Tag Archives: around the web

3 Steps to Getting More Out of Google Analytics

Google Analytics is probably the most popular free tool to keep track of how your website is performing, and for good reason. It offers a lot of great features, though they can be intimidating at first glance. This program has a lot to offer, so wrapping your head around it all might seem a bit daunting. However, once you pick on how to use some of its more advanced features, you’ll have more valuable control over your digital marketing efforts.   1. Read the Reports Analytics reports give you a very clear picture as to how visitors are interacting with your website. When you log in, you’re brought to the audience overview page by default. This general overview breaks down your website stats, which include total website visits, page views, unique visitors, average visit duration, bounce rate, and percentage of new visits within the given time frame. Though this information is helpful, there are other reports you can check out to get more detailed information about your traffic. Content Overview: When you click on Content> Overview in the left navigation panel, you’ll see a report that tells you what people are specifically looking at when they visit your website. You’ll see specific information about you page traffic, including which of your pages are most popular. This is helpful in identifying which pages you might want to get rid of, improve, or downplay. Traffic Sources Overview: Knowing where your traffic is coming from allows you to fine tune your online marketing efforts. Analytics sorts sources by search traffic, referral traffic, direct traffic, and traffic from AdWords campaigns. Click on Search Engine Optimization and you’ll see what keywords lead users to your website, as well as what pages users are landing on and what geographic areas they live in. Intelligence Events: This nifty tool allows you to set alerts for when specific events happen on your website. For instance, you might want to be alerted once a certain number of people make a purchase or download a free resource in a given month. Google will calculate the actual performance against the expected performance. You can set intelligence events for both web analytics and AdWords. Conversions: This section allows you to set and monitor conversion goals for your site. You do this by specifying the goal URL to track. For instance, if your goal is to get people to sign up for your newsletter, then set the confirmation page as your goal URL. You then set up a sales funnel consisting of all the pages your visitor will go through to ultimately reach the confirmation page. KISSMetrics has written an excellent guide to using this feature.   2. Use Reporting Tools Reporting tools let you use and control your analytics data in a variety of ways. If you’re a WordPress user who’s hungry for more analytics power, you’ll be happy to know that there’s more than one plugin for that. For example, Google Analytics for WordPress by Yoast lets you track things like views per category, views per author, and can automatically track pageviews and outbound clicks. If you aren’t a WordPress user, there are also other tools that give you more control over your analytics. Google Analytics Evolution allows you to plug your data directly into an Excel spreadsheet. Bringshare.com allows you to merge your  data with other sources to generate reports, white papers, and other company documents.   3. Explore Advanced Features Advanced segmentation. This feature gives you more detailed information when it comes to where your traffic is coming form. For example, you can create and view the segment of people who bounced from your website in a given month, or only visitors who made a purchase. You can even create multiple segments and compare them on the same chart. Custom Reporting. Just as the name suggests, custom reports allows you to create customized reports based on specific criteria and metrics. You can create reports that tell you things like bounce rate per city and Page Views by browser. You can find this option under the Customization tab. Flash Tracking. Tracking Flash content on web pages has always been a major challenge for web developers. Google addresses this with Flash Tracking . It translates your tracking code into ActionScript 3 language, making it easier to track Adobe Flash content like forms and buttons. Customized email reports. You can schedule reports to be emailed to you once, daily, weekly, monthly, or on a quarterly basis.   If you’re fairly new to analytics, then Google is a great place to start. Even after you learn your way around, you’ll find that there are still more features to learn about. The best way to learn is to tinker around and see which ones serve you best. Soon enough you’ll be rocking graphs and spreadsheets like the pro that you are. Continue reading

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10 Blogging Strategies That Will Help Bring More People To Your Website

