google93407e1317119c0c.html SEO | SEO ONPAGE | HOW TO DO SEO | WHAT IS SEO Read more: http://allbloggingtips.com/2012/02/05/new-cool-social-icons-with-hover-effect-widget-v2/#ixzz2VM45GHXT Example: My title page contents
 
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Friday

SEO GOOGLE UPDATES | LATEST PANDA UPDATES | LATEST PENGUIN UPDATES

                                            SEO GOOGLE UPDATES 

The Panda and Penguin algorithm updates have taken the lion’s share of attention this year in the SEO industry. The Panda updates focus on downgrading shallow or duplicative content. Sites that use stock product descriptions that are used across many other sites were affected, as were “content farms” that specialized in creating many thousands of pages of content with little useful information. The brunt of the Panda upheaval was felt in February 2011 when the algorithm was first introduced. The updates we’re seeing now are minor algorithm tweaks or refreshes with comparatively small impact.

The Penguin algorithm updates are being felt strongly this year, though. Launched in April, Penguin targets sites with low-quality link profiles. In years past, link-building strategies tended to focus on easily acquired links such as links from directories, article repositories, wikis, and comments on blogs. Many times these low-quality links were also paired with highly optimized anchor text in an attempt to squeeze as much value into each link built. But precisely because they’re easily acquired, these links are worth very little individually even though they could be built in large numbers.

Quality Algorithm Updates
In the past, these large numbers of low-quality links influenced rankings unfairly, in Google’s eyes, giving an advantage to sites working hard to manipulate rankings rather than those working hard to create compelling and valuable content. This theme of focusing on creating compelling and valuable content has become a mantra for Google of late, as it has focused on devaluing the types of content and links that they consider low quality.

Keeping Pandas and Penguins at bay, then, simply requires doing the right things right for your customers, in tandem with ensuring that your site is technically optimized to strengthen the signals all that great content is sending. That is easier said than done. If creating compelling and valuable content that engages customers and inspires them to link to and share your content naturally was easy, every site would do it. And that’s precisely why it’s valuable to Google — it’s not easy. As a result, the best sites will rise to the top of the rankings rather than the sites that spend their time looking for easy ways to manipulate rankings.

Another recent algorithm update targeted low-quality sites with exact match domains. The EMD update focuses on the practice of domaining, buying up many domains that contain keyword phrases and building narrowly focused content sites on each. Domainers typically make their money via affiliate programs or by selling ads on their sites. To make this practice more scalable and profitable, the sites tend to also lack unique, valuable content.



 Google is re-writing your Title tags – Have you noticed it?
 Yes I am right; Google is re-writing our ‘Title Tags’.

I was reading a discussion thread in a webmaster forum, in the thread many people reported that ‘Title Tags’ in SERP for their sites are different from what it should be.


Well I heard that Google is re-writing ‘Title’ of our page wherever it is longer than 60 characters.

To check it I opened Google and search for my domain name; I was shocked as Google SERP was showing a different Title for my home page.

Why Google re-writing Title Tags?
First question came in my mind what is the reason behind this ‘Title Tag’ re-writing process.

Google mentioned in its early updates that they will re-write Titles for those pages which has Title longer than 60 characters but my home page has a ‘Title Tag’ shorter than 60 characters.

One of the forum members mentioned that

1-      The title rewrite algorithm is specific to the search term.

2-      The goal is to increase clicks. How well they achieve that goal is an open question.

First point suggesting that Google re-writes your Title tag according to the search term entered by the user so that pages can get much better ranking and user can get much better results. Second point confirms my explanation for point one J

One of the members mentioned that, “Google is doing this because they don’t want to rely on anything from the webmaster – Title, Description, Links, Anchor and Text etc.

Many of SEO Consultant and Professional SEO found it another Google step against SEO.

Title Tags, Google is re-writing title tags, Google is showing different titles, my page title is not correct in Google search

 How Google decides what should be your New Title?
Although there is no clear cut explanation about it but different webmasters have share different points based on their experience.

1-      Google use your most used keyword while re-writing your Title Tag.

2-      Google use anchor text from your internal links to that page to re-write your Title tag.

One of the members mentioned that, “Google is using their domain company Name from ‘whois’ details while generating their Title Tags”.

I know it sounds weird but big G can do anything J

When you have checked your page Titles in search engine last time? It’s time to check it again; Is it helping you in ranking better or it is annoying you? Share your experience with us.



 Google Pagerank dropped – It doesn’t mean end of blogging world
  Google recently (4th Feb 2013) updated ‘Page Rank’. ‘Google Page Rank Update’ is an important event in online world as it impacts the ranking of any websites in search result page.

After ‘Google Page Rank Update’ I saw lots of bloggers talking about it on Facebook and Twitter. Some of them were very happy as their blog/website got a good PageRank but most of them was feeling demotivated and frustrated because either their Page Rank dropped or didn’t improve as they were expecting.

I am a great believer of ‘Google PageRank’ but I am not able to understand why people feel so much demotivated and frustrated when their PageRank dropped.

I am not saying that ‘Google PageRank’ is just a number and you need not to give importance to it. ‘PageRank’ is important but if your PageRank dropped or not improved as you were expecting then it doesn’t mean end of world for you.


Sudden Change In The Number Of Links Reporting In Google Webmaster? Don’t Panic.
Over the past week or so, we’ve been hearing reports of the number of links being reported within Google Webmaster Tools drastically changing from what it was days before the change.

Last week, we received some reports of Google increasing the number of links being reported in the tool. This week, we are seeing dozens of reports of the link count dropping significantly. Some suspect Google has a data display issue specifically with reporting on home page links, while others are not sure.

Google’s John Mueller, who I believe is currently on vacation, responded to the concerns in one Google Webmaster thread saying that this looks like a data display bug. He wrote:

    This looks like an issue with how the data is displayed in Webmaster Tools, it shouldn’t affect your site’s crawling, indexing or ranking. I don’t have any specifics at the moment, but the team is looking into the details to see what we can do here. Thanks for your patience & sorry for the confusion!

Two days later, it is still not resolved, and webmasters are getting nervous.

    Some Webmaster Tools users have reported missing data in the “Links to your site” section. We are aware of this issue and are looking into it; you do not need to take any action. We hope to have the normal data shown again in the near future. The data shown there is informational and does not affect your site’s crawling, indexing or ranking.



Someone have eaten up your backlicks – Just Check
   It seems that something big going to happen in Google Search world. Google released first PageRank update of 2013 year on 4th Feb 2013.

People were busy in PageRank discussion and suddenly I noticed another major change (or may be a bug) from Google in Web Master Tool (WMT).

Till last week, Google Webmaster Tool was showing 44000+ backlinks for my blog and today it is showing only 1800 backlinks.

I was totally shocked, what happened to my backlinks? Is it a bug or my blog has been hit by some penalty?

I started looking into many webmaster forums to know if other is also facing this issue.

google webmaster tool backlink count, link to your site, backlink count, check your backlinksI found two threads about same topic; one on Web Master World and another on Google Webmaster Help

Many webmaster reported that they have seen drop in their back link count in WMT from 20% to 90%.

I tried to give a look to my backlinks and noticed that

1-      Google has removed all links from ‘Link to your site’ report that was pointing to my homepage.

2-      Google has removed links from those pages which was having most incoming links.

3-      I didn’t notice any drop in search traffic (2-3% variation only).

It’s too early to say anything about this backlink count drop. It may be a bug or it may be a surprise change from Google.

Have you checked your back link count in Web Master Tool? If not then do it right now and share your observation.



GOOGLE PANDA UPDATES AFFECT  NO CHANGES
Google Panda latest update confirms no changes according to the reports. Google told Search Engine Land that it will no longer be confirming updates as Panda will be included into the regular overall algorithm updates. Thus, Google Panda will go in hiding with no official confirmations details.

Preceding to this latest update, it announced its 24 other Panda updates usually through the official Twitter address however webmasters and SEO specialists are stopped with their own statements of judgments upon knowing Google’s Matt Cutts announcement last week that the latest Panda update was due on either Friday, March 15 or Monday, March 18.

Matt Cutts warned at the same time that updates will be a little noticeable compare to what has been usually updated as they become more and more incorporated with Google’s algorithm.

Most recent Panda update earlier to this one was last January 22, with a previous update done in the build up to Christmas, on December 21 2012.

Last February, Panda was celebrating its second anniversary and Search engine giant initially opened the algorithm back in February 2011 to evaluate spammy websites, low ranking firms which used illegal strategies of Internet Marketing such as duplicate or stolen content, in order to rank higher on the search results pages.


Google decided not to update Google PageRank

 While surfing internet I found hundreds of article about ‘Google PageRank Update’.

People in online business specially SEO, Webmaster, Blogger and ‘ecommerce site owners’ are very much interested in Google PageRank update.

They do lots of effort to get high PageRank.

Google update its PageRank database on quarterly basis (from last two year it is updating PR regularly on quarterly basis).

So people are predicting that next Google PageRank update will be in first or second week of May 2013.

Most of my blogger friends have done lots of link building through different ways to get high PR this time.

They are regularly having an eye or PR Tools and updates from different sources about Google PR update.

Google PageRank Update May 2013, Google PageRank Update, Neat Google PageRank Update

While thinking all about PR and craziness of people about it a naughty thought came into my naughty mind.

What will happen if Google decide not to update Google PageRank?

I know you guys want to kill me after reading above line but friends it’s my imagination and there is no control on my imagination.

Cool….

So just give a thought to it.

There will be different reaction from different people.

Backlink Seller – They will be the happiest person after reading this news; because they have made lots of money in last 3 months (since they get High PR) by selling backlink and now they were thinking that Google will lower their rank this time.

But if Google decides not to update PageRank then these people will celebrate it like a festival as their PageRank will remain same till next update and they can fetch some more dollars through link selling.

Newbies- It will be shocking news for them as after entering into online world the first term they heard was Google PageRank.

Newbies are most excited people for Google PageRank; for them having a PageRank from Zero to PR-1 is like having their first salary.

It will be a demotivating factor for some newbies who thinks that no PR means no success.

SEO and Webmaster- It will be a discussion topic for them. Few people will share their research analysis on it.

Few big player in ranking industry will start their own ranking system to give you an idea what could be your ranking this time.

Value it but not obsesses for it

I know it feels good when you see that long green bar for your domain but it is not good to be obsessed for it.

PageRank is a way to show others how valuable your website is; but it is not the only way to decide authority of a website/blog.

If you are regularly providing natural, useful, unique and fresh content to your user then all other things will come automatically with it.

Google updates PageRank Regularly
Google updates your PageRank on regular basis (almost daily) but it release it for public once in a quarter; otherwise SEO and webmaster start guessing Google Algorithm by regularly watching PR changes.

3 Ways Google's Penguin Update Can Affect Your Website’s Rankings

In an effort to provide searchers the most helpful search results, Google has continued to refine their search algorithm.  Their most recent update, affectionately named “Penguin,” was launched shortly after Memorial Day.  Penguin updates are expected to continue through the end of 2012, and are geared toward dramatically improving quality, relevancy, and cleanliness of the search result by penalizing overly spammy pages or those with spam-like links. Sites that violate Google’s quality guidelines have also likely been hit by this newest update to Google’s constantly changing algorithm.

Even though many sites have been hit hard by these updates, you don’t have to be among them. Your site can recover from Penguin and prepare for future algorithmic updates by understanding the update and making  recommended changes.

Here are some of the most important things to know about how Penguin might affect your website. Stay ahead of the game by knowing what’s coming and reviewing your site to make sure it isn’t guilty of committing these errors and others like them.


Penguin Analysis
1.  Keyword Stuffing – Keyword stuffing is the excessive use of keywords in the content of your website. If a site is keyword stuffed, the keywords are usually repeated randomly and excessively throughout the website.

    REMEDY: Appropriately include your keyword phrases in the titles of your web pages and use them sparingly in the content of your website. Vary the keywords and phrases so they sound natural. It’s smart
    to shoot in the range of 2-5% keyword density for most blocks of text.

2.  Ad-Heavy Page Layout – Penalized page layouts usually have to do with the overload and placement of ads on a page —particularly those “above the fold”– or those first seen when a viewer lands on the page. Google knows that a site which favors relevant content over advertisements gives users a better experience, so they reward and penalize accordingly.

3.  Plagiarized or Outdated Content – As with all Google updates, Penguin will penalize websites that do not have original (not plagiarized, informational, and relevant to the keywords searched) and or fresh (recently uploaded) content.  It makes sense, since users want to find the most pertinent and most recent information on the internet about their topic.

    If your content isn’t quite up to par, get some! Do some research, some analysis, write, and you’ll have some unique content in no time.  Get rid of any duplicate content you have on your website (you can check for unique content here), and keep it up.  Be original, relevant and fresh, and you’ll score in the search engines.


List of Google’s 204 Ranking Factors For SEOs

All search engine optimizers may already know that Google uses about 204 ranking factors in their algorithm…

But what the hell are they ranking factors in Google’s algorithm?

Well, today you are in for a treat from my side because here I am publishing a complete list of Google’s 204 Ranking Factors.

But please note that :- Some are proven, Some are controversial & Others are SEO geek assumptions.

1. Domain Age: In this video, Matt Cutts states that:

“The difference between a domain that’s six months old verses one year old is really not that big at all.”.

In other words, they do use domain age…but it’s not very important.

2. Keyword Appears in Top Level Domain: Doesn’t give the boost that it used to, but having your keyword in the domain still acts as a relevancy signal. After all, they still bold keywords that appear in a domain name.

3. Keyword As First Word in Domain: Moz’s 2011 Search Engine Ranking Factors panelists agreed that a domain that starts with their target keyword has an edge over sites that either don’t have the keyword in their domain or have the keyword in the middle or end of their domain.

4. Domain registration length: A Google patent states:

“Valuable (legitimate) domains are often paid for several years in advance, while doorway (illegitimate) domains rarely are used for more than a year. Therefore, the date when a domain expires in the future can be used as a factor in predicting the legitimacy of a domain”.

5. Keyword in Subdomain Name: Moz’s panel also agreed that a keyword appearing in the subdomain boosts rank,

6. Domain History: A site with volatile ownership (via whois) or several drops may tell Google to “reset” the site’s history, negating links pointing to the domain.

7. Exact Match Domain: EMDs may still give you an edge…if it’s a quality site. But if the EMD happens to be a low-quality site, it’s vulnerable to the EMD update:

8. Public vs. Private WhoIs: Private WhoIs information may be a sign of “something to hide”. Matt Cutts is quoted as stating at Pubcon 2006:

“…When I checked the whois on them, they all had “whois privacy protection service” on them. That’s relatively unusual. …Having whois privacy turned on isn’t automatically bad, but once you get several of these factors all together, you’re often talking about a very different type of webmaster than the fellow who just has a single site or so.”

9. Penalized WhoIs Owner: If Google identifies a particular person as a spammer it makes sense that they would scrutinize other sites owned by that person.

10. Country TLD extension: Having a Country Code Top Level Domain (.cn, .pt, .ca) helps the site rank for that particular country…but limits the site’s ability to rank globally.

11. Keyword in Title Tag: The title tag is a webpage’s second most important piece of content (besides the content of the page) and therefore sends a strong on-page SEO signal.

12. Title Tag Starts with Keyword: According to Moz data, title tags that starts with a keyword tend to perform better than title tags with the keyword towards the end of the tag:

13. Keyword in Description Tag: Another relevancy signal. Not especially important now, but still makes a difference.

14. Keyword Appears in H1 Tag: H1 tags are a “second title tag” that sends another relevancy signal to Google, according to results from this correlation study:

15. Keyword is Most Frequently Used Phrase in Document: Having a keyword appear more than any other likely acts as a relevancy signal.

16. Content Length: Content with more words can cover a wider breadth and are likely preferred to shorter superficial articles. SERPIQ found that content length correlated with SERP position:

17. Keyword Density: Although not as important as it once was, keyword density is still something Google uses to determine the topic of a webpage. But going overboard can hurt you.

18. Latent Semantic Indexing Keywords in Content (LSI): LSI keywords help search engines extract meaning from words with more than one meaning (Apple the computer company vs. the fruit). The presence/absence of LSI probably also acts as a content quality signal.

19. LSI Keywords in Title and Description Tags: As with webpage content, LSI keywords in page meta tags probably help Google discern between synonyms. May also act as a relevancy signal.

20. Page Loading Speed via HTML: Both Google and Bing use page loading speed as a ranking factor. Search engine spiders can estimate your site speed fairly accurately based on a page’s code and filesize.

21. Duplicate Content: Identical content on the same site (even slightly modified) can negatively influence a site’s search engine visibility.

22. Rel=Canonical: When used properly, use of this tag may prevent Google from considering pages duplicate content.

23. Page Loading Speed via Chrome: Google may also use Chrome user data to get a better handle on a page’s loading time as this takes into account server speed, CDN usage and other non HTML-related site speed signals.

24. Image Optimization: Images on-page send search engines important relevancy signals through their file name, alt text, title, description and caption.

25. Recency of Content Updates: Google Caffeine update favors recently updated content, especially for time-sensitive searches. Highlighting this factor’s importance, Google shows the date of a page’s last update for certain pages:

26. Magnitude of Content Updates: The significance of edits and changes is also a freshness factor. Adding or removing entire sections is a more significant update than switching around the order of a few words.

27. Historical Updates Page Updates: How often has the page been updated over time? Daily, weekly, every 5-years? Frequency of page updates also play a role in freshness.

28. Keyword Prominence: Having a keyword appear in the first 100-words of a page’s content appears to be a significant relevancy signal.

29. Keyword in H2, H3 Tags: Having your keyword appear as a subheading in H2 or H3 format may be another weak relevancy signal.

30. Keyword Word Order: An exact match of a searcher’s keyword in a page’s content will generally rank better than the same keyword phrase in a different order. For example: consider a search for: “cat shaving techniques”. A page optimized for the phrase “cat shaving techniques” will rank better than a page optimized for “techniques for shaving a cat”. This is a good illustration of why keyword research is really, really important.

31. Outbound Link Quality: Many SEOs think that linking out to authority sites helps send trust signals to Google.

32. Outbound Link Theme: According to Moz, search engines may use the content of the pages you link to as a relevancy signal. For example, if you have a page about cars that links to movie-related pages, this may tell Google that your page is about the movie Cars, not the automobile.

33. Grammar and Spelling: Proper grammar and spelling is a quality signal, although Cutts gave mixed messages in 2011 on whether or not this was important.

