Category: Free SEO Stuff

The Noob Friendly Guide To Link Building blog post

Bookmarked https://ahrefs.com/blog/link-building/

The White Hat Guide To Indexing Your Site blog post

Bookmarked http://www.serped.com/guide-to-indexing-your-site/1766

The White Hat Guide To Indexing Your New Site -

I can almost guarantee you want more traffic from Google, don’t you? Especially when you have a brand new site and organic search traffic can be hard to come by. You know, those people who happen upon your site through searches. But, it doesn’t have to be hard. In fact, getting Google to pay attention to your site and start ranking you straight away can be one of the easiest parts of SEO. And, if you get it right, you can build a solid platform for future SEO that no algorithm change or unexpected update can ever take away from you. All you have to do is index your site, the right way. And that’s what I’m about to show you
 * What Is Indexing (And When Do You Need To Do It)? * How To Index Your Site Today * What The Heck A Site Map Is * The Steps You Need To Take (In Simple English) All while watching me index my own site, One Day Guides, as you go. It’s simple, easy to do and can set you up well for great Search Engine Optimization (SEO) results in the future. Let’s get started, shall we? Okay, this section needs to be split into two sections: What is an index? Let me tackle them in that order, so you get the biggest picture. However, if you already know what both of these are, click here [link] to jump ahead to the first step. An index on the internet is exactly the same as it was in your school textbooks, too. It’s a list of names, information, pages and references that shows you where to find the correct information you need. It’s more specific than a contents page, and helps you find the specifics of what you’re looking for much more quickly. If you ever studied at College or University and had to use referencing for a thesis, you know what I’m talking about here. Now this is important to know because you need to bust a common misconception about the internet. When you search on Google (or Bing or Yahoo! Or whichever you choose to use) you’re not searching the internet. You’re searching their index of the internet. That is to say that they take your page from the internet, store the relevant information from it, and put it into their huge database of the internet. That, at time of writing, contains 4.76 billion pages. That’s a hell of a lot of information, right? So the ranking factors and every other piece of SEO terminology you hear is all about how you can rank well in Google’s Index and not on the internet. When you search a term then, like How To Make Brown Rice: The results that you see are the pages from Google’s index that are most relevant, based on all of those ranking factors: This index is also why sites from the dark internet, where people can buy drugs and guns and other illegal products, don’t show up in your search engine searches. Because, Google has control over what goes in and what shows up. This may not be the most exciting Traffic generating topic you’ll read about, but knowing Google is an index makes understanding what indexing much easier. Indexing, then, is getting your content to appear in Google’s Index. Google is pretty on the ball with this. If you have a site, within a few days you’re probably going to show up in Google. But, just because you show up, doesn’t mean you’re going to show up correctly, or be well optimised for it. That’s where indexing comes in. By indexing your site – as I’ll show you how in this article – you’ll be able to indicate to Google that your site is active, and the sort of content you’re going to be producing. And, by making it easier for Google’s spiders to crawl the site, means your chances of showing up higher will be much greater. If you’re ready, let’s look at how you can index your site and kick-start your SEO off right. The first question you need to ask is, “Do you even need to index your site?” If you’ve been slowly putting content on your site for the last few weeks or months, there’s a chance that Google has already indexed you. In which case it’s just a case of following some of the next steps to make sure you’re indexed properly. But, to find out if you’re indexed, you just need to perform a simple Google search. Head to Google – it doesn’t matter which extension your on, be it .com, .de, .co.uk, .fr or wherever your country is – and perform the following search: You can just replace my One Day Guides name with your own domain. For example: My site has been around for a few weeks, so mine shows up indexed, like so: If yours doesn’t show up then it’s not been indexed at all. If it does, it’s been indexed to some extent, like mine has. Either way it’s time to verify yourself with Google. Okay, this step is a little tricky. So I’m going to hand you over to Google themselves for this stage. But, you don’t need to leave the page, here’s their guide in Image format so you can stay with me
 Once you’re verified, you can move on to the next step. Earlier I mentioned that Google uses Spiders to crawl through pages to find the relevant information for a search. They’re what go and find the pages, like the ones in the brown rice search earlier. Now, what Google sends these spiders to is your sitemap. This shows the layout of your site, and all the pages connected to it, so the spiders can work their way through and find that relevant page with juicy content to solve your problems. That looks a little something like this: The problem is, though, is your site doesn’t come pre-packed with a sitemap. Instead you have to create one. And then you have to submit it to Google. That’s not as hard as it sounds so don’t worry. Here are a few ways you can do it
