I have received from specific long tail queries
Posted: Sun Dec 22, 2024 6:19 am
Employing a nice tactic to increase search visibility for long tail queries: "The site used to have a clever internal system which monitored the keywords sending natural search traffic and then added them to the page automatically to make the page seem more relevant than before and therefore get higher rankings.
The concept of taking actual search queries that hav email lists australia e triggered clicks to your site I found very interesting, its kind of like UGC but without requiring the surfer to actually do anything, and for most websites building up a decent position on the potentially hundreds of terms per page that 'might' drive traffic is phenomenally difficult unless you have some serious domain authority in your chosen subject, and lets face it, most of us don't! I tend to use WordPress for most of my smaller sites that I launch around keyword rich domain names, as its a simple and easy way to build out half decent sites in minutes as opposed to days, so I set about writing a plugin that would replicate exactly what scribd had turned off to monitor the results.
In a nutshell, the plugin strips the search term from the referring URL if its come from a search engine (pretty much every major SE as well) and saves it in a table, and displays the queries on the post pages of the wordpress site that a user has used to find that specific page. The results so far have been pretty good, increasing the total number of clicks that , and increasing the unique queries that have passed through hits.
The concept of taking actual search queries that hav email lists australia e triggered clicks to your site I found very interesting, its kind of like UGC but without requiring the surfer to actually do anything, and for most websites building up a decent position on the potentially hundreds of terms per page that 'might' drive traffic is phenomenally difficult unless you have some serious domain authority in your chosen subject, and lets face it, most of us don't! I tend to use WordPress for most of my smaller sites that I launch around keyword rich domain names, as its a simple and easy way to build out half decent sites in minutes as opposed to days, so I set about writing a plugin that would replicate exactly what scribd had turned off to monitor the results.
In a nutshell, the plugin strips the search term from the referring URL if its come from a search engine (pretty much every major SE as well) and saves it in a table, and displays the queries on the post pages of the wordpress site that a user has used to find that specific page. The results so far have been pretty good, increasing the total number of clicks that , and increasing the unique queries that have passed through hits.