Friday 1 March 2013

How to Increase Google Page Rank?

If you are looking to increase your Google Page Rank, you need to do Quality link building. Quality Link Building is nothing but building quality dofollow back links from higher PR sources, especially from those niche relative authority sources. Having your link on those websites which have more PR than yours would do good, but PR gets divided among the number of links over there. So look outfor those websites which are having a Good Google PR and less outbound links (both internal and external).
Some ways that you can get good Quality Links are
  • Article submission
  • Blog Commenting (Do Follow Blogs)
  • Forum posting
  • Classified ads
  • Press releases
  • Link Exchange to relevant sites
  • Social bookmarking (Sites like HubPage & squidoo are popular)

Thursday 28 February 2013

SEO’s Six most often asked questions........?





1.   What’s the competition level for a specific keyword?

This is a metric that takes into consideration the authority, incoming links, age, social activity and on-page optimization– of the top results for a specific keyword in the Google country version that you select, providing  an average level of competition that you can take into consideration as a relative indicator to prioritize the keywords you can more easily rank for.  


2. Which other keywords can you suggest me to rank for? 


Another handy functionality that serpIQ provides is a fast and friendly visualization for keyword suggestions. Using SEMrush it shows the related terms, average CPC, search volume and domain availability for a keyword you specify:

3. In which social network is my site content shared the most?

Socialcrawlytics answers to this question for free. It crawls your site (or your competitors’ if you want) looking for the social shares for each of the internal pages in the most popular social networks: Facebook, Twitter, Delicious, LinkedIn, Google Plus, Pinterest.
 
4. What is the most socially shared content of my site?
Socialcrawlytics also generates a report specifying the total amount of shares that your site (or competitor’s) pages have had in each social network:

5. What’s the position of my (and my competitors’) incoming links in the pages where they are included?

CognitiveSEO gives you not only the position of your incoming links in the pages they have been included –whether it is in a text paragraph, group of links, images, footer, etc.- but also your competitors’ links and can also indicate which of those incoming links are common between you two
6. Which of my incoming links have changed during the last week?
You can also easily monitor your incoming links status with CognitiveSEO –and manage them by assigning link partner’s data- with reports including the information coming from the incoming links that have changed since the day before or during the last week, whether they are broken, have become nofollowed, have changed the anchor text, etc.: