+1 Kate
To add on what Kate said, you can typically get a little more data to help you pinpoint what it is by clicking on other and then looking at secondary dimensions such as medium, ad distribution network, placement domain, campaign, etc.
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Job Title: VP of Online Marketing
Company: SingleCare.com
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+1 Kate
To add on what Kate said, you can typically get a little more data to help you pinpoint what it is by clicking on other and then looking at secondary dimensions such as medium, ad distribution network, placement domain, campaign, etc.
Hi John,
Typically when you switch from Flash to HTML, you'll see a nice bump in organic traffic as search engines have a hard time with most flash sites.
In your case, you are using the hash bang to deliver content to users and the escaped fragments to deliver content to search engines on your new site. While this should be ok, it isn't always. It should be more effective for you than your main current site though. SEO-Browser is a good tool to simulate how a search engine would see your site. You can see your old site here (note, from the cached version it appears that Google is actually accessing some of your flash content) and your new site here.
Ideally, you'd have a site that relies entirely on HTML/CSS to display your content to users. In your case, I'd feel comfortable updating the main site to the new version. A couple notes here -
I've never heard of anyone going to a Wix site for SEO. If you want to use a simple CMS that is good for SEO, I'd recommend WordPress.
As Jeff pointed out, with something like a Christmas category page, you'll want to leave it up so that you can use it easily next year (and maintain any links associated with the page). You can easily remove navigation links to the page during the off season and add them in in the months leading up to the season so that you're again passing internal link equity to the pages.
Regarding the RSS feed content, I'd probably 301 it to a related video or to a relevant category page, though you could make a case for leaving it up, saying that the content is no longer available and providing related videos for the user to navigate to.
Hi There,
Simply re-ordering your content is not going to make it any more unique. I've seen mashing up content help sometimes (depending on how trustworthy the site is) but changing the order of the same phrases doesn't add to the uniqueness of the page. Honestly, the results probably aren't worth the time required to do this.
Good luck!
Geoff
Hi There,
As the other people have said here, 2 weeks isn't very long for Google to sort this out, though I know it feels like a really long time. While Google and Bing say they will treat 302's as 301's if they think it's a mistake, but I haven't really seen this happen.
Whenever I do a URL migration, I always submit a sitemap with the old URLs to help Google pick up the 301's faster. In your situation, I'd definitely submit an xml sitemap of as many old URLs as you can find to help Google pick up the updated redirects ASAP. Do you have any old files that you could pull URLs from (I know you don't have an old xml sitemap, but maybe a csv or something like that)?
Good luck!
As Mike pointed out, this is pretty subjective and I think you can pretty easily make either argument. I think I'd tend to avoid the slider as it takes up a lot of space, but that's just an opinion. If you really want to find out if one is better than the other for conversion, test it using software such as optimizely! Otherwise, I'd go with your gut.
To answer your questions:
1. I think the practice you described sounds good, should help establish credibility and trust, right?
2. Using the SEM Rush example, I might add a quote from one of the above clients for added credibility. On your /clients page, I'd probably do a couple things: I would add quotes/testimonials for each logo if possible - it's one thing to work with someone, but it means a lot more if you have a quote from them. Second, I'd look at doing case studies if possible.
As I mentioned earlier, you should really test everything. Everyone has an opinion about CRO that's based on their experience but every vertical, niche, and company is different as are their customers so don't just take someone else's word for it. Test everything!
As it's all sorted now, I really wouldn't worry about them too much. You can use the remove URL functionality in WMT, but this is a manual process so I wouldn't do this. If I were in your position, I'd probably just let the pages keep 404ing'. After a bit, Google will usually stop trying to recrawl the 404 pages. Right now they are probably trying to recrawl incase the 404 was an accident.
If it's causing a bandwidth problem, you can solve with a robots.txt as suggested earlier.
Hey Ariel,
Here's a couple lists of bots that some people are blocking - you should probably review your server data to see which bots are visiting you that you want to block:
In addition to the moz resource Chris referenced, here are a couple more pages that might be useful for you:
Good luck!
This is pretty hard to give a good answer to without knowing the site, but a significant sudden drop is usually not tied to smaller factors like page speed. Rather, they tend to be tied to low quality link building (penguin), low quality content (panda), over optimization penalties, or technical problems (look for noindex, robots.txt, nofollow, canonical issues).
I know it's a bit broad but without a specific URL, I'd start looking there.
Good luck!
-Geoff
This is really a market research project, and you have a few different ways to figure out who your customer is.
You can get market research reports - Here are a few examples that turned up from a Google search:
MarketResearch.com | IBISWorld.com | TrendReports.com | ResearchAndMarkets.com
You could also do your own market research through a site like AYTM.
You could also use a service like Qualaroo to ask your website visitors questions or you could create a survey on a site like AYTM but send it to your previous customers instead of their panel.
With the data that you gather in the above processes, you can begin to build personas as already suggested.
Good luck!
-Geoff
+1 Kate
To add on what Kate said, you can typically get a little more data to help you pinpoint what it is by clicking on other and then looking at secondary dimensions such as medium, ad distribution network, placement domain, campaign, etc.
This is really a market research project, and you have a few different ways to figure out who your customer is.
You can get market research reports - Here are a few examples that turned up from a Google search:
MarketResearch.com | IBISWorld.com | TrendReports.com | ResearchAndMarkets.com
You could also do your own market research through a site like AYTM.
