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Google Rankings Domination Guide
Google Rankings Domination Guide
Google Rankings Domination Guide
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Google Rankings Domination Guide

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About this ebook

Dear Entrepreneur:

Are you Tired Of Your Sites Search Engine Rankings Being Stuck On Lower Google Pages When You Can Easily Be Cashing Insane Amount Of Money On Autopilot Traffic!

You're probably wondering:

"How do I rank on the first page of Google?"

That's the right question to be asking. Ranking on Google helps drive a ton of people to your website.

Here is an excellent opportunity to harness all the persuasive power of top Google Rankings, and make a killing. Use our Advanced Techniques To Get Insane Google Ranking with Solid Online Traffic... And Beef Up Your Checks On Steroids!

Google has been going through a lot of big changes in the last few years. Panda, Penguin, Hummingbird, and now the guest posting madness. Ranking high has become more challenging, but that doesn't mean it's impossible. Yes, ranking on the first page on Google for any keyword is possible.

I am willing to bet that you've already done all the basic on-page optimization you can think of. But how do you get these good rankings? Hang on, because I have written a brand new 157 pages guide you can follow for any website.

Introducing....

"Google Rankings Domination Guide"

Discover How To Get Higher Google Rankings For Your Blog Or Business Website Fast!

So, here we are with my never before seen                                               

 "Google Rankings Domination Guide" which covers:

  • What is the methodology behind Google Ranking and How to Earn it?
  • How To Get To Number 1 On Google Without Breaking The Rules
  • How Can you Check your Website For Compliance With Google's Recommendations?           
  • How To Check Your Rankings On Search Engines?
  • How to boost the SEO of your WordPress site?
  • Analyzing Keywords for high Popularity in Google
  • Content writing tips for your blog for high google ranking
  • How to rank in Google Local Business Results
  • The complete list of over 200 Google Ranking Factors
  • Link Building Tips for High Google Ranking
  • A 10-Step SEO Plan for Higher Search Rankings
  • Best Free SEO Tools to Improve Your Google Ranking
  • How to boost your overall traffic on Google News
  • Reasons your blog site isn't ranking high in Google
  • Tracking SEO Metrics for improving Google ranking
  • How to Rank Higher on Google for Absolutely Any Keyword
  • Successful business Case Studies
  • And so much more!

Remember though that getting to the top is only half the battle: staying on top is equally as hard. Basically, your SEO success lies on whether you can make your website among the top ten or not and then whether or not you can keep it there. 

That's what this guide is all about. Just grab my awesome "Google Rankings Domination Guide" which will give you hot secrets and tips from industry experts to rank your blog or business website on the first page of Google. 

By the end, you'll have a complete understanding of the latest keyword research techniques, from changes in search to how to use them to improve content creation and content promotion. I've included everything I think you need to know.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateJun 16, 2018
ISBN9781386288954
Google Rankings Domination Guide
Author

Manuel Braschi

I am dedicated to providing my readers with the latest and most up-to-date e-Books on topics such as Health & Fitness, Self Improvement, Internet Marketing, Social Media and other genres of interest.

Read more from Manuel Braschi

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    Google Rankings Domination Guide - Manuel Braschi

    Introduction

    Garnering Traffic through Google 

    The most important reason why you want to get first page rankings is that you want to be visible to everyone that will need your product/service. Google, for example, is the #1 search engine and it provides for almost 12 billion searches a month. Approximately 1.17 billion unique searchers use it every month. It’s the number 1 search engine used in the US. It gets 67.5% of the US search market, and a whopping 87.1% of the mobile search market. 

    And if you are in business, you should also know that 93% of all buying decisions start with an online search.  Google shows 10 results on the first page when someone searches for any specific terms based on a number of issues like site speed, backlinks, bounce rate, and a host of other factors.

    So, if you can top the first page of Google results, it can be an excellent opportunity for you and your business.

    That’s what this guide is all about. By the end, you’ll have a complete understanding of keyword research, from changes in search to how to use them to improve content creation and content promotion. Better grab a cup of coffee; we’ve included everything we think you need to know.

    Introduction

    The websites that Google ranks on the 1st page of its search results for any given search term are the ones that they consider to be the most relevant and useful. They determine which websites are the most useful and relevant by using a complex algorithm (mathematical process) which takes into account 200+ factors.

    Google doesn’t let people know what those factors are, however, through a combination of research, testing and experience, a good SEO consultant knows what the most important factors are. For example, most SEOs would agree that the following are all important ranking factors:

    Keyword usage

    Site structure

    Site speed

    Time spent on site

    Number of inbound links

    Quality of inbound links

    The algorithm is designed and set-up by humans, however, the rankings given to websites are wholly determined by the outcome of the algorithm. There’s no manual intervention by humans to adjust the rankings specific websites are given by the algorithm.