34. Syndicated Content: Is the content on the page original? If it’s scraped or copied from an indexed page it won’t rank as well as the original or end up in their Supplemental Index.

35. Helpful Supplementary Content: According to a now-public Google Rater Guidelines Document, helpful supplementary content is an indicator of a page’s quality (and therefore, Google ranking). Examples include currency converters, loan interest calculators and interactive recipes.

36. Number of Outbound Links: Too many dofollow OBLs may “leak” PageRank, which can hurt search visibility.

37. Multimedia: Images, videos and other multimedia elements may act as a content quality signal.

38. Number of Internal Links Pointing to Page: The number of internal links to a page indicates its importance relative to other pages on the site.

39. Quality of Internal Links Pointing to Page: Internal links from authoritative pages on domain have a stronger effect than pages with no or low PR.

40. Broken Links: Having too many broken links on a page may be a sign of a neglected or abandoned site. The Google Rater Guidelines Document uses broken links as one was to assess a homepage’s quality.

41. Reading Level: There’s no doubt that Google estimates the reading level of webpages:

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But what they do with that information is up for debate. Some say that a basic reading level will help your page rank because it will appeal to the masses. However, Linchpin SEO discovered that reading level was one factor that separated quality sites from content mills.

42. Affiliate Links: Affiliate links themselves probably won’t hurt your rankings. But if you have too many, Google’s algorithm may pay closer attention to other quality signals to make sure you’re not a “thin affiliate site”.

43. HTML errors/W3C validation: Lots of HTML errors or sloppy coding may be a sign of a poor quality site. While controversial, many in SEO think that WC3 validation is a weak quality signal.

44. Page Host’s Domain Authority: All things being equal a page on an authoritative domain will higher than a page on a domain with less authority.

45. Page’s PageRank: Not perfectly correlated. But in general higher PR pages tend to rank better than low PR pages.

46. URL Length: Search Engine Journal notes that excessively long URLs may hurt search visibility.

47. URL Path: A page closer to the homepage may get a slight authority boost.

48. Human Editors: Although never confirmed, Google has filed a patent for a system that allows human editors to influence the SERPs.

49. Page Category: The category the page appears on is a relevancy signal. A page that’s part of a closely related category should get a relevancy boost compared to a page that’s filed under an unrelated or less related category.

50. WordPress Tags: Tags are WordPress-specific relevancy signal. According to Yoast.com:

“The only way it improves your SEO is by relating one piece of content to another, and more specifically a group of posts to each other”

51. Keyword in URL: Another important relevancy signal.

52. URL String: The categories in the URL string are read by Google and may provide a thematic signal to what a page is about:

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53. References and Sources: Citing references and sources, like research papers do, may be a sign of quality. The Google Quality Guidelines states that reviewers should keep an eye out for sources when looking at certain pages: “This is a topic where expertise and/or authoritative sources are important…”.

54. Bullets and Numbered Lists: Bullets and numbered lists help break up your content for readers, making them more user friendly. Google likely agrees and may prefer content with bullets and numbers.

55. Priority of Page in Sitemap: The priority a page is given via the sitemap.xml file may influence ranking.

56. Too Many Outbound Links: Straight from the aforementioned Quality rater document:

“Some pages have way, way too many links, obscuring the page and distracting from the Main Content”

57. Quantity of Other Keywords Page Ranks For: If the page ranks for several other keywords it may give Google an internal sign of quality.

58. Page Age: Although Google prefers fresh content, an older page that’s regularly updated may outperform a newer page.

59. User Friendly Layout: Citing the Google Quality Guidelines Document yet again:

“The page layout on highest quality pages makes the Main Content immediately visible”

60. Parked Domains: A Google update in December of 2011 decreased search visibility of parked domains.

61. Useful Content: As pointed out by Backlinko reader Jared Carrizales, Google may distinguish between “quality” and “useful” content.

Site-Level Factors

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62. Content Provides Value and Unique Insights: Google has stated that they’re on the hunt for sites that don’t bring anything new or useful to the table, especially thin affiliate sites.

63. Contact Us Page: The aforementioned Google Quality Document states that they prefer sites with an “appropriate amount of contact information”. Supposed bonus if your contact information matches your whois info.

64. Domain Trust/TrustRank: Site trust — measured by how many links away your site is from highly-trusted seed sites — is a massively important ranking factor. You can read more about TrustRank here.

65. Site Architecture: A well put-together site architecture (especially a silo structure) helps Google thematically organize your content.

66. Site Updates: How often a site is updated — and especially when new content is added to the site — is a site-wide freshness factor.

67. Number of Pages: The number of pages a site has is a weak sign of authority. At the very least a large site helps distinguish it from thin affiliate sites.

68. Presence of Sitemap: A sitemap helps search engines index your pages easier and more thoroughly, improving visibility.

69. Site Uptime: Lots of downtime from site maintenance or server issues may hurt your ranking (and can even result in deindexing if not corrected).

70. Server Location: Server location may influence where your site ranks in different geographical regions. Especially important for geo-specific searches.

71. SSL Certificate (Ecommerce Sites): Google has confirmed that they index SSL certificates. It stands to reason that they’ll preferentially rank ecommerce sites with SSL certificates.

72. Terms of Service and Privacy Pages: These two pages help tell Google that a site is a trustworthy member of the internet.

73. Duplicate Meta Information On-Site: Duplicate meta information across your site may bring down all of your page’s visibility.

74. Breadcrumb Navigation: This is a style of user-friendly site-architecture that helps users (and search engines) know where they are on a site:

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Both SearchEngineJournal.com and Ethical SEO Consulting claim that this set-up may be a ranking factor.

75. Mobile Optimized: Google’s official stance on mobile is to create a responsive site. It’s likely that responsive sites get an edge in searches from a mobile device.

76. YouTube: There’s no doubt that YouTube videos are given preferential treatment in the SERPs (probably because Google owns it ):

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In fact, Search Engine Land found that YouTube.com traffic increased significantly after Google Panda.

77. Site Usability: A site that’s difficult to use or to navigate can hurt ranking by reducing time on site, pages viewed and bounce rate. This may be an independent algorithmic factor gleaned from massive amounts of user data.

78. Use of Google Analytics and Google Webmaster Tools: Some think that having these two programs installed on your site can improve your page’s indexing. They may also directly influence rank by giving Google more data to work with (ie. more accurate bounce rate, whether or not you get referall traffic from your backlinks etc.).

79. User reviews/Site reputation: A site’s on review sites like Yelp.com and RipOffReport.com likely play an important role in the algorithm. Google even posted a rarely candid outline of their approach to user reviews after an eyeglass site was caught ripping off customers in an effort to get backlinks.

Backlink Factors

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80. Linking Domain Age: Backlinks from aged domains may be more powerful than new domains.

81. # of Linking Root Domains: The number of referring domains is one of the most important ranking factors in Google’s algorithm, as you can see from this chart from Moz (bottom axis is SERP position):

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82. # of Links from Separate C-Class IPs: Links from seperate class-c IP addresses suggest a wider breadth of sites linking to you.

83. # of Linking Pages: The total number of linking pages — even if some are on the same domain — is a ranking factor.

84. Alt Tag (for Image Links): Alt text is an image’s version of anchor text.

85. Links from .edu or .gov Domains: Matt Cutts has stated that TLD doesn’t factor into a site’s importance. However, that doesn’t stop SEOs from thinking that there’s a special place in the algo for .gov and .edu TLDs.

86. PR of Linking Page: The PageRank of the referring page is an extremely important ranking factor.

87. Authority of Linking Domain: The referring domain’s authority may play an independent role in a link’s importance (ie. a PR2 page link from a site with a homepage PR3 may be worth less than a PR2 page link from PR8 Yale.edu).

88. Links From Competitors: Links from other pages ranking in the same SERP may be more valuable for a page’s rank for that particular keyword.

89. Social Shares of Referring Page: The amount of page-level social shares may influence the link’s value.

90. Links from Bad Neighborhoods: Links from “bad neighborhoods” may hurt your site.

91. Guest Posts: Although guest posting can be part of a white hat SEO campaign, links coming from guest posts — especially in an author bio area — may not be as valuable as a contextual link on the same page.

92. Links to Homepage Domain that Page Sits On: Links to a referring page’s homepage may play special importance in evaluating a site’s — and therefore a link’s — weight.

93. Nofollow Links: One of the most controversial topics in SEO. Google’s official word on the matter is:

“In general, we don’t follow them.”

Which suggests that they do…at least in certain cases. Having a certain % of nofollow links may also indicate a natural vs. unnatural link profile.

94. Diversity of Link Types: Having an unnaturally large percentage of your links come from a single source (ie. forum profiles, blog comments) may be a sign of webspam. On the other hand, links from diverse sources is a sign of a natural link profile.

95. “Sponsored Links” Or Other Words Around Link: Words like “sponsors”, “link partners” and “sponsored links” may decrease a link’s value.

96. Contextual Links: Links embedded inside a page’s content are considered more powerful than links on an empty page or found elsewhere on the page.

97. Excessive 301 Redirects to Page: Links coming from 301 redirects dilute some (or even all) PR, according to a Webmaster Help Video.

98. Backlink Anchor Text: As noted in this description of Google’s original algorithm:

“First, anchors often provide more accurate descriptions of web pages than the pages themselves.”

Obviously, anchor text is less important than before (and likely a webspam signal). But it still sends a strong relevancy signal in small doses.

99. Internal Link Anchor Text: Internal link anchor text is another relevancy signal, although probably weighed differently than backlink anchor text.

100. Link Title Attribution: The link title (the text that appears when you hover over a link) is also used as a weak relevancy signals.

101. Country TLD of Referring Domain: Getting links from country-specific top level domain extensions (.de, .cn, .co.uk) may help you rank better in that country.

102. Link Location In Content: Links in the beginning of a piece of content carry slight more weight than links placed at the end of the content.

103. Link Location on Page: Where a link appears on a page is important. Generally, links embedded in a page’s content are more powerful than links in the footer or sidebar area.

104. Linking Domain Relevancy: A link from site in a similar niche is significantly more powerful than a link from a completely unrelated site. That’s why any effective SEO strategy today focuses on obtaining relevant links.

105. Page Level Relevancy: The Hilltop Algorithm states that link from a page that’s closely tied to page’s content is more powerful than a link from an unrelated page.

106. Text Around Link Sentiment: Google has probably figured out whether or not a link to your site is a recommendation or part of a negative review. Links with positive sentiments around them likely carry more weight.

107. Keyword in Title: Google gives extra love to links on pages that contain your page’s keyword in the title (“Experts linking to experts”.)

108. Positive Link Velocity: A site with positive link velocity usually gets a SERP boost.

109. Negative Link Velocity: Negative link velocity can significantly reduce rankings as it’s a signal of decreasing popularity.

110. Links from “Hub” Pages: Aaron Wall claims that getting links from pages that are considered top resources (or hubs) on a certain topic are given special treatment.

111. Link from Authority Sites: A link from a site considered an “authority site” likely pass more juice than a link from a small, microniche site.

112. Linked to as Wikipedia Source: Although the links are nofollow, many think that getting a link from Wikipedia gives you a little added trust and authority in the eyes of search engines.

113. Co-Occurrences: The words that tend to appear around your backlinks helps tell Google what that page is about.

114. Backlink Age: According to a Google patent, older links have more ranking power than newly minted backlinks.

115. Links from Real Sites vs. Splogs: Due to the proliferation of blog networks, Google probably gives more weight to links coming from “real sites” than from fake blogs. They likely use brand and user-interaction signals to distinguish between the two.

116. Natural Link Profile: A site with a “natural” link profile is going to rank highly and be more durable to updates.

117. Reciprocal Links: Google’s Link Schemes page lists “Excessive link exchanging” as a link scheme to avoid.

118. User Generated Content Links: Google is able to identify links generated from UGC vs. the actual site owner. For example, they know that a link from the official WordPress.com blog at en.blog.wordpress.com is very different than a link from besttoasterreviews.wordpress.com.

119. Links from 301: Links from 301 redirects may lose a little bit of juice compared to a direct link. However, Matt Cutts says that a 301 is the similar to a direct link.

120. Schema.org Microformats: Pages that support microformats may rank above pages without it. This may be a direct boost or the fact that pages with microformatting have a higher SERP CTR:

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121. DMOZ Listed: Many believe that Google gives DMOZ listed sites a little extra trust.

122. Yahoo! Directory Listed: The algorithm might also have a special place for the Yahoo! Directory, considering how long it’s been cataloging sites.

123. Number of Outbound Links on Page: PageRank is finite. A link on a page with hundreds of OBLs passes less PR than a page with only a few OBLs.

124. Forum Profile Links: Because of industrial-level spamming, Google may significantly devalue links from forum profiles.

125. Word Count of Linking Content: A link from a 1000-word post is more valuable than a link inside of a 25-word snippet.

126. Quality of Linking Content: Links from poorly written or spun content don’t pass as much value as links from well-written, multimedia-enhanced content.

127. Sitewide Links: Matt Cutts has confirmed that sitewide links are “compressed” to count as a single link.

User Interaction

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128. Organic Click Through Rate for a Keyword: Pages that get clicked more in CTR may get a SERP boost for that particular keyword.

129. Organic CTR for All Keywords: A page’s (or site’s) organic CTR for all keywords is ranks for may be a human-based, user interaction signal.

130. Bounce Rate: Not everyone in SEO agrees bounce rate matters, but it may be a way of Google to use their users as quality testers (pages where people quickly bounce is probably not very good).

131. Direct Traffic: It’s confirmed that Google uses data from Google Chrome to determine whether or not people visit a site (and how often). Sites with lots of direct traffic are likely higher quality than sites that get very little direct traffic.

132. Repeat Traffic: They may also look at whether or not users go back to a page or site after visiting. Sites with repeat visitors may get a Google ranking boost.

133. Blocked Sites: Google has discontinued this feature in Chrome. However, Panda used this feature as a quality signal.

134. Chrome Bookmarks: We know that Google collects Chrome browser usage data. Pages that get bookmarked in Chrome might get a boost.

135. Google Toolbar Data: Search Engine Watch’s Danny Goodwin reports that Google uses toolbar data as a ranking signal. However, besides page loading speed and malware, it’s not know what kind of data they glean from the toolbar.

136. Number of Comments: Pages with lots of comments may be a signal of user-interaction and quality.

137. Dwell Time: Google pays very close attention to “dwell time”: how long people spend on your page when coming from a Google search. This is also sometimes referred to as “long clicks vs short clicks”. If people spend a lot of time on your site, that may be used as a quality signal.

Special Algorithm Rules

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138. Query Deserves Freshness: Google gives newer pages a boost for certain searches.

139. Query Deserves Diversity: Google may add diversity to a SERP for ambiguous keywords, such as “Ted”, “WWF” or “ruby”.

140. User Browsing History: Sites that you frequently visit while signed into Google get a SERP bump for your searches.

141. User Search History: Search chain influence search results for later searches. For example, if you search for “reviews” then search for “toasters”, Google is more likely to show toaster review sites higher in the SERPs.

142. Geo Targeting: Google gives preference to sites with a local server IP and country-specific domain name extension.

143. Safe Search: Search results with curse words or adult content won’t appear for people with Safe Search turned on.

144. Google+ Circles: Google shows higher results for authors and sites that you’ve added to your Google Plus Circles

145. DMCA Complaints: Google “downranks” pages with DMCA complaints.

146. Domain Diversity: The so-called “Bigfoot Update” supposedly added more domains to each SERP page.

147. Transactional Searches: Google sometimes displays different results for shopping-related keywords, like flight searches.

148. Local Searches: Google often places Google+ Local results above the “normal” organic SERPs.

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149. Google News Box: Certain keywords trigger a Google News box:

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150. Big Brand Preference: After the Vince Update, Google began giving big brands a boost for certain short-tail searches.

151. Shopping Results: Google sometimes displays Google Shopping results in organic SERPs.

152. Image Results: Google elbows our organic listings for image results for searches commonly used on Google Image Search.

153. Easter Egg Results: Google has a dozen or so Easter Egg results. For example, when you search for “Atari Breakout” in Google image search, the search results turn into a playable game (!). Shout out to Victor Pan for this one.

154. Single Site Results for Brands: Domain or brand-oriented keywords bring up several results from the same site.

Social Signals

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155. Number of Tweets: Like links, the tweets a page has may influence its rank in Google.

156. Authority of Twitter Users Accounts: It’s likely that Tweets coming from aged, authority Twitter profiles with a ton of followers (like Justin Bieber) have more of an effect than tweets from new, low-influence accounts.

157. Number of Facebook Likes: Although Google can’t see most Facebook accounts, it’s likely they consider the number of Facebook likes a page receives as a weak ranking signal.

158. Facebook Shares: Facebook shares — because they’re more similar to a backlink — may have a stronger influence than Facebook likes.

159. Authority of Facebook User Accounts: As with Twitter, Facebook shares and likes coming from popular Facebook pages may pass more weight.

160. Pinterest Pins: Pinterest is an insanely popular social media account with lots of public data. It’s probably that Google considers Pinterest Pins a social signal.

161. Votes on Social Sharing Sites: It’s possible that Google uses shares at sites like Reddit, Stumbleupon and Digg as another type of social signal.

162. Number of Google+1’s: Although Matt Cutts gone on the record as saying Google+ has “no direct effect” on rankings, it’s hard to believe that they’d ignore their own social network.

163. Authority of Google+ User Accounts: It’s logical that Google would weigh +1’s coming from authoritative accounts more than from accounts without many followers.

164. Verified Google+ Authorship: In February 2013, Google CEO Eric Schmidt famously claimed:

“Within search results, information tied to verified online profiles will be ranked higher than content without such verification, which will result in most users naturally clicking on the top (verified) results.”

Verified authorship may already be a trust signal.

165. Social Signal Relevancy: Google probably uses relevancy information from the account sharing the content and the text surrounding the link.

166. Site Level Social Signals: Site-wide social signals may increase a site’s overall authority, which will increase search visibility for all of its pages.

Brand Signals

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167. Brand Name Anchor Text: Branded anchor text is a simple — but strong — brand signal.

168. Branded Searches: It’s simple: people search for brands. If people search for your site in Google (ie. “Backlinko twitter”, Backlinko + “ranking factors”), Google likely takes this into consideration when determining a brand.

