Explosive PR

news and press releases from agency offering Publicity Lite to artists who don't need their hands held

Wednesday, October 12, 2005

Your static web page is obsolete. Dumplingfeed can rescue you from your webmaster and Google limbo.

For immediate release

Dumplingfeed home http://www.dumplingfeed.com
Paperback Hero band site http://paperbackhero.dumplingfeed.com


LOS ANGELES ­ With the rise of search engines like Google and Yahoo,
it's not enough to build a web page and hope it gets noticed. Search
engines are hungry, and demand a constant diet of data to keep your
project on the first page of results. Stop feeding them, and you can
sink like a stone.

New tools like RSS, blogging, mob blogs, wikis and syndication can
create a virtual feedback loop, constantly adding new information that
points directly to you. But these "Web 2.0" ideas are complicated and
confusing for most people. And just because something is "new" and
"cool," that doesn't mean you need it. How do you sort through the
jargon to find the perfect tools for your needs?

This is where Dumplingfeed comes in. Dumplingfeed is a new media
consulting team that blends new and traditional media into
custom-built software tool suites for their clients. This dynamic web
portal updates itself constantly with information the client chooses.

With Dumplingfeed's tools, you can create and publish content that
creates a compelling narrative about your product, increasing sales
and visibility, making it easier and more interesting for customers to
connect.

And unlike other geek factories, Dumplingfeed offers top-notch
editorial guidance from partner Kim Cooper, publisher of Scram
magazine and editor of several acclaimed pop culture histories.

Visit L.A. rock band Paperback Hero's Dumplingfeed site to see how a
band and their fans, working together, have launched a perpetual data
machine that feeds those hungry search engines something fresh every
day. No webmaster, just client-picked content. http://paperbackhero.dumplingfeed.com

For more information on Dumplingfeed, visit
http://www.dumplingfeed.com, or contact Richard Schave at
schavester@gmail.com or by phone (310) 995-4591.