out:
http://www.marketingmainevent3.com/rep/website4wealth/
Be sure to check back later for more interviews and reviews here on my blog.
Ultra Marketing Marathon

There’s a new lightning-speed way to
make money online…
These true “moneymachine” systems are like
having an ATM…in your living room!
I have a place reserved for you but you
have to get a ticket yourself:
Tellman Knudson’s Ultra Marketing Marathon turns
even the “softest” newbie into an Iron Man when
it comes to making money hand-over-fist!…
(and he has the screen shots to prove it–
take a look)
Act now and start your 7 day marathon.
To your success!
Andy
Computex 2007- Taiwan
Here is my visit to the 2007 Computex event in Taipei Taiwan.

COMPUTEX TAIPEI 2007
One of the World‘s Top Two
Asia‘s Top IT Extravaganza? and Reaching Higher!
With a fresh slate of records for participation and attendance, Computex Taipei is heading into its 27th year to consolidate its standing as the world‘s second largest IT show and highlight Taiwan‘s position as the leading IT supplier to the world. The 2006 fair surpassed projected attendance with about 30,000 overseas buyers and a total of over 130,000 visitors, generating on-site orders and sales worth around US$12.5 billion. Representatives of all industries, sectors, and companies from regions and nations around the globe milled about four spacious Taipei World Trade Center halls housing 2,907 booths to browse, network, source, and exchange.
Best of Taiwan and the World
COMPUTEX TAIPEI places you under one roof with Acer, Asustek Computer, BenQ, VIA Technologies, Hon Hai Precision, First International Computer, Gigabyte Technology, Micro Star International, Mitac, Arima Electronics, CMC Magnetics, Ritek, Inventec and Tatung. And leading global heavyweights like Nvidia, ATI, Fujitsu, Intel, AMD, Microsoft, Toshiba, Infineon Technology, Pine Technology and TI are always featured.
Leader Across the Board
When it comes to the IT industry, Taiwan is truly consultant to the stars, making this little island a powerful dynamo with numerous top worldwide rankings in production volume, production value, and market share

A real suprised when I ran into John Chow, one of my favoriate blogger on the internet space. An inspiration to me and my internet success. Here is us enjoying the free Redbull from the event.
Cheers!
Andy Huang
Stock Market Technical Analysis Review for 6/6/07
Technical analysis video review of the stock market and individual stocks for Tuesday June 5, 2007 including; Nasdaq 100 Trust Shares (NASDAQ:QQQQ), S&P 500 Index (AMEX:SPY), Semiconductor HOLDRs (AMEX:SMH), iShares Russell 2000 Index (ETF) (Public, NYSE:IWM), OMNI Energy Services Corp. (Public, NASDAQ:OMNI), ADTRAN, Inc. (Public, NASDAQ:ADTN), Teva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd (ADR) (Public, NASDAQ:TEVA), SuperGen, Inc. (Public, NASDAQ:SUPG), Halliburton Company (Public, NYSE:HAL) Netflix, Inc. (Public, NASDAQ:NFLX). Trend analysis for daytraders and swingtraders of stocks and options. Trading stocks involves risk; this information should not be viewed as trading recommendations.
Baidu-Google Rivalry Continues
Baidu has a huge share of the Chinese search market. Google does not. And as if that wasn’t bad enough (from the American company’s perspective), people are once again noticing that Baidu has made fun of its Mountain View-based competitor.

Computerworld’s Sumner Lemon reports the content of an advertisement in which a “Western man . . . speaking heavily accented Chinese†interacts with “a suave Chinese man dressed in scholar’s robes laughs.â€Â I’d never seen this commercial – turns out it was put on YouTube over a year ago – but it’s an interesting video.
“As the ad unfolds, the Chinese scholar proceeds to humiliate the Westerner, mocking his poor Chinese-language skills,†writes Lemon. “In the end . . . the Westerner is left confused, alone and humiliated.â€Â These characters represent Baidu and Google, by the way.
I’m not offended – it generally takes more than a commercial to bother me – but can you imagine what would happen if Google put out commercials making fun of a Chinese man’s English? Aside from the hubbub over Google actually making a commercial, I don’t think it would be a good PR move.
That’s just a side note, though. The real problem (again, from Google’s point of view) is that the advertisement may be close to reality. Gord Hotchkiss, who serves as the CEO of Enquiro and also writes for Search Engine Land, notes, “The homegrown competition, Baidu, has a 62% market share. Google has a 20% market share. And Google seems to be struggling to grow its market share. In fact, it’s been slipping . . .â€
Google needs to do something – perhaps, as Baidu implies, become more familiar with Chinese – in order to arrest this slide.
About the Author
Doug is a staff writer for WebProNews. Visit WebProNews for the latest eBusiness news.


