- See more at: http://mybloggerdesk.blogspot.com/2013/01/how-to-stop-blogger-blog-from.html#sthash.mMLbX24v.dpuf Digital Marketing, SEO Updates Digital Marketing, SEO Updates- Anurag

Monday 20 June 2016

Why Listing Accuracy is Important

Whether you manage a single local listing or hundreds, the consistency of your NAP data across the web can either help grow your business, or serve as a barrier to customer discovery.
With answers for business owners, SEOs dabbling in local search, and those at enterprise-level searching for a broad solution, Moz Local's George Freitag stars in this week's Whiteboard Friday covering all the boons and secrets of listing accuracy (give him a warm welcome, folks!).
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Thursday 10 March 2016

SEO, PPC, Content Marketing, or SMM: Which Services Sell Best?

Each search query in Google is a demand signal for us digital marketers. If you know exactly what users are looking for, you can easily spot what they’re likely to buy.

From a common sense point of view, it’s quite logical to say that if users search for something more, they are able (and likely) to buy more. As it turns out, this correlation doesn't work within digital marketing niches. The commercial potential of a certain digital marketing service is not in direct proportion to the search volume it receives. In other words:
In the digital marketing industry, popularity doesn’t influence salability.

In the four digital marketing niches analyzed, I discovered:

    SEO is still the most desirable service and it has the highest chance of leading to conversion.
    Users want to know more about social media and content marketing, but they’re not ready to pay for it.
    Users who are searching for PPC are the most likely to be converted.

After digging further into this article, you’ll discover which digital marketing services are the best to sell and why. Armed with this data, you'll inform your strategy and have a leg up on your competitors.

Blog Source-- https://moz.com/blog/seo-ppc-content-marketing-smm-which-services-sell-best
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Tuesday 30 June 2015

12 Add-Ons When Setting Up Google Analytics

One of the great things about Google Analytics, other than the fact it's free, is how simple it is – easy to set up and easy to use. But if you want to get the most out of your website data, there is additional functionality you can enable that isn't turned on by default. 

Here's my checklist for running Google Analytics to its fullest potential – because better data means a stronger ability to form better insights and make better decisions around your digital marketing activity. 

1. Goals 

If you are asking the user to take an action on your site, you should be tracking it. This could range from making a purchase, signing up to an email newsletter, or even submitting a form. Setting up Goalsallows you to not only measure and report on these conversions, but to analyse the traffic source, device, and location. A monetary value can also be assigned to each goal to assist in ROI reporting and optimization.

2. Funnel Visualization 

Where there are multiple steps in a goal, like completing a transaction over a few pages, be sure to setup the funnel. Using the Funnel Visualisation tool, you can understand at what stage the dropouts are occurring and stop leaking leads. Fixing user experience, A/B testing or remarketing might all be tactics to explore once you've seen what your funnel looks like.  

3. E-commerce Tracking 

If your business is around e-commerce, it's a no brainer to enable this enhanced conversion tracking. This will allow a deeper level of reporting across product sales, categories and revenue. Again this provides incredible value when you analyse where these visits are coming from and how your digital marketing activity is performing. 

4. Event Tracking 

By default, other than tracking which pages a user visits, Google Analytics doesn't tell you a lot about how people interact with your site. To measure interactions, such as how many people click on a share button, or how many users watched a video, you need Event Tracking. To better understand these behaviours, each custom interaction can be manually tagged to report directly into Google Analytics each time the event is trigged.  

5. On-site Search 

What users search for on your site tells you not only what people are looking for, but also what they couldn't find. The most searched for queries inform you about what content is missing, or if it couldn't be found easily in the navigation or on the front page. By default Google Analytics won't report on these searches, but it's usually not hard to set it up. Learn more about Site Search here. 

6. Google Account Linking 

Google Analytics integrates incredibly well with the rest of Google's products such as Adwords and Adsense. Manually linking these accounts automates much of the reporting, gives you greater insight across the products and puts all your data in one place. 

7. Exclude Internal Traffic 

If you, or your employees, are constantly on your site there's a good chance they're skewing the data. Measures like conversion rates and dwell time will be softened by internal traffic and testing. Avoid this by excluding this traffic based on a specific IP address.

Read More - http://searchenginewatch.com/sew/how-to/2415237/12-add-ons-when-setting-up-google-analytics
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Thursday 30 April 2015

How to Adapt Your Content Strategy in Time for Mobilegeddon


On Thursday, February 26th, 2015 Google announced that it would be changing it’s mobile search algorithm. Barry Schwartz covered the announcement onSearch Engine Land and not long after the term “mobilegeddon” had been coined. The term refers to the Armageddon of non-mobile-friendly pages in Google’s mobile search results as of April 21st, 2015.