169. Site Has Facebook Page and Likes: Brands tend to have Facebook pages with lots of likes.

170. Site has Twitter Profile with Followers: Twitter profiles with a lot of followers signals a popular brand.

171. Official Linkedin Company Page: Most real businesses have company Linkedin pages.

172. Employees Listed at Linkedin: Rand Fishkin thinks that having Linkedin profiles that say they work for your company is a brand signal.

173. Legitimacy of Social Media Accounts: A social media account with 10,000 followers and 2 posts is probably interpreted a lot differently than another 10,000-follower strong account with lots of interaction.

174. Brand Mentions on News Sites: Really big brands get mentioned on Google News sites all the time. In fact, some brands even have their own Google News feed on the first page.

175. Co-Citations: Brands get mentioned without getting linked to. Google likely looks at non-hyperlinked brand mentions as a brand signal.

176. Number of RSS Subscribers: Considering that Google owns the popular Feedburner RSS service, it makes sense that they would look at RSS Subscriber data as a popularity/brand signal.

177. Brick and Mortar Location With Google+ Local Listing: Real businesses have offices. It’s possible that Google fishes for location-data to determine whether or not a site is a big brand.

178. Website is Tax Paying Business: Moz reports that Google may look at whether or not a site is associated with a tax-paying business.

On-Site WebSpam Factors

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179. Panda Penalty: Sites with low-quality content (particularly content farms) are less visible in search after getting hit by a Panda penalty.

180. Links to Bad Neighborhoods: Linking out to “bad neighborhoods” — like pharmacy or payday loan sites — may hurt your search visibility.

181. Redirects: Sneaky redirects is a big no-no. If caught, it can get a site not just penalized, but de-indexed.

182. Popups or Distracting Ads: The official Google Rater Guidelines Document says that popups and distracting ads is a sign of a low-quality site.

183. Site Over-Optimization: Includes on-page factors like keyword stuffing, header tag stuffing, excessive keyword decoration.

184. Page Over-Optimizaton: Many people report that — unlike Panda — Penguin targets individual page (and even then just for certain keywords).

185. Ads Above the Fold: The “Page Layout Algorithm” penalizes sites with lots of ads (and not much content) above the fold.

186. Hiding Affiliate Links: Going too far when trying to hide affiliate links (especially with cloaking) can bring on a penalty.

187. Affiliate Sites: It’s no secret that Google isn’t the biggest fan of affiliates. And many think that sites that monetize with affiliate links are put under extra scrutiny.

188. Autogenerated Content: Google isn’t a big fan of autogenerated content. If they suspect that your site’s pumping out computer-generated content, it could result in a penalty or de-indexing.

189. Excess PageRank Sculpting: Going too far with PageRank sculpting — by nofollowing all outbound links or most internal links — may be a sign of gaming the system.

190. IP Address Flagged as Spam: If your server’s IP address is flagged for spam, it may hurt all of the sites on that server.

191. Meta Tag Spamming: Keyword stuffing can also happen in meta tags. If Google thinks you’re adding keywords to your meta tags to game the algo, they may hit your site.

Off Page Webspam Factors

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192. Unnatural Influx of Links: A sudden (and unnatural) influx of links is a sure-fire sign of phony links.

193. Penguin Penalty: Sites that were hit by Google Penguin are significantly less visible in search.

194. Link Profile with High % of Low Quality Links: Lots of links from sources commonly used by black hat SEOs (like blog comments and forum profiles) may be a sign of gaming the system.

195. Linking Domain Relevancy: The famous analysis by MicroSiteMasters.com found that sites with an unnaturally high amount of links from unrelated sites were more susceptible to Penguin.

196. Unnatural Links Warning: Google sent out thousands of “Google Webmaster Tools notice of detected unnatural links” messages. This usually precedes a ranking drop, although not 100% of the time.

197. Links from the Same Class C IP: Getting an unnatural amount of links from sites on the same server IP may be a sign of blog network link building.

198. “Poison” Anchor Text: Having “poison” anchor text (especially pharmacy keywords) pointed to your site may be a sign of spam or a hacked site. Either way, it can hurt your site’s ranking.

199. Manual Penalty: Google has been known to hand out manual penalties, like in the well-publicized Interflora fiasco.

200. Selling Links: Selling links can definitely impact toolbar PageRank and may hurt your search visibility.

201. Google Sandbox: New sites that get a sudden influx of links are sometimes put in the Google Sandbox, which temporarily limits search visibility.

202. Google Dance: The Google Dance can temporarily shake up rankings. According to a Google Patent, this may be a way for them to determine whether or not a site is trying to game the algorithm.

203. Disavow Tool: Use of the Disavow Tool may remove a manual or algorithmic penalty for sites that were the victims of negative SEO.



On-Page Seo Checklist to Follow in 2015

You goal is to harness the power of your search engine optimization, if so, follow these checklist and implement things that you’ve missed promptly. These are important factor to take in consideration in regards of on-page seo.

1. Is your blog consist of relevant posts, of 500+ words each?

2. Do your post consist of <h1> before <h2>, <h3>, <h4> tags? Or do it just consist of <h1>?

3. Is your targeted keyword (primary) in your heading tag <h1>?

4. Did you included your keyword in <h2> tag?

5. Are you using alt-tags in images?

6. Is your image’s name isn’t like img9284.png, and is like article-keyword.jpg?

7. Are you using a responsive theme, that is passed through Google mobile-friendly testing tool?

8. Are you having a set of popular posts in your sidebar?

9. Are you interlinking your old posts with new one, and vice-vice?

10. Are you using relevant title headlines, with powerful words?

11. Are you using title tags under 65 characters?

12. Are you focusing on gaining more social shares?

13. Are you cloaking your affiliate links? i.e. from http://www.bluehost.com/track/viralblogtips/ to yoursite.com/recommended/bluehost/

14. Are you concentrating on quantity or relevancy while link building?

15. Are you keeping keyword density to 2-3 percentage?

16. Are you properly configuring your meta tags?

17. Are you focusing to improve your conversion rate? – try Crazy Egg, your’s 60 days FREE.

18. Are you showing implementing important elements, CTA’s above-the-fold?

19. Are you mixing both primary and secondary keyword in title tag to rank better?

20. Is your loading speed below 4 seconds?






Thursday

HOW TO INCREASE PAGE RANKS IN GOOGLE | HOW TO INCREASE PAGE RANKINGS

        

HOW TO INCREASE PAGE RANKS IN  GOOGLE:
 

Google PageRank :
Google Page Rank is a measure from 0 -10 of how important Google thinks a webpage is. In Google's eyes a web page with a PageRank of 10/10 is very important and a web page with a PageRank of 0/10 is not very important. If you have the Google toolbar installed on your browser then it will automatically tell you the PageRank of any webpage you are looking at, if you do not have one then you can check PageRank by visiting the following website.

 PageRank Checking Tool:
Generally websites with higher PageRank will get better rankings in Google's search results. Google takes into consideration many things when it is calculating PageRank, the most important factor is the amount of quality incoming links a webpage has. Generally the more quality links a webpage has, the higher the PageRank will be, therefore you can increase PageRank by gaining more quality links.

PageRank updates about once every three months. People have come up with ways of trying to predict what your PageRank is likely to be at the next update and although no one can tell for sure the guys at Iwebtool have come up with a pretty good prediction tool.


 PageRank Predictor:
This tool does not always get it right, and it is mainly for entertainment purposes only. However if you work hard at link building you will see your predicted PageRank increase and when the next update comes you should see your PageRank increase.

Google Page rank is based on back links. Back links are Links pointing to your website from another website. The more back links you have the higher your PR will be.

1. Join forums, forums are a great way to achieve links to your website. In most forums you are allowed to have a signature and in your signature you can put a link to your website. But another important note to look on is making sure the forum is somewhat related to your website. You will still get credit if it’s not, but if it’s related to your website than you will be accomplishing two tasks at once.

Your websites presence is very important to your survival. The more people see, or hear about your website the more credibility you will have and this increases your chances of having these visitors come back and possibly become leads.

2. Submit to search engine directories. Search engine directories are a good way to get a free link to your website. They also increase your chances at being listed higher on popular search engines like Google, and overture.

Most search engine directories allow you to submit to their website for free. This will allow you to increase your web presence by being listed on another search engine, and it will also be a free link.

3. Using ezine ads (or newsletters). Creating an ezine will probably be the most beneficial step you can take to increasing your web presence. When you create an ezine you will be able to keep visitors coming back to your website for more by using signatures and giving special deals.

4. Creating and publishing articles. Articles are an easy source of generating new traffic. You can include your signature in your article. This will bring in more traffic from article submission directories.

Your signature usually consists of 4 to 8 lines. Usually the first line would be the title of the website that you are trying to advertise. The last line would be the link to the website and the lines in between these would be a sales pitch to draw your viewers into your website.

5. Links from related websites. Gaining links from related websites can be one of the most frustrating tasks you can attempt.

They are very easy to find, but can be somewhat difficult to obtain links from.

To find related websites, all you have to do is go to a search engine… say Google… and type in your subject. Maybe your website is based on ford mustangs.

You go to Google and type in ford mustangs, than you look around for pages that are somewhat related to your website. After you have done this (which should be very easy) you have to contact them in some way to get your link posted on their website. This can be the most difficult task because a lot of webmasters ignore e-mail’s from people requesting links because they don’t see the importance of it at the time. Some other reasons could be that they are rarely online, or they delete spam mail and sometimes delete their important emails in the process.

So if Google one day decided to link to a website that was just created and this website has a page rank of 0 and has a domain that goes something like this: mywebsite.geocities.com it’s page rank wouldn’t increase even though Google’s page rank is 10, it’s rank would still be zero because it would only have that one back link.

Page Rank is a link analysis algorithm which is used by search engines to determine relative importance of your link within their database. Here I’ll tell you how to increase page rank
How is Page Rank Calculated?

Page Rank is calculated by various algorithms made by search engines, in simple words, Page Rank is calculated upon the number of links on your site; these links Include:

    Backlinks.
    Inbound links.
    Internal links.
    External links.
    No-Follow links.
    Do-Follow links.

Google and other Page Ranking sites analyze these links and assign a numerical page rank from 1 to 10 to your website. Below we will discuss Top 15 Killer Tips To Increase Page Rank
How To Increase Page Rank?

Increase Page Rank:
1. High Quality Content:
In order to increase Page Rank you must have unique quality content which your readers want to share with their friends. You can read Tips For Writing Engaging Content.

2. Site Submitting:
To boost Page Rank you must have high quality Backlinks and the best way to generate quality backlinks is to submit your site on different web directories and article directories.
Some Good Web And Article Directories Are:

    DMOZ
    Yahoo Directory
    Best Of The Web
    Ezine Articles
    Article Base
    Go Articles

3. Guest Posting:
This is one of the most used and best technique to increase Page Rank. Most Blogs have options of guest posting through which you can post at their blog and get two or three backlinks in return to your blog this really helps if you are posting on good Page Rank Blog with the same Niche as yours.

4. Link Exchange:
This is one of the most old techniques but it still works, in order to get a good PageRank you should get higher Page Rank sites to link to your site, through this you will firstly get a good Page Rank and will get traffic from that site.

5. Keep Updating:
Google really likes Sites that keep their content fresh and unique. The more you post, the more Google will crawl your site and the more chances for you to increase page rank ;)

6. Commenting On Other Blogs:
Link Building
Commenting is a very crucial process in generating a good Page Rank. In Blogging Community you must be very socially active. Some Blogs are Do-Follow, which can help you generate back links to your site by just commenting on their posts. Nowadays most blogs have CommentLuv Plugin installed on their site which automatically places a link to their last blog post at the end of their comment.

    Why You Should Comment on Other Blogs?

7. Social Bookmarking:
Social Bookmarking is a very effective method to increase Page Rank because by sharing your Site on different Social Sites you will get a free Backlink and Traffic. Some of the most popular Social Bookmarking Sites Are:

    Facebook
    Google Plus
    Squidoo
    Digg
    Hub Pages
    Stumble Upon

8. Website Accessibility:
If Your Website is down for a long period of time, Google may reduce the ranking of your site. So You should always keep Your Website accessible.

9. Using Commonly Searched Keywords:
As You know people search using keywords and not the whole sentence so if you have used a keyword which is very frequently searched then you get a higher chance of your website being visited and MORE VISITORS = BETTER PAGE RANK.

10. Website Advertising:
You can make an Ad or a banner for your site and advertise it on different website, through this you will get good back links and traffic.

11. Create Multiple Pages:
If You create multiple Pages on Your Site this will strengthen your internal linking and will ultimately increase Page Rank.

12. Participate In Forums:
Google loves forums that are most frequently updated and by getting a back link from these forums you will succeed on increasing Page Rank.

13. Using Signatures:
You can add a link to your website in your online signatures. For example, you can add signatures in your email and forum posts but don’t try to spam because you can be blocked.

14. When Does Google Re-Evaluate Page Rank?
Google Re-Evaluates Page Rank about Three to Four times per year, so almost every Three months Google calculates Your Page Rank again.

15. Never Use Illegal Tactics:
Using illegal tactics can get you banned from Google and Google is very smart so never think that you can deceive Google because if they find out that you are using illegal techniques which are against their policy they will block you. Stay away from those tactics using these legitimate techniques will improve traffic.

 How do you improve page rank fast?
You must have heard it said many times over that traffic is the lifeblood of any internet business. Of all traffic sources, search engine optimization (SEO) is about the most enduring and effectively, cheapest means in the long run. In comparison with pay per click for example, the traffic the marketer generates from search engine optimization (SEO) recurs unlike pay per click where the traffic generated virtually grinds to a halt as soon as the marketer’s expenditure on his advertisement stops. This makes search engine optimization a much sought after means of traffic generation by most marketers.

However, “if wishes were horses, beggars would ride.” Search engine optimization is a very painstaking and relatively long term method of generating traffic. In brief, search engine optimization involves on page and off page site optimization. This again can be looked at from the angle of content creation and optimizing as well as generation of backlinks. All these enable the small business owner to improve page rank of his site.

The question now arises as to which approach is best for the marketer to achieve effective search engine optimization for his site such that he obtains reasonable volume of traffic to enable sales and profit within the shortest possible time?

Some marketers would say just more and more content published on your website or blog will achieve the objective. Others would say, emphasis should be on gaining as many backlinks as possible. Let us be practical. Can any small business marketer hope to effectively compete with the relatively larger companies in terms of content generation? These companies can afford to employ freelance writers on a permanent basis to regularly churn out relevant and unique articles for their website’s use. Some of these companies even go to the extent of utilizing bots to generate articles for their blogs/sites.

The alternative to generating huge content left for the small business marketer is duplication of content which may not favor the marketer as a lot of his duplicated content may end up not being indexed by Google and other search engines.

The other approach is in regards to gaining backlinks. Hitherto, this could also effectively be dominated by relatively bigger companies who could afford to finance the use of bots to spam many sites with a view to gaining backlinks. The possibility of this is however now curtailed with the introduction of captcha by many websites.

Combined with this is the fact that here, the “river is very wide and available for all to swim”. A small business owner can effectively research his own set of keywords which may not be in use by the relatively bigger business marketer and so optimize for these and begin to point massive backlinks towards these set of keywords.

The small business marketer can even create very few high quality unique content in form of “link bait” which can attract backlinks on its own merit.

In summary, the best approach for the small business marketer to improve page rank and achieve search engine optimization (SEO) for his website within the shortest possible time and thus reap the relatively free targeted traffic therefrom, is through relatively much more focus on backlinking, possibly self-generating, through link baiting as opposed to massive original content generation which can take ages.

 How to Improve Your Google PAGE Ranking ?
Google's search engine, www.google.com, uses a variety of methods to determine which pages are displayed first in the results. Their exact formula is a secret, but there are a few things you can do to improve your positioning. The term for this is Search Engine Optimization (SEO).
These tips may not make your website the first one to appear in the list, but they just may help you move up a little.

Ignore spam and websites that offer to submit your website to hundreds of search engines. At best these are wastes of time or money and at worst they can actually hurt your ranking.

Keyword Phrases
Rather than focusing on a single word, try adding a few words to make a keyword phrase. You may want to read about effective Google searches to see how keyword phrases help with searches.
If you were searching for your own website, what keyword phrase would you type into Google for each page? Would you look for super fast widgets? Would you look for cooking with widgets? It may be helpful to get a different perspective. Ask someone else to read your page and suggest what they think your keyword phrase might be. You can also check Google Trends to see if one phrase is starting to gain popularity.

Try to stick to one subject per page, and stick to one keyword phrase per page. That doesn't mean you should write stilted text or use odd phrases. Clear writing is both easier to search and easier to read.

Density
One of the things Google looks for when it catalogs pages is the density of the keyword usage. In other words, how often the keyword occurs. Use natural phrasing. Don't try to trick the search engine by repeating the same word over and over or making text "invisible." It doesn't work. In fact, some of that behavior even get your website banned. Read more: Google Dont's - Bad Tips and Dirty Tricks That Will Get You Banned.

Give a strong opening paragraph. Google may or may not search beyond the first 200 words or so of your web site, but it definitely looks at the first paragraph for keyword density.

You can check your keyword density with Google Toolbar.

Name Your Pages
Give your pages a descriptive name with the <title> tag. This is vital. Google displays search results as a link using the Web page's title. A link called 'untitled' isn't enticing, and nobody is going to click on it. When appropriate, use the page's keyword phrase in the title.

One of the biggest factors Google looks at is the hyperlink. Google looks at both links to and from your website.

Google looks at the words you use in links to help determine the content of your page. Use links within web pages as a way to emphasize keywords. Rather than saying, "click here to learn more about SEO" you should say: Read more about SEO (Search Engine Optimization).

Learn more about why hyperlink names matter to Google.

Links from other websites to your website are used to determine PageRank. You can use Google Toolbar to check your current PageRank.

You can improve your PageRank by exchanging text links with other relevant websites. Banner exchanges are not as effective. You can also improve your PageRank by making sure your website is listed with important directories. In other words, check the PageRank of the home page of the directory.

Submit Your Site to the Right Directories
Submit your website to the open directory project, if possible. Google considers this directory to be an important link. Be patient. A real human has to check your site, before it's listed in the Directory.

Submit your site to specialized directories. For instance, a work at home mother owned business (WAHM) should submit her site to WAHM directories. A site on butterflies should be sent to biology or entomology directories.

Don't get too submission happy, though. Google, in an effort to combat click fraud, often filters out websites linked from link farms, or pages with nothing but links to other websites. This is one reason why free services to register your website may hurt you. Stick to specialized directories and organizations. They're more likely to help and not hurt your rankings.

