
Remember in the movie The Graduate, where Benjamin’s parents are having a party and celebrating Benjamin’s college graduation? Mr. McGuire, a family friend & local businessman, takes Ben aside and says, “I just want to say one word to you — just one word — ‘plastics.’ ”
Well … I want to take YOU aside and say one word to you. Just one word.
OK, OK. It’s actually three words:
Latent Semantic Indexing
Try saying it to yourself. Kind of flows off the tongue, doesn’t it? I’ll bet you really feel smart when you say it?
OK. I’ll try not to get too carried away here.
Anyway, last week, I was minding my own business, doing Google searches to choose which titles I’d use for some articles. I’d done about 6 searches in a row, for different but similar keyword phrases. Each time, each different search, the same article got the #1 rank in Google.
By the 6th time this happened, I figured I probably ought to actually look at the article. Maybe I’d learn something.
Boy, did I. It was a major revelation to me. I absolutely know a perfect example of latent semantic indexing when I see it. But I had no idea how effective it could be. I had no idea that LSI gets Google so excited, it practically slobbers all over itself.
Anyway, I’m going to be doing a 1-hour training call this Saturday night, February 14th, at 9 pm Eastern Standard Time, telling you exactly what my big discovery was and how you can use it to routinely get high listings in Google searches.
If you’d like the call-in information for this conference call, just email me: richard @ NetTrafficMachine dot com (of course, remove the spaces & replace “dot” with a period). Just put “Google slobbers” in the subject line, and I’ll send you back the call-in info.
If you can’t make it at that time, let me know, and I’ll send you a link for the audio file of the call. Plus, I’ve created a nice little tool you may find very useful, and I’ll give you that, too.
Take care,
Richard Dennis