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                        <id>https://support.yourdigitalagency.com.au/feed/930</id>
                                <link href="https://support.yourdigitalagency.com.au/feed/930" rel="self"></link>
                                <title><![CDATA[FLAT RATE SEO Article Feed]]></title>
                    
                                <subtitle></subtitle>
                                                    <updated>2022-12-08T08:15:53+00:00</updated>
                        <entry>
            <title><![CDATA[HOW DOES SEO WORK?]]></title>
            <link rel="alternate" href="https://support.yourdigitalagency.com.au/articles/how-does-seo-work-2456" />
            <id>https://support.yourdigitalagency.com.au/2456</id>
            <author>
                <name><![CDATA[Leah Gibbs]]></name>
            </author>
            <summary type="html">
                <![CDATA[<p>Search engines like Google look at two things when evaluating a website and deciding where to rank it - relevance and trust. Relevance takes into account the quality of content on a website and the code behind the scenes.</p><p> Building relevance means optimizing the code and making sure the content accurately represents the business and the brand. Trust refers to how many other sites on the internet link back to a site. </p><p>If a large number of high-quality sites point back to it and your content satisfies the searcher’s intent then the Google algorithm will start to trust it more and move it up in the rankings.<br /></p>]]>
            </summary>
                                    <updated>2021-05-14T10:29:49+00:00</updated>
        </entry>
            <entry>
            <title><![CDATA[HOW LONG DOES SEO TAKE TO GET RESULTS?]]></title>
            <link rel="alternate" href="https://support.yourdigitalagency.com.au/articles/how-long-does-seo-take-to-get-results-2457" />
            <id>https://support.yourdigitalagency.com.au/2457</id>
            <author>
                <name><![CDATA[Leah Gibbs]]></name>
            </author>
            <summary type="html">
                <![CDATA[<p>How long does it take to see results?
</p><p>Good organic SEO can’t be done overnight, it takes time. </p><p>Many of our clients start to see their rankings rise within 3-4 months. In fact, 86% of our small business clients reach the 1st page of Google after 6-9 months of SEO work (when implementing our recommended keywords). </p><p><br /></p><p><br /></p>]]>
            </summary>
                                    <updated>2021-05-14T10:31:39+00:00</updated>
        </entry>
            <entry>
            <title><![CDATA[DOES SEO WORK FOR EVERY TYPE OF BUSINESS?]]></title>
            <link rel="alternate" href="https://support.yourdigitalagency.com.au/articles/does-seo-work-for-every-type-of-business-2458" />
            <id>https://support.yourdigitalagency.com.au/2458</id>
            <author>
                <name><![CDATA[Leah Gibbs]]></name>
            </author>
            <summary type="html">
                <![CDATA[<p>Yes! As long as your business offers a viable product or service at a reasonable price, then SEO can move your website higher in search rankings and drive more sales.<br /></p>]]>
            </summary>
                                    <updated>2021-05-14T10:31:56+00:00</updated>
        </entry>
            <entry>
            <title><![CDATA[WHAT TASKS DO YOU DO THAT IMPROVES MY WEBSITE RANKING?]]></title>
            <link rel="alternate" href="https://support.yourdigitalagency.com.au/articles/what-tasks-do-you-do-that-imprives-my-website-ranking-2463" />
            <id>https://support.yourdigitalagency.com.au/2463</id>
            <author>
                <name><![CDATA[Leah Gibbs]]></name>
            </author>
            <summary type="html">
                <![CDATA[<p><b>Keyword Optimization:</b> It takes a lot to rank well for a keyword, so we conduct extensive research to find the very best ones for a campaign that will lead to success and satisfy searcher intent.<br /></p><p><b>Website Optimization:</b> We perform a full-service cleanup as well as extensive upgrades to the website code and user experience. 
</p><p><b>Business Profile Development</b>: To make sure Google and prospective customers know a business is active, we ensure that information about your client’s company is consistent across all business profile sites, like Google My Business. This task is crucial for local SEO success. 
</p><p><b>Link Portfolio Development</b>: We get the word out about your business by creating a diverse link portfolio to the website and place them in strategic locations all over the web. These links are on popular industry sites, news sites, blogs, articles, and more.
</p><p><b>Custom Content Creation:</b> We create and post high-quality content and blogs that will keep a website fresh and at the top of the search rankings and keep potential customers interested. 
</p><p><b>Service and Performance Reporting:</b> We install reporting tools that show businesses how their campaign performs, as well as in-depth reviews of all the work performed. 
</p><p><br /></p><p>
</p>]]>
            </summary>
                                    <updated>2021-05-14T10:30:57+00:00</updated>
        </entry>
            <entry>
            <title><![CDATA[HOW DO I KNOW SEO IS WORKING?]]></title>
            <link rel="alternate" href="https://support.yourdigitalagency.com.au/articles/how-do-i-know-seo-is-working-2464" />
            <id>https://support.yourdigitalagency.com.au/2464</id>
            <author>
                <name><![CDATA[Leah Gibbs]]></name>
            </author>
            <summary type="html">
                <![CDATA[<p>Bottom line, SEO success comes when your website starts rising in the rankings. You will likely see better-qualified traffic to your store, more leads, and a bigger online presence.
</p><p>Essentially if you’re seeing rankings grow for your targeting keywords that means it’s working. </p><p><br /></p><p>
</p>]]>
            </summary>
                                    <updated>2021-05-14T10:32:43+00:00</updated>
        </entry>
            <entry>
            <title><![CDATA[HOW DO YOU PRICE YOUR SEO SERVICES?]]></title>
            <link rel="alternate" href="https://support.yourdigitalagency.com.au/articles/how-do-you-price-your-seo-services-2465" />
            <id>https://support.yourdigitalagency.com.au/2465</id>
            <author>
                <name><![CDATA[Leah Gibbs]]></name>
            </author>
            <summary type="html">
                <![CDATA[<p>We have a Flat Rate flexible pricing model, which means we can do something for almost any business at almost any budget.</p>]]>
            </summary>
                                    <updated>2021-05-14T10:33:10+00:00</updated>
        </entry>
            <entry>
            <title><![CDATA[WHAT PARTS OF SEO CAN YOUR TEAM HANDLE?]]></title>
            <link rel="alternate" href="https://support.yourdigitalagency.com.au/articles/what-parts-of-seo-can-your-team-handle-2466" />
            <id>https://support.yourdigitalagency.com.au/2466</id>
            <author>
                <name><![CDATA[Leah Gibbs]]></name>
            </author>
            <summary type="html">
                <![CDATA[<p>We will handle everything for your SEO campaign. </p><p>That includes keyword research, onsite copy and optimization, link building, and much more. </p><p>We provide a monthly report for you to show the progress made on a campaign.</p>]]>
            </summary>
                                    <updated>2021-05-14T10:33:51+00:00</updated>
        </entry>
            <entry>
            <title><![CDATA[SEO GLOSSARY]]></title>
            <link rel="alternate" href="https://support.yourdigitalagency.com.au/articles/seo-glossary-2468" />
            <id>https://support.yourdigitalagency.com.au/2468</id>
            <author>
                <name><![CDATA[Leah Gibbs]]></name>
            </author>
            <summary type="html">
                <![CDATA[<p>Every SEO term you’ll ever need to know, ever wanted to learn about, or just where to go for a better understanding of your SEO campaign.</p><p><b>301 Redirect
</b></p><p>A forward to a new URL from an old URL with a transfer of all search authority permanently. Current inbound links and traffic will be redirected over to the new URL. 301’s are used for permanent URL redirection when the intent of the webmaster to replace the page with a different one for good.
</p><p><b>302 Redirect
</b></p><p>Forward to a new URL from an old URL for temporary purposes. They differ from a 301 as they are used as temporary redirects. They are typically used for A/B testing and maintaining a good user experience during the downtime of webpages.
</p><p><b>404 Error
</b></p><p>Also called a 404 Not Found, Page Not Found, or Server Not Found error. It means a browser is not able to communicate with a server, or the server cannot deliver a request. 404 Errors will show if a server cannot disclose information, or when a user clicks on a broken or dead link.
</p><p><b>A
</b></p><p><b>Above the Fold
</b></p><p>Referring to newspaper publishing, above the fold refers to content that shows at the top half or front page of a website. Like headlines in newspapers, the top section of a website should grab attention. And an appearance on a desktop, tablet, or mobile device should be taken into account.
</p><p><b>AdWords (Google Ads)
</b></p><p>Currently known as Google Ads, it’s the system where advertisers bid on keywords for their ads to show up in Google Search results above organic results. These ads can be service offerings, products, videos, or brief copy.
</p><p><b>Algorithm update (Google algorithm update)
</b></p><p>Every year Google and other search engines make hundreds of updates to their algorithms for serving up search results. These updates can range from small tweaks to Natural Language Processing to large hits to current SEO strategies. When these algorithm updates are big enough they are named (i.e. Penguin, Panda, or Hummingbird).
</p><p><b>Alt text (alt attributes, alt descriptions, alt tags)
</b></p><p>Descriptions of photos that are rendered when the element cannot be rendered. The purpose of alt text is not necessary to describe the contents of the image literally but to give context and guide purpose to the overall page. The alt text is used as an alternative for the image that wasn’t rendered.
</p><p><b>AMP
</b></p><p>An abbreviation for Accelerated Mobile Pages, it’s an online publishing format created by Google. This language is similar to HTML but optimizing a site for mobile web browsing.
</p><p><b>Anchor Text (link text)
</b></p><p>Text that is used as an “anchor” for an HTML hyperlink. Search engines view anchor text with more regard as typically they are used to describe what is contained within the hyperlink but that does not have to be the case. Strategies regarding anchor text have changed in the past as search engines evolve and learn how to weigh the importance of content.
</p><p><b>B
</b></p><p><b>Backlink (Inbound link, Incoming link)
</b></p><p>Backlinks are hyperlinks that direct a user from one website to another. Search engines view these connections as integral to their ranking algorithms. Depending on the frequency, quality and timeliness of links they can have a wide range of effects on the authority of your site. If your site has backlinks on another site then you would consider those “inbound links” as they are driving traffic back to your site from another.
</p><p><b>Bounce rate
</b></p><p>A valuable term in website analytics. A “bounce” is when someone navigates away from your site without interacting with it further. Bounce rate refers to the percentage of visitors who leave your site after viewing only one page.
</p><p><b>Branded Keywords
</b></p><p>Keywords that include a company’s name or are related to a brand’s identity. In our case, any keyword that includes “Boostability” is a branded keyword regardless of the other words around it. These are keywords customers use when looking for specific information about a business or brand.
</p><p><b>Browser
</b></p><p>A software application that allows users to access the internet by interpreting HTML files and display a graphical user interface in the format intended by the website owner. Popular browsers include Google Chrome, Safari, Firefox, Microsoft Edge, and Internet Explorer.
</p><p><b>Business Directory
</b></p><p>A listing of local businesses in different categories. Directories can often be found online but they may be printed as well. Consumers use business directories to find businesses to meet their needs. Many of these directories include paid services or premium options to help businesses be seen on their site more prominently.
</p><p><b>C
</b></p><p><b>Canonical URL (Canonical tag)
</b></p><p>HTML link tags demonstrate to search engines that different URLs host the same information and that only one should be considered for indexation. Webmasters use canonical URLs to avoid issues with duplicate information. This tactic is similar to the 301 Redirect without actually redirecting traffic. Instead, it identifies the canonical link as the one with the most authority so the duplicate pages are viewed as part of the link.
</p><p><b>Comments
</b></p><p>Opinion content generated by users to comment on the subject matter of a certain page. Comments can be used on blogs or other sites to allow readers to interact with the content by posting a comment.
</p><p>There are two types of comment sections, gated and non-gated. Non-gated comments are open to everyone on the internet. Gated sections require users to identify themselves in some way to the site as a way of monitoring what is being commented.
</p><p><b>Content
</b></p><p>Information developed by a company to inform their consumers of products, services or answers. Content can include videos, blog posts, articles, social media posts, etc. Content is how you communicate with your consumer.
</p><p><b>Conversion
</b></p><p>An important indicator in website and business performance. A conversion occurs when a visitor to a website performs a desired action like completing a purchase or filling out a form. What a conversion looks like will differ from website to website depending on what the site’s goals are.
</p><p><b>Conversion rate
</b></p><p>The percentage of unique visitors who complete the desired action on a website and turn into customers. In most cases the higher the conversion rate, the more successful your website is.
</p><p><b>Conversion rate optimization (CRO)
</b></p><p>The act of optimizing lead funnels and interactions to achieve a better conversion rate. This can include changing assets, media or altering content on your website. Many marketers will use A/B testing to see if A method converts better than B method for CRO.
</p><p><b>Cookies (Internet cookie, web cookie, browser cookie)
</b></p><p>A small packet of data is sent from a website and stored browser-side. They are typically used to remember information regarding e-commerce or record browsing activity. There are many different types of cookies that serve different purposes but the modern web uses authentication cookies to know whether or not to serve up sensitive information.
</p><p><b>Cornerstone content
</b></p><p>The most important pages and pieces of content on a website. These are pieces of content that other pages on your site link to in order to direct users to your best content. This internal linking structure can also guide web crawlers to know what you consider your best content. Cornerstone pieces are detailed, typically longer, and teach what a user needs to know about a subject. Normally, cornerstone pieces aren’t meant to sell content or push products, but to inform. Cornerstone content also includes the most competitive keywords that a site wants to rank for.
</p><p><b>Crawl
</b></p><p>The act of scraping and indexing content from the internet for the purpose of serving search results to a search engine and browser. There are many types of crawls but one of the most common is a website crawl. This type will start at the homepage and grab links from there to search through a whole site. Each link followed from that point is another level in depth.
</p><p>Each website has what is called a “crawl budget” that is determined by the bot. A crawl budget is the maximum number of pages that the crawler will visit on a website. This typically is only an issue for larger sites but can affect the indexation of pages further down the crawl.
</p><p><b>Crawler (Bot, Spider, Web crawler, Googlebot)
</b></p><p>A software application that fetches, analyzes and files information from web servers. A web crawler systematically browses the internet for the purpose of indexation. Because of the enormous size of the internet, even the biggest and most complex crawler falls short of a fully complete index. A robots.txt file can request that crawlers only visit specific parts of a website or nothing at all.
</p><p><b>D
</b></p><p><b>De-indexed
</b></p><p>The act of a website being removed from the search results page. Typically being de-indexed comes from a violation or manipulation of the rules set up by search engines like Google. These infractions are in the form of spammy content, toxic linking or keyword stuffing as well as others.
</p><p>De-indexed is used synonymously with a Google Manual Penalty but this is not always the case. It could be a human error that you had made on the back-end of your site that is causing the de-indexation. Depending on what was the cause of deindexation you will need to take appropriate action to have it reversed.
</p><p><b>Direct traffic
</b></p><p>Direct Traffic is attributed to the portion of traffic on your site when Google Analytics cannot determine the source or channel. Typically this happens when users come to your site by entering your URL into their browser directly or using a bookmark. Although it should be said that this is not the full answer. Traffic can also be Direct if incomplete UTMs have been placed on links or shared social media links from apps that don’t transfer referral information.
</p><p><b>Do-follow link
</b></p><p>The default value that is assigned to the rel attribute of an HTML anchor element instructs search engines that this link should pass along authority. As opposed to a nofollow attribute that tells search engines not to pass along authority.
</p><p><b>Dwell time (Time Spent on Page)
</b></p><p>The amount of time a user spends on a website. The duration starts when the user lands on the site and ends when they leave. Google has used dwell time as an indicator for page rank as this metric can be an indicator of satisfying user intent.
</p><p><b>E
</b></p><p><b>Ethical SEO
</b></p><p><b>See White Hat SEO
</b></p><p><b>Expertise-Authority-Trust (E-A-T)
</b></p><p>E-A-T is a term that Google uses for the Quality Rater’s Guidelines for judging how much clout the website and author has. The correlation between website and author and how much expertise, authority and trust they have is used to determine if they provide quality content or not. There are many different strategies for improving your website’s E-A-T score that you can check out here.
</p><p><b>External Link (Outbound Link)
</b></p><p>Links that point towards any domain other than the one they are on. They lead to an external source domain
</p><p><b>F
</b></p><p><b>Featured snippet (Rich answer, Direct answer)
</b></p><p>Special boxes found in the SERPs provide results in a format that is dissimilar to the normal lists of links. If your domain ranks for a Featured Snippet for a search term then it will NOT HAVE AN ORGANIC LISTING on the same results page. Because of this, there are many different strategies that go into whether trying to land a snippet is ideal or not.
</p><p>Not every search query has a featured snippet in the SERP but they are typically included on question queries. They are different from Knowledge Cards from Google’s Knowledge Graph that is used to enhance the results page.
</p><p><b>Fresh Content
</b></p><p>Typically understood as “timely” content regarding breaking news stories but can also mean the frequency at which a site posts content to add new pages or even how often they update content. The concept of fresh content can be extremely powerful for SEO rankings if implemented correctly.
</p><p>The term “evergreen” content is sometimes mixed in with fresh content but is different in ideation and execution. Evergreen content is content that is meant to stand the test of time while fresh content is the idea that you hit the topic while the iron is hot and move on.
</p><p><b>G
</b></p><p><b>Google (Google Search, Google Web search)
</b></p><p>A technology company that was started by Larry Page and Sergey Brin has a wide variety of products and services. The initial product was the Google Search Engine that was created with the idea of PageRank as opposed to the frequency of search terms and has evolved into what we now know today.
</p><p>Google Search is always evolving and has many algorithm updates that change what results are being shown and how to rank for those results. The industry that seeks to optimize and understand those changes and how they relate to businesses is called Search Engine Optimization or SEO.
</p><p><b>Google Ads (see AdWords)
</b></p><p>Paid advertisements appear in SERPs with the Search Network or appear on websites through the Display Network and Google’s AdSense program.
