Caps or no caps?


Some Search Engines are case sensitive. This gives rise to a new dilemma for webmasters. Should they include keywords in both lower case as well as upper case, especially in Meta tags? Most webmasters actually do so. For instance, they would list the keywords as a set of all possible combinations of upper and lower case.
Webmasters may feel that this is the safest technique to avoid losing potential visitors. However, such repetition may be considered by the Search Engine to be Spam! After all, higher the number of words, higher the combinations.

The best way to get around this problem is to list keywords in lower case only. Most surfers always search in lower case. There are very few cases where surfers use capitals even if the word is a proper name. Of course, you may run a very small risk of losing a few visitors who use upper case, but this risk is minimal. Besides, you do not want to be banned for Spam.

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WinHost Web Hosting

few Search Engine myths


There is an abundance of search engine information available on the web- some of it valuable, much of it contradictory. Throughout the years some prevailing search engine myths have developed. Some of these myths are still encouraged. Others are based upon techniques that were effective years ago but no longer work. Still others come from simple misunderstandings that inevitably come with a relatively new medium. Here is a discussion on some of the most common myths around
Myth: Meta tags are the most important factor in search engine rankings.
Fact: Many search engines (most notably Google) ignore meta tags completely due to constant abuse by webmasters. The only importance placed on meta tags these days is actually the meta description tag, which will appear as the description for the corresponding page on engines that use inktomi data (such as MSN). Meta tags are virtually irrelevant in the ranking algorithms of the top engines- but many people continue to believe that they are the only optimization strategy that they need.
Myth: It’s impossible to do search engine optimization in-house.
Fact: It often is done in house, and done effectively. This is typically when a large corporation hires in-house talent that is largely devoted exclusively to promoting the website. However, it is unrealistic to expect someone with many other job functions to do a credible job of SEO. Much of the skills are acquired through experience- and it isn’t usually desirable to have someone “experimenting” with the company website (especially considering that certain techniques can get sites penalized on engines or banned outright).
SEO isn’t rocket science, but it also isn’t something that can be learned overnight. When deciding whether to outsource SEO or do it in house, it is important to consider the actual costs involved. Often, when the necessary hours it takes to pay someone to learn on the job are taken into account, it is cheaper to outsource (and the results are almost always better). Only a careful evaluation of your goals and resources can determine the best course of action for your company.
Myth: Sites must be constantly resubmitted to retain rankings.
Fact: This is a scare tactic popularized by various submission services and software companies. In fact, it is a waste of money to pay to have your site resubmitted once it is

already listed in an engine’s database. It will not hurt your rankings to constantly submit (or else people would submit their competitor’s sites to get them penalized), but it will not help, either.
Myth: Search engine optimization is not as effective as “traditional” marketing.
Fact: In many ways, it is more effective. Companies often spend countless dollars on direct mail, television and radio advertising, and bulk email without a second thought. The common thread with each of these strategies is that the prospect is “approached” by the company, and that the company must reach a great number of people to find a few motivated prospects. On the other hand, search engines can deliver highly motivated prospects directly to your website- people who have already demonstrated, through their use of particular key phrases, an interest in your products or services.

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WinHost Web Hosting

Plan prices and its various terms



Hi Support,

I want to see the plan prices, and also want to understand each and every term used in that.

You can view the various plan’s prices by logging into the control panel, and then selecting, Online Price in the Billing menu.

You will find lot of terms in that:

Free: the minimum number of units you initially get for free.
In Use: the number of units you are currently using.
Max: the maximum number of units you can have.
Setup: single-time amount payable at the moment when a unit of this specific resource is purchased beyond free units.
Recurrent: the amount payable at the beginning of each payment period for this type of resource. If a resource is purchased in the middle of the payment interval, the recurrent fee is calculated for the period from this moment to the end of the payment interval. Recurrent fee is refundable adjusted for refund percentage.
Usage (i.e. extra): payment for every unit of this resource used over the set quota. It is charged:
– at the end of each billing period;
– when you change to a different plan;
– when you delete this resource, in which case it is calculated for the period from the beginning of the payment interval to the moment of resource deletion or plan change.
Usage fee is non-refundable.
Refund Percentage: If you delete this resource, you will be returned recurrent fee adjusted for the refund percentage for the days left to the end of the current billing period when you quit using the resource.

Things to Avoid Doorway or Gateway pages


Doorway pages are pages that have been designed for one purpose only, to rank high in the search engines for a particular keyword and then direct the arriving visitors further into the site. Usually their design is relatively simplistic and includes a lot of text, but contains very little graphics or other fancy effects.

