Social Media Spam Saturation: An Event Horizon for Online Networking

July 2nd, 2009

Okay so by this point, most people between the ages of 5 and 55 who use a computer at least once a week have probably heard of social media and social networking Web sites.

Even if you aren’t on Twitter, you’ve no doubt heard about it. You’ve probably heard your friends, co-workers or kids mention Facebook too. And MySpace continues to make the news thanks to sexual predators. Facebook has also dealt with its share of predators on its social networking site.

Social media and networking sites have been around for a while, but like with many things, it sometimes takes time for the general public to adopt them.

It can also take some time for advertisers to adjust to the hottest new social media site too. Twitter has been around since 2006, but it’s only recently (think Ashton Kutcher versus CNN, and Oprah) that the real mainstream has embraced it.

When Facebook first started, it was only for Harvard students. It then expanded to Standford and Yale – then to most colleges. Now anyone can have a Facebook page: individuals, companies…even television characters.

There is a definite correlation between mass adoption of social media sites and the amount of spam and advertising that appears on these sites.

Of course, you say – that’s logical. The more people on a site, the more reach an advertisement has. Duh.

But there also appears to be correlation between the arrival of mass advertising and spammers, and the decline in popularity and reach of social media sites.

Let’s start with Bebo. I personally have never used the site, but I know it used to be very popular. It never reached MySpace or Facebook popularity, but there was a point in time – 2006 through early 2008 - when the site had a respectable global reach.

This is what the Bebo homepage looked like in January 2006.

bebo-homepage-20061

It’s clean, simple, and the call to action for members to join, build a profile and log in are the main focus of the site. There’s virtually no advertising on the homepage, and the focus is on the members who make up the site.

This is what the Bebo homepage looks like in July 2009.

bebo-homepage-july-20091

Whoa! It looks like Bebo took a page from the MySpace playbook and made their entire homepage a branding opportunity for advertisers. While this particular advertiser (the anti-smoking campaign Truth) has a good message, it’s still advertising nonetheless. The focus has obviously shifted from users to advertising dollars.

Enter the decline in popularity.

bebo-on-alexa

Unfortunately, the Alexa stats only go back to late 2007 on this graph, but it’s quickly apparent that Bebo is losing market share. Oops!

How about MySpace? That site certainly took right off, didn’t it?! The site has had well over 120 million profiles created and at one time it was the most popular social site on the Internet.

This is what the MySpace homepage looked like in October 2007.

myspace-homepage-2007

It’s fairly clean and has mostly member-related content on the page. There isn’t an over-burden of advertising on the homepage – just a trailer for an upcoming movie and the MySpace Music section. Again, the focus is on the members.

Fast forward to July 2009.

myspace-homepage-july-2009

This is actually an improvement over their total-page branding that they were doing a few months ago, but there is still a large amount of page space dedicated to advertising. The World Poker Tour online eh? Didn’t the US government just freeze a bunch of online poker assets?

Enter the decline in popularity.

myspace-on-alexa

Whoops! The decline in MySpace popularity and profitability has been widely documented, largely because of the corresponding rise on Facebook.

NewsCorp bought MySpace in 2005, and many users blame the large corporation for turning its attention from users to advertising dollars.

Now let’s look at Facebook. It’s now the most popular and highly visited social networking site, after taking the crown from MySpace in 2008. While MySpace was purchased by NewsCorp in 2005 for $580 million, Facebook has been valued as high as $10 billion!

This is what the Facebook homepage looked like in October 2007.

facebook-homepage-october-2007

It’s obviously very clean, crisp and simple. There’s not a lot – or any! – clutter, and it’s a simple portal for users to access their accounts. The focus is clearly on the users.

Here is Facebook in July 2009.

facebook-homepage-july-2009

Not a whole lot has changed. They’ve added a snazzy global image, but other than that, it’s still a very clean, simple homepage. There isn’t any advertising or branding on the page. There isn’t the latest movie trailer on the page. The focus is still on getting the user to their account.

Guess what? Facebook is still booming! There are over 200 million users, and despite some issues like the click fraud that they’re dealing with, Facebook shows no real signs of slowing down.

facebook-on-alexa

Twitter is the next obvious site to target, but it’s a little different than the others. Rather than being a place to post a bunch of pictures and share your favorite “I love my sorority sisters” gif, it’s a micro-blogging service.

