Showing posts with label competitors traffic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label competitors traffic. Show all posts

Saturday, February 08, 2014

Ben Norman's SEO: Day 5 - Link Building

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Day 5 - Link Building.
 
Link building is a fundamental point when it comes to getting your website moving up the search engines.
The search engines now use the inward links pointing at a website to confirm what a website is about and where to rank it. This is because it is thought that other websites are likely to be more truthful about your website than you would.
It is important to remember that not all links are made equal and the only links you want to focus on getting are one way links. This means that a website links to your website but you don't have to link back. This is the most powerful link and the only one you want to focus on. Reciprocal links are where you link to someone and they link back but this has a few problems being:
  • Google knows it's reciprocated and takes away relevance
  • If the website turns into a bad neighbourhood in the future and your linking to it your website could get penalised
You also want to ensure you get the most from your links by making sure the anchor text (the text that has the hyperlink in it) is relevant for example instead of having "click here" or your website address if you sold Sony Cameras you would have that as your link mixed with other relevant phrases such as "cheap Sony cameras" "buy Sony cameras".
Another way to make sure you get the most out of links is to make sure the links you get are from relevant websites as if they are not they are not worth as much.
Now there are many different ways in obtaining links including:
  • Writing articles that you post to places like ezine articles then other webmasters can publish them on their website in return for linking back
  • Going to relevant directories free (use the Vilesilencer list) and paid (such as Yahoo directory) and adding your website
  • Producing surveys which people can use in return for a link
  • Write great blog posts that people will link to
  • Create applications, documents and put on your website to get links
Just remember Google has declared war on link buyers so stay away for buying links on people's websites as sooner or later Google will find it and penalise your website for it.


 
Tomorrow
 
Tomorrow we will be looking at email marketing and how to capitalise on non-buyers so be sure to check your inbox.

Friday, February 07, 2014

TechViews: Facebook Gets Big on Mobile, 9 Worst Practices of Cloud Computing , Big Data Blackholes​; and More!

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Featured Article
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Is the Mainframe Cool Again? Who’s Not Thinking About Mobility? And more
By Denise Dubie
The IT industry gives its professionals, members and supporters a bit of everything. There is mature technology that keeps humming along healthily like the mainframe and new emerging trends such as enterprise mobility that force IT organizations to reconsider how they work and deliver services. IT pros must evolve into hybrids to keep pace with this all, and STEM education efforts aim to prepare the next generation of IT professionals to take on these challenges in the coming years.
Tech News
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In search of a better way to hit that goal of higher agility, businesses have turned to DevOps -- a variety of techniques, tools, and methodologies employed in service of the philosophy that developers and operations should work together, not be split apart, in order to hit higher speeds and take advantage of larger and larger scale infrastructures. This CITEWorld article explains DevOps philosophy of speed, not momentum!
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Cloud computing represents one of those once-in-a-generation shifts that not only changes the way we think about managing information, but also the way we design and run businesses. This Forbes article provides 9 ‘Worst practices’ to avoid with Cloud computing.
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With mobile Internet usage accounting for one-third of website visits, we no longer have the luxury of only improving and testing for user experience on a single device class. It’s imperative that you expand your user experience testing to measure results on desktop, tablet and mobile separately and respond to the needs of each medium. This UX Magazine article provides three steps you can take to help keep your mobile visitors happy.
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For many businesses, Big Data is superfluous. Except when a recently-published paper on the mathematics of Big Data, reveals that, it isn’t. It turns out there is a kind of data that, like black holes or evil wizards of Middle Earth, only becomes more powerful the larger it grows. This Quartz article explains that if you aren’t already gathering this kind of data, then you might lose out to a competitor who is!
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Ten years after its founding as a simple website for a few thousand Harvard undergraduates to manage their social lives, Facebook is a far different company. This New York Times article looks into the big profit at Facebook as it tilts to Mobile.
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The “cloud” is talked about endlessly in technology. Everything is going into the cloud. Outside the technorati, few people can even define what the cloud is and many simply assume that this must be happening. This WIRED article discusses the rise of the personal Cloud.
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TechViews Unplugged Episode
In this episode of TechViews Unplugged, Andi Mann and George Watt of CA Technologies discuss how the Tesla Model S can power your house; why hearing aids are cool; and more. Click here.
TechInsights Pinboard
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Be sure to check out our TechInsights Pinboard for more research, developments, insight, and guidance on major IT.
TechViews Twitter Chat
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Join the next #TechViews Twitter Chat on "The Risks and Rewards of API Development" Tuesday, February 11th at 1PM ET. Read this blog for background, and to download the calendar invitation. Sign up for Twitter chat notifications here. Follow Trends in Tech to receive top insight on the latest trends impacting enterprise IT.
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About CA
CA Technologies (NASDAQ: CA) provides IT management solutions that help customers manage and secure complex IT environments to support agile business services. Organizations leverage CA Technologies software and SaaS solutions to accelerate innovation, transform infrastructure and secure data and identities, from the data center to the cloud. www.ca.com

Thursday, June 27, 2013

7 tools to monitor your competitors’ traffic.