    The website ranked in 1st place is the website that the algorithm has given the best score to when taking into account the 200+ factors. Google is constantly reviewing, adjusting and updating its search results, so a website that is ranked 1st today could potentially not even be on the 1st page next week.

    If a website stays where it is, rises or falls in the search results is dependent on one overall consideration – how it compares to the websites it is competing with i.e. the other websites who want to rank for the keywords that it wants to rank for.

    So, for example, if a website that is ranked on the 4th page for a particular keyword phrase decides to improve its site structure, add new content and seek out new high quality backlinks, whilst the websites on the 1st – 3rd pages of the search results don’t also make improvements, then the website on the 4th page will rise in the rankings.

    How much it rises is dependent on the existing authority and quality of the sites above it and how much value Google’s algorithm places on the value of the improvements that have been made to the website. It could rise up just a couple of positions or it could rise straight to the no.1 position.

    There’s no magic button that an SEO can press that guarantees a no.1 ranking, however, by paying attention to the factors that the algorithm places value on, and actively working to improve them, they can guarantee to improve your website’s rankings in Google.

    What Is Page Rank?

    When a user enters a search query, the search engine’s number one goal is to return results that are high-quality, relevant and able to best give them what they want. One of the 200+ factors Google takes into consideration to determine which webpages best fit the bill is Page Rank.

    Page Rank (PR) is a calculation, famously invented by Google founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin, which evaluates the quality and quantity of links to a webpage to determine a relative score of that page’s importance and authority on a 0 to 10 scale.

    The handful of Page Rank 10 domains, including USA.gov, Twitter.com and Adobe Reader Download, have the highest volume of inbound links of any sites on the web.

    The top sites set the bar, so to speak, and the 10-point scale plummets exponentially down from there.

    Page Rank 5 websites have a good number of inbound links, PR 3 and PR 4 sites have a fair amount, and brand new websites without any inbound links pointing to them start at Page Rank 0.

    NOTE: You may be curious what your site’s or your competitor’s PR score is. But Google no longer reveals the Page Rank score for websites. It used to display at the top of web browsers right in the Google Toolbar, but no more. And PR data is no longer available to developers through APIs, either.

    What Is Link Juice and What Are Page Rank Points?

    When Site A links to your web page, Google sees this as Site A endorsing, or casting a vote for, your page. Google takes into consideration all of these link votes (i.e., the website’s link profile) to draw conclusions about the relevance and significance of individual webpages and your website as a whole. This is the basic concept behind Page Rank.

    When a website links to your site, or when you link internally from one of your pages to another, the link passes Page Rank points. This passing of Page Rank points is also commonly called link juice or link equity transfer.

    The amount of link juice passed depends on two things: the number of Page Rank points of the webpage housing the link, and the total number of links on the webpage that are passing Page Rank.

    It’s worth noting here that while Google will give every website a public-facing Page Rank score that is between 1 and 10, the points each page accumulates from the link juice passed by high-value inbound links can — and do — significantly surpass ten. For instance, webpages on the most powerful and significant websites can pass link juice points in the hundreds or thousands. To keep the rating system concise, Google uses a lot of math to correlate very large (and very small) Page Rank values with a neat and clean 0 to 10 rating scale.

    How Link Juice Is Passed

    Think of it this way: Every webpage has a limited amount of link juice it can pass, and the top of that limit is the total Page Rank points that page has accrued. So, a webpage with 20 accrued Page Rank points cannot pass more than 20 points of link juice per page.

    If a page with 20 Page Rank points links to one other page, that one link will transfer the full amount of link juice to that one other webpage. But if a page with 20 Page Rank points links to five webpages (internal or external), each link will transfer only one-fifth of the link juice.

    Google applies a decay value to every pass, so the actual numbers will be a little less than our diagram shows below. But to explain the Page Rank concept simply, the formula is PR points divided by number of on-page links, or in this case, 20 divided by 5:

    PageRank_flow

    Visualize it: This diagram shows what it looks like when a webpage with 20 Page Rank points links out to five other webpages that, accordingly, each receive approximately four Page Rank points.

    What if you want to link to several resources to aid user experience, but you have a strategic reason to withhold passing Page Rank to those pages?

    You can tell Google not to pass Page Rank by amending some links with a rel=no follow attribute. A no followed link is not crawled by the search engines, and no Page Rank or anchor text signals are transferred.

    However, Google still sees no followed links as part of the total number of links on the page. The Page Rank value available to pass through the remaining, followed links is thus reduced.

    So for example, if you have a web page with 100 PR points that has four links on it, and three of those links have rel=no follow tags, the one link that doesn’t have rel=no follow will probably still pass only one-fourth, or 25 points, of link juice. (Find out when no follow is essential below.)

    Transferring Page Rank/Link Juice with Internal Linking

    You can help Google see pages of

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