Thứ Hai, 13 tháng 8, 2018

Youtube daily Aug 13 2018

Google Maps Latest Updates 2018

Latest Technology 2018

Google Maps Tricks

For more infomation >> Google Maps Latest Updates 2018 | Latest Technology 2018 | Google Maps Tricks - Duration: 3:21.

-------------------------------------------

Ecommerce SEO Tutorial: Rank it and Bank it - Duration: 20:16.

Amazon.com has nailed their eCommerce SEO generating over $1,000 in revenue per second.

And while a lot of their traffic and sales come from searches within their own platform,

SimilarWeb estimates that search contributes 30% of their overall traffic and Ahrefs'

Site Explorer estimates 706 million search visitors each month.

But Amazon didn't become an overnight success.

In fact, their search traffic has grown immensely year after year.

So in this video, I'm going to walk you through a complete eCommerce SEO tutorial,

step-by-step for more rank and more bank.

Stay tuned.

[music]

What's up SEOs?

Sam Oh here with Ahrefs, the SEO tool that helps you grow your search traffic, research

your competitors and dominate your niche.

Today, we're going to be talking about eCommerce SEO and how you can rank your product and

category pages.

So here's what our agenda looks like today.

First, we'll tackle a couple must-dos for all online shops.

Next, we'll break down keyword research for ecommerce.

Then we'll hit on-page SEO, get technical, tackle link building specifically for product

and category pages, and finish it off with a bit on content marketing for eCommerce.

Let's get to it.

So there are two absolute musts that I think all eCommerce sites should do.

The first is to make sure that you secure your website with HTTPs.

The main reasons for this is to keep your customers information encrypted.

And I'm not just talking about credit card details, but names, addresses, and other personal

information that you wouldn't want to have compromised.

And it's important that all of your pages are set up correctly because you don't want

Chrome returning a privacy error screen like this or other warnings like this.

And Google has officially stated that HTTPS will be used as a ranking signal, even though

it may not be the strongest ranking factor according to our on-page SEO study.

The second must-do is to run a site audit to identify your technical SEO issues.

Ecommerce properties are one of the easiest types of websites to unintentionally create

a whole mess of indexation and cannibalization issues because of the sheer size.

For this tutorial, I'll be using Kleinfeld Bridal shop as our example site, which sells

wedding dresses and other bridal apparel.

So I'll go to Ahrefs' Site Audit tool and set up a simple SEO audit.

The only change I'll be making to the default settings is to run the audit on the domain

without subdomains and then click next.

And next again to go to the crawl settings.

And for the sake of a simple SEO audit, I'll leave everything to default, but I'll turn

on "Execute Javascript."

Finally, I'll turn off the scheduled audits and just run this once.

Now, while the audit is running, let's move onto keyword research.

In this step, you'll need to choose a keyword to target for every product and category page.

Yes, it is a ton of work, but it's something that should be done or outsourced.

Now, when it comes to selecting keywords, there are two different types of pages I want

to focus on.

And those are category pages and product pages.

So first, you'll need to get a complete inventory of your product and category pages.

Depending on the CMS you use, whether that's Shopify, Magento, Open Cart, Woocommerce,

or whatever, you may be able to export these pages directly from your backend.

Or you can go to your Sitemap if you have one created.

So for the bridal site, I'll just add /sitemap.xml to the end of the URL and you'll see a full

list of all of the pages that they want search engines to crawl.

From here, you'll want to prioritize these by the highest revenue generating pages or

the pages that generate the most traffic for your business.

Now, for each of your pages, you'll want to look for a head term as well as long-tail

variations.

In general, a head term would be a more popular keyword with a higher search volume.

Long-tail would likely have lower search volume but are modified variations to the head term.

You can find these by going to Ahrefs Keywords Explorer and type in a seed keyword that's

broadly related to your niche.

So I'll type in "wedding."

Next, you can go to the "having same terms" report, and you'll see a bunch of irrelevant

keywords like "wedding invitations."

So you can make it relevant by using the "include" search box.

