Is Moz really usefull?
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I think seo and marketing a business online is ever changing so that being said i think moz tools and moz local is great. Even just to read about different topics & Q and A within the industry is a great tool in itself.
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There is no need to be rude EGOL. I have no time going to conferences, sip coffee nor farting. Instead I invest in time and money to research, learn and execute. My day as a company director starts at 8 am and I'm mostly at home around 10 pm realizing I had no time to take a proper lunch. I have invested enough time and money in MOZ and I see that it has no result and that I have to look out for better investments.
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Not trying to be rude. Â Sorry if it seemed that way.
Just saying that one of the greatest values here is getting feedback from people who do the same thing as you. Â Lots of people do lots of work when a small change could make a big difference.
If you want to tell us what you have done in detail we can tell you if the same thing has worked for us.
If you want to post the URL of your website with a specific question, someone from here who knows about your question will probably take a look at it and reply.
In my opinion, Q&A is the most valuable part of moz after the beginner's guide and the webinars.
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Moz isn't useful. We just hang around here to see what Rand's beard looks like this week.

Your website is like a house. It has problems and you want to fix them. So what do you do? Hire a home inspector. They come in, look at the house and give you their professional opinion of what's wrong. But it's up to you, the homeowner, to fix the problems.
Moz is a home inspector. It inspects your website and tells you what it thinks is wrong. But they can't market your website, build your SEO or grow your beard build your brand. And remember, no home inspection or SEO tool reveals all your problems. Moz tells you the obvious ones and some not-so-obvious ones but it can't tell the difference between quality content and spam. That's your job.
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Home inspectors came, inspected the house, gave their opinion, I fixed the problems, nothing happend. Tell me something new.
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Did you research your competitors sites to see where they were getting links from? Then try to get links there as well? Have you been monitoring your traffic and social media to see what kinds of blog posts / social media posts work the best, then exploit them?
You have a lot of defensive remarks, but when people in the thread try to help you with your SEO you just don't respond. If you are using the same tactics with your Moz account I can see what your issue is.
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@TechTumble you seem quite negative and obstructive about the whole thing to be honest. People are giving their opinions, if you just looking for people to agree with you you're unlikely to find them in the Moz.com forums.
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Ok, you got me there. It doesn't matter what Rand's opinion of your site is. Or Roger. Or myself for that matter.
Organic SEO is a branch of marketing aimed specifically at Google (or Bing, but mostly Google). And Google is a fickle mistress who will coo at the latest things but turn her nose up at the strangest times. We kinda know what she likes but her handlers talk in riddles sometimes and seldom give you straightforward answers. So you can ace the Moz exam and still be #37 for "buffalo widgets". Or "beard growing cream". Or whatever it is that you want traffic for.
I work for a company that rode the Google wave. We did well in the SEO game for a long time (it was stupid cheap marketing) and, like a lot of people here, lost big in the various updates that came afterward. Since then, we don't focus on organic SEO as much. We still make sure we have quality content, but we broadened our marketing to make sure we weren't so singularly focused. No more spreadsheets detailing how many links we built this week. No more wringing our hands over the fact that we have 10% KW saturation on that one page. No more guest writing articles. We pay attention to our SEO, but it's a small part of what we do and it's part of the other things we do naturally. Organic is nice but not the only show in town.
At the end of the day, only you can decide if it's worth the cost of a Pro subscription to keep pursuing organic rankings. I don't know your company/business/barber/accounting/income.
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@zeroabove I would not consider general remarks about beards, house inspectors and farts productive nor helpful either.
As a Moz user, what are your experiences with the tools and do they make a difference? Do you have a use case? What strategy are you following to push rankings up?
Thank you in advance for your reply.
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Why don't you post your url so people can give suggestions - I would be thrilled if someone wants to help me.. I'd love to see how peopl analyse your site and make suggestions.
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I agree. So far for me, the community alone is a great value! Having a place to bounce ideas off of others who give detailed, thoughtful, and respectful feedback is valuable to me (sitting alone in my home office with nobody to talk to). MOZ.com is like being able to stand up in a cubicle and ask one of your colleagues for feedback or ideas when you hit a wall. Just waiting for the virtual coffee feature...
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I actually come here for Rand's shirts. They're fantastic!