</p><p>AdWords are focused on keywords where advertisers will make a list of target keywords that are pertinent to their business offerings. After the list is determined they bid on these keywords and depending on how much they are willing to pay as well as their Quality Score determines which ads appear.
</p><p><b>Google Analytics
</b></p><p>Launched in 2005, Google Analytics is a service offered by Google that tracks and reports website traffic. This website activity is displayed as different metrics like session duration, bounce rate, events, etc. You can modify Analytics to track conversions as well as assess traffic trends to help optimize your site for a better user experience.
</p><p><b>Google Keyword Planner
</b></p><p>A free tool paired with Google Ads to help select which keywords to target and how to be competitive in bids for those keywords in the Google Search Network.
</p><p>This tool is also used for more robust keyword research for campaigns and also for historical statistics. You can see the competitiveness of specific keywords and terms as well as how many times per month any term is searched in Google’s search engine.
</p><p><b>Google My Business (Google Business Listing)
</b></p><p>A free tool for businesses and organizations to manage their online presence on Google’s Search and Maps. You can verify your business location, post updates, respond to reviews and tell your story from this platform. Google My Business is intrinsically tied to local SEO in that it helps Google recognize your business as an entity located in a specific location.
</p><p><b>Google penalty (Manual Action Penalty)
</b></p><p>When a Google reviewer has looked at your site and deemed that it is a violation of the Quality Rater Guidelines you can receive a Manual Penalty. These penalties are not to be confused with algorithmic devaluation that can come from changes to Google’s core algorithm.
</p><p>You can check to see if your site has a Manual Penalty in the Google Search Console under the Security &amp; Manual Actions tab. Reversing a penalty can be a complicated fix but if you have completed all the allotted changes Google requests of you then you can submit your site for a re-evaluation with a reconsideration request.
</p><p><b>Google Quality Rater Guidelines (QRG)
</b></p><p>The Quality Rater Guidelines are a set of guidelines given to a group of people that Google contracts to check sites manually to better train their algorithm’s results. The Rater Guidelines are located right here and can be viewed publicly. You can read through them and see exactly what Google is looking for and extrapolate what they view as quality content.
</p><p><b>Google Search Console (previously Google Webmaster Tools, GSC)
</b></p><p>A web service provided by Google that allows webmasters to check indexing status as well as a test for mobile effectiveness. This product is constantly being updated with new features and reports to help webmasters understand how Google visits their site. Some of the most prominent features are the implementation of sitemaps and robots.txt files on GSC.
</p><p><b>Google Tag Manager
</b></p><p>A free tool that allows you to manage and deploy marketing tags, triggers and variables on your website without modifying the underlying code. This is especially valuable to marketers as they can implement pixels and code without fear of harming their site. Third-party tags can all be managed with Google Tag Manager and campaign tracking can give amazing insights on performance.
</p><p><b>Google Webmaster Guidelines
</b></p><p>Guidelines have been published for the benefit of webmasters so they know what Google considers “good” and “bad” practices. For example, they have a few basic principles like:
</p><p>Make pages primarily for users, not for search engines.
</p><p>Don’t deceive your users.
</p><p>Avoid tricks intended to improve search engine rankings. A good rule of thumb is whether you’d feel comfortable explaining what you’ve done to a website that competes with you, or to a Google employee. Another useful test is to ask, “Does this help my users? Would I do this if search engines didn’t exist?”
</p><p>Think about what makes your website unique, valuable, or engaging. Make your website stand out from others in your field.
</p><p>Google also lets us know what we should be avoiding. Things like link schemes or little to no original content on your site. They have also denounced hidden text and abusing structured data markup. The Google Webmaster Guidelines are very similar to the Quality Rater Guidelines but they are written for webmasters as opposed to raters.
</p><p><b>GoogleBot
</b></p><p>The web crawler software that Google uses to collect documents and build a searchable index. GoogleBot is characterized by two different types of web crawlers: a desktop crawler and a mobile crawler. You can use your robots.txt file to give specific instructions to the GoogleBot or other web crawlers on how to crawl your site.
</p><p>As of July 1, 2019, Google announced that all new websites crawled by GoogleBot will be on a mobile-first index standard. This means that when a site is crawled that the mobile version of the site will be served to their index. Making your site “mobile-friendly” is now more important than ever to avoid indexation issues.
</p><p><b>Guest posting (Guest blogging)
</b></p><p>The act of writing content for another business or website where you are featured as a guest author in order to attract traffic and boost authority with inbound links. The nature of guest posting has changed many times in the past. Prior to Matt Cutts 2014 denunciation of the practice, it was commonplace to share content and links without regard to quality but now only the best content and an organic relationship should be considered.
</p><p>As with many SEO tasks, guest posting can be done in a “Black Hat” or unethical manner but if done correctly can be a great tool for digital marketing. Avoid spam bloggers and do not allow low-quality content to be shared on your site. Remember Google’s Quality Rater Guidelines when considering content from an unknown guest blogger and keep your site’s users in mind.
</p><p><b>H
</b></p><p><b>Homepage (Main page)
</b></p><p>An introductory page of a website that typically serves as a “table of contents” for the overall site. They often are used to help a user navigate throughout the website or present headlines to entice potential customers.
</p><p><b>HTML (HyperText Markup Language)
</b></p><p>A basic markup language for tagging text documents designed to display in a web browser. HTML uses tags that are character-based data types, character references and entity references. Tagging is done to modify font, colour, graphic and hyperlink effects. Tags normally come in pairs like &lt;h1&gt; and &lt;/h1&gt;.
</p><p>HTML can help describe the structure of a web page and help interpret the content by emphasizing as well as improving accessibility of web documents
</p><p><b>HTML Headings
</b></p><p>The most common HTML headings or “tags” come in pairs like &lt;h1&gt; and &lt;/h1&gt;, &lt;h2&gt; and &lt;/h2&gt;, &lt;h3&gt; and &lt;/h3&gt;. They help delineate importance from 1-6 with 1 being the most important tag on the page.
</p><p><b>HTTP (Hypertext Transfer Protocol)
</b></p><p>A protocol application for distributed, collaborative, hypermedia information systems. It functions as a request-response protocol in the client-server computing model and is the foundation of data communication for the Internet.
</p><p><b>HTTPS (Hypertext Transfer Protocol Secure)
</b></p><p>An extension of HTTP, HTTPS is used for secure communication over a computer network. With this type of connection, the protocol is encrypted. The requested URL, query parameters, headers, and cookies are all encrypted to provide a more private and secure connection.
</p><p><b>Hyperlink (Link)
</b></p><p>A clickable reference to another source of data. The data source is typically another webpage. Hyperlinks are most commonly set to a text called Hypertext but can also be an icon, graphic or picture. Hyperlinks were integral to the formation of the World Wide Web in that they connect websites together.
</p><p><b>I
</b></p><p><b>Impression
</b></p><p>A measurement of how many users see an ad or other type of digital media. This measurement is not action-based and simply refers to how many times the media was seen. Impressions are generally used for campaigns aimed at increasing brand awareness.
</p><p><b>Inbound Link
</b></p><p>A link coming from another website to your site. Inbound links serve to direct users from one site to your site to learn more and serve user intent based on the anchor text they incorporate. Authoritative inbound links are an important aspect of good SEO.
</p><p><b>Index
</b></p><p>Where search engines store the information they have gathered and processed from across the internet. It serves as a database of all the content that meets their quality standards. Search engines pull results from their index whenever a user performs a search so websites must be indexable (visible to search engines) to be found by users.
</p><p>Global search engines, like Google, maintain indexes for each separate market. Different countries can access results from national indexes that specialize results for the search behaviour of that country. Likewise, local indexes focus on results catered to a specific region or city. Common queries like “near me” and those that contain geographical names will return results from local indexes.
</p><p><b>Indexability
</b></p><p>How accessible and transparent a web page is for search engine web crawlers. The easier a site is for crawlers to download and catalogue, the more indexable the site is. Indexability is a key factor in determining web positioning, or how visible a site is on the web.
</p><p><b>Internal link
</b></p><p>A link on a site that links to another page on the same website. Internal linking allows your web pages to share their link authority and is the first signal to search engines that your pages are important. Your most important pages (i.e. product pages, your homepage, etc.) should be linked to the most.
</p><p><b>International SEO
</b></p><p>The idea of geotargeting your SEO to be either friendly with many countries or targeting a specific country with your SEO strategy. This can be done with the use of language tags and performing SEO with language-based keywords or location-based keywords. International SEO is similar to local SEO in strategy and practice in that you tailor your content for a specific location. You may also need to consider different search engines with your international strategies like Yandex in Russia or Baidu for Chinese search results.
</p><p><b>K
</b></p><p><b>Keyword
</b></p><p>A word or concept of great significance. In SEO, keywords are used to help describe the content of specific pages best. Search engines use keywords to help with data retrieval as they help you find sources that are associated with your keyword or keyword phrase. These search engines are always evolving to better serve user intent and are constantly being tweaked
</p><p><b>Keyword competition (Keyword difficulty, Keyword SEO difficulty)
</b></p><p>How difficult it is to rank for a specific keyword or keyword phrase. The higher the competition, the higher the difficulty of ranking. Search frequency, domain age, site structure and overall quality of content can help mitigate some of the issues that arise with high keyword difficulty. There are also many tools that help with keyword research and help determine the keyword difficulty.