Here, I'll type in a few keywords like dress, dresses, shoes, and accessories which should

represent some of your parent categories that broadly match the type of wedding related

products that we sell.

And I'll set the dropdown to show keyword ideas that have "any" of these keywords

in it.

And you can see a whole bunch of great keyword ideas here, some of which would be perfect

category pages, others that are perfect sub categories to that parent, and the rare one

that's irrelevant.

So you can match up the best keywords with the current structure of your site based on

the types of products that you sell.

Based on these results, you'll likely want to focus on a broader term like "wedding

dresses" as the parent category, then add sub categories like guest dresses, plus size,

cheap, beach, and vintage underneath the parent.

Keyword selection for product pages is a bit different.

For example, if you sell a branded product like Gucci shoes or an iPhone 8 Plus, then

you'd want to include the brand name and/or model numbers, since they will likely hold

search volume because of brand recognition and reputation.

And if you're on the other side of the spectrum where you're selling unbranded products

or products from unknown names, then you may want to stick with more descriptive terms

that people are searching for.

For example, if you look at these shoes from Nordstrom, you'll see that they've named

it "Gabe Pump," which no one seems to be searching for.

On the other hand, there are around 350 monthly searches for "vince camuto pumps," which

could act as a head term for the product page with some variations or modifiers like using

colors, the type of toe or heel, or simply by prefixing the title with "women's."

If you look at Amazon's product pages for Vince Camuto pumps, you'll see that they've

put a little bit more thought into their keyword research and on-page optimization.

They're using the designer's name, a modifier keyword, the brand line, and the type of shoe

which is both descriptive as well as keyword rich.

A good way to find product keywords is to search for your brand name as your seed in

Keywords Explorer.

Then, go to the "Having Same Terms" report and type in the type of product that you sell.

In this case, we're talking about pumps, so I'll type in 'pump.'

Another way to find product and category page ideas is to analyze your competitors' top

pages.

Looking at the top pages report for David's Bridal, one of Kleinfeld Bridal's competitors,

you'll see that some of their top keywords for their most popular pages in search include

"mother of the bride dresses," "prom dresses," and "bridesmaid dresses."

And all 3 of these happen to be categories that our example site is not yet serving.

From here, you can click on the keywords dropdown and look for the long-tail variations on these

head terms.

Here, you'll see that even though their top keyword is "mother of the bride dresses,"

that they still rank high for variations like "mother of the groom dresses" and this

one that uses "long" as a modifier.

Now, before you actually select a keyword, there is one massively important step that you

must take.

And that's to ensure that the search intent for the keyword matches the page you intend

to use it on.

Looking back at our list of keyword ideas, you can analyze search intent by clicking

on the SERP dropdown beside any of the keywords.

So looking at the SERP for "wedding guest dresses," you can see that they're all

category pages, so you'd want to stick with the same format because the search intent

shows that people are looking for a list of different dresses that they can browse through.

Looking at the SERP for "meghan markle wedding dress," you can see that these are all blog

posts, so serving search intent with a product or category page probably wouldn't be in your

best interest.

Taking 10 seconds to analyze the current SERPs can save you a ton of time to ensure you're

not targeting the wrong keyword.

I could go on with more keyword research techniques, but this should be more than enough to give

you a solid list of keywords.

So, let's move on to on-page optimization.

First is to optimize your meta titles, descriptions, and H1 tags.

Now, most eCommerce sites use templated versions, especially those with thousands of different

products, which makes sense from a time perspective, but it isn't exactly ideal from a search perspective.

It's a bit ugly and none of these really entice a click from my point of view.

In fact, these 3 pages might seem like duplicate content issues, but they are indeed completely

different products.

With this, you can go with somewhat of a hybrid approach.

So rather than using the type of wedding dress for the meta title as they have here, you

can use the title of the product, which you should be able to easily formulate if you

do your keyword research.

As for the description, it looks like they wrote unique meta descriptions for each product,

but they look like they're the same simply because they prefix the description with a template.