You could also use a service like Qualaroo to ask your website visitors questions or you could create a survey on a site like AYTM but send it to your previous customers instead of their panel.
With the data that you gather in the above processes, you can begin to build personas as already suggested.
Good luck!
-Geoff
Hi There,
Simply re-ordering your content is not going to make it any more unique. I've seen mashing up content help sometimes (depending on how trustworthy the site is) but changing the order of the same phrases doesn't add to the uniqueness of the page. Honestly, the results probably aren't worth the time required to do this.
Good luck!
Geoff
As everyone else has said, it doesn't really make a difference whether you have a file/extension as part of the URL. But if you do change your URLs and 301 redirect the old URLs to the new, you will lose some link equity (typically about 10%-15%); I'm not sure if this devaluation is reflected in OSE/Moz metrics.
That said, I would recommend showing the directory without a file extension (using consumerbase.com/ instead of consumerbase.com/index.html). If you change platforms in the future to something that runs off PHP or some other language, displaying .html file types might not be an option but you can always display the directory. If you set yourself up now to display without the doc type, you don't have to worry about these changes in the future as much.
Hey Fabrizio,
I think this is a very case by case issue. For musicianspage.com, I would probably lean towards make it JS based or removing it primarily because most of the profile pages that I saw are pretty empty and I wouldn't want search engines to find a lot of thin content here.
There could be value in this if all users had a more complete profile AND they participated in a lot forum threads - this could help with content discovery (for the threads) and pass link equity to the threads, helping them bring in traffic. If this is your goal, you would need to do a leader board, not just online users, so that you are getting users who have actually answered questions and these users are most likely to invest in their profiles and fill them out well. As it stands now, if you want to keep the online users, I'd probably make it JS based.
Good luck!
-Geoff
1/19/2015
Back in 2011, I wrote a a technical site audit checklist, and while it was thorough, there have been a lot of additions to what is encompassed in a site audit. I have gone through and updated that old checklist for 2015.
10/27/2014 AJAX and pushState give us the ability to load new content for users without them ever leaving the page. The downside? If they don't leave the page, your analytics are artificially deflated. This post guides you through a clever fix that uses Google Tag Manager.
2/17/2014 Whether you're setting Google Analytics up on a site for the first time or checking a client's existing implementation, there are quite a few standards to remember. This post offers a simple checklist for doing the job right.
11/11/2013 Tracking the success of offline marketing campaigns can be far more difficult than online campaigns, but it's equally important. Here are a few simple steps you can take to put that tracking in place.
7/1/2013 This post dives into Pyscape, a Python-based tool that uses the Mozscape API to extract data from Open Site Explorer. Try it out, and you might never go back to using Google Docs to pull that data.
3/11/2013 Our industry has seen big changes over the last few years, and with that change has come a shortage of testing. As SEOs and inbound marketers, we need to continue to test to refine our practice, and share our stories with the industry at large in order to move it forward.
10/8/2012 Do you have a deployment SEO strategy? Geoff Kenyon shares why creating and implementing a deployment SEO strategy is important for your entire team, plus sheds some light on how to create one of your own.
1/30/2012 The ‘over optimization’ of anchor text has been coming up a lot recently in conversations that I have been having and has been the subject of a few recent blog posts. When I have talked to people about this recently, I have suggested that a 7:3 ratio of non-targeted: targeted anchor text would be a good target to emulate a ‘normal’ link profile. I got curious about this though and decided to do some research.
9/1/2011 While link bait is frequently seen as more "fun", and it's definitely more creative, than doing things like guest blogging or or emailing people asking for links, it has its challenges. I wanted to share a few things I've learned about creating link bait from my experiences.
8/4/2011 While search volume data can help you make more informed decisions when choosing keywords for link building campaigns, it is important to be driving traffic through terms that not only bring in more traffic but convert well. Targeting anchor text phrases that have above average conversion rates will provide a higher ROI on your link building efforts than focusing only on search volume. Further,...
5/2/2011 As increasing number of searches have local intent behind them, Google is showing Places listings in many more SERPs. This presents an opportunity to either gain a spot on the first page for many businesses or to gain more space on the first page for companies already ranking on the first page. Here are five t...
2/21/2011 When Google made their “page speed is now a ranking factor” announcement, it wasn’t a significant new ranking factor but rather that it is significant because it means Google wants to use usability metrics to help rank pages. Your site speed should be a priority as slow sites decrease customer satisfaction and ...
1/24/2011 When you work on a large site that sees frequent development updates or if your website is your product, it is easy for mistakes to happen that can have a significant impact on your SEO. Sometimes page titles will contain only the company name, the noindex tag gets carried over from the test environment, or you might find that all internal links within a specific category are nofollowed. Mistak...
11/8/2010 Building links is regarded as one of the most challenging and time consuming parts of SEO. If you run a community focused web site, you should allocate some of your link building hours to implement features on your site that will encourage link your users to do link building for you. A little investment into these features can result in a scalable way to continually build links....
6/3/2010 If you have an offline advertising budget, you can increase your rankings by leveraging a user’s search history. You don’t even need a budget to accomplish this, what you need is a channel to communicate with potential customers and capture their attention long enough to tell them what to do. You can use anything at your disposal, from a TV ad to your ...
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