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The Importance of Proper Site Updating and Maintenance to Achieve Success

SEO update and content strategy comprises of the dissemination phase that includes the process of maximizing its potential for the effective distribution through social networks.

The Importance of Proper Site Updating and Maintenance to Achieve Success

SEO update and content strategy comprises of the dissemination phase that includes the process of maximizing its potential for the effective distribution through social networks

Showing posts with label Create backlink. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Create backlink. Show all posts

Saturday, January 18, 2014

PPC Management Operations:




When your PPC operations are set up well, account management should run like a finely tuned machine. Just like a car's engine, PPC management needs regular tune-ups and maintenance in order to perform at the optimal level.
When you have regularly scheduled checkups daily, monthly, quarterly and semi-annually, you miss less opportunity to respond to change and increase your return on investment.
Planning is half the battle, so here's your starter calendar for your PPC management at the start of a new year.

Daily PPC Tasks

Every business is different and the level of attention needed for certain accounts will vary. But in general, one of the first things you should do is check your accounts each day to see what happened yesterday.
  1. For ecommerce, check ad spend and revenue.
  2. For lead gen sites, check conversions.
Those are the two basic performance indicators – what everyone cares about anyway. But look for standouts – did any one account spend way more or less than usual? Did it have a fantastic sales day? Track the ups and downs.
And don't get too freaked out if something looks out of the ordinary. Unless the client is used to making $10,000 per day and it dropped down to $1,000, it's likely part of the inconsistencies businesses sometimes see.
Pro tip: If you're an agency or consultant and you notice something is off, call up the client. They might be able to explain the odd behavior, for example, the shopping cart was buggy or someone internally clicked on the ad and put items in the shopping cart to test the process, thus making a purchase. (I've seen both of those scenarios and more). If you're running your own PPC, talk to others on your team or dig deeper to uncover reasons why you might be seeing this behavior.

Monthly, Quarterly & Semi-Annual PPC Tasks

These tasks within your PPC calendar will once again depend on the individual business and its advertising needs. For example, changing ad messaging could be a quarterly task, but depends on how much data you have about your ad performance, or if you have special campaigns that run consistently on a shorter timeline.
A good rule of thumb is: the newer the account, the more attention it will need – and some of the tasks we're going to go over may occur more frequently in that case.

5 Monthly PPC Tasks

1. Negative Keyword Management
The simplest and easiest way to avoid wasted money is managing negative keywords. If you stay on top of this, squandered ad spend is practically non-existent. For newer accounts or existing accounts that need a revamp, doing this daily is wise.
2. Review Ad Positions and Manage Bids
You want to make sure you're claiming top spots in paid search placement, just like in organic search. Bid management is key, and you can help streamline this with rules and settings in advertising platforms like AdWords.
3. Communications With Clients or the Team
If you're a party of one running your own campaigns, this doesn't really apply. But if you're managing PPC on behalf of a company, a monthly check-in is a must, and can go a long way when you learn about something the client or team is working on that you can assist with.
4. Watch for Good and Bad Performers
View this at the campaign level down to the ad group and keyword level. It's also sometimes beneficial to do this in reverse as well.
5. Google Display Network Management
Site exclusions are to the Display Network what negative keywords are to paid search ads. Make sure you're managing which sites your ads are featured on, so you're not inadvertently showing up on weather sites if you're a cloud computing company (true story!).