In this case, they could simply move that part of the template to the end or remove

it, so as people start reading the meta description, they'll know that they are indeed different

products.

The h1 tag is pretty simple.

Just use the category title or product name.

And again, if you've done everything correctly up to this point, then these should fall in

place quite nicely.

The next on-page tip is to optimize your URLs.

There are certainly different ways to do this, but my preference is to keep them as clean

as possible.

Remember this hierarchy we talked about?

You can use these to formulate the structure for your category pages.

So, for example, you might have domain.com/wedding-dresses/ as the parent.

Then you can add your sub category by adding plus size as a new subfolder.

And if you happen to have a plus size product, the URL can look like this with the product

name as the final part of your URL.

Other sites often follow the same category structure, but you'll also see sites that

have product pages as domain.com/product-name, which is also fine and a good way to avoid

duplicate content by having the same product in multiple categories.

We'll get into the more advanced URL features like filter queries and parameters in the

technical SEO section.

The next part of on-page optimization are writing unique product and category descriptions.

So, product pages, they often lack content.

Sometimes they don't even have any at all aside from the title of the product.

I won't go too in-depth, but here are a few copywriting tips:

Include your head keyword target in the description; Sprinkle in long-tail variations and synonyms

that hold semantic relationships with the head term.

For a wedding dress product page, you may include keywords like bridal, gown, the designer's

name, etc.

Make sure they're well-written and readable for visitors;

Tell visitors things that they may actually want to know.

Don't try and meet a word count quota.

Just keep it short, sweet, and on point.

And last, use user generated content via.

product reviews to add further context.

The final on-page tip is to use schema markup.

By adding schema markup, you can have your product pages show up in search like this.

Beyond looking more visually appealing, structured markup has led to increases in click-through-rate

by 30%.

I won't get into a coding tutorial, but you can check out the best practices on schema.org

or use Google's Structured Data Markup Helper, which makes an intimidating task, super simple.

After you've marked up your products, then you can enter in the URL of your page or paste

the source code into Google's structured data testing tool.

So for this page, you can see that they're using both breadcrumbs and product markup.

One important thing to note is that if you decide to markup products within your category

page, then according to Google, all of them should be marked.

Schema markup isn't a must, but it's certainly a good way to standout in the SERPs and increase

your CTR.

Alright, we're onto our technical SEO section.

Now, technical SEO is super important for ecommerce sites simply because it's a lot

easier to create duplicate content, cannibalization, and other issues that often go unnoticed.

We've already talked about general navigation in terms of URL structures, but as an ecommerce

store, you need to take special care with faceted navigation.

And by faceted navigation, I'm talking about parameters that are added to the URL via.

filters that don't exactly have a semantic relationship.

For example, if I'm looking on Amazon for an iPhone and then I choose a 5 to 5.4 inch

display size, only in gold color, and from this random seller, they don't really have

a semantic relationship when all combined together.

While these filters are great for user experience, they often lead to issues with duplicate content

which comes with other problems like how your link equity is distributed among your other pages.

And for bigger sites, crawl budget becomes something to be aware of.

So there are 2 main issues that we need to solve.

Number one is duplicate content, which will affect how your link equity is distributed.

And number two, wasted crawl budget.

And the most effective way for beginners and intermediates is to set a canonical URL for

different facets that you don't want to be indexed as a separate URL.

And if you look at the source code for that Amazon category page, you'll see that it's

something that they set here.

But this doesn't solve our crawl budget issue.

So the way you can do that is to add nofollow internal links on facets that you don't

want to be followed.

And you can see that our example bridal site does that here on certain filters.

It's absolutely vital that you take care of faceted navigation since Google has explicitly

said that it contributes to having many low-value-add URLs, affecting crawl budget.

You can check if you have issues with faceted navigation simply by taking one of your URLs

with some filters that you don't want to be indexed and then pasting it in as a Google search.

Next is to fix other duplicate content issues.