Every blogger has faced the lack of readership dilemma at one point or another. After all, there’s no point in creating an archive of content if there’s no one there to read it. Contrary to what you may believe, that super star blogger you admire so much didn’t burst into notoriety overnight. Gaining a readership is something that requires consistent effort. Below you will find ten building blocks on which you can build your blogging strategy.   1. Share and Share Often If you’ve written something great that you’ve put your heart into, then let everyone know about it. Put it on your Facebook wall, tweet about it, bookmark it on StumbleUpon, Digg it, and put it out there for the world to see. Ask your friends to do the same. You can continue to do this long after you originally publish your post. Consider re-sharing your post again at a later time as a “throwback” or a “best of” promotion. You can also compile a list of your most helpful blog posts and share the comprehensive list with your readers.   2. Make List Posts People like lists. They’re easy to read, and offer a quick way for readers to digest information they find interesting or useful. Make lists that are relevant to your blog, such as top tools to use, best blogs to follow, most helpful Youtube videos, or most influential people in your field.   3. Learn to Write Headlines The blog post title is the hook that grabs your reader’s attention. You can have a great blog post, but if the title is boring, then you might as well toss it. John Morrow of Copyblogger has a wildly popular post on writing catchy headlines.   4. Blog Commenting Engaging in communities built around other blogs is a great way to interact with other readers. Leave thoughtful blog comments that help show you’re interested, knowledgeable, and passionate about the subject at hand. Link back to your website in the box provided. Avoid including links directly in your blog comment though, as this could come off as too spammy to the existing readers in the blog community.   5. Make Posts “Scannable” Have you ever been faced with pages and pages of textbook material that just make your eyes glaze over? You don’t want to do that to your readers. This is why making your posts scannable is so important. Use subheadings, bullet points, lists, and use short paragraphs of three to five sentences when composing your blog post. This will help ensure that your readers can quickly scan over the post and quickly get the gist of what the post is about, before actually having to read the whole thing.   6. Contests and Giveaways If there’s anything that people love more than lists, it’s free stuff. Give away a free copy of your latest product, or a much-coveted item like a Kindle or iPod. You can also give away copies of books and other items from guest bloggers or other people you deliberately feature in posts.   7. Guest posting Guest posting is probably the best way to get your name in front of new audiences. A few guest posts a month on other relevant blogs can get you a nice stream of new visitors. This also works in reverse. Have a well-known person guest post on your blog to draw in new visitors. You can also conduct an interview or Q&A session with an industry expert.   8. Blog Carnivals and Link Parties A blog carnival is a compilation of blog posts that a blogger puts together on a particular subject. Blog Carnivals give bloggers a chance at exposure, and give the blog owner a helpful piece of content to present to their readers. See a good example of this at Kelly the Kitchen Kop . A link party is similar to a blog carnival, except bloggers submit a link directly to the host blog. See the blog of writer Carol Tice as an example.   9. Tell Stories Telling stories is an art. People have long been captivated by good stories, whether they’re written, spoken, or featured on the silver screen. Engage your readers with a good story related to your topic to really draw them into what you’re saying.   10. Use Visuals There’s a reason why infographics have sharply risen in popularity in the past couple years. Humans are very visual creatures, and visuals are a very effective way to illustrate what you’re talking about. Graphs, illustrations, photos, and slide shows are great ways to catch a reader’s attention, and can also help break up the monotony of a longer post.   Bonus Tip: Check Your Motives at the Door You probably already know the number one rule of blogging: Write great content. But why are you writing great content? Is it to offer a helpful resource to your readers, or just to attract attention? Your number one priority must be to help and/or entertain the reader. If your priority is to attract attention, it will show in the quality of your writing. The best bloggers are passionate about what they blog about, and know how to effectively captivate their readers. Continue reading

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Infographic: From Dial-Up to Lightspeed

From ARPANET to Fiber Optics, we’ve come a very long way in a relatively short amount of time.  The following infographic traces the origins of the Internet from its humble beginnings up through today’s technology.  Where do you think it’ll go from here? From Dial-Up to Lightspeed via HostGator Continue reading

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HostGator Visits The Houston Food Bank

The entire HostGator training staff recently took a day off from training and instead spent it volunteering at The Houston Food Bank , which was founded in 1982 and provides food and other products to more than 500 hunger relief agencies in southeast Texas. The Houston Food Bank is the nation’s largest-size Feeding America food bank, operating in an impressive 308,000 square foot facility. Before we could begin, an orientation was necessary to ensure we knew exactly what and how we were to accomplish the day’s work. Having now been oriented, it was time to get down to work.  Although, in the case of Jorge here, work highly consists of photobombing. As work continued for the vast majority of the staff, Jorge continued to excel at his particular style of “work.” The day ended successfully, and we want to sincerely thank The Houston Food Bank for the opportunity!  If you are in the Houston area and would like to volunteer, please find the information here .  When you do volunteer, be sure to wear closed-toe shoes.  One of our staff, who shall remain nameless (*cough*David*cough*) had to borrow a mis-matched pair of shoes from the food bank in order to work. Fortunately, for the aforementioned un-named Gator (*sneeze*DAVID!*sneeze*), mis-matched grey is the new black.  Thank you again to The Houston Food Bank for the opportunity to have volunteered for the day. Continue reading

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Google Issues New Info on Backlinks: Is Your Site Safe?