Social Networking
Social networking sites can be a good way to promote a site, but not all of them will affect your rank directly. Digg and Del.icio.us are social linking sites that could potentially have the most impact.
Make Your Graphics Search Friendly

Keep the Flash to a minimum. People may enjoy reading Flash, but search engines tend to skip right over it. Google has gained some ability to read Flash, but it is still limited. If your menus are in Flash, they might as well be invisible. Consider making plain text links in addition to or instead of Flash.

Give your images <alt> tags. Not only does it make your website more accessible to the visually impaired, it also gives you another chance to place your keywords where Google can see them.

Good Design Is Popular Design
In the end, strong, well organized pages are pages that Google tends to rank higher. They're also pages that tend to become more popular, which means Google will rank them even higher. Keep good design in mind as you go, and much of the SEO will design itself.

These are More Tips to the Increase Paqge Rank in the Google: 
 use a meta tags in head of your website ,use the keywords which are related to your website,another method is to build backlinks,backlinks are those where u address your website on some other websites like facebook.com.keep updating your website,always remember google consider those website for higher rankings which are having updated content in their website.

To increase visitors to your website you need a good page rank and for getting a good page rank you can follow some quick steps:

1.)Create your blog first and update it daily with the latest any 1 article related to your website.
2.)Create Facebook-Page and use Face-book social Plugin on your website it will really helps you to make your website popular and helps you getting Vistors as well as Pagerank.
3.)Do Comment Posting on Blog related to your website it will really helps you to get you on the top of Google.
4.)Submit only 3 articles per week to the sites given below:
http://www.ezinearticles.com
http://articlecity.com
http://ehow.com
http://www.articlebase.com


PPC (like google adwords)
- Video Marketing (especially via YouTube)
- here at Yahoo! Answers
- submit articles
- Directories

- Social Bookmarking
- Forum and Blog commenting

- email marketing
- Classifieds





SEO TIPS | SEO ON PAGE TIPS | QUALITY LINK BUILDING | LINK BUILDING | SEO UPDATES 2013

                                                      SEO TIPS 

We have put together this basic Search Engine Optimization Guide to help website owners properly optimize each page on their website. You do not need to be an SEO Expert to achieve adequate rankings as you can quickly implement many of these SEO techniques on your own.

Our seo guide covers 8 main areas of search engine optimization: Keyword Research, Title Optimization, Body Optimization, URL Optimization, Backlink Optimization, Pagelink Optimization, General Optimization and Link Building Techniques. Each section will walk you through the most important aspects regarding that particular optimization type. Furthermore, it will outline basic rules to follow when performing the described SEO technique.

But wait! Before you get too far into this guide, remember that all of these tips are incorporated into our Professional SEO Tool. Our tool analyzes each page on your website and provides easy to follow optimization suggestions. This greatly simplifies the SEO process and illustrates SEO violations in a graphical, easy to follow format.


Search Engine Optimization Tips & Guidelines
   
Keyword Research Guide

The most crucial step in SEO is selecting the best keyword phrases that fit your business and optimization strategy. This is your foundation. Mistakes in this phase can lead to many headaches further down the road.
   
Title Optimization

Although your title is just one element of many on your page, it is highly significant when it comes to achieving quality search engine rankings. This guide will cover topics like title length, prominence and keyword phrase count.
   
Body Optimization

Learn what to do and what not to do when optimizing your body text. This guide focuses on elements such as headings, word count, proper bolding and keyword phrase prominence.
   
URL Optimization

Your webpage Url is very important when it comes to SEO. This SEO guide focuses on items such as url length, keyword phrase count and hypen usage.
   
Backlink Optimization

Websites linking to yours play a major part in determining the relevancy of your webpage. Here you will learn things like the importance of relevancy, variation and quality.
   
Pagelink Optimization

Your website's linking structure also plays a role in determining the theme of a particular webpage. The sites you reference and the way you setup your internal links go a long way to determine the relevancy of a page.
   
General Optimization

These are optimization techniques that don't really fit into their own category. This guide includes topics such as page size, page freshness and the metatag description.
   
Link Building Techniques

Getting others to link to your website pages is the most difficult and powerful aspect of SEO. This guide outlines a few strategies you can use to start getting backlinks.

                                                    Seo Tips Guidelines
Welcome to the web's top SEO tips - the best and most comprehensive SEO guide on the internet for increasing your web site's traffic.

SEO consists of two fundamental elements: producing search-engine-friendly content and obtaining high-quality inbound links. There is a third element that you should take seriously: staying on the right side of Google and avoiding Google penalties at all costs, since Google is the foremost search engine and getting banned is pretty much a death sentence for a web site, especially if it is a young web site without an established following. If you follow the SEO tips in this article your web site will attract a lot of traffic from the search engines and will grow exponentially.

Produce excellent copy
Your content should be written extremely well; great copy writing is the heart and soul of SEO. Firstly, excellent writing is better for your users and is more likely to attract inbound links. Secondly, Google has ways, some of them very subtle, of determining just how good and useful a piece of writing is (see latent semantic indexing). Write with your users in mind, with a view to giving them the best and most useful experience possible. With regard to Google's subtle ways of assessing the quality of a piece of writing, you should avoid using the same keywords again and again, even if it feels natural to do so. Instead, you should use of a variety of synonyms for every keyword. This makes your writing more readable and interesting, and also persuades Google that your content is not run-of-the-mill spam, but authoritative and useful.

Content is king
The only thing Google respects is high-quality text with some links pointing to it. Google considers web sites that constantly add content much more useful than web sites that add content infrequently. For this reason you should set yourself a realistic target for the production of new content and stick to it. Depending on how ambitious you are, you can aim for one new page of content per day or per week. Whatever you choose, remember that Google likes fresh content. It has an intrinsic preference for web sites that focus on creating new content over web sites that keep tweaking their existing content again and again. In other words, Google wants to see that you are working on producing new content, not on optimizing content that you already have on your web site. The ideal word count for each page is between 500 and 1500 words.

Use the Google sandbox
The Google sandbox is an incredibly useful tool that suggests keywords and key phrases on the basis of what people have been searching recently. For example, you might type "SEO consultant" and the Google sandbox will tell you that, in addition to searching for "SEO consultant," other frequent searches are "SEO expert" and "SEO services." Using the Google sandbox will give you an inexhaustible supply of ideas for the creation of fresh content. Put simply, you use Google's sandbox to find out what people are searching for, and you then write content that targets those keywords. The aim is, of course, to rank highly in the search engine results pages (SERPs) for those queries. 

Use the h1 tag
The h1 tag is one of the great secrets of SEO. The h1 tag tells search engines that this is the main title of the page ("heading #1"). The h1 tag is an incredibly powerful tool and Google takes it seriously, providing it is substantiated by the page's content. In other words, the words in the h1 title tag should also appear in the main text. Using the h1 tag is an excellent way to optimize a page for specific keywords.

Here is how you use the h1 tag: <h1>Your keywords</h1>

The h1 tag will make the text quite large; you can have the benefit of the h1 tag without such enormous text by using CSS to format it as desired.

You should also use the h2 and h3 tags for your sub-headings, making the content of your page hierarchical. 

Keyword density
The keywords you are targeting should appear in the main body of your text reasonably frequently, but don't overdo it: a page that is stuffed with keywords destroys the credibility of your web site and is easily identified by Google as spam. Putting your keywords at the beginning of the page, in most of the paragraphs, and somewhere near the end will be quite sufficient. Do not forget the importance of using synonyms too, as mentioned above. If you want to check the keyword density for a page, you can use this keyword density tool. 

Use bold, italics and underlining on keywords
When you bold, italicize or underline a word, Google assumes that this is one of your keywords. You should therefore bold, italicize or underline some of the keywords on your page.

Be very careful, because this can also work against you: if you use bold, italics or underlining on words that are not keywords, you will confuse Google and will weaken the effect of these tags on your real keywords. 

Keywords in the URL
Deciding the URL of a page is an important part of SEO. The page should have a file name that contains your keywords, and the page should be in a directory that also has keywords in its name. For both the directory and the page itself, the keywords should be separated by dashes.

You should follow a sensible rationale when deciding what to call directories and files; it should reflect the hierarchical nature of your web site. For example, if you are writing a page about obtaining inbound links, a good URL for it would be

Use a high content-to-code ratio
Search engines will give your page a higher ranking if it has a lot of text relative to the amount of code. You should aim for a high signal-to-noise ratio on your page, which means that there should be more content than code. Open any page on the Internet, right click on it and select "view source" (or its equivalent). If there is a lot more code than text, search engines are not going to love it.

If you are serious about SEO you will produce pages with good, clean HTML and will avoid anything that requires a lot of code. A small amount of HTML code and a lot of quality text is what search engines (and users) really love.

Split substantial articles into several pages
If you write an article about a big topic, it is inevitable that the article will in fact deal with a number of sub-topics. In these cases you should split the article into several pages: one page for each subtopic. This has the following advantages:

a) you will be able to have highly focused search-engine optimization that targets each specific page, instead of trying to optimize one enormous page for keywords that are relevant to only 10% of it. Remember that Google decides what content is about on a page-by-page basis: this means that every page should focus on one topic - only one;

b) users prefer to read articles that are split over several pages rather than articles that have the "toilet roll" format. The links that take you from one page to the next should have the target page's title as the anchor text (more about this later).

Avoid frames like the plague
From the point of view of SEO, frames must rank amongst the most disastrous thing you can do. Users hate them, and search engines hate them even more. Put simply, search engines are not able to index web sites that use frames; the most they can do is index your homepage. For all intents and purposes you will simply not be present in search engine indexes if your web site uses frames. The brilliant Jakob Nielsen has more to say about why frames suck. 

Avoid Flash like the plague
After frames, Flash is the biggest enemy of SEO and usability. Search engines are not able to read Flash files. Therefore any text displayed on the Flash page will not be read by the search engines and will not give you any SEO benefit. As importantly, Flash is an enormous barrier between your web site and its users. I have always found Flash-based web sites extremely frustrating and very often leave before the homepage has even finished loading. In the rare occasions in which I waited for the home page to load, the web site invariably turned out not to be worth the wait. Truly useful web sites have indexable content, preferably in the HTML format. Good, clean, minimalist HTML code is the true friend of SEO. Do not use Flash if you are serious about SEO and getting real traffic from the search engines.

UPDATE: Google has greatly improved its ability to index Flash. It can now read textual content in any SWF file. The words that appear in these Flash files will be taken into account when the algorithm decides how to rank your page for a given query. Of course, text that is displayed graphically - as in a JPEG file, for example - will not be read by Google. It never has been, and will continue not to be.

I still hate Flash, and advise EVERYONE against using it, but if you really must, at least now you can be confident that its text data will be spidered and indexed by Google. 

Interlink your pages
Every page on your web site should have at least a couple of contextual links that point to other pages on your web site. These links should follow naturally from the content of your page. For example, if your page mentions an SEO consultant, you can use those words to link to a page that is relevant to them. That's a contextual link.

This will ensure that Google PageRank will be shared among your pages, and is an additional way of telling Google what your pages are about. 

Put high-quality outbound links on every page
Every page of the content on your web site should also have at least one contextual link that points to a high-quality external web site. It has been shown experimentally that Google gives a higher ranking to pages that link to a high-quality external web sites. In other words, other things being equal, a page with good outbound links will be placed higher in the search engine results pages than a page with no outbound links.

Deciding who to link to is relatively simple. Choose a word or group of words in your text and do a search on Google. Look at the top 3 or 4 web sites and choose one that does not compete with you. Go back to your page and make those keywords the anchor text for an outbound link that points to that high-ranking external web site. Google will love you for linking to a web site that it deems to be of a high quality, especially if the link's anchor text has words for which that web site ranks very high on Google. Doing this on every page in your web site will have the following major advantages:

Produce an HTML sitemap
By "sitemap" I do not mean those special files that tell search engines about the structure and your web site, although that kind of sitemap is a good idea too. In this instance I am referring to an HTML page that contains links to every single page on your web site, just like a directory. There are two reasons that make such a page essential:

a) f or the purposes of SEO, no page should be more than two clicks away from your homepage. Search engines do not like pages that need a lot of clicks to be found. Furthermore, it makes every page on your web site receive some of the Google PageRank of your homepage (the homepage will inevitably have a higher PageRank than any other page on the web site);

b) it is extremely useful for users to be able to access any page on your web site from a single page of links. In this way they can access a page very quickly, even if it is the last page of multi-page article. 

Put the menu on the right
To make your web site even more search engine- friendly, consider putting the menu on the right, as with this web site. This will ensure that the first thing Google sees after the <head> section is your content. This is because search engines read pages from top to bottom and from left to right. Putting the menu on the right-hand side ensures that search engines will come to it after your main content. This is related to having a high signal-to-noise ratio.

The <title> tag
This is vital because, like the h1 tag, it tells search engines what you claim your page to be about. The title tag should have the same contents as the h1 tag. The title tag for this page is:
<title>SEO tips</title> 

Produce META tags with great care
There are three META tags of interest in SEO: ROBOTS, content and KEYWORDS. The first two are vital; the third no longer plays a big role.

The robots tag should be as follows:

<meta name="robots" content="index, follow"/>

The contents tag should be identical or similar to the title tag - it has been found that Google loves this. The content tag for this page is as follows:

<meta name="description" content="A definitive guide to SEO (Search Engine Optimization)"/>

In the dark ages of the pre-Google anarchy the keywords meta-tag was taken very seriously by the primordial search engines. Accordingly, the SERPs were dominated by spam web sites that stuffed their meta-tags with keywords. Nowadays the keyword tag is almost irrelevant. By all means include it, but make absolutely sure that no keyword appears in the tag more than once. Do not put more than 20 words in the meta-tag. The keywords meta tag for this page is as follows:

Remember that search engines cannot read pictures
The essence of SEO is putting high-quality content on a page, and making sure that search engines can fully read and understand the content. This means that the heart of SEO is quality text. Any text that is displayed as a JPEG file or other graphics cannot be read by the search engines. Look at the source code of a web page: that's what search engine can see. If you can't read it in the source code, search engines will not be able to read it either, and you will therefore get no search-engine credit for it. I have seen entire articles displayed as a JPEG file. The author is probably despairing over why Google won't show it in its search results at all.

Therefore, do not use graphics to display content. This does not mean that you should not use pictures; when used appropriately, pictures enhance your users' experience and make your content more useful.

You can tell search engines what a picture is about by using the ALT tag. Make sure that the description in the ALT tag faithfully describes the content of the picture; stuffing the ALT tag with keywords that are not relevant to the picture is considered spam. 

Make sure you have "index, follow" in the ROBOTS tag
Every single page on your web site should have this tag. It tells search engine spiders to index the page, and it also tells them to follow all links to their respective target pages. This is useful in making sure that all the pages on your web site are indexed.

Spiders are programs that search engines use to analyze pages on the Internet; they go from page to page, following links and reading every page, making decisions on their quality and keeping a copy in order to show them on the search results pages for relevant queries. SEO is essentially about convincing these automated programs that a given page deserves to rank highly for a specific search query. 

When you produce a new page of content, link to it from the homepage
Once your homepage has a few quality inbound links, Google will regularly spider your homepage. Therefore, a good way to make sure that Google spiders and indexes a new page as soon as possible is to link to it from the homepage. Search engines will follow the link and index the target page within a few days. 

Use a unique IP address for your web site
It is very important that your web site be associated with a single, unequivocal IP address. There are two reasons for this:

a) If you use a shared IP address and another web site with that IP address gets a Google penalty, your web site will also suffer;

b) Google will take your web site a lot more seriously if it has a unique IP address.

Having a unique IP address for your web site will cost you a few extra dollars a month but it is undoubtedly worth it.

Get inbound links
Inbound links are the kingpin of the Google algorithm. Google revolutionized online search by introducing a simple but very effective answer to a complicated question: "If a user performs a search for widgets, and there are one million web pages about widgets, how do we decide the order in which these web pages should be presented in the search results? In other words, how do we rank them?"

The answer provided by Larry Page and Sergey Brin was simple: pages that have more links pointing to them are more likely to be useful than pages with fewer links pointing to them. Google considers inbound links as votes in favor of a particular web page.

It is therefore absolutely imperative to obtain inbound links that point to your web site and to content pages within your web site. The links that are most beneficial are one-way inbound links: links that point to your web site without your web site linking back. Google considers these the most genuine endorsements and therefore the most reliable indicator of a page's objective usefulness. Buying links is a great way to obtain high-quality links quickly. Text Link Ads is the most reputable link broker and offers a whopping to new advertisers.

How much weight Google will give to a link depends on the page's PageRank and on whether the link's target page is related to the content on the linking page. In other words, a link pointing to a page about SEO is worth more if is in a page about SEO; if the link is on a page about cars, it will be less beneficial. 

Link anchor text is important
The anchor text of links is extremely important, because it answers Google's all-important question: what do users think this page is about? The more relevant the inbound link's anchor text is to the target page, the more the page will benefit. The most beneficial links for SEO purposes are one-way inbound links with relevant anchor text. If you manage to get a one-way inbound link with a anchor text that contains the words in the target page's h1 tag, to Google this is an independent third party confirming the topic and usefulness of your page, and your ranking will go through the roof. Such links are worth pursuing.

This is not to say that other links are useless. Getting inbound links from pages with a high PageRank, even if the links are reciprocated, will still be beneficial. Links with "click here" as the anchor text should be avoided as they do not tell Google what the linker thinks the target page is about.

Probably the only way to start out with links is to start e-mailing webmasters, once you have produced some quality content, and ask to trade links. Most will decline, but some will say yes, and this will get you started. Remember that no decent web site will link to you unless it has free useful content. Part of the point of writing excellent content is to obtain natural, unsolicited one-way inbound links. For this reason, such content is sometimes referred to as link bait.

Use advertising to generate some traffic
A web site's traffic should grow exponentially once a certain critical level of traffic is reached, because the more people visit your web site, the more incoming links you will get, the higher your ranking will be, which in turn will bring in more traffic - assuming, of course, that your web site offers value to its visitors. Posting a cool video is an excellent way to gain exposure. If you follow the SEO tips in this article your web site will get good search engine traffic from the get-go.

Precisely because traffic breeds more traffic, you might want to consider spending a small amount of money on advertising at the beginning. Although advertising does not have a search engine benefit, the extra visitors it brings might link to your useful content, which will have an SEO benefit. Google's Adsense is a cool program for this sort of thing.