You can find plenty of individuals, businesses and advertisers on the site, but thus far, Twitter management has resisted putting actual advertising on the site.

Users are free to decorate their page however they like, and I have yet to see a movie trailer on the login page.

That’s not to say that there are spammers on Twitter. In fact, it’s a growing problem. But we have a choice in whether or not we follow the spammers. We don’t have to be inundated with spammers if we choose not to be. The focus is still on the users – not the advertising.

So what can we take away from all of this? It’s pretty obvious that so long as a social media and networking site maintains its focus on the user, they’ll be okay.

But the moment the attention turns to growing the advertising revenue, the site starts to lose appeal. And in turn, advertising revenue starts dropping.

Isn’t irony fun?

By: Zack S.

Twitter Trending Topics and Their Staying Power

June 30th, 2009

standing-strong

Ah the Twitter Trending topics – the place for the latest and greatest on Twitter, right? That’s where the strong stand amongst the flood of tweets day after day. When big news breaks, like say Michael Jackson’s death, it is right up there on top of the Twitter trends.

Some companies have decided that getting their company name into the top 10 Twitter trending topics is a great way to boost exposure and get people talking about their company – and how right they are!

For example, the Web site publishing company Squarespace created a contest for Twitter users. All that was needed was to add #squarespace into your tweet, and you were automatically enrolled in to a drawing for one 3GS iPhone a day for 30 days.

As you can imagine, #squarespace quickly leapt into the number one slot for the trending topics on June 8, and it stayed there for….not very long.

I’m not on Twitter 24/7, but while I was watching, #squarespace moved around in the top 10 trending topics for several days, and subsequently hasn’t been seen in a couple of weeks.

The contest is still very much going on, and during the time it’s taken me to write this far, 170 new search results have appeared with the #squarespace tag.

But the tag is no longer on the list for the top 10 trending topics, and it’s probably for one of a couple reasons:

First, it could be that Twitter has simply out-grown promotions. Hah – anyone believe that for a minute?

But it could be that the Twitterati and more interested in hard news these days: MJ’s (death), #iranelection, Honduras, Billy Mays….

trending-topics

If that’s the case, then it’s a sign that Twitter is maturing, and perhaps users are embracing their role as an up-to-the-minute news source.

The other reason we could be seeing such short-lived staying power of Twitter trending topics is simply because users are fickle and our interest can only be held for so long.

It really goes hand in hand with Twitter emerging as a breaking news source. We like our news to be as fresh as possible, and as we saw with Michael Jackson’s death, it wasn’t CNN or the New York Times who broke the news. It was TMZ, and then picked up on quickly by Twitterers.

It’s great if Orbitz decides to do a Twitter giveaway, and they enjoyed a brief stint in the trending topics, but you won’t see them on top anymore.

Twitter is arguably the embodiment of the internet – fast moving and up to date, a collection of ideas and viewpoints, and it’s global. While the majority of users are currently American, that could change as more people adopt the micro blogging service.

But because Twitter is so quick, it presents a challenge to marketers who want to make a splash in the pool, and then stay in the water for as long as possible. It’s a crowded place, with many people and companies clamoring for attention, and even unique ideas like Squarespace’s quickly get overtaken.

What can we learn from this? Well in the SEO industry, we’re constantly adjusting to search engine changes, and working to adopt the latest practices and technologies.

Changing is becoming part of the daily plan of attack for marketers, at least at a micro-level. As online marketers and SEOs, we should embrace the rapidly changing culture of the internet.

By the way, there have now been almost 500 #squarespace mentions since I started writing. So even though it’s not a top 10 trending topic, that doesn’t mean the marketing push isn’t still a success.

By: Zack S.

P.S.
Twist is a great place to track and search trends in the Twitterverse.

Search Engine Market Share and User Loyalty

June 29th, 2009

statcounterglobal1

Amid all the news about Microsoft rolling their Live Search and MSN search engines into Bing, Google unveiling new features day after day, and Yahoo updating their site, there’s a startling trend in the search engine market share: one of very little change.

Brand loyalty is often something attributed to basketball shoes and automobiles – not necessarily search engines.

But according to StatCounter, the overall market share percentages in the United States for each major search engine have barely moved.

search-engine-market-share-may-18-to-present

Google and Yahoo have both registered small decreases in overall market share since July 2008, but in the interim, both have moved up and down – much like the stock market.