 If you’re on WordPress, go ahead and download the free YoastSEO Plugin. Not only is this a great SEO tool anyway (you’ll need it in the future) it’s also going to create your sitemap for you. Once downloaded and installed, head over to the Yoast Plugin section on your WordPress Dashboard, and select the XML Sitemap section: Here you can access your site map and see everything for yourself (my sitemap above was created by Yoast through this method). You can still do it completely for free. Head over to this site, XML Sitemaps, and you can create one for up to 500 pages. Just follow the steps on screen (at least up to number three) and then come with me to the next mini-step within this step. So by now you should have verified your site with Google and created your sitemap. Now, it’s time to get it online. Head back to Google Search Console and select your property (site): On the next page, select add/test sitemap and add the following text after your domain name: That’s system/feeds/sitemap if you want to copy and paste it. Hit submit and you should be all good to go. Now, onto the more fun stuff
 Blogs are wonderful for your search engine results. They mean you constantly add content – showing Google your site is still alive – as well as being able to connect to hundreds if not thousands of people all over the world. You can solve people in your industry’s problems. Create content that’s engaging and fun to read. As well a find yourself climbing through the rankings in Google. Adding a blog is pretty unique to your site. Unless you started it through WordPress, so I’d recommend contacting your service provider to make sure you did it correctly. If you have a WordPress site, here’s a simple blog post showing you how to add the blog for yourself. Blog Comments are a great way to build traffic back to your site. For example, as I wrote for Nichehacks here, you can build a consistent (but small) stream of targeted traffic through Blog Comments without much effort at all. And, because these links are only indicators to Google and not ranking factors, they don’t count as spam. If you’re commenting on industry specific blogs, Google can tell that your (at the moment quite empty) site is involved in a specific topic or group of topics. And, you can build traffic back to your site, further showing Google you’re here to play ball. For example, if I head over to the site of the industry leader in my niche, Nomadic Matt, I can leave a comment on there (see above) that points right back to my site. And, got me a really high value hit: You may know who your business competitors are. Or, who the big names in your niche are. If not, now’s the time do some research. The number one way I recommend you do this is to head to Feedly, set up a free account, and look for people who are posting about your industry: Go ahead and click on an article – I chose this one from Matt Long – and then leave a value-adding comment. Repeat this a few times, over a few days if there’s not enough fresh content right now, and you’ll be well on your way to getting your site some attention, as well as cementing a place in the index. Internal Links – hyperlinks that go from one page on your site to another page on your site – are often overlooked by SEO’s. But, not only are they a ranking factor, they also make your website easier to crawl (and easier to index). If you have content on your blog already (or content ready to go on your blog) find ways to link them together. It can be using a keyword or relevant phrase, or it can be at the bottom using a phrase like: PS: Did you read last week’s post about snorkelling? Check it out here! But if (and when) you’ve got a few blog posts, go out of your way to find these opportunities. Like here, I was able to link a guide about Porto to a guide about Spain that I wrote because they had one common factor – my girlfriend was mentioned in there
 You can optimise all of this – and I’ll come to that in a later post – but for now, you only need to worry about just linking some pages up so it makes sense to Google. If you ask any Search Engine Optimization professional they’ll scream back in your face that social media links don’t count for link building. And, well, they don’t. But that’s not why you’re going to use Social Media here. But Google still knows these links are there and will help show that your site is active and means business. Whatever social media profiles you have associated with your business: Be sure to include a link back to your site from there. Like I’ve done here: And, you guessed it, here: And, according to Harsh Agrawal at Shout Me Loud, if you verify your profile on Pinterest you get a real followed link that counts towards your Google rankings too, which is worth bearing in mind. Phew! Okay, that may not be the most exciting SEO article you’ve ever read, but it’s by far one of the most important. So let’s recap anything you need to do to get these basics right on the first try: * Find out if you’re on Google: you might already have a presence you don’t know about. * Get yourself verified: Google knowing you’re a legitimate site, run by a human, is really important (as silly as that sounds). So get yourself verified on the search console. * Create your sitemap: By using Yoast if you’re on WordPress or XML Generator if you’re not. Then, upload it through the search console. * Add a blog: if you don’t already have a blog, get one on your site and start creating content. * Comment on industry blogs: Build a little traffic and get yourself some indicating links by commenting on your competitors, or other industry specific blogs. * Add internal links to your own content: Don’t worry if it’s a blog post or another page, find ways to link them together for some of your own link juice and to make your site much more easily scannable. * Link back from your social accounts: Simple, get all of your social pages pointing to your site. You’re proud of your business anyway, aren’t you? We focused this article on getting your main site and new posts/content indexed. The next issue is indexing your backlinks. For that, we highly recommend ‘Link Indexer Pro‘ inside the SERPed.net Suite of tools. Normally closed to the public, you can access SERPed.net if you don’t yet have an account, via this backdoor link here. And that’s it, the simplest, most white-hat way to get your blog indexed today! Questions or comments? Let me know below