</p><p>Common phrases can be extremely competitive and not worth small businesses time to try to rank for. That’s why doing proper keyword research and competitive analysis is integral to a quality SEO campaign.
</p><p><b>Keyword Research
</b></p><p>The practice that SEO professionals use to determine the right keyword to target for a particular business so as to appear higher in the search results. These practices can vary widely depending on the website’s niche and campaign intent but are all similar in nature. Typically a researcher will use tools like Google Ads Keyword Planner, SEMrush’s Keyword Magic Tool, Ahref’s or Moz’s Keyword Explorer to select keywords that are attainable for the website.
</p><p><b>Knowledge graph
</b></p><p>A knowledge base or index that Google uses to enhance SERPs with information gathered from various sources. Typically seen as an Infobox on the side of a SERP, a Knowledge Card was incorporated into Google’s search structure in 2012. The implementation of this information was done to provide a more useful and relevant experience to searchers.
</p><p><b>L
</b></p><p><b>Landing page
</b></p><p>A web page that appears in response to clicking on a link in the SERPs or marketing advertisement.
</p><p><b>Link building (Link acquisition, Linkbuilding)
</b></p><p>As part of SEO, link building is the act of increasing the number and quality of inbound links to a webpage. This is done to increase search engine rankings and traffic. There are many types of links a website can acquire various levels of authority and trust as well as methods for gaining these links. Link building can build brand awareness but, if done poorly, can result in a penalty from Google. When link building, always remember to add value to end-users and abide by Google’s terms of service for the best results.
</p><p><b>Link equity (Link authority, Backlink authority, Link juice, Link value, Quality Link)
</b></p><p>A term used to describe how much authority a link is able to pass to another site or webpage. Link equity is closely tied to Google’s old PageRank in that it views a backlink profile as a way to determine search engine rankings. Some of the key indicators of good link equity are relevancy, indexation and overall quality of the sites involved in the link exchange.
</p><p><b>Link profile (Backlink profile)
</b></p><p>The entirety of inbound links pointing towards your site constitutes its link profile. Having a good backlink profile means having multiple relevant and authoritative links linking to your site. These links can come from a wide variety of locations like other domains, directories, comments or social media shares. They can also be either no- or dofollow for a natural, healthy mix that search engines like to see.
</p><p><b>Local Business
</b></p><p>A company that provides goods or services to a local population is considered a local business. Often identified as a “brick and mortar” location. Local businesses have different online strategies for getting foot traffic in their area than you would see for a national business without a location near a consumer. A local business can be a locally owned business or a corporate business with multiple locations operating in a specific area.
</p><p><b>Local pack (Local Listings, Map Pack)
</b></p><p>A group of three to five local business listings that appear in a map box relative to the searcher’s location or search query that includes a specific location. These results are pulled directly from Google My Business listings as opposed to the organic search index.
</p><p><b>Local SEO
</b></p><p>Optimizing a business's online presence to rank for local searches. The strategies for local SEO are very similar to traditional but involve business listing sites like Yelp, Angie’s List and Manta as well as social campaigns to help rankings/visibility. Reputation management and review transparency also play a large role in Local SEO success. These strategies also include ranking for locational queries in order to pull local traffic to a physical location.
</p><p><b>M
</b></p><p><b>Meta Description
</b></p><p>Part of a website’s head section typically under 160 characters and used to describe the page’s content. These descriptions are served up on SERPs and should be optimized to get engagement and click-through-rate. Meta descriptions help users see what is on the page as they appear in SERPs. A Meta Description is a type of Meta Tag but should not be used interchangeably as Tags can include many different elements that are only for crawlers.
</p><p><b>Meta Tags (Microdata, Meta Data, Meta Elements)
</b></p><p>Meta Tags are similar to descriptions but are used to more distinctly tell search engines what is on a page. They are used for the search engine’s benefit as they are found in the source code only. Sometimes the term Meta Tags is used in place of Meta Descriptions but they are, in fact, not to be used interchangeably.
</p><p><b>Mobile optimization
</b></p><p>Modifying a website’s content to ensure that mobile visitors have a good experience.
</p><p>This can be achieved by optimizing videos, content, images, buttons, using responsive templates and considering site load speed. Changes like these to a site will help the overall user experience. Google offers its Accelerated Mobile Pages as a solution to many of these mobile optimization challenges.
</p><p><b>Mobile-first indexing
</b></p><p>The mobile version of your website is what Googlebot crawls and archives in their search index. This is different from what it was in the past as it would pull the desktop version of a site. Mobile-first does not mean mobile-only and if a website doesn’t have a mobile version served up then the desktop version will be included in the index. Not having a mobile version of your site COULD harm your ranking potential.
</p><p><b>Mobile-friendly website (Responsive design)
</b></p><p>The capability of a website to be rendered on a mobile device or the ability for a web page to render appropriately on different size windows or screens.
</p><p>There are two types of mobile-friendly sites—an entirely separate site designed to serve up on mobile and a responsive design that is a site that auto-adjusts itself based on screen size. If a site is truly “mobile-friendly” then it will be easy to navigate and load on mobile devices. If a user is able to easily navigate your website no matter the screen size it can help with Google ranking factors in an SEO campaign.
</p><p><b>N
</b></p><p><b>Navigation
</b></p><p>The process of navigating SERPs on a web browser. Think of web navigating as a road map that enables website visitors to explore and discover different areas.
</p><p><b>Nofollow
</b></p><p>An HTML attribute that instructs search engines that the hyperlink should not influence the ranking of the link’s target relative to the source. A nofollow attribute will not stop a search engine’s crawl but will diminish or lessen the authority typically passed. The reason it only diminishes the effectiveness is that a healthy backlink profile has a good mix of both followed and no-followed links.
</p><p><b>O
</b></p><p><b>Off-page SEO (Offsite SEO)
</b></p><p>Optimizations are done on sites other than your own for the purpose of increasing your site’s search engine ranking. This is done by sharing content, review cultivation, influencer outreach, guest blogging and social media. Good SEO strategies take into account both on and offsite SEO strategies for overall success.
</p><p><b>On-page SEO (Onsite SEO)
</b></p><p>Optimizations are done to your own website for the purpose of increasing your search engine rankings. This can be done by optimizing keywords, content, titles, meta descriptions, headlines, microdata, site speed, internal links, mobile-friendliness and alt tags. Because these things are all done on your own website they are considered onsite optimizations and are a good starting point for any SEO campaign.
</p><p><b>Organic Links
</b></p><p>Links that are gained without explicit agreement to exchange links. They are placed in a piece of content for the purpose of enhancing the content or validate the stance of the author. They can also be called authoritative links. The idea of organic link building is that you produce content on such a high level that you will organically get people and sites linking to your own because of quality.
</p><p><b>Organic Search Results (Organic rank)
</b></p><p>On a SERP there are two types of results: organic and paid. Organic rankings are everything that is not a paid result. On the front page, there can be anywhere from 7 to 10 organic results with the most desirable being the first result. With the advent of featured snippets and what is considered “position zero” by some, there is debate as to whether being in the top position is better or ranking for the featured snippet is better.
</p><p><b>Organic traffic
</b></p><p>Traffic that comes to your site from a search engine results page (SERP) for free. On a SERP there are two types of results: organic and paid. If you have a page on your site that ranks highly for a search query you have more potential for acquiring more organic traffic.
</p><p><b>P
</b></p><p><b>PageRank (Page Authority, PA)
</b></p><p>Google’s PageRank was named after one of their founders Larry Page. It was a link analysis algorithm that assigned a numerical value of 0-10 to denote the importance or authority of a webpage. On April 15, 2016, Google turned off the display that showed PageRank data of their toolbar. While it still uses PageRank to determine rankings in search results it is no longer visible to site owners as is not considered an important metric to track.
</p><p>Page Authority (PA) is often confused with PageRank but should not be used synonymously. Page Authority is a number between 1-100 that Moz uses to denote the quality of a page based on their own proprietary algorithm and is still visible with their MozBar tool.
</p><p><b>Page speed (Page load speed, Page load time, Page response time)
</b></p><p>The amount of time it takes for a web page to load. There are different types of ways to measure page speed by some of the most common are a time to the first byte, first meaning paint and fully loaded page. There are some things that each webmaster can do to help their loading time like upgrading your hosting, cleaning up your code and optimizing your images. There are many different tools you can use to check your page load speed like Google’s own tool.
</p><p>In April 2010 Google made page speed a ranking factor and in 2018 they ramped up the importance of this metric in their algorithm.
</p><p><b>Page title (Title tag)
</b></p><p>A short description of a page on a website. This is typically under 70 characters and appears on the top of the browser window and in SERPs. A page title often has the focus keyword for the page.
</p><p><b>Paid traffic
</b></p><p>Any traffic to your site that the webmaster has paid for. This includes advertising promotions on PPC campaigns and social media advertisements. The strategies involved for obtaining the right kind of paid traffic can be very complex and can be extremely targeted towards specific audiences.