Looking at Google’s market share, as of June 28, 2009, Google holds 78.34 percent of the US market. That’s back up after Bing’s one-day leap in the standings on June 4, and less than a one point drop since July 2008.

search-engine-monthly-market-share-july-07-to-present

Sure – the search engine industry is getting more competitive. Google no sooner unveiled their Wonder Wheel feature than rumors of a Yahoo makeover and update were announced. Bing made a splash in the market as well, but overall, the numbers really don’t move much.

Google is still king, and Yahoo, Microsoft (first MSN and Live Search, now Bing) make up distant second and third, respectively. Jumped at the bottom of the heap is everyone else – AOL, Ask, etc.

While the other search engines don’t have a large share of the market, it appears that they have staying power. In fact, AOL’s market share is up from 1.28 percent on May 18, 2009 to 1.41 percent on June 28, 2009. Not a large gain, and the numbers have bounced around, but users are staying loyal.

This brings me to user loyalty. I’ve never really considered myself loyal to one particular search engine over another, but I almost always use Google. The results are fast, usually accurate, and almost any random query I posit, I get what I’m looking for.

Users of Ask, AOL, Yahoo and every search engine have for some reason chosen to stick with their respective sites. AOL and Yahoo have informative home pages filled with news, local weather and personalized recommendations. Some users probably enjoy the home page service – but Google offers all the same stuff; you just have to click for it.

As SEOs, we know that Google is the giant, with a big target painted on its side. But this trend of user loyalty proves that smaller search engines like Ask and AOL are valuable for targeting users who will always stay with what they like.

Google will remain the major target, but we shouldn’t ignore the smaller search engines in the process. For whatever reason, some users have chosen those search engines and there’s no point in missing out on reaching those users!

By: Zack S.

Google Searches Per Day Reach 299 Million in May 2009

June 26th, 2009

The statistic counter company comScore released the U.S. search engine rankings for May 2009 last week, and Google continued to reign supreme.

comScore estimates that in the United States alone, some 14.3 billion core searches were conducted, with Google holding 65 percent of those.

That works out to 9,295,000,000 searches on Google for the month of May and 299,838,709 Google searches per day in May 2009. That’s an incredible number!

Of course, these numbers are before Microsoft’s Bing arrived on the scene, so it’ll be interesting to see the numbers for the month of June when they come out. I suspect there might be a slip dip for the month, but thus far Bing hasn’t made much of an impact on the overall Google and Yahoo’s market share.

What Illegal File Sharing Can Teach Us about Social Media Etiquette

June 26th, 2009

you-and-social-media1

Any active member of a social media community will tell you there are certain rules and policies for the site. They vary from community to community, but some of the basic ones are don’t over self-promote and don’t be a troll.

If you don’t already know, a troll is someone who posts intentionally inflammatory remarks on a community forum or social media site. The entire goal of a troll is merely to tick people off, and they usually are successful.

The self-promotion thing is also pretty standard. Feel free to share your stuff, but don’t make it all about how you’re the lord and master of the online marketing universe or whatever.

Many social media sites have active members who have created multi-way avenues of information sharing. The idea behind the sites is not to be a broadcast center, but to serve as a hub of free-flowing information. There’s give and take from the communities’ best members.

Think back to the early days of peer-to-peer file sharing. Not too early, mind you, but let’s think of Napster as a starting point.

Many of those file sharing programs, legal or not, rated or measured users based on their download to upload ratio. If a user downloaded more than they uploaded (grabbed more than they shared), their score would be dinged.

It’s similar with social media etiquette, but reversed. Don’t upload more than you comment on, retweet, forward others’ work. There needs to be a relative balance between how much you broadcast your own messages and how much you sphinn, digg, retweet and comment on other people’s work that you find interesting and relevant.

People take notice when they see you retweet their blog post. They may even start to follow, based on good-will alone. Your goal on a social media site should be to become a respected and well-followed member of the community – not someone broadcasting from a soapbox.

The last thing you want to do is drive people away from your social media profile. You’re there to communicate and participate, so do that! Just remember that communication is a two-way street of give and take. Don’t let your self-promotion/other content promotion ratio inhibit how effective your communication strategy can be.

By: Zack S.