Doorway pages focus on particular keywords and phrases targeted for search engines and serve as an entry page to visitors. These used to be a popular means to achieve high rankings with Search Engines, but recently, many Search Engines have started completely ignoring websites with doorway pages.
Because creating doorway pages used to be so easy, especially when using programs that can automatically generate hundreds or thousands of pages in a heartbeat by using a simple template and merely placing the keywords in the right places, many sites lost control and created enormous amounts of them.
The search engines initially tolerated this behavior, but as their databases started being filled with doorway pages they soon realized that these pages would quickly conquer the top ranking spots from normal content-rich pages. This would reduce the quality of their indices and lower the value of the search results, resulting in users abandoning the search engine.
Search Engines such as AltaVista began removing doorway pages from its index and in some cases even banning the sites that were using them. Other engines followed suit and soon it was safe to say that the age of doorway pages, at least in the form we used to know them, had passed.
Instead of focusing on doorway pages, you should focus on optimizing your actual content pages.

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WinHost Web Hosting

Keyword stuffing and spamming


Important keywords and descriptions should be used in your content in visible Meta tags and you should choose the words carefully and position them near the top and have proper frequency for such words. However it is very important to adopt moderation in this. Keyword stuffing or spamming is a No-No today. Most search engine algorithms can spot this, bypass the spam and some may even penalize it.
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WinHost Web Hosting

Payments Monthly


Hi,

I want to opt for the your Starter Reseller Plan, what are the various modes by which I can make payments monthly ?

That is great that you want to choose Starter Reseller Hosting plans.
For this Reseller Hosting Plan, You can make payments monthly by either of these possibilities:

Credit card – this type of payment allows you to pay for resources online. Contact technical support if your credit card brand is not supported. Sometimes, the account may require system administrator to approve of your registration, in which case the account will not be available immediately.

Check – you must send a check to the specified location. After the check is received, your account is made available for use. Check payments can be disabled.

PayPal – this type of payment allows you to pay for resources via online payment provider. Your credit card info won’t be stored in your billing profiles and billing info won’t show in the control panel. In order to pay via PayPal, you should have a web-based Personal account registered in the PayPal system.

WorldPay – this type of payment allows you to pay for resources via online payment provider. Your credit card and billing info won’t be stored in your billing profiles. In order to pay via WorldPay, you should have a web-based Personal account registered in the WorldPay system.

2CheckOut – you can pay via web-based payment provider if you have online account registered with 2CheckOut. When you are to pay, you are sent to the 2CheckOut website and all further payments take place beyond H-Sphere. The scheme of 2CheckOut account in H-Sphere is similar to a check account.

You need to make an advance payment not less than the registration fee. Until the payment gets processed, your account won’t be enabled and you won’t be able to purchase hosting resources and services, including control panel account or domain registration.

Dynamic URLs


Several pages in e-commerce and other functional sites are generated dynamically and have? or & sign in their dynamic URLs. These signs separate the CGI variables. While Google will crawl these pages, many other engines will not. One inconvenient solution is to develop static equivalent of the dynamic pages and have them on your site. Another way to avoid such dynamic URLs is to rewrite these URLs using a syntax that is accepted by the crawler and also understood as equivalent to the dynamic URL by the application server. The Amazon site shows dynamic URLs in such syntax. If you are using Apache webserver, you can use Apache rewrite rules to enable this conversion.
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WinHost Web Hosting

Re-direct pages


Sometimes pages have a Meta refresh tag that redirects any visitor automatically to another page. Some search engines refuse to index a page that has a high refresh rate. The meta refresh tag however does not affect Google.
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WinHost Web Hosting

Payment for Unused MB’s


Hi,

I have a shared basic unix plan in which I am getting 500 MB of disk space, I have just hosted one site on it, that is consuming only 90 MB of disk space, I used to pay monthly, do I will get the payment returned for the unsued MB’s.

Regards,

Hi,

Well, in this plan we do provide the 500 MB of disk space, whether you use that space or not, so we are very much sorry, nothing is returned for the unused MB’s.

Regards,

Image maps without alt text


Avoid image maps without text or with links. Image maps should have alt text (as also required under the American Disabilities Act, for public websites) and the home page should not have images as links. Instead HTML links should be used. This is because search engines would not read image links and the linked pages may not get crawled.
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WinHost Web Hosting