</p><p><b>Penalty
</b></p><p><b>See Manual Penalty
</b></p><p><b>PPC (Pay Per Click)
</b></p><p>A type of Internet marketing where advertisers pay a fee each time their ads are clicked. The most popular platform for PPC advertising is Google Ads but other platforms like Bing and Facebook have adopted this type of paid advertisements.
</p><p>Bid-based PPC is when advertisers compete against other advertisers in a private auction for a specific ad spot that is typically tied to a specific keyword. This auction plays out automatically every time a visitor triggers an ad spot. These ad spots can either be in the SERPs or hosted on a third-party partner website that then shares the ad revenue pulled.
</p><p><b>Q
</b></p><p><b>Quality Content
</b></p><p>Content is the method by which a website presents its audience with information. This content can be in the form of text, graphical, video or audio. Quality content is content that provides value for users, generates more sales, evergreen, shareable, SEO optimized and/or enhances the usability of the site.
</p><p>The actual quality level of content can be interpreted from a few different angles. Quality content for users might be different from quality content for web crawlers. Google is always tweaking their algorithm to bring those two inline but sometimes they can differ. Following Google’s Quality Rater Guidelines can be a great touchstone for what qualifies as quality content.
</p><p><b>Quality Link
</b></p><p>A backlink to your site that fits into your content and backlink profile in a manner that enhances visitors experience, increases traffic and/or verifies authority. Quality links can be different depending on what your campaign goals are and the type of website you manage.
</p><p><b>Query
</b></p><p>A query, in web search terms, is a question that is entered on a search engine to satisfy the informational needs of a user.
</p><p>Wikipedia illustrates 4 different types of web queries:
</p><p>Informational queries – Queries that cover a broad topic (e.g., colorado or trucks) for which there may be thousands of relevant results.
</p><p>Navigational queries – Queries that seek a single website or web page of a single entity (e.g., youtube or delta airlines).
</p><p>Transactional queries – Queries that reflect the intent of the user to perform a particular action, like purchasing a car or downloading a screen saver.
</p><p>Connectivity queries – Queries that report on the connectivity of the indexed web graph (e.g., Which links point to this URL?, and How many pages are indexed from this domain name?).
</p><p>Web search queries can be structured to be more specific than just a textual question with search operators.
</p><p><b>R
</b></p><p><b>RankBrain
</b></p><p>A machine learning search engine algorithm update that Google released on 26 October 2015. This update was a great step forward towards Google’s search engine understanding user intent and serving up better, more relevant results. SEO tactics surrounding this update emphasised quality content.
</p><p><b>Ranking
</b></p><p>A search result position is displayed on a results page. There are different factors that play into positions on a results page with some of the most prominent being backlinks, website optimization and content structure.
</p><p><b>Redirect
</b></p><p><b>See 301 Redirect or 302 Redirect
</b></p><p><b>Referral traffic
</b></p><p>A traffic type that Google identifies as a visit from outside their search engine. This can include people clicking on links from another website or social media.
</p><p><b>Relevancy
</b></p><p>The idea of relevance in relation to SEO and search engines is the concept of how the content corresponds to a search term or keyword. The higher the ability to relate to the purpose of a keyword the higher you should rank for said term.
</p><p><b>Reputation management (Rep management, Online reputation management, ORM)
</b></p><p>Influencing the way people think about you or your brand online. A good reputation online will help your sales and is essential in a modern competitive landscape for small to large businesses. You see small businesses live and die by their online reviews and campaigns directed towards gathering good reviews is a legitimate strategy that should not be ignored.
</p><p>Companies, brands and people will seek reputation management services when they see that negative news is being shared. Because this type of PR is done online companies will use social media and SEO tactics to help lead their reputation management campaigns.
</p><p><b>Rich Result (Rich Snippet)
</b></p><p>Often used interchangeably with Featured Snippet but a rich result is more encompassing than just a featured snippet. Rich results can include People Also Ask boxes, video results, knowledge cards or carousels. The strategy for ranking for these results involves microdata markup (like Schema.org) loading on the page.
</p><p><b>Robots.txt (Robots exclusion protocol)
</b></p><p>A standardized way websites communicate with web crawlers about which areas of the website should be crawled and which shouldn’t. Not all crawlers follow the Robots.txt directives as there are some that scan for security vulnerabilities. Not to be confused with a sitemap, robots.txt file is often used in conjunction with traditional XML sitemaps.
</p><p><b>S
</b></p><p><b>Schema.org (Schema Markup)
</b></p><p>A set of vocabulary that was created collaboratively by Google, Yahoo, Microsoft and Yandex to structure metadata (microdata) on web pages. This markup can help search engines understand the content of a page and website for enhanced results on the SERP.
</p><p>An example of microdata would be a website’s homepage having a logo, organization, contact and social media markup for knowledge card results. There are three ways to implement Schema.org microdata on your site: HTML, RDFa and JSON-LD with JSON-LD being the most popular and recommended method.
</p><p><b>Search Box (search field, search bar)
</b></p><p>A GUI element used to accept user input for queries of a database. Typically seen in search engines but a search box can be used for any database that has a search function.
</p><p><b>Search engine (SE)
</b></p><p>A software system that is designed to carry out website crawling, web searches and archiving data to be queried by a user at a later time. Each search engine has its own algorithm that is continually updated with better, more intelligent functions to crawl, search and index more effectively.
</p><p>When a search engine decides on ranking there are specific factors that are weighted differently that each engine looks at to attribute a location for displaying on the SERP. Frequently when you hear about algorithm updates the community is referring to the Google search engine and their algorithm.
</p><p><b>Search engine marketing (SEM, Search Marketing, Search engine advertising
</b></p><p>A form of Digital Marketing that involves the promotion of websites by increasing their visibility in SERPs. SEM encompasses PPC, SEO, Social Media, website and content optimizations directed at results page rankings.
</p><p><b>Search Engine Optimization (SEO)
</b></p><p>The process of increasing website traffic through improvements invisibility on a search engine results page. You can improve your visibility through various methods that many SEO companies offer. SEO is solely focussed on natural or organic results and omits paid search methods like PPC or adspace.
</p><p>An SEO campaign is fulfilled differently depending on website, audience, competition and niche. Because of this variety an SEO professional needs to be competent in how search engines work, algorithm updates, search volume, search terms, website structure and audience tendencies to have success. Typically optimizations are characterized under two classes: on-site and off-site optimizations. This means that you need to take into account both your website and influences not on your website.
</p><p><b>Search engine result page (SERP)
</b></p><p>The pages displayed by a search engine in response to a query.
</p><p>These results used to be a simple 1-10 position ranking that started with the best, most linked-to result being in the top spot on the page. But due to many changes in the online landscape, there are now snippets, cards, carousels, ads and other elements that are competing directly with the traditional 1-10 spots.
</p><p><b>Search History
</b></p><p>The list of web pages a user has visited recently. Typically this data is recorded by the web browser along with page title and time of visit. Sometimes third-party services record web browsing history for various reasons.
</p><p><b>Search Query
</b></p><p>A question that is posed to a search engine in order to search online databases for a response of web pages. Typically search queries were associated with a search term or keyword but as algorithms get smarter and understand human speech we get further and further away from short keywords and go towards actual conversational dialogue.
</p><p><b>Search traffic (Web traffic)
</b></p><p>Traffic that visits your site from a search engine.
</p><p><b>Search volume
</b></p><p>The number of searches that are anticipated for a specific keyword in a 30 day time period.
</p><p><b>SEO Copywriting
</b></p><p>A form of online writing that contains keywords, helps rankings and increases traffic. When writing you have to take into account both the user and a search engine crawler. One may understand the context of the content but the other may not so use keywords to help illustrate this intent is essential.
</p><p><b>SEO-Friendly URL
</b></p><p>A URL that illustrates context to users and crawlers. Understanding how search engine crawlers use URLs is essential to selecting a good URL slug that is SEO-friendly.
</p><p>Best practices for this type of URL selection vary but the general consensus in the past has been that the slug should contain the keyword that it looks to rank for
</p><p><b>SEO site audit (Site audit, SEO audit)
</b></p><p>A process by which a webmaster or SEO agency audits a website to see how optimized it is for search engines. This includes technical aspects like page speed, site structure and mobile optimization as well as content and keyword placement. Tools that are typically used are ScreamingFrog or other common tools like SEMrush or aHrefs.
</p><p><b>SERP (Search Engine Results Page)
</b></p><p>A list of results pulled for a query or search. These results are pulled from an index that is archived by a crawler. A SERP can change many times a day as a modification to search engine algorithms happen regularly as well as ranking changes due to new content and ranking signals.
</p><p><b>SERP features
</b></p><p>Features that modify the typical 1-10 spot display of a search engine results page.
</p><p>These features constantly change but are traditionally seen as rich results like featured snippets or carousels but can also be as simple as paid ads. Recently, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Google has included pagination for terms that are more ambiguous. For example, if you search “COVID-19” you will get 5 different pages you can flip through like Overview, Statistics, Health Info, Testing, Coping and News. These types of changes could see the widespread implementation for more ambiguous, informational terms.