SEO and Innovation: Staying Fresh and Staying on Top

June 24th, 2009

The internet moves at a lightening pace, and SEO moves with it. Major search engines like Google, Yahoo and now Bing frequently tweak and adjust their algorithms, forcing SEOs to adjust the way they do things.

Sometimes in a matter of mere hours you can see the SERPs move up and down relative to each other.

This means we must be creative and we must be innovative to keep our foothold on first place rankings for competitive keywords.

SEOmoz just published a great article by Danny Dover with their best policies and practices for SEO. It’s a great list, filled with explanations and reasoning behind their decisions.

But SEOmoz could probably publish one of these lists every few months or so with updated ideas and tactics as the computer science behind the major search engines changes.

Follow/nofollow links? To Tweet or not to Tweet? Plaxo? Plurk? Bad link neighborhoods? This is all stuff you’re going to want to consider when tackling search engine optimization.

There’s an outstanding video on the TED website from Clay Shirky about how Twitter can make history. In brief, Twitter and the internet as a whole have changed the way news and information is spread around the globe.

Cell phone pictures and videos, along with text messaging and the ability to upload content to the internet from nearly anywhere remove the gatekeepers from traditionally media sources and make everyone a potential information source.

As SEOs, we can tap into that fast-moving process. As Shirky says in the speech, the goal should be to convene messages and conversations, not control them.

Companies on Twitter that are using it properly should spend more time listening that broadcasting. Tune into what people are saying about your industry and your company, and respond thoughtfully.

There’s nothing wrong with a company doing some self-promotion. I loved the #squarespace iPhone promotion, and all the subsequent copy-cats like the ongoing Orbitz promotion on Twitter – great stuff!

This is innovation at its best, and it’s probably returning great results for the respective companies. But you know what else it’s doing? It’s probably strengthening their SEO.

Inbound links to a site will significantly improve a site’s SEO, so long as they aren’t from a bad link neighborhood. I think Twitter qualifies as at least an upper-middle class neighborhood.

That’s not to mention the number of people who will write on their blogs about the promotion (like this one) – thus increasing the number the inbound links as well.

Internet innovations like these Twitter promotions are great ways to stay fresh and stay on top of the search engines. Sure, it requires some creativity, but take a little time to plan beyond your Web site sitemap structure, and you can really improve your SEO.

By: Zack S.

Things NOT To Do on Twitter: Or Why I Won’t Follow You Back

June 22nd, 2009

Let me preface by saying I don’t think my Twitter account is better than yours. There are some powerful, influential individuals on the micro blogging site who share a lot of great information, and there are some small-scale individuals who tweet some great stuff too.

Over at @realusaseopros, we try to share information about online marketing, SEO, public relations, advertising etc that we find interesting and hope our followers will as well.

Sure, we tweet when we post a new blog, or if there’s a press release done about us – what company doesn’t?

But there’s a line to be drawn with the way some people use Twitter. Step over the line and you risk losing Twitter followers.

We’re thankful for each and every single person/company/bot that chooses to follow us. Every follower is a chance for us to communicate, share ideas and potentially learn from that person.

There are a few caveats though, and they go as follows:

1) I won’t follow you back if you have a terribly written or non-existent biography on your Twitter profile. If you can’t spell “internet”, you’re not going to get my attention.

Similarly, if you don’t have anything written in your bio, I won’t follow you. Trying to guess what you do from a profile picture will get me nowhere and it’s simply not a good branding practice.

Even if you’re simply an at-home marketer trying to make a dollar, write as much. You don’t have to be Guy Kawasaki to be interesting. I look at every single person who starts following the @realusaseopros account. I hover over everyone’s name a read their bio description before deciding (quickly) whether they merit a further look.

2) Along the same line – if you don’t have a profile picture and are simply using the default image, I won’t follow you.

It doesn’t take much to put up an image of you/your company logo/a block of cheese onto Twitter, so do it! It makes you and your Twitter account at least appear more legitimate and legitimacy is what it’s all about!

3) If after I visit your actual profile page I see that you have 3,972 following and 3,899 followers, but only four updates, I’m not going to follow you.

Sorry if that seems harsh, but unless you’re a celebrity or politician, that many followers/following screams spam. I know you can buy entire chunks of people to follow who will auto-follow back, and I’m not interested in helping you pump up your numbers.

If you have interesting things in your Twitter stream, then great! But I’m guessing those four measly updates weren’t so earth-shaking to merit almost 4,000 followers.