Now, if we go back to Site Audit we can head over to the "Content Quality" report in

the left sidebar, and you'll see a nice cluster map of near duplicate pages.

The green ones have canonicals matching, and the red duplicates have mismatching canonicals.

And in almost all cases, the green ones can be left alone, but the red ones will need

some tender love and care.

If I click on one of the red ones, then you'll see the duplicate pages that do not share

the same canonical URL.

And if I open up a couple of pages, you'll see that the pages are indeed the same, but

have different canonical URLs based on the page number.

But they're using the parameter, pp, which stands for per page causing a potential SEO issue.

So in this case, they can nofollow the internal links to the number of results per page filter,

noindex the pages that contain that filter, or add some additional conditions in the backend

to fix this issue.

But there would likely need to be more fixes throughout the site since these kinds of issues

tend to go deep.

You can click on the URL that you want to examine, then click on "inlinks" within

Site Audit, and you'll be able to see all of the internal links pointing at this page.

There are a lot of options that you need to weigh out and since I have minimal knowledge

about this site as a whole, there would need to be further analysis before making a big

move like this.

There are other kinds of duplicate content issues.

A common one you'll see on ecommerce sites is having the exact same product page within

different categories.

For example, you might have a URL that looks like this, which is in your new-releases section.

But that same product might fall into your dresses category, creating two identical pages.

In this case, you could either use the canonical tag or if it's no longer relevant, you can

delete the page and redirect it to the correct URL.

Finally is to find and fix keyword cannibalization issues and we have a great video and blog

post on that, which includes a free template that you can download and watch after this

video.

Because right now, we're going to hit link building for ecommerce which is a real struggle

for many of us ecommerce site owners.

Building links to your product and category pages is hard in comparison to getting links

to blog posts.

So let's talk about a few tactics that you can use that will help you get more links

to your revenue generating pages.

The first is to find sites that link to your competitors' homepages.

And the reason why I'm going for homepage links is because this is much more common

and easier to get for ecommerce sites over links to product pages.

Using the link intersect tool, you can enter in your competitors' domain and see which

sites link to them and try and get an understanding of why they're linking to them.

If you're not sure who your competitors are, then you can go to the Competing Domains

report within Site Explorer and look for sites that have a lot of common keywords, or just

skim through the visual graphic here and look for lots of green.

So you would take these 3 domains here and paste them into the link intersect tool, which

I've already preset.

And then in the bottom, you can enter in your domain

Next, I'm going to switch all of these dropdowns to URL mode.

Finally, I'm going to switch this filter to show pages that link to any of these pages

and I'll run the search.

And you can see that there are nearly 5,500 sites that are linking to these competitors,

but not to Kleinfeld Bridal.

Now, some of these links will be irrelevant, but you'll also be able to see that they

have links from Vogue.

Then you'll see a bunch of links from what looks like a wedding magazine who are perpetually

giving them editorial links.

These are the kinds of people you'd want to network with!

Another link building strategy is to get featured on manufacturers' "where to buy" page.

You can do a Google search for something like this:

The manufacturer whose product you stock then intitle:("where to buy" OR "stockists").

Sometimes you'll find directory listings like this, and other times, you'll be able

to contact the manufacturer who would be more than willing to list your online shop there.

You can also do this in Site Explorer.

Just enter in the domain of one of your competitors, so I'll put in Davidsbridal.com.

Then go to the backlinks profile.

Next, type something in the "include" search box like "where to buy."

And you can see here that there are some decent opportunities to get some editorial links.

The next link building strategy is to search for people who have done reviews on your competitor's products.

Now, the wedding dress industry probably wouldn't be the best for this search since

they have high ticket items. So let's use Tata Harper as an example, who sells natural beauty products.

You can do a Google search for intitle:"tata harper" intitle:review.

And you can see that there are a good number of results including YouTube results.

You can also do this in Content Explorer.

I'll just type in "Tata Harper" as a phrase match and set the search parameter

to title.

And you'll see a nice list of pages that weeds out a lot of the junk pages that you'd

normally have to filter through in Google and in YouTube.

