Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Tips from Google AdSense

The below was sent to me by Google AdSense.

Hi there,

As the holiday season approaches, advertisers are preparing new campaigns and internet traffic is likely to increase. To help you take advantage of this, in this issue, we've put together the top tips for making your site more visible. You’ll also find updates on:

* Improving page load speed in DFP Small Business
* Using Google+ Pages for brands and businesses

Make your site more visible!

Be relevant
Do you know how users find your pages? Webmaster Tools provides you with detailed information on the top queries for which your site ranks in Google search results. Use this information to make sure that the content users find most interesting is most prominent.

Be social
As we mentioned in our last newsletter, by implementing the +1 button on your pages, you can give users an opportunity to share their opinion with you and guide you to what is most interesting for them on your site. Webmaster Tools now also allows you to track the search impact of +1’s on your pages.

Be fast
A faster site increases user satisfaction, so speed is an important factor in the Google search ranking. Page Speed Online analyzes the content of a web page and generates suggestions to make that page faster. Let Maile Ohye from the Developers Program Team tell you more about the importance of your site’s performance:
Site Speed Performance For Webmasters (VIDEO)

Check how fast your website loads !


UpDates:
Google+ Pages for businesses and brands
Google+ Pages are a way for brands and businesses to have a presence on Google+. Pages bring you closer to your audience, letting you have real conversations with the right people, connecting you face to face with your site’s visitors, and letting current fans recommend new ones.

Giving your business a home on Google+ lets you directly interact with your users, while giving them more chances to share your content with their friends. Create a page today and connect with your audience!


I hope the above information is of help to you.

Anthony,
Your Internet website marketing partner at ProNetUSA.com

Yahoo Site Explorer Coming Offline

The below information as received from Majestic SEO.

Yahoo Site Explorer was launched in September 2005 to mixed acclaim but became the main source of link analysis data in the world for several years. It is now being retired as we speak and its architect, Tim Mayer laments its demise.

Majestic SEO does not – and never has – used Yahoo’s data. Whilst we expect an increase in the Free services that Majestic offers as a result of this closure, we have already planned for this eventuality within our infrastructure and see no issues in handling the increased traffic to our site.

Majestic crawls the web independently of any search engines and we surpassed Yahoo’s data set many years ago.

We would like to say thank you to Yahoo for Yahoo Site Explorer’s contribution to Internet Marketers everywhere.


I hope the above information has been of help to you.

Anthony,
Your Internet website marketing partner at ProNetUSA.com

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

Web Page tips from Google

The below was sent to me by Google AdSense.

Hi there,

As the holiday season approaches, advertisers are preparing new campaigns and internet traffic is likely to increase. To help you take advantage of this, in this issue, we've put together the top tips for making your site more visible. You’ll also find updates on:

* Improving page load speed in DFP Small Business
* Using Google+ Pages for brands and businesses

Make your site more visible!

Be relevant
Do you know how users find your pages? Webmaster Tools provides you with detailed information on the top queries for which your site ranks in Google search results. Use this information to make sure that the content users find most interesting is most prominent.

Be social
As we mentioned in our last newsletter, by implementing the +1 button on your pages, you can give users an opportunity to share their opinion with you and guide you to what is most interesting for them on your site. Webmaster Tools now also allows you to track the search impact of +1’s on your pages.

Be fast
A faster site increases user satisfaction, so speed is an important factor in the Google search ranking. Page Speed Online analyzes the content of a web page and generates suggestions to make that page faster. Let Maile Ohye from the Developers Program Team tell you more about the importance of your site’s performance:
Site Speed Performance For Webmasters (VIDEO)

Check how fast your website loads !


UpDates:
Google+ Pages for businesses and brands
Google+ Pages are a way for brands and businesses to have a presence on Google+. Pages bring you closer to your audience, letting you have real conversations with the right people, connecting you face to face with your site’s visitors, and letting current fans recommend new ones.

Giving your business a home on Google+ lets you directly interact with your users, while giving them more chances to share your content with their friends. Create a page today and connect with your audience!

Anthony,
Your Internet website marketing partner at ProNetUSA.com

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Google+1 button will begin to appear on AdSense for Content and AdSense for Mobile Content

As received from Google on 9-21-2011

"Hello,

In the next month, we'll introduce the +1 button and personal recommendations to display ads. The +1 button will begin to appear on AdSense for Content and AdSense for Mobile Content display ad formats -- image, animated gif, and Flash. +1s will be one additional signal to help determine an ad's relevance and we'll continue to show the ads that will generate the most revenue for you.

We previously launched the +1 button on Google search and for publisher sites to make it easier for people to share and discover content across the web. Soon, your users will be able to endorse specific ads and make the ads more likely to appear to their social connections. We believe that these recommendations could help your readers notice ads on your site more, leading to higher returns for you over time.

If you prefer not to show the +1 buttons on display ads on your pages, you can opt out in your account. For more information please visit the Inside AdSense blog.

Sincerely,

The Google AdSense team"

+1 gets conversations going. Click the +1 button to give something your public stamp of approval. Then, if you want to share right away, add a comment and send it to the right circles on Google+.

The next time your friends and contacts search on Google, they could see your +1. You’ll help them find the best stuff on the web – and you might just start up another conversation!