Post in forums
An excellent way of getting one-way inbound links is to post in forums and place contextual links pointing to pages on your web site, in addition to a link to your homepage in your signature. Of course this is only acceptable (and beneficial) if the forum's topic is the same as your web site's.

Make sure all such links have anchor text that is a highly focused on the target page's content. Not all forums make this possible, but I have seen several that publish posts as HTML pages and that allow links. The most beneficial forums are those that allow you to post a link without the rel=nofollow tag. Of course, make sure that you write quality posts that add value to the forum, or your posts will be considered spam. Also, the outbound links will be worth more if they are embedded within a good chunk of quality text. 

Use press releases to obtain backlinks
A great way to obtain one-way inbound links is to broadcast a press release through an online service. By all accounts PRWeb is the best facility for this sort of thing. Make sure that your press release is well-written and interesting, and of course make sure that it has a link to your web site. 

Do not link to bad web sites
If you link to a web site that Google has penalized or that for some other reason Google considers to be a bad web site, your web site will be penalized. Google will not penalize you if a bad web site links to you, but it will penalize you if you link to a bad web site. For this reason you should only link to the best web sites, and you should check those links frequently to ensure that the web site does not have a new, spammy owner (it can happen).

You should avoid so-called bad neighborhoods. Bad neighborhoods are clusters of interlinked web sites that are suffering a Google penalty (maybe without even realizing it). If you link to a web site which in turn links to a penalized web site, you are part of a bad neighborhood. Avoid this like the plague. 

Staying on the right side of Google
The third vital element in search engine optimization is avoiding anything that is even remotely spammy or unethical. You should follow Google's Webmaster Guidelines scrupulously. If you do any of the things banned by the Google Webmaster Guidelines, sooner or later Google will find out and penalize your web site. The following tricks are expressly prohibited by Google:

* Cloaking: this means displaying a different version of your web site depending on the IP address of those accessing it

* Redirecting your homepage to another page

* Using text that is the same color as the background

* Hidden links

* Registering many domains and interlinking them all

The Google algorithm has become very sophisticated and if you breach any of the Google Webmaster Guidelines sooner or later your infractions will be detected and you will be subjected to a penalty. An irritated user might also file a Google spam report.

SEO really works. If you write high-quality content that is search-engine-friendly and get some quality inbound links, Google will give you a goop placing in its search results pages and your web site's traffic will increase exponentially. It's incredibly satisfying to see a page you created on the first page of search engine results! With some hard work, it will allow you to build a useful web site that gets a lot of referrals from the search engines. Good luck!

Link Building and its Strategies:

 Link building is the SEO practice of obtaining links from external web sites to your own to improve both direct referrals ie. people clicking on the links and search engine ranking. Link building is all about increasing your site link popularity.

Web site Crawler will go to a site again and again whose ranking in Search Engine is high. You can verify this fact by putting your site on a high rank site. If your site link is available on a high rank web site then you have 99.99% chances that you site will be indexed with-in 24Hrs.
How to increase Link Popularity ?

There are various ways of increasing your web site link popularity. I'm listing out some important tips which are easily doable.

    Submit your site in popular search engines manually. Don't go for automated submission.

    Get your site listed in Open Directory Projects like dmog.org, yahoo.com. Getting listed in these directories will give your site a boost in link popularity and improve search engine ranking in other search engines.

    Provide high quality content - people will naturally link to your site if you have what they want and no where is available.

      Submit your site to bookmark sites like DIGG, and Slashdot etc. Before submitting please go through their spam policy.

    Write good articles in blogging sites and give few references of your links with-in that article.

    Keep providing good content to your site visitors. Try to keep them busy on your site. If possible create forums, news letters, blogs etc.

There are other ways but you need to spend some dollars to go for such alternative.

    Buy a place on high rank website where you can put your link.

    Subscribe for google's Adwords program to drive traffic towards your site.
This article is prepared to give you insights on how to do link building and strategies applied to generate back links to websites. I will try to explain many techniques and special terminologies about link building.

Link building is the process of getting quality websites to link to your website, in order to improve search engine rankings. Link Building techniques can include One Way linking , 2 way linking or reciprocal linking and Three way Linking.

Link Building and its strategies
 Link Building


A Reciprocal Link is a mutual link between two websites to ensure mutual traffic. For Example http://seoterminologyanalytics.blogspot.in/p/seo-tips.html gives links to http://seoterminologyanalytics.blogspot.in/ and in return seoterminologyanalytics gives links to ( Seo Tips), the websites are reciprocally linked. Website owners often submit their websites to reciprocal link exchange directories in order to achieve higher rankings in the search engines. Reciprocal linking between websites is no longer an important part of the search engine optimization process. Google and other search engines now do not give much credit to reciprocal linking as it does not indicate genuine link popularity.

Resource Links:
Resource links are a category of links, which can be either one-way or two-way, usually referenced as “Resources” or “Information” in navbars, Basically, they are hyperlinks to a website or a specific webpage containing content believed to be beneficial, useful and relevant to visitors of the site establishing the link. In recent years, resource links have grown in importance because most major search engines like Google have made it plain that—in Google’s words– “quantity, quality, and relevance of links count towards your rating.”

Search Engines insistence on resource links being relevant and beneficial developed because many artificial link building methods were employed solely to “spam” search-engines, i.e. to “fool” the search engines’ algorithms into awarding the sites employing these unethical devices undeservedly high page ranks and/or return positions.

Despite cautioning site developers (again quoting from Google) to avoid “‘free-for-all’ links, link popularity schemes, or submitting your site to thousands of search engines (because) these are typically useless exercises that don’t affect your ranking in the results of the major search engines at least, not in a way you would likely consider to be positive,” most major engines have deployed technology designed to “red flag” and potentially penalize sites employing such practices.

Forum Signature:
Forum signature linking is a technique used to build backlinks to a website. This is the process of using forum communities that allow outbound hyperlinks in a member’s signature. This can be a fast method to build up inbound links to a website, Forum signature can also produce some targeted traffic if the website is relevant to the forum topic. It should be stated that forums using the nofollow attribute will have no actual Search Engine Optimization value.

Blog Commenting:
Leaving a comment on a blog can result in a relevant do-follow link to the individual’s website. Most of the time, however, leaving a comment on a blog turns into a no-follow link, which is almost useless in the eyes of search engines, such as Google and Yahoo Search. On the other hand, most blog comments get clicked on by the readers of the blog if the comment is well-thought-out and pertains to the discussion of the other commenters and the post on the blog.

Directory Submission:
Website directories are lists of links to websites, which are sorted into categories. Website owners can submit their website to many of these directories. Directory listing is of 3 types Free, Paid and Reciprocal.


What is unnatural links? I got unnatural links message from Google
Google Web Spam Head ‘Matt Cutts’ released a new video (11-Feb-2013) in order to answer the question asked by one of webmaster.

Dbizzle from Los Angeles asked an interesting question about “How do we know what are unnatural links pointing to our domain?”

    “Google Webmaster Tool says I have “Unnatural Links”, but give little help as to which specific links are bad. Since I have never purchased links, I don’t know which one to have removed, and I’m scared of removing good ones, which will hurt my traffic. Suggestions?”

What is unnatural links?
First of all I would like to tell you all that Google recently started sharing information about your bad links in Google Webmaster account (in the form of e-mail).

Normally unnatural links (or backlinks) are

    Paid Links
    Links from banned site or Adult sites
    Links from link exchange network sites


Latest Back Link analysis
Matt suggested that, Google Webmaster Tool have provided to download your latest backlink details. This functionality provides your links and date when Google have discovered these links.

Now you can check your backlinks around the date on which you received ‘Unnatural Backlink’ e-mail from Google.

It will help you to find bunch of backlinks that may be on radar. You can analyze those links and sources and then removed the links that you think are unnatural or bad links.

Future e-mail will contain example of backlinks

Matt has given a hint that soon they will roll out a change, once this change will be rolled out then all the ‘unnatural back link’ e-mail will have the example of ‘back links’ as well. These example will help you to find bad or unnatural backlinks within your back link profile.

Why Google telling us which links are bad directly?

Now my question to Matt is, “why Google is not listing down all the bad (or unnatural) back links within the unnatural back link e-mails as it help blog/website owner to remove unnatural links”.

Why they are sending only example of bad links? Why not list of bad links?

Right now I don’t have any answer to my questions but my assumption is Google is not sharing exact bad links URL as it can help to webmaster/SEO to distinguish between natural and unnatural link logic of Google and they can plan their back link process accordingly to manipulate their client’s ranking. 
SEO (Search Engine Optimisation) is becoming crucial to ensure that your website is easily found, so today we've provided our Top 10 SEO Tips to help you get the best search results for your website.

When you are operating a business website, especially one with an online store, it is crucial that your site can be easily found. Just as bricks and mortar retail stores always try to get the best position with the highest pedestrian count, websites need to rank well in search engines to be successful.

This is where SEO (search engine optimisation) comes into the picture. Why is it so important? Well, SEO is one of the keys to the success of your online business.

Website ranking is determined by many factors, the relevance of the keyword or search terms to what the searcher is seeking, the popularity of the search term amongst the people who actually search, as well as technical elements such use of keywords/phrases in page titles, use of all keywrods and phrases within the body text etc. By understanding search terms and developing appropriate SEO strategies.

The following Top 10 SEO tips are simple techniques that you can use to start improving the search engine ranking of your website.
Top 10 SEO Tips


1. Encourage respected, industry-related websites to link to your web pages
This is the most important factor in optimising your site. Inbound links from other websites and blogs help the search engines find you and understand what your web pages are about. A website is like a destination in a sprawling city, and links are the roads leading to it. The search engines also treat these links pointing to your web pages as 'votes', and the more 'votes' you have from good quality and relevant websites, the better.

2. Satisfy the search engines' appetite for informative text
Customers are looking for information to help them choose a product or service. The search engines help them by finding web pages that provide useful and helpful information about that product or service. Search engines can't 'read' images and animations, so they need informative text. Give the search engines plenty of reading material. This is their food.

The other benefit of providing lots of helpful information on your site is that website owners are more likely to link to your pages and the search engines will reward you for these inbound links.

3. Do some keyword research
Who is your target market? What words or phrases (keywords) would they use to search for your products and services on the Web? Do some research; you may be surprised by the results.

To be found on the Web and communicate with your customers, you need to speak their language and address their particular needs. It's much easier to optimise web pages for keywords relating to a niche market's needs (e.g., Australian women looking for shoes size 10 and over, as opposed to people across the globe looking for general footwear).
Two free keyword tools

Google AdWords Keyword Tool

Yahoo's Overture Keyword Assistant

4. Make sure each web page has a unique title and unique content
Each of your web pages should have unique content and the keywords and title you choose for each page should reflect this. Think of each page as having a different emphasis. It's important to have a different title for every web page. Need help with page titles and how to edit them?

Search engines rank web pages, not websites, so each page can only be optimised for a handful of keywords and you can't optimise every page for the same set of keywords. If you try to fill a single page with all of the keywords related to your business, no single keyword will stand out to the search engines and they will not consider the page to be a good match for any specific search query.

5. Use your keywords in your web pages
Incorporate your keywords — in context and in moderation — into the text, headings, links, image titles and descriptions, description meta tags and keyword meta tags of your web pages.

6. Speak your target market's language
Help your customers find your website by clearly explaining what products and services you offer and the regions you service. Speak your customers' language and you will also help the search engines understand what you offer. Search engines are not good at 'reading between the lines' and you can help them by being specific in your choice of words.
           
7. Update the text content of your website
The search engines are trying to deliver the best, most up-to-date information to people searching the Web, so they favour sites that are updated often with good quality text content.

8. Study your site's statistics
Use your SiteSuite website statistics to learn which sites are driving traffic to yours and which pages within your website are the most popular.

9. Add interactive features to your website

Give your customers the opportunity to contribute comments, ask questions, submit product reviews, vote in a poll, or forward links and images to friends. These features encourage visitors to return and tell others about your site. Increasing traffic to your site can in turn attract the attention of the search engines. Interactive features such as forums and blogs have the added bonus of encouraging visitors to generate more text content for your website — the very thing search engines are looking for.

10. Look at your competitors' site content
Which web page appears first in the search result for your chosen keywords? Watch the search results over several weeks to see which pages perform well consistently. How are your competitors using those keywords on their web pages? How is their text information structured? How much information do they offer? Do you offer a product or service that your competitors don't, or do you service an area they don't cover? Make sure the distinction is clear to your customers and the search engines.

Given the importance of ensuring your website is easily found in Google and other search engines, we'll continue to provide updates to our Top 10 SEO Tips and other SEO advice, as well as occasional guest blogs by SEO professionals. But whether you follow our top 10 SEO tips or not, you simply can't ignore your website's ranking, your business might depend on it.


TOP 5 REASON WHY YOUR KEYWORD RANKING DROPPED IN SEARCH ENGINE

Today I am sharing couple of main reason that can affect your keyword ranking. This information can help you to find the cause of your keyword ranking drop.

Why my keyword ranking dropped, my keyword ranking drop from top 10, not ranking for my top keyword, keyword ranking and traffic dropped

1  Have you redesigned your website/blog?
If you have redesigned your website recently, it could be a possible reason of drop in your keyword ranking.  Change in URL structure, duplicate content, broken links, robot.txt and change in navigation technique can affect your keyword ranking in SERP. You need to check following areas of your website/blog

    URL structure

    Duplicate Content

    Broken Links

    Navigation

    Robot.txt

2  May be someone have hacked your website/blog.
This is another major reason that can affect your keyword ranking in search engine page. Most of the time it has been observed that hacker put some kind of redirection, malware or hidden spam links in your code that affects your keyword ranking.

Check your website / blog for

    Hidden spam links

    Hidden redirection code

    Hidden un natural code

Once you remove all unnatural code/links then send your website reconsideration request to respective search engine support group.

3  Change in search engine algorithm
Most of the search engine changes their search algorithm on regular interval. Change in algorithm can affect your keyword ranking. There could be two types of search engine algorithm changes

a) If your keyword has dropped 10 or more positions, then something in the algorithm probably decided to demote your site.

b) If just one of your big keywords has dropped just a few positions (e.g. from #1 to #4 or 5) then it may be about a different kind of algorithm change. This is a kind of change that rewarding your competitors’ sites for some factor rather than demoting your site.

Keep yourself updated with all the major/minor search engine updates.

4  Check Webmaster Tool Notification messages.
If you see drop in your keyword ranking then login to your webmaster tool account and check whether you get any king of notification e-mail or not. If you get any e-mail then take next step accordingly to resolve the root cause.

5  Check your backlink profile
You must have an eye on your backlink count on regular basis. If you see a sudden drop in your keyword ranking then check if there is any change in your backlink count.

Quality of backlink (with anchor text) affects your keyword ranking. Use webmaster tool to check your backlink count and keyword ranking.


How To Get Your New Website Indexed Quickly
For many people, getting search engine spiders to crawl their content for the first time is one of the toughest things to do. And even tougher still is the task of getting those spiders to come back and crawl your content on a regular basis. But alas, it is possible to get your brand new website crawled, indexed and visited frequently by search engine spiders – you just have to know the right tricks!

Get indexed
This is completely possible for even the novice webmaster who knows nothing about how websites work. The reason why I can say this is because I was a complete novice as well, but I managed to get my website crawled and indexed within the first 48 hours of it being on the web.

I want to share with you exactly what I went through in order to get my website crawled and indexed so quickly, and hopefully you will find it helpful, insightful, beneficial and inspirational. Without further adieu, let’s get into the nitty gritty of getting your new website indexed quickly.


1. Plan, research, plan, research some more!
So you want to get your website indexed within 48 hours too, right? The most important thing I can tell you to do before you even think about publishing your website is to plan and do research. I will expound on some of these topics later in the post.

     Brush up on your SEO (search engine optimization) knowledge and gain a general understanding of how it works. Write down any useful information and keep it handy for when you go to publish your website.
    Scope out your competition and see how their website flows. While you do not want to copy work from your competition, you do want to learn from them so that you can avoid future mistakes.

    Research what you can do in order to promote your website quickly. For example, reading this article is an excellent place to start! Simple Google searches like “how to get your website indexed”, “how to get traffic to your website” and “how to promote your website” will bring up plenty of content for you to digest.

2. Create at least 10 pieces of quality content ready
I made sure that I had already written, proofread and edited my website content before I purchased my domain name and hosting. Because I had already mapped out the niche I wanted to enter, I prepared quality content that would be ready for publishing as soon as my website went live. This allowed me to gear up my website quickly and focus on designing the website rather than having to rush around to write “quality” content.

3. Start building your internal link structure
I think this is a crucial mistake that far too many new webmasters commit. They research on how to get their website indexed quickly, how to promote their website, and how to get traffic to their website, but they forget to actually develop their website. Indexing, promotion and traffic are all wonderful bonuses, but the quality of your website must always be of first importance.

Depending on your website (you may own an informational website, a blog or a combination of both), create the necessary web pages that are needed for the site. For example, I created these pages right from the beginning: “Home”, “Blog”, “Articles”, “Misc”, “Contact” and “About”. It is beneficial if you have already prepared the staple information (Contact, About, etc.) so that you can just toss the information in as soon as you publish your website.

Once you have created and edited your pages, begin the process of adding in your prewritten content and linking the pages to one another. Make sure that every page links to at least one other page in your website and that each individual page has at least one link pointing to it. This is vital for helping those spiders crawl and index the majority of the pages in your website. Make it easy on the spiders by thoroughly linking to your web pages. Make sure that your link structure flows logically – a.k.a., don’t just randomly add links into your web pages. Make sure that each link is a cohesive fit and that each link will make surfing for your visitors (and the spiders) easier.

4. Optimize your content for niche keywords
Looking back at when I first started my website, I wish I would’ve researched more about how to optimize web pages. Use the Google Keyword Tool to analyze what people are searching for in your niche. Once you have found a few phrases that you think fit your website’s content, start optimizing your pages by strategically placing those keywords throughout your content.

Don’t overstuff your content with those keywords or the spiders will think your website is a bunch of spam. However, make sure you use those phrases (and variations of those phrases) enough to attract attention from the search engines. If it flows well, also make your anchor text (the text that appears for a hyperlink) mimic the keyword(s) highlight the keyword phrases you have chosen. This will help those search engine spiders understand what your content is all about and tell them how to rank it in the respective search engines.