A big plus to using Content Explorer is that you can see all of the SEO metrics to know

which site owners and authors are worth building relationships with.

Now that we have a list of prospects, you just need to reach out to them.

You can say something like:

Hi [name],

Sam here with Sam's Natural Beauty and Healthcare Products.

I saw your review on Tata Harper's organic cleanser.

Thought you might be interested in doing a review on our [similar product].

Cosmopolitan rated it as the top natural cleanser in 2018 and Forbes has called us "a skin

care company to be reckoned with."

I liked the thoroughness of your Tata Harper article and thought you might be a good fit

to provide an objective review on our "Organicks" line.

Let me know if you're interested and I'd be happy to send you some samples and a few

gifts for you and your family.

Cheers, Sam

Now, if they choose to write a review, this is will naturally lead to a link back to your

site and/or product page.

The last one is a bit different, but it has massive potential to rank for highly competitive phrases.

The caveat is that it's extremely difficult to execute.

Do you remember #thedress?

Basically, a woman saw this dress as blue and her friend or family member saw it as

gold.

They posted it on Tumblr and the story went viral.

But what store did they buy this dress from?

And of course people would go out of their way to find out.

And it was a small-ish store in the UK called "Romans Originals."

Once people found out, guess what happened?

Authority sites like the Huffington Post, Forbes, BBC, and Mashable started linking

to their product page and home page.

And look at their spike of referring domains!

Now, ranking for hashtag, the dress, isn't going to bring much value for them alone.

But look at their "Best by Links" report to see what they did.

They started redirecting all of their viral links to their /dresses category page.

And if we look at the overview page of their dresses category page, you'll see that they

had a massive spike in Google traffic to their pages when they redirected those pages.

Now, creating a viral hit like this is no easy task.

But if you or your team are able to come up with something creative, you can use a similar

post-viral strategy.

So, get the links from virality, milk every link you can until the buzz fades, then redirect

those pages to a relevant page that can bump your rankings.

The last and final piece to the eCommerce SEO puzzle is to do content marketing.

And by content marketing, I'm referring to blogging, creating infographics, and tools

that will be helpful to your prospective customers.

As I mentioned earlier, content attracts a lot more links and a lot more easily than

product or category pages.

Now, rather than rehashing what I've already said, I highly recommend watching our SEO

tutorial, which you can view by clicking the card and I'll leave a link to it in the

description below.

So keep grinding away, get results, and I'll see you in the next tutorial.

For more infomation >> Ecommerce SEO Tutorial: Rank it and Bank it - Duration: 20:16.

-------------------------------------------

100 Cool & Unique bed Ideas - Design Examples - Duration: 11:08.

For more infomation >> 100 Cool & Unique bed Ideas - Design Examples - Duration: 11:08.

-------------------------------------------

Thomas Markle Says Hung Up On Prince Harry When Talking About Staged Photos | TODAY - Duration: 2:37.

For more infomation >> Thomas Markle Says Hung Up On Prince Harry When Talking About Staged Photos | TODAY - Duration: 2:37.

-------------------------------------------

5 Adults Involved In New Mexico Compound Face Expected To Face Child Abuse Charges | TODAY - Duration: 2:48.

For more infomation >> 5 Adults Involved In New Mexico Compound Face Expected To Face Child Abuse Charges | TODAY - Duration: 2:48.

-------------------------------------------

Conjoined Twin Sisters Tell Their Story: 'Being By Her … It's So Calming' | Megyn Kelly TODAY - Duration: 12:36.

For more infomation >> Conjoined Twin Sisters Tell Their Story: 'Being By Her … It's So Calming' | Megyn Kelly TODAY - Duration: 12:36.

-------------------------------------------

Meet The 13 Fearless Women Of The Caramel Curves Motorcycle Club | Megyn Kelly TODAY - Duration: 2:58.

For more infomation >> Meet The 13 Fearless Women Of The Caramel Curves Motorcycle Club | Megyn Kelly TODAY - Duration: 2:58.

