Posts Tagged ‘Should’
Choosing the correct keywords is absolutely critical to internet marketing success. Whether you are advertising your product via Google Adwords, using articles to generate traffic to your website or performing SEO (search engine optimization) to improve your siteâ??s search engine ranking, the keywords and key phrases you use play an enormous part in your success (or lack thereof).
Keywords are a major part of online promotion. Adwords is based on them, search engines use them in page titles and meta tags to rank websites and Adsense uses them to target banner advertisements. Every webmaster needs to determine the proper keywords for his market. Of course, this is often easier said than done. Keywords which are searched for often are best, but the competition for them is fierce and as such tremendous cost and time are required to contend with the big players. Keywords which are searched for rarely usually offer better return on your investment, but can be painfully slow in bringing traffic and sales to your website.
www.jimyaghi.com Jim Yaghi, author of PPC Domination explains his PPC case study: There’s a LOT of people teaching that in order to get a high quality score, high Click-Thru-Rate (CTR), and high conversion you MUST use the keyword you bid on in your ad’s headline and body. Is that true? Well, I put it to the test because I never believed it for a minute. And sure enough I now have proof that using the keyword in your ad DOESN’T necessary work in your favour at all. i39.tinypic.com i43 …
This blog supports Argent sur internet
I want to optimize my web pages so that our homepage will rank high in Google!. Many of our web pages require password to log in. If I only want the homepage to rank high, can I just optimize 10 or 20 pages that have meaningful content, or I should optimize 100+ web pages? Among those 100+ web pages, some of them are just sign in page, forgot password page.
Will I boost my web homepage ranking by optimize more pages? or it doesn’t make any difference?
This blog supports Argent sur internet
im getting a class ring and on one of the sides i have a track foot on it. and i don’t know what keyword put on it?
This blog supports Argent sur internet
Should I be ranking for “Insurance South NJ” vs. “Insurance New Jersey”?
Example DMOZ description:
“Independent insurance agency serving South NJ with a selection of personal and commercial insurance products. Allows online policy change requests.”
This blog supports Argent sur internet
I’ve been referred to a service that charges approximately $5000 for website design and SEO. I’ve checked out the websites they have made for others and they seem to get results with high search rankings for their clients. Is this a competivie price though? I can design my own website fairly easily, I really am just looking for SEO. Is there cheaper, but effective ways of doing this (other than doing it myself)?
This blog supports Argent sur internet
I wanted to know if knowledge about programming and coding is necessary for seo!!! I know html basics.. is it enough?? and please give me the details of the important programming stuff a seo expert should know..
This blog supports Argent sur internet
Services will include reprogramming HTML of the site. Should we state in the contract that the site will appear in the first page of search results on Google, etc.?
This blog supports Argent sur internet
Services will include reprogramming HTML of the site. Should we state in the contract that the site will appear in the first page of search results on Google, etc.?
This blog supports Argent sur internet
I’ve fluctuated in my use of software for reporting search engine rankings. I feel that, on one hand, they shift the focus from ‘results’ to monitoring and getting hung up on rankings. On the other hand, using a large base of keywords that I feel represent the spectrum of what the site is optimizing for can some times provide some objective metric for determining the general direction your efforts are going.
This blog supports Argent sur internet