5. Submit to search engines and web directories
This is the point in which you will start receiving some attention from the web spiders. I first started out by submitting my website to the big search engines: Google and Bing. To make things easier on you, each of those terms is hyperlinked to the page that you need to access in order to submit your site to those search engines. Submit your main URL to each of these search engines to get started.

The next thing I would suggest that you do is sign up for Google Webmaster Tools. Once again, it is highlighted for your convenience (please note that you must create a Google account first before you can use their tools). I would also sign up for Bing Webmaster Tools (you must create a Hotmail account) while you are at it. Bing does take longer to index pages than Google, but it would be wise to go ahead and sign up for their tools anyways. Yahoo! also has their own type of webmaster tools for you to use.

After you have submitted your URL to the search engines and have signed up the for Webmaster tools, it is time to create a sitemap for your website. This allows the search engines to see and understand the link structure in your website and, more importantly, allows the spiders to crawl your website with more freedom and ease. You can easily create your own sitemap by clicking here and filling out the necessary information.

Now that you have done all that work (phew!), it is time to start submitting your website to some web directories. I will go ahead and warn you that there are myriads of directories out on the web, but not all of them are necessarily good. Below is a list of directories (both paid and free) that I would recommend for submitting your website.

Free Directories
    DMOZ.org – just submit your site to this PR8 directory anyways. The backlog is insane, so don’t expect to get your site included anytime soon. However, I would go ahead and recommend that you submit your site to them. It has a lot of presence with Google (Google basically copies their directory).
    Tsection.com – this PR5 directory is excellent for free submission. It is laid out well and provides a good backlink for your website.
    LinkCentre.com– this PR3 directory is nice and they accept your site very quickly. The only drawback to this directory is that it is very full because of the automatic approval factor.
    SoMuch.com – this nice PR5 directory will review your site quickly for inclusion.


6. Submit content to social media sites
Now that you have setup your website and submitted it to search engines and web directories, it is time to submit your content (that you have hopefully already created) to some social media sites. I would recommend that you submit your content to the following sites (as they get indexed quickly and/or produce large volumes of traffic): Digg, Reddit and StumbleUpon. While there are other social media websites (feel free to submit your content to them too), I would first start out with these three.

Digg is crawled very frequently by search engine spiders, so you have an excellent chance of getting your content crawled once it is submitted. I have found that Reddit can bring good traffic to your website and that Reddit users tend to tweet about their newest findings (good advertising). StumbleUpon has the potential to bring tons of traffic to your website in a short amount of time, greatly increasing the chance that your site will get indexed quickly by the search engines.

7. Sit back, and watch your site get indexed
While I cannot 100% guarantee that this method of getting your website indexed quickly will work, I can say from personal experience that doing this got my own website indexed within 48 hours. And, because I took the time up front to do all this labor, my blog posts generally get crawled and indexed within 5 hours of me publishing them on the internet. Did I mention that I have only been at this whole website thing for 2 months? Many people can’t even get their website indexed in two months, much less their newest content!

Using these steps above, I got my own website/blog indexed within 48 hours. Two months later, my website gets crawled at the very least every other day (if I don’t make any new posts) and it is always crawled the same day I make a new post. Remember folks, I’ve only been at this for two months. Take time to follow the steps that I have provided for you, and you will start to see results in no time!



Keywords
 Words and phrases that users might type into a search engine when looking for sites like yours.

Markup
 The HTML tags applied to the content on your page. Examples: headings (h1 through h6), paragraphs (p) and title (title).

Link Labels
 The words that are actually clickable in a link to your site.

PageRank
 An algorithm used by Google and other search engines to determine your search engine ranking. On a scale from 0 to 10.

Search Engine Ranking
 How high in the list of search results your site is when someone searches on keywords related to your site.

Why Your Search Engine Ranking is Important
If your site doesn't show up on Google or other popular search engines, no one except those you tell about your site will find it. Let's say, for example, a prospective student types the words "school of public health" into Google. If the SPH web site turns up high on the list of resulting web sites, then SPH has a better chance of recruiting this student.

The higher a websites PageRank, the higher it will show up in search results. Google and other search engines use secret algorithms pointing to dozens of factors to determine PageRank. You can find out the PageRank of any web page below:
Check Page Rank of any web site pages instantly:
[Max field length is 300]
This free page rank checking tool is powered by Page Rank Checker service

How Search Engines Work
The higher your web site's search engine ranking on important key words is, the better. So how do you increase your site's search engine ranking? In order to answer this question, you need to understand how search engines work. They all work differently. Here is how they work in general:

    They send out "spiders" or "robots" that comb through web pages, recording URLs, page titles, content and meta data. They move from a page to every page linked to from it, and from those pages to every page linked to from them, in a spider-web-like fashion. A count is kept on how many times the robot comes across each page.
    They use information from internet directories.
    They use information submitted by Web Masters.

What this Means
    The more web sites that link to your site, the more times the robots will come across it, and the higher your ranking will be.
    Your URLs are important
    Your page titles are important
    The content on your pages is important
    The meta data on your pages is important
    You should make sure that your site is listed on internet directories
    You should submit your site to various search engines

Determine your Keywords
The first step in optimizing the findability of your web site is to make a list of the words and phrases that someone might use in a search engine query to find sites like yours. For the SPH web site, we might list the following:

    school of public health
    graduate school public health
    public health school
    masters public health

There are tools to help you do this. Google Insights for Search is one. Enter one search phrase into the search box and click the Search button. Scroll down and you will see search terms related to the search term you entered.

The Popularity Contest
The number of sites that link to your site is the number one determinant of your Google PageRank. Moreover, the popularity of the sites that link to yours matter. The bulk of search engine optimization tactics revolve around getting other popular sites to link to yours. So how do you get other sites to link to yours?

Target appropriate sites, such as affiliates/partners, business/trade web sites and related sites.

One way to find related sites is to use Google to see what sites are "related" to yours. Go to Google and search on "related:www.yoursite.com" (substituting "yoursite.com" with your own domain). You will see a list of the sites Google thinks are related to yours.

Additionally, you can find out what sites already do link to your site with Google. Search on "link:www.yoursite.com" (substituting "yoursite.com" with your own domain).

Once you target sites, contact the webmaster of each one and ask for a link exchange. If you offer to link to their site, they will be more likely to link to yours.

Get people talking about your site. Today there are plenty of social media sites (such as blogs, Facebook, Twitter, etc.) where people post content, including links. A social media campaign could increase your web site visibility.

Pay attention to the words that link to your site. Having other sites use your keywords in their link labels will help increase your search engine ranking on those keywords.
Use Human-Readable URLs

Outside of getting popular sites to link to your site, your URL is the most important factor for search engines. A web site about diabetes with the URL www.diabetes.org will rank higher than one with the URL www.sph.umich.edu/diabetes/. If you can, use your most important keywords in your URL. The order of words as well as the density of words are important.

This is true for your entire URL, not just your domain. Name sub-directories that represent the sections of your web site for that section. For example, The "About" section of the SPH web site has the URL www.sph.umich.edu/about/.

Here is how it works:
    Best results come from having the keywords as part of your domain name (e.g., www.diabetes.org)
    Having the keyword as a subdomain is second best (e.g., diabetes.sph.umich.edu)
    Having the keyword as a directory name is third best (e.g., www.sph.umich.edu/diabetes/)
    Having the keyword in a file name is fourth best (e.g., www.sph.umich.edu/diabetes.html)

Provide Good Page Titles
Web page titles count for a lot, too. I am referring to what comes between the opening and closing title tags in the head section of your documents, and appears in the title bar of the web browser when viewing the page. Page titles are usually shown in search engine results.

Be sure to use short, descriptive page titles. Be sure to make the titles different on all your pages, but make sure that all of them include the site's main title. The page your are reading is in the Web Services section of the Informatics & Computing Services website. Hence the title tag is as follows:

<title>Improving Your Site's Search Engine Ranking - Web Services - UM SPH Informatics & Computing Services</title>

Read more on descriptive page titles from Google Webmasters Support
Provide Good Content

Search engines like Google actually record the content on your page and use it in their search algorithms. If your site is about preventing diabetes, saying so on your page will increase your search engine rankings for searches on "preventing diabetes." The first 200 words on a web page are crucial. The first 2 or 3 sentences may be used in search engine result listings. A well-written first paragraph, packed with keywords, can do wonders for your search engine ranking.

When I say content, I mean the actual text on your page, not text images. Search engines cannot read text images, although they can read alt tags. Make sure that there is text on your site's homepage describing your site and its purpose. Each sub-page or section should also contain text describing their purpose.
Use Sound Structural and Valid Markup

Google counts text contained inside headings as more important than text that is not. Your page is bound to include headings and sub-headings. Be sure to enclose that text in actual heading tags. Your site name should use the highest-level heading, h1, sub-headings in the next-highest-level heading, h2, etc.

Google also gives high priority to alternative text for images and titles for links. Be sure to use these attributes in your pages.

Finally, pages with valid markup naturally receive higher search engine rankings than do pages with invalid markup. See the world wide web consortium for more information.
Provide Good Meta Data

Meta data is defined by the meta tags you use in the head section of your HTML document. Meta tags form name-content pairs. The name is stated in the value of the name attribute and the content is stated in the value of the content attribute. You can make up your own meta tags, but the important ones to use are:

    Content-Type
    author
    title
    copyright
    description
    keywords

The most important one for search engines is description. Keywords are less widely used, but are still used by some search engines.

The description of your site should be succinct yet comprehensive. Each page on your site should contain a unique description, and that description should say what that page is about. The character limit for descriptions is 250 characters.

Keywords should contain your entire list of keywords. Listing the same keyword multiple times in meta data will not increase your search results rankings in searches for that keyword. Indeed, many search engines will penalize you for doing so.

Here are the actual meta tags we use for the SPH web site:

<meta name="title" content="The University of Michigan School of Public Health" />

<meta name="description" content="The University of Michigan School of Public Health creates and disseminates knowledge, through research and teaching, to prevent disease and promote the health of populations worldwide." />

<meta name="keywords" content="school of public health, public health, University of Michigan, UM SPH, graduate schools, biostatistics, environmental health sciences, epidemiology, health behavior, health education, health management, health policy, reproductive health, genetic policy" />

<meta name="copyright" content="Copyright 2009 The Regents of the University of Michigan" />

It is easy to add meta data using Dreamweaver. Just click the Insert drop-down menu, choose HTML, Head Tags, Meta.

Read more on good meta descriptions from Google Webmasters Support
Update your Content Often

Most-recently updated pages rate higher in search engine listings. Adding a "date updated" date to your pages helps, but search engines know when pages were last updated.
Register your Site with Internet Directories

Google (and many other search engines) uses the Open Directory Project as the source of their online directory. In their own words, "the Open Directory provides the means for the Internet to organize itself." It is maintained by volunteers from all over the world. If you click on the "Submit a URL link", you will learn how to submit your site. It is not simple, nor quick. There are many rules. First you must decide which category and sub-categories your site fits into, then submit your URL. You can only submit your URL to one category. Once it is submitted, a volunteer Editor will process your submission, and inform you as to whether or not it was accepted.

I suggest that you read the "How to add a site to the Open Directory page" very carefully before submitting your site.

Submitting Your Site to Search Engines
Some search engines let you submit your URL directly to them. Some will let you do so for free, others will charge a fee. Be sure to read all the fine print before submitting your site. Here are links to the three most important search engine submission pages:

    Google
    Bing (Microsoft Live Search and Yahoo)

On the "Add a URL" page for google, it says "We do not add all submitted URL's to our index, and we cannot make any predictions or guarantees about when or if they will appear." This is very true. In fact, there is no guarantee that submitting your URL to any search engine will increase your ranking in search results. Of all the strategies discussed here, this has the least impact on your rankings in search results. But it takes very little time, so it is worth doing.

Google has recently begun offering a Site Map tool for Webmasters. You can submit a Site map as part of Google webmaster tools. Google uses your Site map to learn about the structure of your site and to increase our coverage of your web pages.

The following video from Google Webmaster Help helps to explain how Google finds your site:

Read more on submitting your site to Goole from Google Webmaster Support
Should You Pay to List Your Site?

There are hundreds of pay services that will register your site on multiple search engines. Some search engines will only let you register your site with them for a fee. I personally feel that the other strategies discussed here should increase your search engine rankings enough that you do not need to do this.
Sponsored Links and Local Listings

Another way to bring traffic to your web site (and be found via search engines) is to purchase sponsored links on search engine sites, like Google AdWords. With AdWords, you supply Google with a list of keywords for your site, and Google puts ads for your site on the right-hand side of their search results pages under "Sponsored Links." Every time someone clicks the link to your site, you pay Google. How much? It varies from five cents to one hundred dollars per click.

Yahoo! has similar programs, as do other major search engine sites. I have not used any of these services personally.

Google has a local listings section, and you can list your business there for free. You may have noticed these local listings showing up at the top of search results. Google does not charge for this service, but you do need a GMail account to sign up.
What to Avoid

Certain design elements make it harder for search engines to scan your site, such as flash and image-based sites, frames sites, image maps and JavaScript navigation.
Flash and Image-Based Sites

Today, it is easy to create complete web sites using programs like Adobe FireWorks, Adobe ImageReady, and Adobe Flash. Once you finish creating your pages graphically, you can export all the images and HTML.

The biggest problem with this approach is that text displayed in images and in Flash movies cannot be scanned by search engine robots, and will not be displayed in search engine results. I avoid using text-images whenever possible.

Another problem with image and Flash-based sites is that the HTML created by your image-editing program (or by Adobe Flash) may not contain the page titles, meta tags and heading tags that are so important for search engine optimization. If you do create web sites this way, be sure to edit the HTML and add these elements.

Solution: Of course, using images and Flash movies on your web pages is perfectly fine; just don't let them contain all of your site's content. And be sure to add in good page titles, text content, and meta tags.
Frames

Problem: If your site uses a frames layout, your homepage (index.htm or index.html) itself contains no content. It merely contains references to the pages that do contain content. Therefore, when search engine robots scan your home page, they do not pick up any content. You can still use good page titles and meta tags in the head section of your main page, however.

Solution: Use a CSS layout instead of a frames layout.
Image Maps

Problem: If you use an image map for your web site's navigation, you fall into the same traps as when you use text images for your site's navigation. Additionally, some search engines get "trapped" inside image maps and can't spider your site. Here is an example of an image map:

<map name="meet">
  <area alt="Students" coords="344,0,432,15" href="meet_people/meet_students.html">
  <area alt="Faculty" coords="344,16,432,31" href="meet_people/meet_faculty.html">
  <area alt="Alumni" coords="344,31,439,44" href="meet_people/meet_alumni.html">
</map>

Solution: Use standard HTML hyperlinks for your site's navigation. Use CSS to control how they are displayed.
JavaScript Navigation

Problem: If your site uses JavaScript links for navigation, search engines will not be able to follow those links. Here is an example of a JavaScript link:

<a href="javascript:link()" onClick="popUp('cs1/02.html',700,550)">

It is also important to remember that many web users have JavaScript turned off in their web browsers. Never use JavaScript to provide access to content. You can test how your page looks without JavaScript enabled by turing off JavaScript in your browser settings (just don't forget to turn it back on afterwards). I use a browser extension for Mozilla Firefox called NoScript that allows me to turn JavaScript on and off on the fly.

Solution: Use standard HTML hyperlinks for your site's navigation. Use CSS to control how they are displayed.
Underhanded Tactics
or SEO Strategies That Can Get You Removed from Google

Here are quality guidelines that Google lists on their Google Webmasters Guidelines:
    Avoid hidden text or hidden links.
    Don't use cloaking or sneaky redirects.
    Don't send automated queries to Google.
    Don't create multiple pages, subdomains, or domains with substantially duplicate content.
    Don't create pages with malicious behavior, such as phishing or installing viruses, trojans, or other badware.
    Avoid "doorway" pages created just for search engines, or other "cookie cutter" approaches such as affiliate programs with little or no original content.
    If your site participates in an affiliate program, make sure that your site adds value. Provide unique and relevant content that gives users a reason to visit your site first.

Tracking Your Visibility
Google and Bing (Microsoft) all provide webmaster tools to help you track your website traffic. All require you to register and place a snippet of JavaScript on your website to interact with their services. All of these services are free, and quite useful. I recommend that you sign up for these tools:

    Google Webmaster Tools
    Bing Webmaster Tools (includes Yahoo)
    Google Analytics

Seven Tips to Improve Website Search Rankings

1. Onsite SEO
It is important to optimize the title tags, structure of the site and load speed. These elements are in Google algorithms, hence they are important. But do not be obsessed with it. You can hire someone to do the job of running an assessment and site tuning up.

2. Website content is important
Content is king and this is an open secret that everybody knows. So it is important that the website has good content that keeps the user engaged. It will decide the time the user will be spent on the site. The content holds the user to your site and it will be shared and linked to. It is also important because it helps in the orientation of small business webmaster to offer the users of something that is of more value.

3. Content marketing for back links
Every small business owner knows that it is the back links that cause an increase in search engine rankings. But it does not mean that you should buy back links. You should earn links and for this content marketing is very important to gain back links. When you offer valuable content you will get back links. Valuable content includes humor, how to articles, information etc, all bring back links to your page.

4. Understand your Back link profile
Small business owners must know their back link profiles. If you do not know your brand anchors and mentions, it will kill your rank. Good business owners market their brand via press releases and discuss in forums about their businesses. All this leaves a good impression.

5. Community building
Link bait is the activity that is considered acceptable by Google. It is for the reason that the activity aims at creating a positive end user experience. It is hard to distinguish content marketing from link baiting without community element. If you develop a community element then it will be the best link bait of all as community is the best way to develop content in ways like no SEO consultant can ever think of. It extremely helps the SEO.

6. Quality is more important than quantity
Whatever field it may be but quality is more important than quantity. So provide quality content rather than fussing over the quantity. Small businesses might argue over this but if they want their ranks to increase then you have o respect this rule.

7. SEO reports review
Small business owners make the excuse that they are busy for not knowing what the SEO consultant has been doing and excuses like that only lead to fall in the rankings. So review the monthly reports to know in which direction the results are moving. Make sure the monthly reports demonstrate the disciplined execution of the SEO team.

The Google’s algorithm needs to be understood appropriately for improving your rankings small business site rankings. The updates and rules of the game shift regularly, but the major elements like onsite SEO and back links are the main reason for improving your rankings in years to come. So, follow these simple seven tips without fail to get better rankings and build your brand community and leave the rest as it will take care of itself.