Backlinking is somewhat of a touchy subject in search engine optimization, especially since Google launched its much-publicized crack down on blackhat SEO last year. The search leader encourages a “proceed with caution” approach when it comes to backlinking, and understandably so, given the history that Google and backlinking have with each other. Last month, Search Engine Journal published a story on Google’s recent cautioning on using unnatural backlinks, particularly in “advertorials,” massive guest posting, and optimized anchor text in press releases.   A Brief History of SEO Back in the “Wild West” of the internet age – the mid 1990s – websites started popping up faster than people could keep up with them. Search engines were invented to help web users find what they wanted quickly and efficiently. Back then, all a webmaster had to do to get his or her site indexed was to submit their URL to a search engine. A spider would be sent out to crawl the website, searching for any and all outgoing links as well as relevant keywords to report back to the search engine for indexing. Eventually, people started to see the value in getting higher up in search results, and the term “search engine optimization” was coined. Since search engine algorithms relied so heavily on backlinks and keyword density, people began to come up with all sorts of ways to trick the system. One notably underhanded technique was the use of link farms. Link farms were networks of websites created with the sole purpose of hosting backlinks. Webmasters and internet marketers would commonly buy and trade backlink space. Search engines responded to such tactics by developing more complex algorithms to determine the relevance of a website. Google PageRank is one such example. While employing PageRank brought some much needed order to things, Google’s subsequent algorithm updates were what made the biggest difference. In 2011, Google released the Panda algorithm update, which lowered the ranking of low-quality websites. In 2012, Google unleashed the Penguin update to penalize websites that violated Google’s webmaster guidelines. Recently, changes made to Google’s Webmaster Guidelines provides even more insight into how Google is continuing to work on creating an environment in which natural backlinking is rewarded and unnatural backlinking is penalized.  Specifically, the changes addressed concerns about guest posting, article directory marketing, advertorials and more.   How Much Guest Posting is Too Much? In its recent update, Google didn’t specify how often a blogger should or shouldn’t guest post. A better approach would be to consider the reasons for the guest posting. To clarify, Matthew Cutts, Google’s Head of Webspam, released a video on the topic in October of last year. Basically, he says that there is a difference between guest blogging to add value to a blog and guest blogging to get backlinks. Generally, tactics like spinning and distributing the same blog post to multiple websites for the sake of backlinks is a no-no. Cutts advised to use the rel=nofollow attribute for backlinks included in guest blog posts.   What is “Rel=nofollow?” “Rel=nofollow” is an HTML tag used in links to tell a web crawler not to crawl that particular link. It was originally developed to discourage spammy blog comments. When you use this attribute, the backlink won’t count toward PageRank. You’re essentially saying that the link is for human eyes only, not for search engine consideration.   Backlinking from Advertorials Advertorials, also know as native content, is content containing backlinks that a company pays a webmaster to publish. In essence, this is paying for backlinks, and it’s also an SEO no-no. The reason is two-fold: It’s misleading to the reader, and It’s misleading to Google, which has always used “editorial votes” as a way to rank websites. If a piece of content is an advertorial, it’s best to disclose this, and also use the nofollow attribute for outgoing links. Again, not using the attribute could work against you.   Optimized Anchor Text in Press Releases Optimized anchor text is anchor text that includes keywords that you want to rank for. Google considers “links with optimized anchor text in articles or press releases distributed on other sites” to be in violation of their webmaster guidelines. Since the links within the press release or article aren’t a true indication of your website’s relevance or popularity, make sure you nofollow them. What all comes down to is this: It’s fine to use online content as a promotional tool, but you should use the nofollow attribute if you’re using backlinks in said content. Backlinks within your content should only be used to drive readers to your website, and if the readers like your content, hopefully they’ll link to it themselves. Yes, it sounds like a long workaround, but anyone in search marketing will tell you that building a great online reputation takes time. Ultimately, your goal should be to get your readers to like you. If readers like you, then they will leave a trail back to you for search engines to follow creating an optimum SEO experience without the manipulation that Google loves to penalize. Continue reading

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