12 Quarterly or Semi-Annual PPC Tasks

Many of the following are interchangeable (quarterly or semi-annual), and depending on the account, you could do them on a monthly basis. I recommend semi-annually at the very least.
1. Click-Through Rate Review
This is at the keyword level, and the rule of thumb is to flag anything below 1 percent CTR. However, it's not uncommon to see high-volume keywords with less than 1 percent.
If the ROI and quality score for the keyword is healthy, you can often just leave it be. Otherwise, consider pausing it and weighing your options for tweaking the messaging or something else.
2. Sitelinks Audit
It's a good idea to check in and see what sort of sitelinks are set up. When things change on the website (for example, sales or product pages are added), the sitelinks can also change to drive traffic to the new pages. You can also review how the sitelinks are performing, and axe the links that don't get clicks.
3. Quality Score Reports
Here, you're looking for low score between 1 and 3 that should be addressed immediately. Sometimes when accounts have been poorly managed, the quality score will remain low for some time – even if you're doing everything right – until the improved practices have been in place for a while. You might even decide to pause these keywords and reinstate at a later date.
Quality scores of 4 and 5 are also worth flagging to investigate.
4. Keyword Trends and Program Development
You can sometimes find keyword trends when you're managing negative keywords. However, longer data sets like three or six months can help you better identify them. These trends can forge new campaigns you may not have thought of before.
5. Consider Remarketing and Product Listing Campaigns
These advertising options can fall by the wayside in favor of regular search network campaigns. Have a close look to see if remarketing or PLAs might be an option at this time. Similarly, if they are already set up, review their performance to look for improvements.
6. Campaign Performance Review
Starting at the campaign level, and working down to the keyword level, isolate the "darlings" of the campaigns and optimize for best performance. Also work on improving the worst. With poor-performing campaigns, make a decision about what you want to do – pause it or work on it more.
7. Ad Messaging
At this point in the campaign, it might be a good time to refine and test the ad copy.
8. Settings Audit
Sometimes campaign settings "mysteriously" change. It happens to the best of us, so it's always good to do a review of every setting to check for anything that may have been turned on, off, or modified accidentally.
9. Geo "Hot Spots"
Are there any cities, regions, or states that show the most ROI? Decide if you'll isolate those; it's always worth trying. Don't forget about international opportunities as well.
10. Search Partner Review
When you're advertising on the Google search network, it includes other search partners like Amazon and even Yahoo and Bing. Check the ROI for those other sites and if it makes sense, turn off these partner sites to save money (especially if you're working with a smaller budget).
11. Competitor Review
This one can be challenging if you don't have good tools. It's sometimes hard to trust the data coming from providers that claim they have it. You can start with Google Auction Insights.
12. Day Parting
Check the campaigns against times of day or days of the week to see if anything may need adjusting. If you have a tight budget, you can save a little money by only running when you know your audience is online, for example, during the week for some B2B businesses.

Ongoing PPC Management

Advertising platforms change all the time with new features. Staying on top of this can be a full-time job, but build it into your calendar. You don't want to miss important updates that can enhance your ROI.
Try reviewing the latest updates in AdWords here and here, and in Bing once a month when you're performing some of your other reviews.
But keep in mind that every new advertising product doesn't fit every account, so use discretion on what you pursue; testing new features are good, but you don't want to waste resources on those that aren't a good fit for your account.

Google Images Makes it Easier to Search by Usage Rights

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Google Images has made a great change to its search results. Users can now search for images with specific usage rates more easily. This will be extremely helpful for webmasters and others to find images that they can use for publishing on their own sites.
While Google has actually offered filtering based on photo licenses since 2009, it was a little-known search feature buried in the advanced search options. With the change, users can easily see it and filter the results accordingly.
To access it, simply click "Search Tools" on the image results page, and along with the usual search settings such as size and date, there is now a new drop-down for usage rights. The default is set to "not filtered by license" but users can change it to "labeled for reuse", "labeled for commercial reuse", "labeled for reuse with modification", and "labeled for commercial reuse of modification".
Sites such as Flickr, as well as stock photography sites that offer a variety of photo rights, have long had this type of filtering in their own search results. Bing began offering its own license search filter last summer, so it's surprising that Google took so long to make the change obvious to the average searcher.
As a word of caution, as with any image search, do be aware there are sites that republish photos allowing for reuse, but are actually not the original owner. However, using Google’s reverse image search can help determine the originating owner of an image and to determine what the correct licensing on the photo is.