    How to achieve long term SEO success
    How much SEO you will need to do
    What is involved in comprehensive SEO
    If your site can be SEOed
    If you need SEO
    The stages of SEO - penatlies and promotion
    How long SEO takes to work
    Why your SEO work might show no improvements in your rankings
    When SEO can damage your website's rankings
    SEO for free
    When to do SEO yourself and when to contract it out

How to achieve long term SEO success
If you have read the section What is SEO you will understand:

    On page and off page SEO can help you increase your rankings in the short term
    User behaviour will define if you maintain, increase or loose these rankings

SEO is not about getting lots of visitors no matter what or "just building links"

Standard quality SEO will get your website up the rankings but user behaviour will define if it should stay there.

You want the right visitors because your time at the top won't last for long if users do not engage with your website. Here is your actual desired scenario for long term search engine dominance.

    You carry out SEO and your page displays at or near the top of the search engine results.
    Users want to click on the link to visit your website (known as achieving "a good Click Through Rate - CTR").
    Users stay on your website for "a reasonable time" - they don't click the back button straight away (known as achieving "a low Bounce Rate").
    Users go deeper into your website and visit other pages.
    Users add your website to their favourites either on their browser or in Stumbleupon, reddit, etc.
    Users are so impressed they make a link to your website from their own website, facebook page, twitter account, etc.

And what do these wishy-washy statements "a good Click Through Rate", "a low bounce rate" and "a reasonable time" actually mean? Very simply rates and times that are better than your competitors.

Achieve this and you will dominate the search engines for your chosen keywords and phrases over the long term. Internet users will build links for you so that you don't have to worry about link building exercises.
How do the search engines know what my visitors do?

All major search engines can log how often they show your site in the search results for a particular word or phrase and how often users click through.to your website from those results. They can also see how quickly users click the back button and return to the search results.

Google and Bing can also monitor user movements if they are signed in but Google has the greatest advantage - Analytics. Almost all serious websites have Google Analytics installed which provides highly detailed information on user behaviour.

Read more about User behaviour and SEO.
How much SEO do you need to do?
As mentioned above your SEO needs to be "better than that of your competitors. This could mean you can do all the SEO required to get your top rankings within a few hours because your competitors have done little or no SEO. At the other extreme it could mean you need a full time team of SEO specialists to match the budget and resource of your competitors.

Some websites are SEOed once, some SEO non-stop spending thousands, tens of thousands or hundreds of thousands to keep their rankings.
If you would like to know what you are up against contact us for an SEO audit on your competitors.
What is involved in comprehensive SEO?

Below is the basic checklist for SEO and tells you what most search engines take into account when choosing who to display first. How much weighting they give to each factor is a matter of dispute and varies from search engine to search engine. All of these are covered in more detail throughout this guide.

In no (well known) particular order your website will rank better for a particular keyword if:
The coding is not poor

    your code has been (X)HTML validated by W3C
    your CSS has been validated by W3C
    you don't use the meta refresh tag to forward to another page
    at least 20% of the code on your page is text which the user can read
    the keyword being searched is in the readable text of your page to a density of between 3 and 6%

The coding is helpful
    the alt tags for images are sensibly used to explain the image
    the images are below 50kb so the page loads quickly
    the H1, H2, etc tags are used correctly
    the images have width and height attributes so the page contents won't distort if they fail to load
    menus and navigation are not controlled by javascript or flash which search engines find hard to follow

There is no scamming and limited copying
    there are no cases where the text and the background colour are the same
    the image alt tags don't have keywords stuffed inside them
    the keywords found on the page match keywords found in the title and meta tags
    the majority of the content is unique - not coming from RSS feeds or copied and pasted from websites the search engines have already indexed

The meta tags are used correctly
    the meta tags reflect the keywords found on each page
    The title is about 65 characters long and the description is about 150 characters long
    All the meta tags are used and used correctly

The URLs have certain charactaristics
    ideally your domain name is at least several months old
    You have defined your canonicalization (i.e. is it http://www.mysite.com or http://mysite.com?)
    your domain name contains one keyword or phrase you are targeting
    your url contains the keyword being searched
    your urls are not dynamic (i.e. not http://www.shop.com/product.php?type=television)
    You have a large number of urls (pages) on your website containing the keyword (think how many pages Amazon has with 'Books' as a keyword)

    Your website has files especially for search engines

    you have a sitemap.xml file containing all the pages of your website
    you have a robots.txt file which guides the search engines robots and spiders
    you have uploaded your sitemap files to Google, Bing and Yahoo

Your website has the right links

    there are links within your website that contain the keyword being searched, even if they link to other pages in your website
    There are links from other websites and those websites/webpages:
        contain similar content or keywords
        aren't link farms
        aren't pay per link
        aren't in a link wheel
        don't contain an excessive number of links
        don't get a link back from you (link swapping / reciprocal links)
        perform well in Google (e.g. show up in the top results for popular searches)
    There are out bound links from your website that go to other sites of similar content
    Your text is cross linked with other pages on your website
    There are less than 100 links, internal or outbound, on each page of your site
    You do not have so many links (compared to actual orginal content) that the search engines mistake you for a link farm

Your website has a good CTR and low bounce
    when the search engines display your website in the search results some users click through (the Click Through Rate - CTR)
    users don't immediately click the back button realising it is not what they were looking for (the Bounce Rate)
    users click deeper into your website
    users stay on your website longer than they stay on your competitor's site

All things being equal
You will hear this phrase a great deal when we talk about SEO. We mean that if there are two websites that are exactly the same and one of them changes for the better, it will be ranked higher.

Can your site be SEOed?
Not all websites can be if they are fundamentally flawed in some way. Below are examples of websites that would be difficult to SEO:

    Websites containing duplicate content - e.g. a site made up of song lyrics (if it has been done search engines see no reason to index what they already have.
    Websites that are mainly advertisements - search engines want to index content, not ads
    Websites that are mainly lists of links to other websites

Do you need SEO?
The answer is invariably 'Yes' but how much you need to carry out and how often can vary dramatically. In general:

    If you are coming up top in search engine results you should carry out SEO on a regular basis to ensure you stay there and not be toppled by one of your competitors
    If you aren't coming up top then you definitely need SEO!

The stages of SEO
These pages are a step by step walk through guide on how to do optimisation and fall into two main areas:

    Stop the search engines penalising your website or "how to make the search engines stop hating you"!
    Start getting promoted up the results in the search engines or "how to get the search engines to like you"!

Each of these stages is broken down into smaller and more managable steps but we recommend reading the whole guide first so you can keep some of the later steps in mind right from the beginning.
How long will SEO take to work?

Much depends on the size of your business and the state of your current website. Remember that many large corporations employ teams of SEO professionals full time which gives you some idea of the resources a large company needs.

A great deal will also depend on the size of your ambitions! If you want to get to the top of search engine results for "Jim's bicycle shop guildford" it's not going to take as long as dominating the keyword phrase "LCD TVs". This said there are clever, and legal, ways to get round even the most popular keywords - we will come to these later.

But for either the SEO steps are the same, it is simply the effort at each stage that varies. And always remember the process is cyclical - when you get to the end it's time to go back to the beginning and start again along these lines.

    Go through the entire process.
    Wait for the search engines to pick up the changes (time frames can vary greatly here depending on the keywords you are aiming for).
    Review your improvements ... and any dissapointments
    Review your ambitions
    Go through the entire process again if necessary

Why your SEO work might show no improvements in your rankings

It's an unfortunate truth but carrying out real Search Engine Optimization and then seeing no change in your rankings can be very telling. It means your competitors are also doing their own SEO and what you have done so far has just held the boat steady.
When SEO can damage your website's rankings

Apart from the obvious issues of practicing Black Hat SEO it is possible to carry out legit optimization but simply get it wrong.

One of the most common errors is just to concentrate on visitor numbers. But if you treat it as a simple numbers game this can drive up your bounce rate and cause a drop in the average amount of time users spend on your pages, both of which will have a negative effect on your rankings
SEO for free

These pages contain everything you need to know in order to work through your own optimisation because the only true way to get your website optimised for free is to do it yourself. But even this isn't truly free, your time has value and optimising your website takes a great deal of it so weigh things up carefully.

As a word of caution don't become so obssessed with SEO that you forget to run your own business. You may laugh now but it happens.

Remember to treat 'Free' SEO services offered to you with a great deal of caution. Unfortunately there is no such thing as a free lunch. Some sites are just after your email for their spamming lists, some companies place time bombs in your code that will freeze your website until you pay for them to be unlocked, and so the list of horror stories goes on.
Do SEO yourself or contract it out

We have put this SEO guide together because it gives an overview of our process when working with clients and gives them greater transparency into our services. If, once you've read it through, the thought "Wooah! This is going to be a lot of work" comes to mind then get in touch and we can give you a SEO quote to do the job for you.

                                                  Most Common SEO Mistakes

1.    Stupid you have made your pages ‘NOINDEX’
Yes, this is the number 1 mistake made by most of site owners. They set their website and pages as noindex.

When a Google Bot or other search engine’s bot visit your page and found NOINDEX Meta tag then it doesn’t index your site and your site will not be available on search engine.

If you don’t find your website or pages after making it live then check if there is an NOINDEX tag on page. If it is there then remove it from proper place.
top 7 seo mistakes, most common seo mistakes, biggest SEO mistakes

2.     Not using Anchor text for internal links
Many times we just put the URL of our internal posts/pages without using any anchor text; according to SEO it is waste of interlinking.
Always use proper ‘Anchor Text’ no matter whether it is internal link or external link.
Avoid using ‘Click Here’ or ‘Read more’ anchor text wherever possible to utilize Anchor text property effectively.

3.    Use what people search on search engine
Usually website owner used such terms for their Title or Keyword phrase that is not generally search by internet user.
e.g. “Mt. Everest Height” is a bad keyword phrase because a general user will search – “What is the height of Mount Everest”.
So think in terms of internet user because ultimately they are going to search and read your article.

 

4.    Setting Title Tag automatically
Title tag is one of the most important factors that decide your ranking in SERP; don’t use automatically generated Titles.
Do some research on search engines and select some meaningful title that usually people search.
Read: – How to create Eye Catching Search Engine Friendly Title

5.    Don’t ignore internal linking
Usually people are too lazy in internal linking. Internal Linking not only give life to your old but important article but it also helps to bot to explore your site.

Interlinking SEO Tips- Too much interlinking is not good in respect of your readers and search engine both. Try to limit 1-2 interlink for every 500 words.

6.    Using Same Anchor text for backlink
Usually People target a single keyword as anchor text for all their backlinks to target first page in SERP for that keyword.
Google has recently penalized those sites that were heavily focusing on single keyword as anchor text for their thousands of backlinks.
Google suggests use more than one keyword or keyword phrase as anchor text. This is known as ‘Anchor Text Diversity’.

7.     Keyword Stuffing
One of the biggest mistakes that usually done by bloggers and content writer is ‘Keyword Stuffing’. They have a perception that more occurrence of ‘Keywords’ or ‘Keyword Phrase’ in a page make it more optimized but it is totally wrong.

Don’t put your keyword unnecessarily in every line. Search engine algorithm will consider it ‘Keyword Stuffing’ and your reader will find it annoying. So you will get negative response from your user and search engine both.

Suggested Keyword density for an article should be around 1-2% (but my personal suggestion is try to write naturally then it will automatically come as balanced Keyword Density).

Keyword Density- Occurrence of a specific word in respect of every 100 word is known as ‘Keyword Density’ for that word.



101 SEO Tips | All in one SEO Guide of 101 SEO Tips

   Hi All,

Today, I am trying to cover all my SEO knowledge into 101 SEO Tips. I am working on SEO and Search Engine based web applications since last 5 years. This article is essence of my SEO knowledge.



1-      SEO Stands for ‘Search Engine Optimization’. SEO is a process to optimize your website to improve your ranking in SERP.

2-      SEO can be divided into two parts ‘On Page SEO’ and ‘Off Page SEO’.

3-      On-page SEO covers putting right keywords in right place, ‘site navigation’, ‘content quality’, ‘page loading speed’, ‘your sitemap’ and ‘your internal linking strategy’.

SEO Tips related to On Page SEO

4-      Title tag of your page is very important. Put your all-important keywords in it wisely. Put your Primary keyword in the starting of title and then your secondary and other keywords. Title tag is core of on page SEO.

5-      Try to keep your Title length under 60 characters as most of search engine supports 60 characters only in Title.

6-      If your Title is contain more than 60 characters then search engine re-write your article automatically and you may lose your keyword placement benefit.

7-      URL is another important place of on page SEO. Put your primary keyword in URL and don’t make it lengthy.

8-      Avoid stop words in URL (e.g. a, an, the etc.).

9-      Quality content is backbone of on page SEO. If your content is not of high quality then all your effort that you have put in on page SEO is of no use.

10-   Highlight your keyword or keyword phrase by making them bold or underline or Italic.

11-   Don’t try to put your keywords in every line of article as it may make it spamy and Google can penalize you for ‘Keyword Stuffing’.

12-   Interlinking (linking back your old article) is very important part of on page SEO.

13-   Don’t interlink more than 2-3 article in an article otherwise it will be annoying for your readers.

14-   Interlinking your other articles help bots to explore your blog/site.

15-   Put your important keyword in ‘Alt’ attribute of image for better image optimization.

16-   You can use your keywords in name of the image as well.

17-   Use ‘Hyphen’ instead of blank spaces while naming an image or other file. It is better for SEO. E.g. ‘SEO-Tips.jpg’.

18-   Don’t put too much images in a single article as it may increase your page loading time and that will give a bad effect on your on page SEO.

19-   2-3 lines just above the image are important for image SEO. Use these lines to describe the image.

20-   Smooth navigation is also an important part of on page SEO.

21-   Smooth navigation helps bots to explore your whole site easily.

22-   There should not be any broken link in your site.

23-   Broken links are bad for your on page SEO. It can hurt your ranking as well.

24-   For quick indexing of your site, submit your sitemap file to webmaster tool of search engine.

25-   Please ensure that there should not be any access restriction on your sitemap file.

26-   Although Meta ‘Keyword’ tag is no more used by Google to decide your ranking in SERP but still some search engines use it. So don’t ignore it and put your keywords in Meta ‘Keyword’ tag appropriately.

27-   Meta ‘Description’ tag is another important area of on page SEO. It improves your CTR.

28-   Text length of Meta ‘description’ tag should be under 160 characters only.

29-   If you are republishing content of an already existing article then add ‘canonical’ Meta tag to tell search engine about original source URL to avoid duplicate content penalty.

30-   Long tail keywords (combination of two or more words) are easy to rank high in search engine than targeting a specific keyword.

31-   Page layout also plays important role in your on page SEO. Your website UI should be ‘neat & clean’ and it should be responsive to other devices as well (e.g. Laptop, smart phones and tablet).

32-   Include combination of your target keyword phrases in a page’s H1 and H2 tags.

33-   Instead of using same keyword again and again in your article you should use synonyms of your main keyword. It makes your keyword placement more natural and it is good for SEO as well.

34-   First 50 words are very important of your page. SEO suggests putting your main keyword in that.

SEO Tips – Off Page SEO

35-   Off page SEO cover all SEO activities that you do outside of your website to improve its ranking in SERP.

36-   Major Off page SEO activity is to get high quality backlinks (links from other websites to your websites/blog) for your website.

37-   You can get natural backlinks from forums, directory submission, Press releases, Social book marking sites, social networking sites, local listing and yellow pages websites, guest posts and commenting on other blogs/websites.

38-   Best way to get natural high quality backlink that can improve your website SEO exponentially is to create high quality unique and useful content that people like to reference in their article; because when people add your article/websites as reference then it consider a natural backlink and search engine likes such backlinks.

39-   Recently search engine has started giving value to social signals (e.g. Facebook, like, share, comments or Tweets etc.)

40-   Concept for social signal is search engine believes that the content which is shared and liked by people definitely will be of high quality so search engine has started counting social signal as ranking factor in their algorithms.

41-   Add links of your social profiles on your website so that more and more visitor can connect you’re your social profiles.

SEO Tips – Concept of DoFollow and Nofollow links

42-   Outgoing links (links from your site to other sites) with attribute <rel=’nofollow’> doesn’t pass any link juice from your site to other site.

43-   Outgoing links (links from your site to other sites) with attribute <rel=’dofollow’> pass any link juice from your site to other site.

44-   Incoming links (links from other sites to your sites) with attribute <rel=’nofollow’> doesn’t pass any link juice from other sites to your site.

45-   Incoming links (links from other sites to your sites) with attribute <rel=’dofollow’> pass link juice from other sites to your site.

46-   SEO suggests that we should maintain a proper balance between dofollow outgoing and dofollow incoming links.

47-   Nofollow incoming link doesn’t pass links but it doesn’t mean that it is of no use. It helps bots to know about your site and help it to explore your site that is good for your site SEO.

48-   All affiliate links on your site must be nofollow to avoid any link related penalty.

49-   All sponsored ads and link must be nofollow otherwise Google can consider that you are involve in buy/sell backlinks that is against Google Guidelines and can badly affect your sites SEO.

SEO Tips – Backlinks

50-   Core of search engine ranking algorithm and SEO revolves around backlinks (Link to your site from other websites).

51-   ‘Anchor Text’ (visible part of a link) play an important role in any backlink.

52-   SEO concepts suggest that backlink should be from similar niche sites (e.g. health blog should get backlinks from health blog only not from travel blog).

53-   Backlink from high page rank and high authority sites boost your SEO exponentially.

54-   Backlink creation is not a onetime task it’s a continuous process.

55-   Don’t add thousands of backlink over night as it may put your site under search engine penalty.

56-   Webmasters that focus on single keyword as anchor text on their thousands of backlink has been penalized by Google recently for over optimization.

57-   SEO suggests that use different keywords or combination of keywords as ‘Anchor Text’ to bring anchor text diversity in your backlink profile.

58-   A backlink consider as quality backlink if it has following qualities

    If it is from similar niche site.
    If it is from a high PageRank and Authority site

59-   If a page has 10 outgoing links then Page Rank link juice will be divided equally into 10 links so try to get backlink from a site which has minimum outbound links.

60-   Don’t buy/sell backlinks.

61-   Avoid backlinks from any link building network as Google is totally against such link building networks.

62-   Commenting on other’s blogs and Guest Posts are natural way to get quality backlinks.

63-   Your sites Page rank depends upon number and quality of incoming links.