4) If you are following me, but what you tweet about isn’t at all related to marketing, SEO, advertising, public relations, branding…then I won’t follow you. It’s nothing personal - I may even like your band’s music! - but we try to keep this account a business one.

5) This last one I’ve written about before, but it fits this article too: having only self-promotion in your Twitter stream.

Maybe you’ve got a great bio description and a good picture, but if when I arrive at your page and every single tweet you have is about your own content, I’m probably not going to follow you.

Of course that’s not the case if you’re CNN, Mashable and others who are centers of information for many of the rest of us. But if you’re a home marketer and you only ever tweet about your own “miracle panacea for online link building”, I won’t follow you back.

Share information that you find interesting across the internet. Let me know how watching your neighbor mowing the lawn gave you an idea about how to market yourself online. It’s your account, and they’re your messages, but if you want to retain audience attention, make it interesting!

We try to use Twitter as a tool to listen, communicate and participate in a large, open community. There are a lot of users on Twitter, and although growth has slowed somewhat on the site, that means there are an ever-growing number of voices to listen to. We appreciate everyone who takes the time to follow our stream and listen to what we have to say. But users who trend to the above list will probably not get our follow.

That being said, we’re always interested in learning from new and interesting people – you!

By: Zack S.

6 Tips for Behavior and Managing Social Media Community Profiles

June 11th, 2009

Congratulations, you’ve gotten your company or brand name on Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, YouTube, Digg and a number of other social media sites…but now what?

Your first post or two was rejected by the community and marked as spam even though another community accepted it. You tried to comment on a post and got thumbed down. Meanwhile, your Twitter profile, which quickly gained 250 followers has now sunk to 89, and you haven’t tweeted more than once a week for the past month.

Social media Web site profiles and accounts can be a powerful and effective way to reach out to your audience, but they need to be handled with care and thought.

#1 Don’t simply leap into community discussion without first listening. This means don’t submit your latest blog post, just because you love it, to each and every social news site. Spend some time on the site and see what is accepted and what gets rejected.

Every site has different moderators, different rules, and different levels of community acceptance. Twitter is fairly straightforward. You’re welcome to spam your stream with self-promotion, and nobody can give you a thumbs down – but they can unfollow you.

When I write a blog article for USASEOPros, I don’t always rush out to submit it to Sphinn – an internet marketing news and discussion forum. I try to participate in the community, “sphinn” articles that others have submitted that I enjoyed reading and found relevant and yes – submit some of my own stuff.

But not everything will get through, and that’s going to be something you’ll want to keep track of. If your first five submits were accepted on Reddit, but you last one wasn’t, what was different with it?

#2 This really should go without saying, but unless it’s a political or religious site, or that’s what your company is involved with, keep politics and religion out of your discussion.

Those are two topics that cannot result in a victorious argument – one that is sure to generate. Someone somewhere will disagree with your stance on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, and you’re simply going to end up in a flame war, potentially damaging your brand name.

#3 Try to be professional. This varies site to site, but if you’re managing a company profile on Twitter, then tweeting about Pamela Anderson’s latest foray isn’t acceptable.

I found this interesting blog post about never LOL-ing on Reddit. If you’re trying to promote a business or brand, that’s probably sound advice.

Keep your responses to blog comments and your own comments to thoughtful, professional language. If someone disagrees with your post, thank them for reading the article, and perhaps offer a (polite) rebuttal of your own.

#4 Don’t make it all about you. If you’re managing your company Twitter account, don’t make it a habit to only tweet about your own stuff. Share industry-related things that interest you AS A PERSON. Make the people who follow your feed feel like there is a real person behind the profile page, not just a corporate entity.

I wrote an article about Twitter spam, and I said one of the easiest ways to drive people away from following you is by only posting about yourself and automating the process.

Yes, Twitter can be exploited and used by a number of automated systems. You can schedule your messages to go off every 12 minutes for a certain period of time on a certain day. You can auto-DM and auto-follow people, but are those things that really going to get you the results you’re looking for?

Having 12,000 Twitter followers is surely an ego-booster, but what if 11,824 of them never click on your links and never read your blogs or shared articles?

I would prefer to have just 100 followers if I knew that all 100 of them were actively engaged with my content and communicating constructively with me.