</p><p><b>Site Age (Domain Age)
</b></p><p>Site Age refers to the amount of time during which a domain has existed. Site age is a factor in SEO ranking only as far as content is concerned. If a site has been around for a long time it is assumed that it is constantly being worked on and producing new content. If this is not the case then site age would mean nothing as no credibility was being built. Just because your site is older does not mean it will rank better.
</p><p><b>Sitemap
</b></p><p>A sitemap is a list of pages on a website.
</p><p>There are two main types of sitemaps that SEO deals with. One is a structured listing intended for web crawlers and search engines that tells them what to do and where to go. The other is a user-visible listing that helps with the navigation of your site by visitors. This is typically done in a hierarchical fashion for ease of access.
</p><p>When a sitemap is intended for a crawler it is typically called sitemap.xml and helps the bot find pages that aren’t accessible through links.
</p><p><b>SMM (Social Media Marketing)
</b></p><p>Social media marketing is the use of social media platforms to connect with your audience to build your brand, increase sales, and drive website traffic.
</p><p>The major social media platforms that marketers use (at the moment) are Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, LinkedIn, Pinterest, YouTube, TikTok, WhatsApp and Snapchat.
</p><p>Social media marketing can indirectly help your SEO in terms of visibility for your content. If someone shares and likes your content then more and more people will be visiting your site and search engines view these visits favourably for ranking purposes over time.
</p><p><b>Spam (Spammy tactics, Black-hat SEO)
</b></p><p>Spam, in the SEO sense of the word, is the deliberate manipulation of search engine indexes and algorithms to better your position on SERPs. This is done in many ways such as keyword stuffing, poor link building practices and duplicate content.
</p><p>The history of quality SEO has evolved significantly over the years. Many tactics that were once accepted as a common, good practice have fallen out of favour with search engines and, in turn, the SEO community.
</p><p><b>Structured Data (Microdata)
</b></p><p>Structured data is another term for microdata and describes entities and their relationships through a standardized list of attributes (aka Schema.org) . This data is organized or structured to show a format or rule set that is readable by crawlers. You often see this in SERPs as rich results, star reviews(in the past) or breadcrumbs.
</p><p><b>Subdomain
</b></p><p>A subdomain is another part of the main domain that typically illustrates different parts of an organization. For example, blog.boostability.com would indicate that blog content would be available underneath the domain boost ability with com being the top-level domain or TLD.
</p><p>Not all sites have subdomains and their use is a hotly debated topic in the SEO realm. Most SEO experts have the opinion that subfolders serve the same purpose and require less overhead to manage and, therefore, more preferable to subdomains.
</p><p><b>T
</b></p><p><b>Time on page
</b></p><p>A metric used to determine how long a user stays on a page of a website. Longer time on the page indicates that the content being viewed is satisfying the visitor’s intent. Short times on-page can indicate the content is too thin or no longer relevant for users. This metric is also used by crawlers when determining SERP rankings.
</p><p><b>Thin content
</b></p><p>Content that inadequately explains a concept or a proposed idea. Thin content may not be long enough or lack important details. With the general trend towards actionable content, your site may not be indexed if your content does not provide answers to users or encourage them to move forward in their customer journey. Thin content can sometimes be identified by higher than normal bounce rates.
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            </summary>
                                    <updated>2021-05-14T10:34:24+00:00</updated>
        </entry>
            <entry>
            <title><![CDATA[SERVICE OVERVIEW]]></title>
            <link rel="alternate" href="https://support.yourdigitalagency.com.au/articles/service-overview-2527" />
            <id>https://support.yourdigitalagency.com.au/2527</id>
            <author>
                <name><![CDATA[Leah Gibbs]]></name>
            </author>
            <summary type="html">
                <![CDATA[<p>We are transforming the model of SEO. By injecting technology and transparency into an industry that often lacks both, we’re creating an SEO flat-rate service that is fast, affordable, and hassle-free.
</p><p><br /></p><p>
</p>]]>
            </summary>
                                    <updated>2021-05-17T02:41:30+00:00</updated>
        </entry>
            <entry>
            <title><![CDATA[WEEKLY BLOG ARTICLES]]></title>
            <link rel="alternate" href="https://support.yourdigitalagency.com.au/articles/weekly-blog-articles-2528" />
            <id>https://support.yourdigitalagency.com.au/2528</id>
            <author>
                <name><![CDATA[Leah Gibbs]]></name>
            </author>
            <summary type="html">
                <![CDATA[<p>when it comes to ranking on Google for the long-term, content is king. Whether that's through a user based community or blog content, Google highly prefers sites that have consistent content published online.<br /></p><p>Because of this, we cover weekly blog content that's structured to help you acquire local organic traffic. This improves site metrics that Google looks for when ranking a site, which will result in consistent growth on our target keywords.
</p><p>Our content is written in-house by trained, experienced SEO writers </p><p>
</p><p>
</p><p>
</p>]]>
            </summary>
                                    <updated>2021-05-17T02:42:31+00:00</updated>
        </entry>
            <entry>
            <title><![CDATA[ON PAGE OPTMISATION]]></title>
            <link rel="alternate" href="https://support.yourdigitalagency.com.au/articles/on-page-optmisation-2529" />
            <id>https://support.yourdigitalagency.com.au/2529</id>
            <author>
                <name><![CDATA[Leah Gibbs]]></name>
            </author>
            <summary type="html">
                <![CDATA[<p>Another important aspect of SEO is fixing any technical issues that your site has, along with editing pages, posts &amp; categories for your target keywords. We handle the entire process for you. Our team will go through your site, fix any technical issues, and will integrate your target keywords into your site.<br /></p><p>Please note that we provide comparison reports for optimiSation, not detailed change by change reports. This is not doable at our price point. We focus on executing our service rather than manual documentation that isn't really needed in the long run.</p><p>
</p>]]>
            </summary>
                                    <updated>2021-05-17T02:43:27+00:00</updated>
        </entry>
            <entry>
            <title><![CDATA[BACKLINKS]]></title>
            <link rel="alternate" href="https://support.yourdigitalagency.com.au/articles/backlinks-2530" />
            <id>https://support.yourdigitalagency.com.au/2530</id>
            <author>
                <name><![CDATA[Leah Gibbs]]></name>
            </author>
            <summary type="html">
                <![CDATA[<p>The final aspect of SEO is backlinks. In the SEO industry, there are many services that will advertise affordable links back to your site at a large volume, typically through blogs, directories &amp; forums. This is not long-term SEO.<br /></p><p>Some agencies will use what is called a 'Private Blog Network', which are sites owned by the agency. This is essentially a rented link that can be removed at any time. We highly advise against this.
</p><p>We conduct custom outreach to acquire guest posting access on media/blog sites in your industry. We find that this is the most genuine way to acquire backlinks. It's also heavily preferred by Google. We focus on quality over quantity.
</p><p>Please note that it's extremely important to publish our weekly blog articles, if you don't it's very difficult for us to acquire backlinks.</p><p>
</p><p>
</p><p>
</p>]]>
            </summary>
                                    <updated>2021-05-17T02:44:22+00:00</updated>
        </entry>
            <entry>
            <title><![CDATA[OUR PRICING]]></title>
            <link rel="alternate" href="https://support.yourdigitalagency.com.au/articles/our-pricing-2531" />
            <id>https://support.yourdigitalagency.com.au/2531</id>
            <author>
                <name><![CDATA[Leah Gibbs]]></name>
            </author>
            <summary type="html">
                <![CDATA[<p>We provide all of the above starting at $400 per month. No setup fees, contracts or hidden charges. \</p><p> We look forward to working with you! 😊</p><p>
</p>]]>
            </summary>
                                    <updated>2021-05-17T02:45:30+00:00</updated>
        </entry>
            <entry>
            <title><![CDATA[REPORTING (EVERY 3 MONTHS)]]></title>
            <link rel="alternate" href="https://support.yourdigitalagency.com.au/articles/reporting-every-3-months-2532" />
            <id>https://support.yourdigitalagency.com.au/2532</id>
            <author>
                <name><![CDATA[Leah Gibbs]]></name>
            </author>
            <summary type="html">
                <![CDATA[<p>We are changing an industry that has lacked innovation and transparency. Our service is structured to help businesses that are focused on the long-term, we don't do any spam or growth hacks, we focus on what Google looks for to achieve high first-page rankings.
</p><p>The first thing to note about our service is that we do detailed quarterly reports (every 3 months), We do this for a few reasons, which are:
</p><p>It's impossible for an SEO service to have any significant impact in a few weeks, it takes at least 3 months to see any progress that is measurable.
</p><p>Depending on your site history, you'll need a few months to achieve consistent growth on Google.
</p><p>Google looks for consistency when ranking a site highly. We'll go over how we do this below.
