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AMP Websites and Web Presence Optimization

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AMP WEBSITES On Google’s blog, Google announced in its blog that AMP pages now appear in mobile search results. What is AMP? The AMP (Accelerated Mobile Pages) task is an open-source activity expecting to enhance the execution of the versatile web. It was propelled by Google last October. AMP strips out the greater part of the components which cause website pages to stack slower on cell phones. For instance, Java Scripts, pointless navigational elements, and a considerable measure of customary promotions; HTTPS is obligatory for AMP pages. On February, 24th, Google declared that AMP pages will be shown in portable list items. Presently when you hunt down a story or theme on Google from a cell phone, pages made with AMP will show up when noteworthy in the Top Stories portion of the recorded records page. Any story you read will stack quick—and it's definitely not hard to look through the article without it taking dependably to load or bobbing all around a...

Google Explains How to Search Console Reports Work

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Why are the reports in the Google Search Console delayed? Sometimes some reports from the Google Search Console reporting get delayed and this post is to talk about how it works. One reason for the delay is because of idleness from crawling to reporting and per-URL crawling rates contrast. With respect to the totaled reports in Search Console, there are two-time parts incorporated that one ought to think about: Inactivity from crawling to reporting, it takes a couple of days and sometimes a week for Search Console to show information after it has been crawled. Different procedures keep running over the information, and Search Console tries to mirror the last state — which can take a touch of time to get. This is mainly unmistakable with an unexpected change, for instance, going from no AMP page to stacks of AMP pages.  Crawl rates Per-URL varies. Some URLs are crawled at interims, others each couple months, and some around the center. Going from all URLs are broken...

Google deals with 65% of the 35,000 user-generated spam reports a month

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Google prevents most spam from reaching its users, but if an unwanted message makes it through, it can be reported as spam.  And quite a lot of times, some Google users report spam now and then.  The rate of these reports has grown so high that Google has to take action on them as often as they come in. Google's Juan Felipe Rincon, however, shares statistics on how many spam reports Google receives from users and how serious they take these reports and how often they act on them. It is a known fact that spams are a huge danger to a business such as Google, and it might entirely put users off and make users decide not to use the service anymore. So as a business, it is imperative for Google to protect the interests of its users as no user feels secure with a lot of spams coming in every time.    Spams affect the web presence of Google users and these users do a lot of work to do a proper job of web presence optimization and the presence of these sp...

Attention! Removed Ads From The Search Results Page Can Affect Your Adwords Budget!

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Google recently removed text ads from the right-hand side of search results and simultaneously, we will now be able to see four ads to show just above the organic results although this is only on a slight percentage of highly commercially relevant queries. The ads that appear below the results are unaffected by this change, and with those ads below this results, we can now have a maximum of seven text ads showing at the same time, on a single page. This is a decrease from 11 ads which used to be there when you include the ones that showed on the right in the previous arrangement. This update is to improve ultimately user’s web presence optimization experience on Google search and to make that experience steady across all devices. From statistics, the majority of searches happen on mobile these days and Google search page on mobile view does not have a right-hand-side-ads. For a long time, from statistics generated from the number of clicks each ad attracted, it was observ...

SEO Special Offer

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Do you really need to change your domain name?

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Yes, you’ve heard it! You can indeed change your domain name and keep your SE rankings. There are several steps in achieving this.       The first two steps in achieving our goal of changing the domain name but keeping our bellowed rankings is to r egister the new domain or purchase an old domain, next you need to upload a “coming soon” page,,   transfer the little bits of your website, upload pages to the new   domain, and redirect the old pages to the new ones.  Sounds easy enough?   That’s what we thought. Next you need to get into the Google webmaster console and use the “change of address” tool. Update your important back-links, and optimize. Patience here is crucial. If you follow these steps you will gain rather than lose.  The loss of organic traffic will not affect your SEO status much. Keep in mind that a change of domain name should be avoided, and is the last option.  

SEO as a holistic practice

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SEO is becoming a much more holistic practice than before. Our experience with the clients shows how they are resistant to change, in the technology driven world, a change in strategies occurs every few months, sometimes weeks.  Now, SEO will need to have a hand in all things marketing in order to ensure that all of the hard work and investments a company makes are seen. here are a few things that we need to continue stressing though. No matter he change in strategies, in order to have advantage over your competition you need to structure your flexible strategy around a skeleton of following founding elements: Intelligent Keyword Research & Onsite Optimization Complete Local Places Pages Encourage Online Reviews Accurate Citations & Business Directory Listings Links & Social Signals