Monday, March 22, 2010

samurai 2


I'd like to provide a brief recap of how I'm arriving at my Samurai Analysis request. I entered what I thought would be my micro-niche into the Keyword Research tool, only to discover that my supposed micro-niche keyword had a SEOC of 231,000! I did have 13 related keywords that were quite relevant, so I selected one I thought would qualify. Of course this selection still managed a SEOC of 165,000! This keyword had 8 related keywords. Again, I selected one that looked to be promising and it finally met the recommended criteria, as listed .It seems to me that the first two attempted keywords, that are specific but still return a high number of competitors, would be far too pricey to use in my SEO tactics. Attached is the SEOC chart of my final keyword. Apart from a high level of page and domain backlinks, it seems that this final keyword shows a great deal of promise. None of the top sites have been around for 10 years, only 1 returns a page rank of 5 and there are nearly all N's and few Y's. I don't question the massiveness of my overall field, but rather is there room for my micro-niche to become successful? Thanks in advance for your assistance.It's stats I have and it's what Market Samurai uses as a base. Gosh I'm drawing on memory here - I think it's from the AOL data compiled (and accepted by industry experts) early last year.Just take a note of the figures I've used above for your own personal reference The actual list is outside of the 30DC teachings as such, as we focus on SEOT primarily. And if you look at it as a percentage,Diversity issues in The Last Samurai were unpacked by two authors from Thailand and Japan. Each author watched the film several times and separately reflected on selected emerging themes. Then, they met to discuss issues that they had learned to outline their co-authored article. The Thai views in this article are philosophically influenced by Buddhism whereas the Japanese views stem from the author’s experiences living in Japan and the U.S. Thinsan sees that diversity is by nature the default of human society, but capitalism and consumerism, driven by and intertwined with greed, hate, delusion and lust, have caused differences to develop as conflicts and destructive confrontations. Akiko shows how diversity issues can be easily ignored by people in the mainstream, and thus problems can go untouched in the Japanese society.
The two authors agree on a number of lessons from the film that can instruct the world about how to understand and nurture diversity in the real world and in the academia. They both believe in the power of education in filling the gaps and overcoming the powerful, subtle obstacles existing in the present world. On that note, they, hence, also suggest ten classroom activities that help promote diversity. we can see for ourselves that it's a huge jump from position one down the spectrum.Caro

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