-------------------------------------------

5 Harry Potter Destinations Fans Can Visit in Real Life - Duration: 4:15.

Harry Potter is the boy wizard that millennials grew up with and he is an icon that they know

and love.

When reading the books, you dream of a magical place where kids can become wizards by attending

Hogwarts, and there are new lovable characters that appear around every corner.

The filming locations of all the Harry Potter films stayed true to the magical yet fictional

Britain.

For the most part, they didn't venture too far outside of the UK territory unless they

were filmed in the Hollywood Studios

5 Christ Church, Oxford: Hogwarts Dining Hall The 16th century Oxford Christ Church Cathedral

and college complex was used as a backdrop for the Hogwarts Dining Hall in the Harry

Potter series.

Since the film's release, fans have been flocking there with more than 350,000 visitors a year.

he staircase which leads up to the Great Hall was used for the arrival scene for new Hogwarts

students in the first two Harry Potter films, according to BBC.

Tourists can now pay to go on the path of the college and the cathedral.

Four centuries before Harry Potter was even a thing, Henry VIII founded the university

college and cathedral institution in 1546 and Sir Christopher Wren was commissioned

to design the famous bell tower in 1682 (BBC).

4 Harrow School, London: Professor Flitwick�s Charms Class

In the scene where Hermoine Granger manages to levitate a feather and declare "Wingardium

Leviosa!" in Professor Flitwick's Charms Class, is the Fourth Form Room of Harrow Old Schools,

Harrow-on-the-Hill in Greater London.

In Harry Potter and the Socerer's Stone, this is where he learns how to wave his wand for

the first time.

3 Millennium Bridge, London: Where The Death Eaters Attack

Think of the Millenium Bridge as the Golden Gate Bridge of the UK.

This particular bridge was built not long before the Harry Potter franchise was created.

Construction of the Millennium Bridge first started in 1998, and the total completion

cost came to about �18.2 million (which was �2.2 million over budget), according

to strawberrybustours.com.

2 The London Zoo, London: The Reptile House The London Zoo is was the filming location

of the famous scene where a Burmese python speaks to Harry Potter, played by Daniel Radcliffe

for the first time in Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone.

In fact, that specific enclosure is home to the black mamba.

The building itself was desiged by Dr Joan Beauchamp Procter, Curator of Reptiles, with

the architect Sir Edward Guy Dawber.

1 Kings Cross, London: Secret Entry To Hogwarts In the city of muggles walking about, wizards

need to have a secret passage to Hogwarts that allow for a sneaky entrance.

Platform 9 and 3/4 at Kings Cross Station in London is a landmark for all Harry Potter

fans who secretly wish that they will be teleported to the magical world of Hogwarts.

Located in London�s King�s Cross Station, the barrier between platforms 9 and 10 holds

the secret entrance to the magical platform that can only be accessed by running straight

ahead � directly into the barrier.

For more infomation >> 5 Harry Potter Destinations Fans Can Visit in Real Life - Duration: 4:15.

-------------------------------------------

Drake and Migos Finally Kick Off Tour With Floating Ferrari, Michael Jackson Tribute, and More - Duration: 2:12.

For more infomation >> Drake and Migos Finally Kick Off Tour With Floating Ferrari, Michael Jackson Tribute, and More - Duration: 2:12.

-------------------------------------------

Hazmat investigation closes I-75 in Charlotte County - Duration: 1:28.

For more infomation >> Hazmat investigation closes I-75 in Charlotte County - Duration: 1:28.

-------------------------------------------

Drastic Decrease In Temperatures Today - Duration: 1:15.

For more infomation >> Drastic Decrease In Temperatures Today - Duration: 1:15.

-------------------------------------------

Model Karaś PZL-23A - 1/48 Mirage Hobby - Finishing Touches - Duration: 14:42.

Hi there! Let's continue.

It's breaking. I'll better cut this part, at least it'll be even.

I've prepared those parts off camera. I hope you don't mind.

Time to use some paint. Black primer first.