The same goes for sites like Reddit, Digg, etc. Please don’t let your ego get the best of you on these social sites. Other companies and other people can write quality content and can create something shareable. Don’t shy away from spreading the good word!

#5 Try not to simply dip your toes with these sites. You’ll see much better results if you actively manage your Twitter account day to day, rather than simply appearing now and then after you’ve written a new blog post or your company submitted a press release.

We have several team members who are active on a large number of social media sites, every single day. Yes, as an individual it can get a little crazy to manage 22 different accounts and post, comment, and digg every day, so you might pick just a few to get start.

#6 Trolling has (unfortunately) become part of social media – try not to let personal emotions affect your responses.

If you manage social media accounts for a business, you’re representing more than just yourself online. You have an entire company that you’re speaking for, intentionally or not. Just because someone lashes out at you on a social media site does not mean you need to bare your fangs.

In fact, it’s almost inevitable that you’re going to run across someone who flat out doesn’t like you or your company. Deal with it professionally. The Air Force has a (now) famous blog assessment chart that pretty accurately dictates what your type of response should be.

Air Force Blog Assesment

Air Force Blog Assesment

More than anything when it comes to social media, remember that this is an important avenue to reach out directly to the people you hope to sell to/work with. Keep it composed, keep it professional, and keep it friendly!

By: Zack S.

Bing versus Google: Day by Day, Blow by Blow

June 10th, 2009

I told myself it wasn’t going to be like this: checking the StatCounter stats for US search engine market share daily.

US Search Engine Market Share June 2009

US Search Engine Market Share June 2009

One day Bing rises above Yahoo and overtakes the number two slot in the US…the next day, Bing’s glory is behind it and the market share has fallen.

Bing is new, and it will probably take a few months before things settle down and Bing finds its proper place in the industry. Above or below Yahoo, it’s almost certainly going to be significantly behind Google.

From its low on June 7, Bing has crept back to recapture 1.34 percent of the market for a total of 6.95 percent of the US market share. Not bad – but still third.

What’s most telling is where the percentages are coming from. Google gave up 63 percent of Bing’s market share gain – the rest coming from a mixture of AOL, Yahoo, Ask Jeeves and “other”.

Why is it that Google is losing the larger chunk of market share? I would have thought Google users would be more loyal than your average Ask Jeeves user. It could be that Google’s market share is large enough that a certain percentage is simply always going to flock to the newest and “best” search engine…sorry, decision engine. If you’re an Ask Jeeves user, you’re probably pretty faithful since such a small portion of the US uses it.

So right now it looks like Yahoo is in the middle of a Google – Microsoft search engine battle. Not really a fair fight, but at least Microsoft has the deep pockets to keep fighting versus Cuil or WolframAlpha.

It’s also interesting to note where Microsoft is airing its Bing advertisements on TV. Watching the Daily Show on Comedy Central last night, we were shown two advertisements for Bing. I guess Microsoft figures the average Daily Show watcher is somewhat new-savvy and is more likely to get online to learn more about topics that interest them. Enter Bing.

Want to learn more about Peter Schiff and his 2007 book Crash Proof? Then Microsoft would prefer you Bing! it.

Will Bing continue to grow at Google’s expense? Maybe, maybe not. In the meantime, I might pick up a copy of Schiff’s book and see if I can learn something. Heading over to Google to learn more…

The Daily Show With Jon Stewart Mon - Thurs 11p / 10c
Peter Schiff
thedailyshow.com
Daily Show
Full Episodes
Political Humor Newt Gingrich Unedited Interview

By: Zack S.

SEO Rap Music? You Better Believe It!

June 9th, 2009

What can you learn about link building, proper coding and SEO tactics from a man wearing an oversized shirt, a dangling platinum chain, sunglasses and a backwards baseball hat?

Quite a lot, apparently.

The Poetic Prophet (Chuck), also known as the SEO Rapper has some 14 videos on YouTube under the username m0serious. Titles include “Do the Page Rank“, “Conversion Closing Rap” and “Link Building 101 Rap“.

The most popular in terms of views, “Design Coding” is remarkable.

Lyrics like “do your layout with divs make sure that it’s aligned
please don’t use tables even though they work fine
when it come to indexing they give searches a hard time” go to show that the Poetic Prophet knows his stuff.

The bio says the rapper’s 9 to 5 job is in online marketing. Considering the number of views some of his videos have received, he may just be onto something!

By: Zack S.