Wednesday, December 11, 2013

Benifits Of Inbound and outbound Links

                                                                      
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What are Inbound Links ?:-
Inbound Links (Back links) are the links pointing to your website from other' website or other place on the Internet. Inbound Links send people to your website from other website and plays a very important role into the the success of your blog or website. It helps to acheive good traffic and better ranking as well. 
Different ways to Create a Back link :- 
a.Create a Quality Content :- Creating Quality based and relevant content is one of the best way that increase the Inbound Links. Because Quality Content holds more chances to share by the visitors. The main purpose f creating Quality Content is providing value to your targeted visitors.
Take the time to look at the post that already ranked well in search results and notice their structure, quantity and word placement as well. Remember that Quality Content Holds The Success of your blog or website.
b.Share Your Content on Social Networking sites :-As we know that, now a days social netwoking sites are on boom and these sites are another great way to create Inbound Links. Sharing your post on these sites is a way to create a Inbond Link and has great response as well. 
Search Engines are quickly crawl these site like Facebook, Google+, Digg etc. Try to share use content of your blog on Social Networking sites this helps you to boost you traffic to your blog and Page Rank as well. 
c.Guest Posting :-Guest Post is another a best way to create a natural Inbound Link. You can create a post for other' blog and include a link to your blog in your introduction or bio. Create a quality post and choose the best blog to submit it. 
Make sure that in which you are submitting your post have the same audience or visitors. Don't submit your post on that blogs that are different niche from your blog.
d.Backlink Analysis:-Conduct backlink analysis on competing web sites or blogs – find out who is linking to competitor sites that are not linking to yours. Ask sites linking to multiple competitors to link to yours as well. If another web site or blog is already linking to multiple competitors, there is a chance they’ll link to your blog as well.
e.Comments on other Blog:-Commenting on other' blog and forums are another a great way to create Inbound Links. When you are commneting on other' blog there is a chance to share your blog' link with your comments, same thing follow for forums. Make sure that you are sharing your link on that blogs that are same to you niche that will help a lot to generate more traffic to your blog or website. 

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What are Outbound links?:- Outbound Links are the links on your website or blog that points another website or blog on the internet means pointing another websites from your website these links send your visitors away from your website to another website. 

Many of people have different - different views about Outbound Links and many of them follow that they should minimize the number of Outbound Links, since they send people away from your blog or website. But this advise is not well, if you want to link relevant content that gives more information to your reader then in that it will ensure the quality of your content and increse the visitor trust as well. 


Benifits Of Outbound links :- Outbound Links are also the most important aspect of Search Engine Optimization. By creating Outbound Links you can increase your Page Rank and traffic as well. Search Engine' crawling rate can be increased to your blog when you are using Outbound Links.

  1. Outbound Link to relevant information makes Search Engien Happy.
  2. Targeted Visitors.
  3. Best way to be in touch with bloggers having same niche.

Monday, December 9, 2013

5 Ways to Improve Owned Digital Assets

I come bearing gifts. It is difficult, from time to time, to get the creative juices flowing -- especially when it comes to finding strategic next steps for a client. For a longstanding initiative, you have likely tested and performeView blogd a lot of tactics in reaching digital marketing success.
This time of year doesn't help at all either, as our brains are mostly fried from a busy year of keeping up with the many changes and needs born from the digital marketing industry. With this, I thought it would be fitting to discuss of a few tasks you can undertake with little innovative or creative thought.

Links, in Relation to Robots/404/302

I see this all the time and love when I have the chance to do some link harvesting with a tool like Open Site Explorer. Review the top linked pages on your site. You may find that from this report that you have links pointing to pages on your site that are excluded from search engine view via robots.txt or the Meta Robots tag. This is link value that is not getting through the door.
Also, take a look at those pages heavily linked to that are 302 temporarily linking to another page on your site. Turning this into a 301 permanent redirect will help search engines start giving credit to those links. Last, how many links are pointing to pages that are now 404 error pages where you may have accidently deleted the page or someone has got the domain linked correctly but the page name is incorrect?

Bad Redirections and Old Domains

This may sound a little similar to the above topic, but with a different twist. Do you own any other domains that have link value/domain age and are not permanently redirecting to the current site? I see this issue often, where a new site is created and the old site/site pages are 302 redirected to the new site.
Additionally, do you have any other old owned domains that are simple sitting aside and not being redirected to the current business or organization site? There could be additional link/age value to pass on to the current domain.

Referring Site Links

We all know it can be hard to get a good link, but what happens after we get the link? Many of us may cheer as we have accrued additional SEO value, but what you should be thinking about is the traffic potential of links.
Review Google Analytics Referring Sites and find those referring sources that are not from social media, email, etc., and visit the referring page. You may have a link from the source, but could the link be presented above the fold on the page? Should the anchor text be more enticing? Should the messaging around the link be more relevant? It is great that this referring source is bringing traffic, let’s have it bring some more!