In just under two months anyone with a website has had to measure their mobility and if necessary, adapt to mobile-friendliness in order to maintain their search presence with mobile users. Forget Panda, forget Penguin, mobile-friendly is arguably one of the biggest updates in all of search history – Google’s announcement affects mobile search results worldwide.
Creating a mobile site, adapting your mobile content strategy and having mobile on your radar is no longer a choice. Complying to this announcement in a few short weeks means assessing your website, your content and your content strategy. With little time left and no concern for whether mobile was part of your Spring marketing priorities or not, anyone working in web is preparing for Google’s update.
Surviving the mobilegeddon apocalypse is going to take more than a few blog tips to address and in fact the discussion is quite complex. Everything frommobile URLs to leveraging video in mobile ads is being discussed under the umbrella of Google’s update. Cindy Krum’s recent Search Engine Land post is the most accurate and in-depth discussion I’ve read on the topic to date. She uses the most recent industry discussions on the topic straight from Google’s recent staff presentations at the SMX West and SMX Munich conferences to provide a summary of the need-to-know surrounding Google’s upcoming mobile update.

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Tuesday 21 April 2015

Google’s Mobile-Friendly Update Is Rolling Out Right Now

Google confirmed in a blog post that the mobile-friendly algorithm update is rolling out now. The company also reaffirmed that this update doesn’t equally apply to all devices or results:
  • Affects only search rankings on mobile devices
  • Affects search results in all languages globally
  • Applies to individual pages, not entire websites
Google has put together another FAQs document for webmasters. The company says that webmasters or publishers won’t necessarily see an immediate impact and that it will “be a week or so before it makes its way to all pages in the index.”
Google recommends using its mobile-friendly URL testing toolto determine whether Google will regard your site/pages as ready. There are many more helpful links on in the FAQs.
Mobile friendly Google


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Tuesday 14 April 2015

Google’s Truth Algorithm: 5 Facts You Should Know

By now you may have read about Knowledge-Based Trust, a Google research paper that describes a method of scoring web documents according to the accuracy of facts. Knowledge-Based Trust has been referred to as the Truth Algorithm, a way to assign a Trust Score to weed out sites that contain wrong information.
According to the title of an article in New Scientist, “Google wants to rank websites based on facts not links.” The idea is to identify key facts in a web page and score them for their accuracy by assigning a trust score.
The algorithm researchers are careful to note in the paper that the algorithm does not penalize sites for lack of facts. The study reveals that it could discover relevant web pages with low PageRank that would otherwise be overlooked by current technology.
In current algorithms, links are a signal of popularity that implies authority in a particular topic. But popularity does not always mean a web page contains accurate information. A good example may be celebrity gossip websites. Getting past simple popularity signals and creating an algorithm that can understand what a website is about is a direction that search technology is moving in today, underpinned by research in artificial intelligence.
Ray Kurzweil, Google’s Director of Engineering, has been tasked with creating an artificial intelligence that can understand content itself without relying on third-party signals like links. Knowledge-Based Trust, a way to determine the accuracy of facts, appears to be a part of this trend of moving away from link signals and towards understanding the content itself.
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Sunday 21 December 2014

How to Prepare Your Digital Marketing Strategy for 2015


It’s that time of year again, the time when you need to do your research and prepare your digital marketing strategy for the upcoming year.
Getting your digital marketing strategy ready is vital to your success next year. From new marketing trends to business shifts, you’ll want to prepare a marketing plan for 2015 before the end of the year so you can stay ahead of the curve.
Get a head start with your 2015 digital marketing strategy by using this guide. 
For each step, you will be presented with one or two options. Choose the option that fits your needs depending on where you’re at with your business – whether you’re just starting out or you’ve had your business for a few years already.
Let’s get started!

