Hi adam, I have sent you a PDM with his email address in. Cheers
Tim
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Hi adam, I have sent you a PDM with his email address in. Cheers
Tim
Don't buy links, earn links! Great quality content and outreach in a manor befitting your site and status will bring rewards, where as buying links may earn short term gain, they will ultimately have a negative end result.
HI Adam, I have passed on your details. Cheers Tim
I cannot personally, but my brother-in-law's agency has gained a gold partner status with them here in the UK. He has been talking them up to me for a while and has never had a bad word to say about the platform. If you have any particular questions - would be happy to get his thoughts without any sales pushes etc.
I would suggest adding some URL parameters to your Google Search Console for the domain, it will help tell Google how to crawl and index your site... https://support.google.com/webmasters/answer/6080550?hl=en
https://www.shoutmeloud.com/google-webmaster-tool-added-url-parameter-option-seo.html - a useful read.
https://www.hallaminternet.com/avoiding-the-seo-pitfalls-of-url-parameters/ - another useful read.
Adding canonical's as you have already mentioned, would have been my second bit of advice. I am not sure why you have no-followed the links.
Cheers
Tim
Did you implement an SSL? A link to the website could also help us diagnose the issue. It could have been caused by numerous reasons.
IF they are sending considerable traffic that leads to conversions then there is a case for keeping them. I would however, also look into why your other domains are considered Spammy and try to rectify this also, that way you can still benefit from greater volumes of traffic, improve all your sites and hopefully grow stronger all around.
I wouldn't say it was necessarily weird - but I had quite a bit of my concept livery artwork shared by the likes of Lewis Hamilton, N Nico Rosberg, Ken Block, Mclaren and a few others (from my social profiles @timholmesdesign)... Off the back of sharing via social I had quite a few established sites - BBC Top Gear, Motorsport.com and other request to feature my artwork. As a plus I got a series of great links.
It would certainly be possible to market from a sub domain, but it would in my opinion be better if you could still stick to the root domain for added value.
Could you developers not install say a wordpress installation to a single directory on your root domain. e.g. /blog? Or is it already taken?
To all intents and purposes it would appear the Homepage file has been indexed as it can be found via branded search etc. From viewing the sites source you are not blocking anything or have any funny canonical issues. Do you have any errors in your Google Search Console.crawl reports.
Also have you anything in your robots.txt file that could be causing an issue?
Have you considered a guest registration/checkout, whereby the user creates the account by filling out the checkout options and enters required details - e.g. post address for delivery, email for confirmation / username and once check out is complete and the transaction is done you can simply ask for a password to store this registration for later use. By removing the barrier or creating the option of a guest checkout conversion rates may be improved.
for those that want to register first have this as an additional option at checkout.
Do you have multiple similar products that are targeting the same keywords, could the pages be keyword cannibalising each other and the pages keep switching in your rankings. If so you may benefit from canonicalising similar content pages that may not be direct duplicates or trying to further seperate the content.
e.g. Product review 1 ranks P3 then drops whilst another page say Product review 3 takes its place.
Do you track each url placement?
They often have power sales - which might be the best time for you to renew as they add to your current subscription length at a much lower price.
I too also have Moz and SEO Powersuite, I personally find it very good, but probably don't use it to its full potential. At press I use the rankings tool the most to keep tabs on the top 40 and see how they move around in the rankings and then for generating a series of reports around this. I like it because you get a daily update.
As for the other tools I found it just as cheap to get the whole bundle with a deal rater than each individually, although this may change at renewal.
Not sure if this is of help to you, I suppose it depends how many pages you are expecting to be indexed, but according to John Mu at Google - Google does not necessarily index all pages.
https://www.seroundtable.com/google-index-all-pages-20780.html
I myself have personally moved over to Google's data studio and am finding it very easy to implement, interrogate data and report with...
Another option could be Power Bi from Microsoft, it also has a 60 day free trial if I recall correctly.
Cheers
Tim
This is because these shortened links are being redirected from an external/3rd party website and are in effect a backlink. They are in most cases a 301 or 302 redirect from an external site to yours.
Hope that helps.
At this current time Google clearly deems your home page to be most relevant and have more content tailored to the searchers intent. Having said that I personally do not feel that either of your pages (home or product) really have that much in the way of quality content. By adding more content that is related to the searcher intent and the product involved you will hopefully improve the quality of the page helping it rank better or replace the home page.
If you have relevant FAQ's that are specific to your car product maybe link them a bit better internally rather than solely from the homepage.
But for me the main take away would be quality content, relevant content and more content.
Hope that helps a touch.
To me that sounds pretty good, providing it is relevant to to the image and provides genuine context it should be fine, I would however, consider - "wedding ceremony at venue" borderline - especially if it is in every image alt on a page. Try change it up a touch - if you cannot tell from the picture that it is at specific venue then maybe not have it in there, say for pictures with a shallow depth of field and the background is not easily identifiable, rings, flowers, tables placings, closeups and a like.
I believe what you are doing for your Alt text is great - make it describe each image individually.
As for title I would use it to further describe each individual image rather than duplicate for all in the blog post imagery. This is mainly used for further improving UX on each image.
Alt text is the most important from an crawling/seo perspective as is often used in collaboration with the surrounding text to determine context. Be wary of keyword stuffing in your alt tags.
Hope that helps.