64-   Dofollow and Nofollow both type of incoming links are important for your website/blog. Dofollow incoming links bring link juice to your domain that is good for your site SEO and Nofollow links help search engine bots to explore your site and it brings lots of referral traffic as well.

SEO Tips - Concept of NoIndex

65-   If your site has a noindex Meta tag then no search engine will index your website. This is biggest SEO mistake done by most of webmasters.

66-   If you want any specific page not to be index in search engine then add NoIndex Meta tag in the head section of its HTML.

Example – <Meta name=”robots” content=”noindex”>

67-   Link with <rel=’nofollow, noindex’> value don’t pass any link juice and bot will not index that link as well.

SEO Tips – Tools that can help you to improve/analyze your SEO

68-   Google Webmaster Tool (GWT) – It help to check your keywords ranking and backlink details.

69-   ‘Disavow’ tool in GWT help to remove poor or spam backlinks to your sites. It helps you to protect your website from Negative SEO as well.

70-   GWT tool has function that help you to de-index/remove your indexed page that you don’t want to be indexed or you have deleted from your site (to avoid 404 error).

71-   Google Analytics is another helpful tool from Google that help us to measure our traffic, keywords, and traffic source.

72-   Create account on different social networking sites (Google+, Facebook Fan page, Facebook groups, Tweeter to share links through tweets etc.) and promote your links/images to get better social signals that improve your off page SEO.

73-   Google Keyword Tool – It help you to select most suitable keywords for your website.

74-   Google Trend – It help you to get latest trends that people looking in search engines.

SEO Tips – Some advance SEO Tips

75-   Use ‘301 redirect’ whenever you change your domain or URL structure. ‘301 redirect’ help you to transfer your link juice (Page Rank benefit) to your new URL.

76-   Avoid multiple URL redirects (e.g. Domain ‘A’ to Domain ‘B’ and Domain ‘B’ to Domain ‘C’).

77-   Set-up a usable ‘404 error’ page. Provide useful content and links to your pages on your 404 page.

78-   Set Author markup to improve your Authorship. Google has started giving value to Authorship in search engine ranking algorithm.

79-   For search engines ‘www.domain.com’ and ‘www.blog.domain.com’ are two different domains and both required two separate SEO profiles.

80-   SEO suggests that it is much better to with a folder strategy than creating a sub domain to get root level domain authority benefit. E.g. www.domain.com\blog is better than www.blog.domain.com

81-   A breadcrumb is also part of advanced website navigation that allows a user to see where the current page is in relation to the Web site’s hierarchy. It adds value for people visiting your site as they always aware about where they are. it is also add value to your SEO as it is keyword rich.
E.g. SEO – On-Page SEO – Image Optimization.

82-   Optimize your site for faster load time by minimizing add-ons, heavy images, animations and flash etc.

SEO Tips – Do’s and don’ts while doing SEO for your website

83-   Don’t copy and paste content from other websites.

84-   Don’t use Black hat SEO techniques to get quick success (e.g. auto backlink generator software.).

85-   Don’t participate in any link building networks.

86-   Don’t get/give links from porn or gambling sites.

87-   Diversify your backlink profile. Try to get different links from a wide range of IP addresses.

88-   Don’t get link only for your home page; try to get links for your inner page well to improve your inner page ranking as well.

89-   There is a thin line between ‘Right Keyword placement’ and ‘Keyword Stuffing’. Put your keyword naturally, don’t manipulate them.

90-   Hidden text and links comes under black hat SEO. Don’t try to hide links using same text color as of background.

91-   Don’t use cloaking (different content for human and search engine bot of same page) to optimize your page.

92-   Don’t ignore errors and warning reported by Google Webmaster Tool. They are usually about accessing your sites. Resolve then and respond properly in GWT. If you ignore these errors then it may lead to bad impact on your ranking in SERP.

93-   Do not try to manipulate your Keyword Density. If you write naturally Keyword Density will automatically be ideal one.

94-   Title attribute of link and image has no SEO values now.

95-   Don’t put your main keyword more than twice in your Title tag.

96-   Search Engine bots doesn’t execute/understand your JavaScript code so it doesn’t make any sense to put your SEO effort in JavaScript.

SEO Tips – Characteristics of SEO

97-   SEO takes time to show you results.

98-   SEO require continuous monitoring of search engine updates and implementation these change into your SEO strategy.

99-   Every website is different so one SEO strategy that works well for one site doesn’t guarantee to work for another website as well.

SEO Tips – Success Mantra my 100th & 101th SEO Tips

100-   Content is king and Search engine likes those sites which provide regular fresh content. So publish fresh and useful content regularly to improve your ranking in SERP.

101-    Don’t write for search engines; write for humans because at the end only real human will read your articles not search engines.


                                            25 High PageRank Sites To get BackLinks

Here is a collection of 25 high page rank web sites where you can post your contents, create your profiles, and drop your site’s URL without any reciprocal link from your site. Once you create these high page rank backlinks, they will be a source of web traffic to your site for years to come. So, here is the list

1. EHOW.com Write how to articles or videos. Post your link in your profile. Also a good source of information if you want to know how to do something.

2. WikiHow.com Same as eHow but you can edit existing wiki pages or create your own. Cleverly put your link in “Sources and Citations” section

3. 43Things.com You have to sign up for participation. Post your own goals or reply to posted “to do” list. Occasionally, insert your own link as a resource.

4. Squidoo.com This is one of my favorite. Build your lenses and you can add links to your site, embed your YouTube videos and flickr photos.

5. AssociatedContent.com You can add your link in your profile. Not a favorite of mine.

6. HubPages.com Another site like Squidoo and AssociatedContent. You can put links to your sites in the contents you create here.

7. Digg.com The most popular news ranking site. If you have good blog posts you can post them here. If your article goes to the home page, you will attract thousands of high page rank backlinks and tens of thousands of visitors for a short period. Be prepared for handle the load otherwise you will bring down your server.

8. Reddit.com Another news popularity site. Same as Digg. Post your blog articles here but don’t submit your entire site.

9. Answers.yahoo.com Ask questions and post answers to others questions. You can post links to your site in your answers.

10. Xanga.com A community blog. Crete keyword rich contents and links to your sites in the posts.

11. Kiva.org A microfinance site. You lend to and borrow from individual entrepreneurs. Create a profile page and link to your site from your profile page.

12. Geocities.com One of the oldest site. Create a few mini websites and links to your web sites from the geocities pages.

13. Twitter.com Create an account using a keyword and post your link in your profile.

14. Propeller.com Another news popularity site. Put you site’s link in your profile page.

15. Tradebit.com A site where you can buy and sell digital contents. If you ebooks, your own recorded music, etc., put your keywords in listing pointing to your site’s URL.

16. Angelfire.com Another old site like Geocities. Create your mini sites and put links to your site on the mini site pages.

17. Weebly.com A web 2.0 site where you can create your own mini sites like Geocites. Use the same technique you use for Geocites and Angelfire for back links to your sites.

18. Blogowogo.com A blog aggregation site. If you are running a blog, add your RSS feed to their site and any time you post new articles in your blog, your page at Blogowogo will be updated.

19. Tumblr.com Post and share your photos, articles, links, music, and videos. Use you site’s link in the profile page.

20. StumbleUpon.com Discover great web pages and share with your friends. You can submit your site and individual pages to StumbleUpon.

21. eZineArticles.com The most popular article directory. Submit your articles with author’s box under each article. You can use up to two links to your site in each article.

22. Flickr.com The most popular photo sharing site. You can drop your site’s link on the profile page.

23. MyBlogLog.com Share your online activity on a single page. Link to your sites from the profile page.

24. FastCompany.com If you are passionate about business idea, you should sign up with this very respected site. You can use anchor text in your profile page to link to your web site.

25. YouTube.com The most popular video sharing site. If you don’t have an account with YouTube, you should sign up immediately. Upload interesting and funny videos. Create your profile and link to your site.



SEO Audit

When you start your seo campaign, it is important to do seo audit. It is kind of health check of website as well as seo program. Seo audit is recommended and it should be taken in to consideration for seo strategy. There are many things to take in to consideration.


Keyword Research & Optimisation
 Identifying your keywords, monthly keyword search is a first thing to do for any seo campaign. And appropriate keyword placement on website. Also it is very important for checking content of website too.


Technical Audit:
    Technical Audit refers to
    Checking website´s html validation
    Seo Friendly Urls
    Keyword Proximity
    Checking URL Length
    Page Size
    Image Size
    Javascript Navigation
    Broken Link Check

Content Audit:
    Check Content & Keyword Placement
    Hyperlink Placement Check
    Title Tag
    Meta Tag
    Bold, Header Tag Placement Check

Link Audit:
    Backlink Check
    Link Farm Check
    Directory Check
    Spam Protection Check

Brand/Media Audit:
    Web 2.0 Property Check
    Online Reputation Check
    Media Exposure Check





Testing robots.txt files made easier

Webmaster level: intermediate-advanced
To crawl, or not to crawl, that is the robots.txt question.
Making and maintaining correct robots.txt files can sometimes be difficult. While most sites have it easy (tip: they often don't even need a robots.txt file!), finding the directives within a large robots.txt file that are or were blocking individual URLs can be quite tricky. To make that easier, we're now announcing an updated robots.txt testing tool in Webmaster Tools.
You can find the updated testing tool in Webmaster Tools within the Crawl section:
Here you'll see the current robots.txt file, and can test new URLs to see whether they're disallowed for crawling. To guide your way through complicated directives, it will highlight the specific one that led to the final decision. You can make changes in the file and test those too, you'll just need to upload the new version of the file to your server afterwards to make the changes take effect. Our developers site has more about robots.txt directives and how the files are processed.
Additionally, you'll be able to review older versions of your robots.txt file, and see when access issues block us from crawling. For example, if Googlebot sees a 500 server error for the robots.txt file, we'll generally pause further crawling of the website.
Since there may be some errors or warnings shown for your existing sites, we recommend double-checking their robots.txt files. You can also combine it with other parts of Webmaster Tools: for example, you might use the updated Fetch as Google tool to render important pages on your website. If any blocked URLs are reported, you can use this robots.txt tester to find the directive that's blocking them, and, of course, then improve that. A common problem we've seen comes from old robots.txt files that block CSS, JavaScript, or mobile content — fixing that is often trivial once you've seen it.



There are various ways of increasing your web site link popularity. I'm listing out some important tips which are easily doable.

1. Submit your site in popular search engines manually. Don't go for automated submission. 


2. Get your site listed in Open Directory Projects like dmog.org, yahoo.com. Getting listed in these directories will give your site a boost in link popularity and improve search engine ranking in other search engines. 


3. Provide high quality content - people will naturally link to your site if you have what they want and no where is available. 


4. Leverage your personal relations with other webmasters. Put your site link on their sites. One way links often count for more than reciprocal links. 


5. Participate in Link Exchange Program. Find top 20 sites doing the same business and contact them for reciprocal links. Link exchange between unrelated sites might affect the ranking of websites in the Search Engine. 


6. If you are subscribed in a forum and forum does not have any restriction to keep your site link as your signature then it can help you to increase your site popularity. 


7. Submit your site to bookmark sites like DIGG, and Slashdot etc. Before submitting please go through their spam policy. 


8. Write good articles in blogging sites and give few references of your links with-in that article. 


9. Keep providing good content to your site visitors. Try to keep them busy on your site. If possible create forums, news letters, blogs etc.



There are other ways but you need to spend some dollars to go for such alternative.



· Buy a place on high rank website where you can put your link.

 Subscribe for google's Adwords program to drive traffic towards your site.

 You can go for alternative advertising option to increase the number of hits on your site which will result in your site link popularity.




Penguin 3.0 – What you need to know.

On Sunday Google confirmed that they updated Penguin on Friday. In case you aren’t familiar with Penguin, it is designed to target sites that are spammy, especially sites that are violating linking guidelines.
The problem with Penguin is that once you are hit by it, no matter how much clean-up effort you make, you have to wait until it runs again to be credited for that change and see an improvement. It has been over a year since the last update, so as you can imagine, site owners have been anxiously awaiting this update.
This is the 6th update of Penguin. The first one ran on April 24, 2012.
A few things you need to know:
  • If you were previously hit by Penguin and did clean-up work, you should see some improvement after this update. If not, you have more work to do.
  • If you disavowed links within the past 3 weeks, it won’t count for this update. Google explained at SMX that it was too late for a disavow to impact this run. You will have to wait for the next update to run.
  • Google says they are going to run the updates more frequently. We shall see!
  • Keep in mind, that you may see a decrease in traffic after Penguin and it doesn’t necessarily mean you’ve been hit. If you were hit, the decrease will be significant. You could just be “collateral damage” – meaning some of your ranking may be as a result of links to your site and when Penguin runs, if any of those links were discounted or devalued, they aren’t going to help you the way they did before – so you would see a decrease.
Action plan:
1. Monitor traffic to get a feel for the impact this is having on your site.
2. Check your Link Profile to ensure it’s healthy.
3. If you suspect you’ve been hit at all, get to work on cleaning links so you can be ready for the next update.
4. Get active on social media and create quality content for your site.
Penguin-3.0


Update 40 SEO Blog List for Research

These are the Update 40 SEO Blog List for Research you should read always. I was actually a simple surprised to see that quality SEO blog list are very rare. Much of what I came across was pure crap which contained overly optimized articles that were written for the quantity of content, rather than the quality.
The update 40 SEO blog list aren’t solely based on my personal opinion. In fact, part of the reason I wrote this post was to find more and better resources. Here are some of the criteria I used when deciding whether or not to include the blog in this top 40 SEO blog list.


List of Update 40 SEO Blog :
1. The moz blog
2. Search engine land
3. Quick Sprout
4. YouMoz
5. Matt Cutts
6. SEOBOOK
7. Rand Fishkin
8. Search Engine Watch
9. Search Engine Journal
10. Bruce Clay
11. Seo by the Sea
12. Search Engine Roundtable
13. Digital Relevance
14. Daily SEO Blog
15. CopyBlogger
16. David Naylor
17. Daily SEO Tip
18. Upcity
19. SEO Theory
20. ClickZ
21. Marketing Pilgrim
22. Search Engine Guide
23. REELSEO
24. Higher Visibility
25. Yoast
26. Jhon Battelle's Searcg Blog
27. Backlinko
28. OptimizePrime
29. SEOno
30. WordStream
31. Zazzle Media
32. Koozai
33. SEO Nick
34. Kaiser The Sage
35. DejanSEO
36. Small Business Online Coach
37. iAcquire
38. David Leonhardt’s SEO and Social Media Marketing
39. SiegeMedia
40. Seo Gadget

Matt Cutts’ Google SEO Tips For 2015


If you’ve been around the Search Engine Optimization (SEO) world for some time, the name Matt Cutts surely familiar for you. He is one of Google’s leading algorithm developer. His focus? Stopping webspam and punishing low-quality content websites.

Remember that expression; “keep your friends close and your enemies closer?” Although I don’t view Matt Cutts as an enemy (I actually appreciate his endeavor to rid the world of terrible, spammy websites), I do believe that it’s important to heed his advice when it’s given.

One of the greatest mysteries in online marketing is knowing how Google works. By following advice that comes straight from the mouth of Matt Cutts, you can get a better grasp on how to write SEO content.

Here are the top five tips from Matt Cutts that we believe you should follow in your SEO content marketing strategy.





Tip #1: Don’t Neglect the Body of Your Content.

My two cents: There’s a wealth of SEO advice that tells you to think about the headlines and title tags in your documents. Although important, it’s equally critical to supplement your headlines with meaningful body text.

Strengthen the claims you made in your headlines by backing them up in the paragraphs on your pages. Focus on elaborating a little bit more in the text on your web pages and posts. That will make it easier for Google to see why they should rank your website higher up on the search engines.

Tip #2: Know Your Audience

My two cents: When trying to balance jargon vs. clear content, ask yourself this; “What terms is my audience using in the search box?” Those terms are telling of the depth of content your audience wants.

Most of the time, your audience will want information that’s clear and easy to understand. You want to write something that’s compelling to your end reader. Knowing the terminology they use to describe their problem or question will help you know what terminology to use when answering their needs.

Once in awhile, jargon is okay to use on a website. For example, if you’re speaking directly to people in a scientific industry who know and understand technical terms, it’s okay to use them once in awhile in your content.

For the most part, using general terms and clarifying a complex topic will make you look smarter and more reliable. Remember, as Matt Cutts says, the easier you can explain a topic, the better you appear to understand what you’re saying. The more you add in jargon and technical speak, the messier things get, which scares a lot of people away.

Tip #3: The Best Way to Compete is With Better Content on Your Site.

My two cents: Offers that sound too good to be true, usually are. Follow your gut. If you get an offer for an SEO strategy that guarantees to skyrocket you to the top of search engine results, run! Theproduce high quality content to score higher seo rankingsse offers are obviously bogus and could do more harm than good.

To make your website competitive in search engine results, focus on offering high-quality content. If you’re helpful, people will land on your web page, share your content, and show Google you’re worth ranking high.

That takes time. It takes effort. But it works. More important, it’s cheaper and more sustainable over the long run to use a “white hat,” (Google’s preferred) approach to SEO.

Tip #4: Take a Goldilocks Approach to Your Home Page Content

My two cents: It’s one of the most debated topics in content marketing; “how much content should be on my homepage?”

Having too much could take too long to download, slowing down your website and scaring your audience away. Having too little won’t tell your visitor or Google what you’re all about, which could get you punished in the long run.

Use the Goldilocks rule when it comes to home page content.

Matt Cutts tends to prefer a little bit more text on the home page. He suggests using text where it makes sense on your home page. If you have a lot of images, add short descriptions below the text to describe what the pictures are all about. Remember, Google can’t read images so you need to use your text to tell GoogleBot what you’re showing.

Another good way to do this is by including your blog posts on the home page. You’ll add keywords and content naturally, without slowing down the performance of your website.

Tip #5: Fight Back When Your Content is Stolen

My two cents: One of the most damaging things that can happen to your online reputation with Google is having other pages rip off your content. Suddenly, Google doesn’t know whether you copied Joe Schmo’s content or vice versa, so you’re both punished for duplicate content.

If you notice someone has copied your content, file a Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) notice with Google. This is where you send Google the details of the copied article and let them know it’s a copy of your original article. The other person will get the notice and they can either take it down or dispute the request.

Most of the time, Google has an accurate record of the original creator of the article. That’s good news because it means your site won’t get punished for another site’s poor SEO practices. Still, it’s good to be vigilant and report duplicate content whenever possible, just in case.