January 10, 2011.
7 tools to monitor your competitors’ traffic.

“Heavy Traffic” by Masakazu “Matto” Matsumoto on Flickr

Just how accurate are Alexa, Compete, Quantcast & the others?

This is part of our ongoing series on website optimization and traffic analysis.
Guest post by Sam Crocker
SEOmoz
Today we’re going to examine a number of tools and resources for getting insights into competitors’ traffic data. We’ll assess their strengths and weaknesses as well as the validity and usefulness of the data provided.
We’ve had clients asking us for a better view of overall market size and what kind of traffic their competitors are getting, since it can be tricky to find meaningful predictive data even when you know who your competitors are or should be.
It is worth pointing out that a number of these services suggest they can provide better data if you claim the sites by entering your ownership credentials. I can’t testify to the accuracy of this, and our analysis is based upon the free version of the tools as we did not have paid access to any of the tools.
We tested 25 sites for which we had reliable internal data, giving us insight into just how accurate these tools really are — or aren’t.

alexa
alexa-logo
Alexa: Too often, dubious numbers
1Strengths: Alexa is good for comparing different sites traffic and for monitoring general traffic trends. It can be quite useful for comparing one site to a competitor site (up to five sites at a time). The index is massive and contains somedata about all of the 25 sites we tested.
Weaknesses: Not so great for the smaller sites. As you can see below, you won’t get any of the traffic charts for sites ranked outside of the top 100,000, which means if Alexa thinks you are getting fewer than 10,000 visits per month you’re unlikely to glean any great information. Accuracy is a serious concern. This does call into question the usefulness of the tool in general. The numbers reported are not helpful for predicting traffic on their own.
Accuracy: We want to keep this all anonymous but let’s just say one site that we know gets 10-20,000 visits per month had an Alexa rank that was more than five times better than a site that we know gets 75,000+ visitors per month. And this was not just a one-off event. So I have to seriously question the reliability of this tool. It didn’t seem to be too bad at predicting the trends for a single site but the charts are extremely difficult to make any real use of. Interestingly it seems to be skewed in favor of sites within the search marketing space. Sites in the search marketing space that we looked at regularly outranked sites receiving more than 10 times as much traffic on a monthly basis.
How to best use Alexa: The tool is interesting for comparing similar sites or sites within an industry, but be very cautious about using this to make any meaningful suggestions or estimates on traffic data. The most accurate data seemed to be the data from the visitors by country — the percentages we looked at were not too far off.
Cost: Free. Options for site audits for $199.
Compete: Good UI, questionable data
2Strengths: Compete has a useful interface, speaks the right language (unique visitors, visits, etc.), offers the ability to compare multiple sites, and its data is easy to understand and well presented.
Weaknesses: Accuracy, somewhat limited number of sites – many sites that it classifies as “low sample sites,” and the cost of the Pro option.
Accuracy: Again, accuracy is a serious concern here. The data was off in some cases by as much as 2,000% for monthly visits. The accuracy seemed to be a bit better for the peaks in traffic and some of the general trends we looked at but was certainly not reliable enough for us to suggest reporting competitor traffic based upon this information.
How to best use Compete: It should come as no surprise that Compete is best used for comparing competitors. The scale of the data is way off but some of the trends seemed to be fairly reliable. I wouldn’t advise reporting any numbers from this data as they do not seem close/reliable at all – often off by a factor of 200% or more — however the trends are reliable. The information could be meaningfully used to look into seasonal trends between competitors.
Cost: Free. The Pro membership is $499 per month.
Google Ad Planner: Some unique twists
3Strengths: Google Ad Planner has a few things going for it: Its “sites also visited” data is good, the keywords searched for can be quite valuable, and the “audience interests” data is interesting.
Weaknesses:: Accuracy, lack of data for small sites.
Accuracy: The accuracy was really mixed. For many of the sites AdPlanner provided much better data than some of the others. However, they were still off by miles for some sites – off by as much as 1000%. Given the occasional “big miss,” I would not be comfortable using this data to make traffic predictions for a client.
How to best use Google Ad Planner: The data about other sites visited as well as keywords searched for (with affinity) could be extremely valuable as well as some of the other metrics reported on and audience interests. However, the traffic data is not particularly meaningful and can’t be relied upon.
Cost: Free.
Google Insights: Numbers normalized for search
4Strengths: Google Insights offers generalized trends around key phrases and key phrase groups and regional information. Trusted source.
Weaknesses: It was difficult to read the data. There were no hard numbers about traffic. It was hard to compare entire sites to one another.
Accuracy: You can bet that the accuracy of this data is going to be pretty good given that the data provider has access to more data than anyone else on the Internet. However, the fact that the numbers are normalized and more designed for key phrases and search terms and trends than for traffic data means that the search volume will correspond perfectly with the traffic to a site.
How to best use Google Insights: The tool could be quite helpful for finding the most valuable pockets of key phrases and key phrase groups. This could be particularly valuable when looking at a competitor site and trying to figure out which of their key phrases are driving the most traffic. It could help you see which of the key phrases within a key phrase group might be the most valuable.
Cost: Free.
Google Trends: For broad information gathering
5Strengths: Google Trends for Websites is good for illustrating magnitudes of difference between sites. It allows comparison of multiple websites, and it includes regional information.
Weaknesses: It’s not good for comparing sites fairly similar in size. It does not provide information for smaller sites when logged in, it’s accuracy is uneven and it provides no numbers.
Accuracy: The data seem to be more accurate when only trying to compare traffic from search; it does not seem to do as well in assessing overall traffic. When comparing websites with drastically different traffic numbers, the rough visual estimation appears to correspond quite well with the observed analytics data as well. When visiting the site and logged in, Trends it does provide numbers and ranges, though the data looks to be off on a few of the sites I have checked. It is not as far off as the data for the same sites using AdPlanner, but still considerably far off — e.g., reporting 140,000 visits for a site that receives about 320,000 unique visits daily.
How to best use Google Trends for Websites: Trends is great for broad information gathering. It gives some insight into similar searches when comparing sites, and in general it is unlikely that you will find better comparative data out there without direct access to your competitor’s analytics account. However, Trends does not provide numbers and thus can only be used to venture a guess at what sorts of numbers competitors are pulling in.
Cost: Free.
Quantcast: Nifty Media Planner Tool
6Strengths: Quantcast provides traffic numbers that are easy to follow, displays information nicely, offers some demographic information and has an interesting Media Planner Tool.
Weaknesses: Unreliable and often inaccurate, lacks data for small and medium trafficked sites. Inability to compare sites.
Accuracy: The biggest shortcoming of the Quantcast data is accuracy. As with some of the other services, the traffic data is estimated and is nowhere near accurate on the sites for which Quantcast had any data. Data was off by as much as 10 times the actual analytics data for some of the sites.
How to best use Quantcast: Although the data is not particularly reliable for the traffic data, some of the other tools the site has to offer seem quite interesting and worth further investigation. The demographics information provides a reference as to how the data compare against Internet averages.
Cost: Free.
SEMrush: Most accurate of the bunch
7Strengths: SEMrush‘s data includes sites of all sizes, a list of key phrases and rankings for those terms — and provided the most accurate data of all the tools we examined.
Weaknesses: The data were still imperfect. Customers must pay to get full data lists. And the data is only for Google traffic.
Accuracy: The data were not perfectly accurate, though generally speaking SEMrush did not miss the mark for any of the sites we tested the way a number of the other tools did. In the end, the data were surprisingly accurate. As with some of the Google data, the information reported is just the Google search engine traffic, but this is our main area of focus and was quite accurate when drilling down into that specific area of traffic within analytics.
How to best use SEMrush: Although imperfect, this tool came the closest to providing accurate data that I would, at least with a word of warning, be willing to share with a client about potential expectations or about where their competitors’ traffic may be. Most importantly, the add-on options and ability to see the keyword lists and how the competitor ranks for these terms is extraordinarily appealing.
Cost: Free to $499 per month. We used the free version.