</p><p>We also provide our SEO dashboard (Add on) which tracks your rankings daily, incoming backlinks &amp; auditing, so the general overview of progress is already covered and is tracked 24/7 for you. </p><p>
</p><p>
</p>]]>
            </summary>
                                    <updated>2021-05-17T02:49:37+00:00</updated>
        </entry>
            <entry>
            <title><![CDATA[GOOGLE ANALYTICS AND SEARCH CONSOLE]]></title>
            <link rel="alternate" href="https://support.yourdigitalagency.com.au/articles/google-analytics-amp-search-console-2533" />
            <id>https://support.yourdigitalagency.com.au/2533</id>
            <author>
                <name><![CDATA[Leah Gibbs]]></name>
            </author>
            <summary type="html">
                <![CDATA[<p>When getting started with Flat FRate SEO, we will require access to certain tools &amp; data to deliver an effective service, here's what we'll need:
</p><p>‍
</p><p><b>Access to Google Analytics &amp; Search Console
</b></p><p>Google Analytics &amp; Search Console provides us with in-depth data on your site history, along with any trends that are delivering results. By having access to this, we're able to craft a plan that's data-driven and effective over the long term.
</p><p>‍
</p><p>For instructions on how to give us Google Analytics access -
</p><p>Click on your<a href="https://analytics.google.com/analytics/web/provision/#/provision" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"> web property here.</a>
</p><p>At the bottom left, click "Admin"
</p><p>In the left column, click "User Management"
</p><p><b>Under "Add permission for" enter the Google Account's address you'd like to share access permissions with, check all permissions, and click "Add." Please add seo@yourdigitalagency.com.au</b></p><p><b>You're done!</b></p><p>
</p><p>
</p><p>
</p><p>
</p>]]>
            </summary>
                                    <updated>2021-05-17T02:53:22+00:00</updated>
        </entry>
            <entry>
            <title><![CDATA[GOOGLE SEARCH CONSOLE ACCESS]]></title>
            <link rel="alternate" href="https://support.yourdigitalagency.com.au/articles/google-search-console-access-2534" />
            <id>https://support.yourdigitalagency.com.au/2534</id>
            <author>
                <name><![CDATA[Leah Gibbs]]></name>
            </author>
            <summary type="html">
                <![CDATA[<p>For instructions on how to give us Google Search Console access -
</p><p><a href="https://search.google.com/search-console/welcome" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Choose a property in Search Console here.</a>
</p><p>Click the Settings icon. in the navigation pane.
</p><p>Click Users &amp; permissions.
</p><p><b>Click Add user and select the permissions to grant the user. Please add seo@yourdigitalagency.com.au</b></p><p>Choose the permission level to grant the user.
</p><p>You're done!</p>]]>
            </summary>
                                    <updated>2021-05-17T02:54:58+00:00</updated>
        </entry>
            <entry>
            <title><![CDATA[ADMIN ACCESS TO YOUR WEBSITE]]></title>
            <link rel="alternate" href="https://support.yourdigitalagency.com.au/articles/admin-access-to-your-website-2535" />
            <id>https://support.yourdigitalagency.com.au/2535</id>
            <author>
                <name><![CDATA[Leah Gibbs]]></name>
            </author>
            <summary type="html">
                <![CDATA[<p><b>Editor Access to Your Site - add seo@yourigitalagency.com.au </b></p><p>This depends on what you host/manage your site on. For instructions on adding us as, please see below</p><p><a href="https://support.wix.com/en/article/inviting-people-to-contribute-to-your-site" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Wix</a>
</p><p><a href="https://support.squarespace.com/hc/en-us/articles/206537287-Inviting-a-contributor" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">SquareSpace</a>
</p><p><a href="https://cloud-developer.weebly.com/cl_gs_access_sites.html" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Weebly</a>
</p><p><a href="https://university.webflow.com/lesson/invite-content-collaborators" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Webflow</a>
</p><p><a href="https://wordpress.com/support/user-roles/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">WordPress</a>
</p><p><a href="https://help.shopify.com/en/manual/your-account/staff-accounts/create-staff-accounts" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Shopify</a>
</p><p><a href="https://support.bigcommerce.com/s/article/User-Permissions" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">BigCommerce</a>
</p><p>If your platform is not here, please give our support team a message.
</p><p>This is entirely optional though, if you don't want us to optimize your site or publish your content for you, there's no need to give us access.
</p><p>In addition to this, any information of SEO work on your site is greatly appreciated. You're done!
</p><p>If you have any questions, please feel free to reach out via live chat or to your account manager.</p><p>
</p><p>
</p><p>
</p><p>
</p>]]>
            </summary>
                                    <updated>2021-05-17T02:59:44+00:00</updated>
        </entry>
            <entry>
            <title><![CDATA[REQUEST A REPORT]]></title>
            <link rel="alternate" href="https://support.yourdigitalagency.com.au/articles/request-a-report-2536" />
            <id>https://support.yourdigitalagency.com.au/2536</id>
            <author>
                <name><![CDATA[Leah Gibbs]]></name>
            </author>
            <summary type="html">
                <![CDATA[<p>We strive to make SEO simple and transparent. But as a service, ideal reporting is subjective, everyone is different.
</p><p>We provide transparency around the clock in 3 key areas.
</p><p>Rankings
</p><p>Optimization
</p><p>Backlinks
</p><p>When you join us, for the first few months you might not see the auditor or backlinks tracker update much, which is 100% normal. We need time to acquire real, long-term assets that will support rankings for years, along with detailed optimization that is data-driven, not rushed. We aim to be a long-term solution for businesses that want to have a sustainable sales channel through organic search.
</p><p>If you need a more customized report, you can get in touch with the team to request a customized report, outlining exactly what you need to be covered. </p><p>As a service, we spend the bulk of our time on service implementation, not manual documentation. This allows us to be cost-effective and consistent in delivering a return on investment. We understand that this isn't for everyone, but we find that it's much better to invest in implementing great SEO rather than documenting every inch of it.
</p><p>It's also important to note that we provide customized reporting at the end of the third month - as we need time to deliver results, a few weeks isn't enough time to have a long-lasting impact.
</p><p>If you have any questions, please feel free to reach out to us via live chat or through your account manager.</p><p>
</p><p>
</p><p>
</p><p>
</p><p>
</p><p>
</p>]]>
            </summary>
                                    <updated>2021-05-17T03:02:54+00:00</updated>
        </entry>
            <entry>
            <title><![CDATA[CONTENT TOPIC REQUEST]]></title>
            <link rel="alternate" href="https://support.yourdigitalagency.com.au/articles/content-topic-request-2537" />
            <id>https://support.yourdigitalagency.com.au/2537</id>
            <author>
                <name><![CDATA[Leah Gibbs]]></name>
            </author>
            <summary type="html">
                <![CDATA[<p>We handle the content process in-house. Because of this, we can customize our content based on your preferences, this includes the topics that we cover.
</p><p>It's important to note that our work is made to be effective on Google - we should be covering competitive topics that will increase your organic traffic over time. We shouldn't be covering super niche topics as that won't help us with the ranking process.
</p><p>To request a custom topic, we either need to know them before we start our work or 2 weeks in advance, as we will already have our content scheduled for a week or two. If you'd like to request a topic, you should -
</p><p>Reach out to your account manager.
</p><p>Outline what topic you'd like us to cover.
</p><p>Provide as much information as possible, including references &amp; structure preferences.
</p><p>We will then get it scheduled and written within 2 weeks, sometimes sooner. If you have an urgent topic request, please let your account manager know so that we can expedite it.
</p><p>If you have any questions about our content creation process, please get in touch via live chat or through your account manager.</p><p>
</p><p>
</p><p>
</p><p>
</p>]]>
            </summary>
                                    <updated>2021-05-17T03:04:54+00:00</updated>
        </entry>
            <entry>
            <title><![CDATA[REQUEST A REVISION]]></title>
            <link rel="alternate" href="https://support.yourdigitalagency.com.au/articles/request-a-revision-2538" />
            <id>https://support.yourdigitalagency.com.au/2538</id>
            <author>
                <name><![CDATA[Leah Gibbs]]></name>
            </author>
            <summary type="html">
                <![CDATA[<p>Revisions can happen, especially if you're in an industry that's highly regulated or technical. Everything is handled in-house, which means that we can customize your content based on your preferences.
</p><p>To request a revision, you should -
</p><p>Email the support team.
</p><p>Outline what was wrong with the article, with as much detail as possible.
</p><p>Provide us with any preferences, industry terms and technicalities that we should know about.
</p><p>When provided, our support team will -
</p><p>Loop in our Head of Content.
</p><p>Note your content preferences to the entire content team.
</p><p>Schedule your revision to be with you within 1-2 business days.
</p><p>Will send over the revised article for your review.
</p><p>If you have any questions about our revision process, please reach out to us via live chat or through your account manager.</p><p>
</p>]]>
            </summary>
                                    <updated>2021-05-17T03:06:20+00:00</updated>
        </entry>
            <entry>
            <title><![CDATA[CONTENT PROCESS]]></title>
            <link rel="alternate" href="https://support.yourdigitalagency.com.au/articles/content-process-2539" />
            <id>https://support.yourdigitalagency.com.au/2539</id>
            <author>
                <name><![CDATA[Leah Gibbs]]></name>
            </author>
            <summary type="html">
                <![CDATA[<p>We understand that writing is subjective and that everyone has different preferences.  We have a process to ensure that your preferences and styling is taken into account. We've hired specialists for every segment of the content creation process so that we can deliver quality content that ranks on Google for the long term.
