Showing posts with label SEO. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SEO. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 5, 2011

Website Analysis Tools

Free website analysis tools that will help you, find all this out :

  • Google Analytics

Although designed primarily for those running Adwords campaigns, Google Analytics will provide detailed website traffic reports for anybody and any website. All you need to do is sign up for a Google account (free) and you're in business. Google Analytics provides detailed statistics about traffic to individual pages, average time spent on each page, bounce rate (how often a user hits one page on your site and then leaves), page entry and exit stats, keywords most often used in search engines to get to your pages and much, much more. Not nearly as idiot proof as Statcounter, but the stats are much more indepth and can be used to set up a comprehensive ROI analysis if you've spent considerable time and/or money getting traffic to your site.

http://www.google.com/analytics/
 
  • W3C Markup Validation Service

This is a free service you can use to analyze all the HTML tags in your web pages to see if they conform with W3C Recommendations. This has a number of uses including making sure your web page is cross-browser compatible and spotting those errors you've made that are making your web page look all cockeyed. You can have it check web pages by either inputting a URL to your site, inputting HTML code into a text box or uploading files from your computer.

http://validator.w3.org/

  • W3C CSS Validation Service

This is a free service you can use to analyze all the CSS you use in or along with your web pages to see if it conforms with the W3C Recommendations. After the analysis, if your CSS is good (according to their specifications) then it's termed as valid CSS. You can validate your CSS by inputting a URL to your site, directly inputting code or by uploading files from your computer.

http://jigsaw.w3.org/css-validator/

  • Web Page Analyzer

This free service will spit out a complete rundown on how fast your web page loads according to various connection speeds. It will also give you a detailed readout of the combined file size of all items used on your page (e.g. HTML files, CSS files, Javascript files, images, etcetera) and then issue advisories to cut back based on how well you do.

http://www.websiteoptimization.com/services/analyze/

  • DNS Stuff

This site has —among many other things— the best WHOIS lookup service I know of that can tell you what exists in your domain name's WHOIS public profile. It's important to check this now and then if only to make sure that the contact email you gave when you registered your domain name is an email address that you still frequently use. Many a domain name has expired simply because the domain name owner didn't get a renewal notice.
http://www.dnsstuff.com/

  • Browser Statistics

This has nothing to do with your site directly but nevertheless will furnish you with a detailed monthly update on what web browsers, operating systems, screen resolutions, color depth and Javascript capabilities people on the internet are using these days. This is invaluable to you when building and analyzing your web site as it's paramount to keep abreast of the latest trends and then adjust accordingly.

http://www.w3schools.com/browsers/browsers_stats.asp

Website Analysis Tools
 

Monday, March 21, 2011

Google Changes Algorithm for Low Quality Sites

Google Changes Algorithm for Low Quality Sites . Algorithmic changes are nothing out of the ordinary for Google. The company tweaks its algorithm several times per year, and many times the changes are not officially announced. The latest change is worthy of an announcement because it affects 11.8 percent of Google's queries.

In an attempt to offer its users better search results, Google has just implemented a significant change to its algorithm. The change will help boost the rankings of what are deemed to be high quality sites, and it will push low quality sites, such as content farms, further down the rankings.

Amit Singhal, a Google fellow, and Matt Cutts, a principal engineer who helps the search engine giant fight spam, announced the algorithmic improvement in a post on Google's blog. The change's main goal is to improve relevancy among search results for users. By rewarding high quality sites for their content and punishing low quality sites for their supposed lack of content, users can get more of what they are looking for without having to weed through irrelevant sites. Google considers high quality sites to be those that offer original content, in-depth analysis, research, and more.

Although the blog post did not name any specific websites, it is likely that content farms are its main target. Content farms produce short, low value articles that are created in response to popular search queries. One such site is eHow, which pays freelance writers small fees to produce short articles on a variety of subjects.

Many content farm articles achieved high search engine rankings in the past, but offered little actual value to visitors. Google sees these sites as a form of spam that clutters its results. Other sites, which post unoriginal content and even go as far as to copy content, are also targeted in the algorithm change. It is unknown exactly how long it will take for the ranking changes to actualize, but they should gradually appear.

Prior to officially changing its algorithm, Google announced the release of the Personal Blocklist extension for users of its Chrome browser. The extension allows users to block specific domains from appearing in search results, essentially creating a blacklist of unwanted sites. Personal Blocklist also allows users to provide Google with feedback and opinions on the blocked sites.

Google stated that it did not use the extension's feedback in making the algorithmic change, but there are some consistencies between the two. Approximately 84 percent of the most unpopular or blocked domains from Personal Blocklist have been negatively impacted since the change, which shows that it has worked in accordance with user opinion.

Algorithmic changes are nothing out of the ordinary for Google. The company tweaks its algorithm several times per year, and many times the changes are not officially announced. The latest change is worthy of an announcement because it affects 11.8 percent of Google's queries.

As of now, the change has only been implemented in the United States. Google does plan to make it global in the future, however. As time passes, it should be interesting to see how the change affects the Internet landscape. With any luck, the rewards of higher rankings given to quality sites should create an improvement in terms of the overall level of quality of online content.

For more on this topic, visit http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2011/02/finding-more-high-quality-sites-in.html
Google Changes Algorithm for Low Quality Sites

Sunday, September 5, 2010

How To Increasing your RSS Subscribers

More traffic is more RSS subscriber... This is some tips to increase RSS Subscribers, blog that have many subscriber can be called as successful blog. Deal? hehehe

1. Write Unique article, If your blog have Unique article so your visitor will be happy to be your rss reader, you can write the unique article like tips and trick that are rarely written by another writers, you must have good idea to do these. for example you can write the article like : “How to put TV to your blog, How to put radio online to your blog, How to delete the link on the footer of themes blog when it encryptable, etc.

2. Don’t write too long article, Your visitor is don’t like read your article that have too many “intro”, Your visitor will be happy to read your article that not too long, explicit article. So your reader can easily understand your article, and wish they can be your rss subscriber/reader.

3. To Increase your RSS reader/subscriber you can give your reader/visitor the interest offer if your reader ready to subscribe our article to their email. you can give the offer like “free ebook”, “free script” or etc that you deem is valuable, so your reader will be encourage to follow as your RSS subscriber.

4. Place your rss subscriber form that “eye catching”, so your reader not difficult to found the form, and wish they want to fill it and then be your rss subscriber.

5. Especially wordpress, you can using Stripe ad on the top of your blog, this can make your reader to knowing where you place your link to form RSS Subscriber.

6. last, you must do SEO, more traffic is more RSS subscriber.