A look at two final sites that estimate Web traffic

comScore
Unfortunately, we struggled with comScore. We were unable to get a log-in or sneak a peek at any of the data.
How to best use comScore: comScore offers a number of reports and insights into markets, including reports on local market size as well as information about valuable/important keywords in an industry. It would be very interesting to find out where this data was coming from and how good it was, but we were not able to achieve this in time to publish this information.
Cost: Not disclosed.
HitWise
Unfortunately, we were not able to get data from HitWise in time for publication.
How to best use HitWise: HitWise, similarly to comScore, works on a reporting basis insofar as you speak to them about the types of market reports you would like, or you can create custom reports. While we cannot comment on the accuracy of the data, the services offered look to be better tailored to an SEO‘s needs than do the reports offered by comScore. However, generally speaking HitWise will not work with agencies, which will be a bit of a bummer for some of you.
Cost: Free to $695+ per report

Conclusion

I hope that the findings from all this research will be valuable to you. Ultimately, it’s an incomplete study. For the time being I would rely most heavily on SEMrush for predicting traffic and estimating how well a competitor is doing, but all of these tools add something to the ever-growing traffic toolbelt even if it may be for a purpose other than that which I was hoping they would achieve.
Sam Crocker is SEO Associate Director at OMD UK in London. He is the resident meme expert at OMD and an avid YouTube watcher. Follow him on Twitter. This post orig­i­nally appeared at SEO­moz and is repub­lished with per­mis­sion. The author’s views are entirely his own and may not reflect the views of SEO­moz, Inc. SEO­moz is not affil­i­ated with Socialmedia.biz and has not reviewed this trans­la­tion. SEO­mozpro­vides the Web’s best SEO tools and resources.
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