First Step:

Option A: Set business goals

If you’re just starting out, a successful marketing plan will take more time to put together. Since you don’t have a lot of information to feed off of, you’ll have to evaluate your business and marketing strategies in a different way. But first, you need to set business goals before you plan your marketing strategy for 2015.
Business goals will help guide you in the right direction with your marketing plan. For instance, say you want to build your email list to 3,000 subscribers by the end of 2015. That main goal will give you an area to focus on.
Make sure each main goal is pretty specific, so it is actionable. The more specific a goal is, the better your marketing plan will be.
Think about each area of your business. Consider if you want to create goals for these areas and add them to your marketing plan. A few aspects to consider include:
  • Products or services you plan to provide and how you want to market them
  • Marketing tools you want to use to help you achieve these goals
  • Who you need on your team to help you achieve these goals
  • Possible strategies to use for your marketing plan
After figuring out what you want to achieve, you now have the foundation of your marketing plan!
When you’re starting out and have no information from the previous year to refer to, everything starts with you. You’re the center of every part of your business. Once you start planning your marketing strategy for the next year, clear your head, figure out your main objectives, and work from there.
Use mind maps to get your ideas out of your head and organize them. Figure out what goals to set. Get your marketing strategy mapped out and ready for the new year.
One thing to note about creating goals: Whatever you plan to do for your marketing strategy, make sure you focus on how you can stand out from the crowd. This step most likely will require a lot of time and research on your part. But to ensure you have an effective marketing strategy in place for 2015, do what you can now.

Option B: Review your digital marketing plan from 2014

If you’ve been in business for the past year or so, you have information to look back on and use as a basis for your marketing strategy in 2015. Take time to evaluate all that you accomplished regarding digital marketing in the past year. Here are a few questions for you to ask yourself and your team as you review the 2014:
  • What strategies worked and helped grow your business?
  • What were the most effective marketing strategies that helped give your business a boost?
  • What are your customers’ feedback to your marketing and advertising efforts?
  • Which digital marketing flopped?
  • How has your business changed in the last year? Can you adapt your digital marketing strategy for 2015 to support those changes? Are you going to change your business again before or in the beginning of 2015?
  • Has your target market changed? Can you plan next year’s strategy by including your new target market? What changes do you need to make to appeal to your new target audience?
  • How is your competition doing? Are you keeping up with the competitive pace in your business?
An assessment of 2014 will help you see where you’re at and where you want to go with your business. This information is the foundation of your digital marketing strategy for 2015. Get your team together, and go over all the details of your marketing strategy for 2014. Make note of anything you find significant and will aid in your success in 2015.

Second Step:

Option A: Create micro goals and plans for your main objectives

In the previous step, you came up with the main goals you want to achieve in 2015. To make them more manageable and easier to accomplish, break these big goals down into smaller goals or action steps.
Here’s an example of a broken down goal:
Main Marketing Objective: Build email list to 1,000 subscribers by June 2015.
  • 1st step: Build landing page for email list, and set up a form for visitors to subscribe to newsletter.
  • 2nd step: Have a free product giveaway created to offer as an incentive to prospects.
  • 3rd step: Prepare automated emails and set them to send out on certain days.
  • 4th step: Come up with more content ideas and use content idea creation tools if necessary. Write content and add to automated email series for newsletter.
  • 5th step: Track progress over six months. Track number of subscribers and unsubscribers over the six month period. Continue to improve email marketing strategy until 1,000 subscribers have been reached.
To help you figure out your action steps, think backwards. Say you already achieved your goal. Trace back and figure out what you had to do to reach each one of the action steps. Continue to go backwards until you reach the step you’re at now, which is setting your goals.
You don’t have to figure out all action steps right now, though. Trying to do too much at once will cause you to stress out. If you’re stumped on a step, take a break and come back to it later. Start coming up with micro plans for your other main goals and come back to the goal you got stumped on later.

Option B: Improve your digital marketing plan from 2014

You may be wondering what the point is in improving an outdated marketing plan, but this step helps you see what would you do differently. With the knowledge and experience you’ve gained over the past year, you’ll be able to come up with better, more effective ideas for your 2015 marketing strategy.
Instead of building a marketing plan from scratch, you already have a foundation for next year’s marketing plan from last year’s evaluation. For this step, focus on where you would improve marketing tactics as well as changes in the industry over the past year.
Once you’ve revised and updated last year’s marketing plan, make sure you can use the edited plan for next year. Can the changes and improvements you’ve made be applied to your marketing goals for 2015? Evaluate this improved marketing plan you’ve created to see if it fits what you have planned for 2015; you can now start building your marketing strategy for next year in this step, too.

Third Step: Choose the Right Tools

Whether you’re experienced or just starting your business journey in 2015, digital marketing tools are essential to your strategy. Not only do they maximize your marketing efforts, but they also offer easier and quicker solutions to any marketing obstacle you stumble upon.
In this step, you’ll learn various tools to add to your marketing strategy that will help you achieve your marketing goals faster and more efficiently.

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