Images/Video Driving Traffic

You did it! You have images driving traffic to your site via image search or universal image results… and you probably didn't know it. Review Google Analytic Referring Sites and then view specifically /imgres as a source, in relation to a secondary dimension of Landing Pages. See what pages image traffic is likely landing on and then you may get a better idea of successful imagery.
Next, look in Google Webmaster Tools or Google Analytics at Search Queries data by Landing Page and filter, to only look at Images driving impressions in search results. This will help you get a better handle on which pages are hosting referring image traffic, but also the likely keywords that are ranking your images.

Those Damn PDFs

Sorry, I hate PDFs. Who likes a search result that traverses to your site organically, yet you cannot track it with an analytics snippet? Anyway, beyond losing this traffic from organic data, you still want this traffic to get to your main site. Remember, PDFs often don’t carry the navigational theme of the site and often times carry no link back to the main site. This forces the user to remember your brand and then search or directly visit the site. Add a link from the top of PDF back to the site to help funnel traffic back to the site. I would do this to all PDFs, but if you are short on time, I recommend running a report on all ranking site pages in SEMrush and then identifying any pages that are ranking which are PDFs.

Big Traffic/ Big Bounce

Take a quick look at highest referring organic landing pages, but also those with ugly bounce rates. If you are a seasoned search marketer, you may be able to simply look at the page and assess bad calls to actions, crappy messaging, display issues and such that can be quick indicators prime for bounce rate turnaround. If the page doesn’t have elements that seem responsible, do a few days testing using CrazyEgg or LuckyOrange to get a good example to typical page visitor behavior.
Still nothing? Once again, look at SEMrush and see what terms these pages are ranking well for. Then review the pages again and assess for relevancy between those terms and the messaging/keyword theme of the respective pages.

Thursday, December 5, 2013

How to Use Images in Your Link Building Campaigns

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It's no secret that content that includes images attracts more attention. I've seen statistics that say that content with images can get well over 90 percent more total views than content without images and that paid social posts with images generate more engagement.
Also, I prefer content that includes images. It breaks up the tedium of reading an article, sometimes provides a laugh, and helps make the content stick in my mind.
However, too few people actively seem to market their images in their link building campaigns. It's been awhile since we've been asked to build image links and that's a shame. And I've also noticed that the pages we're building links to, for the most part, also don't really make good use of images.

 Easy Ways to Use Images in Link Campaigns

Let's look at a few easy ways that images can be used in your link campaigns.
  1. Use them to link back to your site from another site. We've had site owners say they don't do text links, but would happily do an image link.
  2. Use them in your content to naturally attract more links. Anything that makes users happier makes them more likely to share, and that ups the odds for more links.
  3. Use them in your content to increase user engagement. Maybe you've used an image that is just too hysterical not to comment on, whereas a visitor wouldn't have commented on your text? Yes, it happens.
  4. Gain traffic from them when they're found in an image search. Maybe a person finds your site for the first time through an image search, and that leads to a new customer, a new email subscriber, some social love, or a new link.
  5. Use them to promote your site on social media (not just Pinterest.) Build links to those social sites, too. According to a Buffer blog post, "tweets with image links get 2x the engagement rate of those without." More engagement equals the potential for more links.
  6. Create infographics and comics.
  7. Use them to help promote your seasonal content. If you're having a company-wide donation program for the holidays, a photo of all the donations you've gathered will be much more interesting than just saying "yeah, we have a lot of donations."
  8. More Info:- Latest google Updates , Latest update seo  