</p><p>‍
</p><p><b>Content Researchers
</b></p><p>This is the first step to take when creating engaging content. Our Content Researchers create a plan for your site based on industry trends, your target keywords &amp; competitor data. We want to make sure that our content is effective at delivering genuine organic traffic over time. Because of this, we like to handle the research process on topics.
</p><p>‍
</p><p><b>Content Writers
</b></p><p>Our writers are trained in SEO, but also in conversion marketing methods that help to deliver rankings that last for the long term. Your content is structured to improve your bounce rate, average user time &amp; engagement - Google views these metrics as vital when ranking a site, which is why we intensely focus on this. Our content is engaging, well-written and customized based on your preferences.
</p><p>‍
</p><p><b>Content Editors
</b></p><p>Our editors ensure that our content is structured correctly and has no typos or errors that might have gone missing. They structure the keyword density to be correct based on your industry, along with a complete optimization audit of every article. This helps us to deliver effective rankings on intent-driven search terms.
</p><p>If you have any questions about our content process, please feel free to reach out to us via live chat or through your account manager.</p><p>
</p><p>
</p><p>
</p><p>
</p>]]>
            </summary>
                                    <updated>2021-05-17T03:08:08+00:00</updated>
        </entry>
            <entry>
            <title><![CDATA[SITE AUDITOR]]></title>
            <link rel="alternate" href="https://support.yourdigitalagency.com.au/articles/site-auditor-2540" />
            <id>https://support.yourdigitalagency.com.au/2540</id>
            <author>
                <name><![CDATA[Leah Gibbs]]></name>
            </author>
            <summary type="html">
                <![CDATA[<p>We strive to be the most effective and transparent SEO service for small businesses. Because of this, we provide you with SEO software that tracks everything in-depth, this includes our Site Auditor.
</p><p>We rescan your site monthly or quarterly depending on your preference. You'll find your last scanned date outlined in the Site Auditor section.
</p><p>Our Site Auditor outlines on-site issues with varying degrees of severity, which are -
</p><p>‍
</p><p><b>Critical
</b></p><p>These are the most serious issues, as they can have long-lasting effects on your rankings. We aim to get these fixed as quickly as possible, usually within a few working days. At times though, these errors might not be valid as they can be due to your web hosting provider or plugins.
</p><p>‍
</p><p><b>Errors
</b></p><p>These are the typical SEO related issues that we get fixed up within a few weeks. This includes missing meta titles/descriptions, alt attributes, H1's &amp; broken links. It's normal to have a high amount of these when joining us, especially if you haven't used an SEO service before. When we rescan for our comparison report, you'll have significantly fewer errors.
</p><p>‍
</p><p><b>Warnings
</b></p><p>These are general issues to keep an eye on. They don't have to 100% be fixed, but it's good to go over them to ensure that we have optimized the best we can. Warnings can be unavoidable due to your website design, content structure, etc. It's the least important area of the 3 mentioned here.
</p><p><br /></p><p>
</p><p>
</p><p>
</p><p>
</p><p>
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</p>]]>
            </summary>
                                    <updated>2021-05-17T03:10:38+00:00</updated>
        </entry>
            <entry>
            <title><![CDATA[OPTMISATION OVERVIEW]]></title>
            <link rel="alternate" href="https://support.yourdigitalagency.com.au/articles/optmisation-overview-2541" />
            <id>https://support.yourdigitalagency.com.au/2541</id>
            <author>
                <name><![CDATA[Leah Gibbs]]></name>
            </author>
            <summary type="html">
                <![CDATA[<p>Optimisation is a vital part of the SEO process. There are many ways to do this, but we believe that it's best to follow what Google recommends. We don't shortcut our way to fast rankings, as they don't last for long.
</p><p>When you register with us, we'll do a few tasks to get started with the optimization process -
</p><p>We'll audit your site in-depth to find any errors, issues &amp; warnings that need to be fixed
</p><p>Analyze competitor sites to see what's working on your target keywords
</p><p>Go through and document any existing on-page optimization
</p><p>We then take a week to collect data on what sites are doing well on your target keywords, along with what content structure, keyword density &amp; content works well.
</p><p>Over the next few weeks, we'll go through your site, fix all on-site issues and rescan for a comparison report for full transparency on the work that has been done. It's important to note that optimization isn't a one time task, it requires constant revisions to get the highest possible ranking, we handle this for you.
</p><p><br /></p><p>
</p><p>
</p><p>
</p><p>
</p>]]>
            </summary>
                                    <updated>2021-05-17T03:11:47+00:00</updated>
        </entry>
            <entry>
            <title><![CDATA[GUARANTEED SEO RESULTS, RANK ON PAGE 1 OR PAY  NOTHING]]></title>
            <link rel="alternate" href="https://support.yourdigitalagency.com.au/articles/guaranteed-seo-results-rank-on-page-1-or-pay-nothing-2658" />
            <id>https://support.yourdigitalagency.com.au/2658</id>
            <author>
                <name><![CDATA[Leah Gibbs]]></name>
            </author>
            <summary type="html">
                <![CDATA[<p>100% Guaranteed SEO Results - Page 1 Or Pay Nothing
Rank on page 1 or pay nothing! </p><p>Dominate your local SEO
</p><p>

</p><p><iframe src="//www.youtube.com/embed/TlKDSffLWZY" class="note-video-clip"></iframe><br /></p>]]>
            </summary>
                                    <updated>2022-04-13T01:21:48+00:00</updated>
        </entry>
            <entry>
            <title><![CDATA[GOOGLE HELPFUL CONTENT UPDATE]]></title>
            <link rel="alternate" href="https://support.yourdigitalagency.com.au/articles/google-helpful-content-update-2695" />
            <id>https://support.yourdigitalagency.com.au/2695</id>
            <author>
                <name><![CDATA[Leah Gibbs]]></name>
            </author>
            <summary type="html">
                <![CDATA[<p>Google announced a Helpful Content Update - on December 5, 2022. The official Google list of announced updates, As always, this update should take about two weeks to roll out completely.<br /></p><p><b>What is new? </b></p><p>Now the helpful content update (aka system) is a global update, impacting all languages and not just the English language. This will help Google’s systems detect more forms of low-quality content created for search engines and primarily not for people.
</p><p>Google also told us this system was updated with additional signals to help Google identify more content created primarily for search engines versus people.
</p><p>Timing. Google said this update appeared for a tiny amount of queries late on December 5th but on December 6th, it became a more notable update, being more visible.
</p><p><b>Rollout. </b></p><p>Like most other Google updates, the rollout should take about two weeks to roll out complete.
</p><p>Google wrote it “released the December 2022 helpful content update, improving our classifier and working globally across all languages. The rollout may take up to two weeks to complete.”
</p><p>Many sites hit by the May update are seeing signs of recovery only a few days in!
</p><p>Google’s helpful content update targets “content that seems to have been primarily created for ranking well in search engines rather than to help or inform people.”<br /></p><p>This algorithm update aims to help searchers find “high-quality content,” Google told us. Google wants to reward better and more helpful content written for humans and to enable users.
</p><p>Content is written to rank in search engines – what you might call “search engine-first content” or “SEO content” has been frequently written about lately and discussed across social media.
</p><p>In short, searchers are getting frustrated when they land on unhelpful webpages that rank well in search because they were designed to rank well.
</p><p>Google’s new algorithm aims to downgrade those websites while promoting more helpful websites designed for humans above search engines.
</p><p>Google said this is an “ongoing effort to reduce low-quality content and make it easier to find content that feels authentic and useful in search.”
</p><p><b>What to do if you are hit. </b></p><p>Google has provided a list of questions you can ask yourself about your content. Read through those questions as here is a list by Search Engine Land, and in an unbiased manner, ask yourself if your content is in sync with this update.</p><p>
</p><p><a href="https://searchengineland.com/googles-new-helpful-content-update-targets-sites-creating-content-for-search-engines-first-387237" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">https://searchengineland.com/googles-new-helpful-content-update-targets-sites-creating-content-for-search-engines-first-387237</a></p><p>Note if this update hits you, it can take several months to recover if you do everything right and make changes to your content over time.
</p><p>Google told us that if a site is no longer seen as unhelpful, it might see a positive change as soon as the current update has finished. However, a place might not see a positive difference if there are other areas where it needs improvement. So always be working on making your site more helpful.
</p><p><b>Why we care.</b></p><p>Suppose you notice any ranking and visibility changes in Google search over the next two weeks, especially if those were significant changes. In that case, you can likely attribute it to this update. Read Google’s advice, make the necessary changes, and hope for a recovery in the upcoming months.
</p><p>We hope you all will benefit from this update, and if not, we hope you recover quickly.</p><p>
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            </summary>
                                    <updated>2022-12-08T08:15:53+00:00</updated>
        </entry>
    </feed>