Click here to go to Google+


Anthony,
Your Internet website marketing partner at ProNetUSA.com

Saturday, September 10, 2011

Google Analytics Time on Site, Length of Visit and Bounces

Bounce as described by Google;
“Bounce rate is the percentage of single-page visits or visits in which the person left your site from the entrance (landing) page. Use this metric to measure visit quality – a high bounce rate generally indicates that site entrance pages aren’t relevant to your visitors. The more compelling your landing pages, the more visitors will stay on your site and convert. You can minimize bounce rates by tailoring landing pages to each keyword and ad that you run. Landing pages should provide the information and services that were promised in the ad copy.”

OPINION Comment
To know how long a visitor has spent on a web page Google needs two things:

1 ) The time you arrived on a specific web page
2 ) The time you requested another web page on the SAME website.
Read # 2 again… “The time you requested another web page on the SAME website.” You have Google Analytics installed on your web site but if the visitor leaves your website for another page for any one of the following reasons; entering an URL in the address bar, closing the browser, clicking on advertisement or an outgoing “self target” link etc… Google Analytics does NOT get triggered again and it cannot calculate the time on that page. So… it defaults to 00:00:00.
Therefore in theory someone could land on a web page and stay on that web page for 10 minutes and get the info they were looking for, then close the browser and Google will count as 00:00:00 time and that equals as a bounce.

How to view your BOUNCE RATE?
If you have a Google Analytics account connected to your website you can view the bounce rates for your website by going to the Bounce Rate report under Visitors > Visitor Trending > Bounce Rate.


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Time on Site as described by Google;
“Time on Site: Time on site is one way of measuring visit quality. If visitors spend a long time visiting your site, they may be interacting extensively with it. However, Time on site can be misleading because visitors often leave browser windows open when they are not actually viewing or using your site.”

OPINION Comment
This method of calculating Time on Site is also not 100% accurate because even the reported time on site is faulty to begin with. Time on Site is nothing but the sum of Avg. Time on Page for all web pages. And we know that the reported Time on Page is not 100% accurate because Google Analytics does not record time spent on page for exits and bounces.


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Length of Visit as described by Google;
“Length of Visit (Visitor Behavior): Length of visit is a measure of visit quality. A large number of lengthy visits suggests that visitors interact more extensively with your site. The graph allows you to visualize the entire distribution of visits instead of simply the ‘Average Time on Site’ across all visits. Keep in mind that ‘Average Time on Site’ is skewed by visitors leaving browser windows open when they are not actually viewing or using your site. You can see whether a few visits are skewing your ‘Average Time on Site’ upward or whether most visits to your site have a high average time.”

OPINION Comment
The only way for someone to register a visit for more than 0 seconds is if they go to a SECOND page. The reason for this is that Google Analytics can only tell how long someone has been there if they have more than one page view – it uses the timestamps (date and time record) of each page view and “subtracts” them to get the time that someone was on one page. For this reason; you will not know how long someone stays on the FIRST and only page visited and you will never know how long someone was truly on your site because you can’t tell how long they were looking at the LAST page they were on (in both instances there isn’t a next page for Google Analytics to subtract time from).


Till the next time,
Anthony,
Your Website Marketing Partner and Friend at ProNetUSA - WebSites and Internet Marketing

Tuesday, August 2, 2011

Website load speed affects search engine rankings ?

Site speed - how long it takes a web page to load and show up for people in a web browser window - is now one of Google's ranking factors. That means Google takes site speed into account when deciding how high a site should show up in search results. Very slow sites will have a much harder time beating out its competitors.

If visitors have to wait too long for your site to load, they're more likely to leave quickly, and less likely to do what you want them to do - like buy your product or service, contact you for a quote, sign up for your newsletter, or download your e-book.

Check how fast your website loads !


You can test how long it takes your site to load with various tools. One favorite is Pingdom's site speed test, and Google also has the new Google Page Speed Online tool. If you use Google Webmaster Tools, look under "Labs" and click "Site Performance."

What's considered slow?


In my opinion, a website that loads within 2 seconds is doing well. A site that loads in 2 to 4 seconds isn't really fast, but is acceptable if you have a bunch of relative information on the web page.

A website that takes more than 5 seconds or more to load is likely to push potential visitors on to the next web page viewing option which could very well be your competitors, and may be suffer a lower ranking. If your site takes more than 7 seconds to load, you really need to speed it up.

For more information on how to improve your site speed,

read AboutUs's 6 Easy Ways To Improve Your Site Speed, for SEO.

Till the next time,
Anthony,
Your Website Marketing Partner and Friend at ProNetUSA - WebSites and Internet Marketing

Monday, August 1, 2011

External backlinks (inbound links for Google Page Rank)

External backlinks are the most focused-on off web page aspect of SEO. Backlinks (or “inbound links”) are a fundamental pillar of search engine optimization. On-page optimization is limited in scope — there is only so much you can do with on-page optimization. The rest of your rankings will rely heavily on your off web page backlinks and how many pages and the quality of those pages that are linking into your web page(s).

Webmasters tend to keep track of Page Rank, which helps in measuring the effectiveness of backlinks to their website or blog. The biggest question is how many backlinks do you need to move your page rank up. It’s not only the amount of backlinks, but the quality of those backlinks as well

Although nobody can determine the exact Google PageRank values, the table below gives a fair representation of how many backlinks, of certain PageRank values are required to achieve a certain Google PageRank.

I know a lot of people don’t know what it takes to increase their Page Ranking using backlinks. Here’s a good graph to help explain to you how many backlinks are needed for that highly sought after page rank increase.

Till the next time,
Anthony,
Click here to page rank chart.