Friday, November 29, 2013

Use the Link Disavow Tool Even if Your Site Hasn't Been Penalized


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 When Google launched the disavow tool, there was lots of discussion about whether people should use the disavow tool even Google hadn't taken a manual action against their sites. There were people making blacklists of what they considered low-quality sites that were linking to many different sites, that they would mass submit to Google to disavow across the entire network of sites.
But there was really no consensus over whether webmasters needed to do anything with the disavow tool if they didn't have manual action, or if they should just leave it until they did have a warning pop up.
Google's Distinguished Engineer Matt Cutts discussed the disavow tool, and whether it should be used as a pre-emptive measure, in a recent webmaster help video.
Cutts started by describing when the disavow tool should be used. After a webmaster has gone through the usual routes of trying to get links removed off sites they see as being low-quality, whether it was from poor SEO decisions or a bad SEO company, then that is when you would use the disavow tool, to disavow the links you haven't been able to get removed.
What about if you don't have a warning? Cutts recommended you use the disavow tool if you have identified any suspicious or low-quality backlinks you believe might hurt you.
"If you are at all worried about someone trying to do negative SEO or it looks like there's some weird bot that's building up a bunch of links to your site and you have no idea where it came from, that's the perfect time to use disavow as well," Cutts said. "I wouldn't worry about going ahead and disavowing links even if you don't have a message in your webmaster console."
Clearly, Google is hinting the webmaster should keep a pretty close eye on their backlink profile, and make disavows based on any suspicious changes they see, and not wait for it to be penalized and show up as a message in webmaster tools.
"So if you've done the work to keep an active look on your backlinks and you see something strange going on, you don't have to wait around," Cutts said. "Feel free to just go ahead and pre-emptively say, you know what this is a weird domain, I have nothing to do with it, and no idea what this particular bot is doing in terms of making links, so go ahead and do disavows even on a domain level."
It is worth noting that this is a different stance on the disavow tool than Google has previously taken. From the disavow tool page Google states that the disavow tool should be used only "if you are confident that the links are causing issues for you." However, Cutts is now saying something different, that the disavow tool should be used even if those links aren't yet causing issues.
Cutts also recognized that webmasters tend to get really stressed out about being penalized by Google. There is a significant concern amongst a lot of webmasters that links, something that is often out of their control, could negatively impact them, and if they do get penalized, will suffer the traffic consequences while a disavow is done and the penalty eventually lifted.
"If you're at all stressed, if you're worried, if you're not able to sleep at night because you think Google might have something, or might see it, or we might get a spam report about you, or there might be some misunderstanding or an algorithm might rank your site lower, I would feel free to just go ahead and disavow those links as well," Cutts said.
So definitely keep a close eye on your backlinks, particularly your new ones, if you aren't already, and make a point of disavowing those poor quality or suspicious backlinks before it can have any impact on your site.
 

Tuesday, November 26, 2013

Best Usefull Tools for SEO


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Keyword Searching and selecting Tool:-   You can use this tool to invent many keywords fro your site.

Search Engine Spider Simulator :-  Check how your site will be crawled by a search engine web crawler.This tool Simulates a Search Engine by displaying the contents of a webpage exactly how a Search Engine would see it.
It also displays the hyperlinks that will be followed (crawled) by a Search Engine when it visits the particular webpage.
Keyword Density Checker :-  Check your keywords density on your web page using this outstanding tool.
is the percentage of occurrence of your keywords to the text in the rest of your webpage.
It is important for your main keywords to have the correct keyword density to rank well in Search Engines.
This tool will crawl the given URL, extract text as a search engine would, remove common stop words and Analyze the density of the keywords.

Keyword Suggestion Tool:-  A tool from Google which suggest you various keywords when you type a word.

HTML/X HTML Validator:-  Check if your site is compliance to W3C standard or not.

More Details :- Latest google update, Create backlinks

Saturday, November 23, 2013

Different Ways to Create a backlink for your websites

1. Create a blog
2. Create an RSS feed
3. Resources/Links pages
4. Profile link building
5. Ask people you know for a link
6. Research competitors
7. Build relationships
8. Article directories
9. Web 2.0 submission
10. Press release submission
11. Infographic submissions
12. Company directory submissions
13. Video submissions
14. User rating reviews
15. RSS directories
16. Podcast directories
17. EBook directories
18. Widget directories
19. Paid directories
20. Multimedia/Document submissions
21. Guest posting
22. Trade articles
23. Educational content
24. Images
25. Free charts/graphs
26. Writing testimonials
27. Entering contests & giveaways
28. Get interviewed
29. Microsites
30. Google Maps mashup
31. Social bookmarking
32. Paid reviews
33. Blog commenting
34. Forum posting
35. Q&A
36. Social coupons
37. Newsletters
38. Email Signatures
39. Wiki
40. Local listings
41. Giving trackbacks
42. Video embeds
43. Forums