Now silver.

Blue-grey.

And silver again.

Dark Polish Khaki.

Some brown on the mattress.

And sand on belts.

The plane is more or less ready.

I must say this model gave me a hard time.

It's designed for experienced modellers.

It's complicated and full of tiny details.

Instructions are not helpful.

Sometimes it's better to make things in different order than instructions suggest.

This set doesn't forgive mistakes.

I'm glad it's finally over ;).

Don't forget to subscribe :)

Cheers!

For more infomation >> Model Karaś PZL-23A - 1/48 Mirage Hobby - Finishing Touches - Duration: 14:42.

-------------------------------------------

I-75 closed from Bayshore Road to Tuckers Grade due to possible hazmat incident - Duration: 1:41.

For more infomation >> I-75 closed from Bayshore Road to Tuckers Grade due to possible hazmat incident - Duration: 1:41.

-------------------------------------------

Greece Visit Visa without Sponsor | Visa Requirements 2018 - Duration: 6:36.

Subscribe Now

Subscribe Now

For more infomation >> Greece Visit Visa without Sponsor | Visa Requirements 2018 - Duration: 6:36.

-------------------------------------------

How to build a great link building strategy - Tips, dos & ideas of 2018 - Duration: 2:58.

One of the major factors for a website to rank high on Google in 2018, is to have lots

of quality backlinks.

But quantity of links per se is not enough: in fact your link building strategy must include referrals

from many different high standards sites, and that's hard to build.

Plus, Google's search algorithm changes all the time, so what the best tips and ideas

for your link building strategy in 2018?

Let's see 4 of them together!

1) Reclaim unlinked mentions and broken links Often times it happens that other people mention

your business in their own content but they forget to put a link to your own website.

And that's an opportunity you should reclaim

by simply asking the author of the content to put a link to your website.

Another very simple thing you can do is to fix the links to your website that are now broken

because you might have moved or removed a page.

In that case you can ask the author of the post to edit the link with the new one

or simply redirect it to your home page.

A very simple tool to check which one of your links are broken is called Check My Links.

2) Create Infographics to be shared Another great idea to boost your link building

strategy is to create infographics about your industry's most interesting data and statistics.

This is because infographics are very eye-catching and easy to digest, so overall they are liked and shared

on other websites three times as much than any other form of content.

The cool thing about them is that you can just simply collect the data from

reliable resources, create the infographic

and then show the embed a link for other people to share

it on their own websites.

3) Guest blogging Guest Blogging is still in 2018 a great technique

to reinforce your link-building strategy.

In fact, since having guest blog posts published by top blogs of your industry is very hard, and

very few of your competitors will have the necessary patience and skills to actually do it,

but in return you will get high qualified backlinks so, it's totally worth it.

As a quick tip , before you propose to publish a guest post on any website, check out their guidelines

by doing a simple search on Google.

4) Take advantage of Content Aggregators The last tips I would give you is to leverage

browser extensions or websites that work as content aggregators for specific industries.

These aggregators basically filter the endless stream of content that gets posted everyday online,

and then only pick the best to share for the their community of users.

So try to identify which content aggregator suits better your industry and try to get your content

shared there because it will bring a lot of qualified traffic to your website and improve

your authority as well.

So these were some tips and ideas that you can implement to keep your link building strategy strong in 2018.

Let us know what you think about them by leaving a comment below and I'll see you in the next video.

For more infomation >> How to build a great link building strategy - Tips, dos & ideas of 2018 - Duration: 2:58.

-------------------------------------------

Alaska fishermen worry Trump tariffs will be 'devastating' to seafood industry - Duration: 2:39.

For more infomation >> Alaska fishermen worry Trump tariffs will be 'devastating' to seafood industry - Duration: 2:39.

-------------------------------------------

Enchanting Swedish Home with Tantalizing Details in Stockholm | Charming Small House Design - Duration: 4:05.

Enchanting Swedish Home with Tantalizing Details in Stockholm

Không có nhận xét nào:

Đăng nhận xét