

Miller also offers webcast training for companies that want to do their own search-engine optimization. Search Mojo also helps organizations set up and manage their pay-per-click ads decide which Web page click-through visitors should land on and measure the conversion rate of the ads, the number of clicks on ads that turn into paying customers or subscribers. Other firms are in the field, Miller said, but a number of them over-promise and mislead customers. "The higher your placement in those engines, the more clicks you get and the more traffic comes to your Web site," Miller said.


Methods include researching which keywords are likely to be used in searches and sprinkling them through a Web site. Search-engine optimization is a way to improve a Web site's placement in results generated by search engines such as Google or Yahoo. Miller is interested in venture capital funding.īig idea: Search Mojo is a search-engine marketing firm specializing in natural search-engine optimization and pay-per-click advertising management. Since its launch two months ago, the company says it has brought in $200,000 in revenue.

Read the full discussion with the White House's own Wordle fiend at The Ringer.Location: President and founder Janet Driscoll Miller primarily works out of her home in McLean and at the Panera Bread in Reston Town Center, where she takes advantage of a Wi-Fi connection to work on her laptop.įunding: Search Mojo is self-funded. When asked for any examples of stressful moments where she played Wordle to relax, Harris said, "They're all classified. Plus, Harris can't share her Wordle scores with anyone because "my phone doesn't let me text anybody, which is sad." The vice president is also a fan of the Times' mini crossword and Spelling Bee - but she's forced to play the "cheapy free version" because her phone doesn't allow her to subscribe to anything. Regular Wordle players can either start with the same word every day or mix it up, but Harris falls into the former camp, revealing her starting word is always "notes" because it has "a healthy mix of consonants and vowels." But we won't talk about that, right?" She says her current streak is 48, although like some other players, it "got messed up when it got moved over to The New York Times." While Harris said Wordle "gets put aside" when she's traveling, she admitted, "I must have played it when I was in Poland.