On-Page SEO blog post

Bookmarked http://backlinko.com/on-page-seo

AuthorityLabs Tools

Bookmarked https://authoritylabs.com/free-tools/

Free SEO Tools

After learning what we can from our competitor’s website, our next step is to research their business itself. In this lesson we will help you ... Get the Guide

Semrush

Bookmarked https://www.semrush.com/

service for competitors research, shows organic and Ads keywords for any site or domain

What makes your rankings go up when you're done with the on-page SEO? Improve the results of your PPC efforts: See how social audience and engagement change over time Compare how you perform against competitors Get instant insights into your social strategy Go above and beyond conventional marketing with unlimited access to analytical data, custom reports and team-based projects World's leading companies choose SEMrush. We have over 1,000,000 users. See what they have to say. SEMrush not only helps you perform day-to-day tasks, but also provides in-depth analysis that is very clear and can be easily incorporated into your digital marketing strategy and significantly improve your performance. With SEMrush we are able to identify opportunities and react to them in less time by having a trusted source of data that is extremely easy for the whole team to access. SEMrush has long been one of my favorite SEO tools. HTTP vs HTTPS: How Security Affects Your SEO How to Choose the Right Long-Tail Keywords We use cookies to give you the best online experience. By using this website you agree with our cookie policy.

Screaming Frog SEO Spider

Bookmarked https://www.screamingfrog.co.uk/seo-spider/

Screaming Frog SEO Spider Tool & Website Crawler

The SEO Spider is a desktop website crawler and auditor for PC, Mac or Linux which spiders websites’ links, images, CSS, script and apps like a search engine to evaluate onsite SEO. The Screaming Frog SEO Spider is a website crawler, that allows you to crawl websites’ URLs and fetch key onsite elements to analyse onsite SEO. Download for free, or purchase a licence for additional advanced features. Compare Versions Download What can you do with the SEO Spider Tool? The SEO Spider is a powerful and flexible site crawler, able to crawl both small and very large websites efficiently, while allowing you to analyse the results in real-time. It gathers key onsite data to allow SEOs to make informed decisions. Find temporary and permanent redirects, identify redirect chains and loops, or upload a list of URLs to audit in a site migration. Analyse page titles and meta descriptions during a crawl and identify those that are too long, short, missing, or duplicated across your site. Discover exact duplicate URLs with an md5 algorithmic check, partially duplicated elements such as page titles, descriptions or headings and find low content pages. Collect any data from the HTML of a web page using CSS Path, XPath or regex. This might include social meta tags, additional headings, prices, SKUs or more! View URLs blocked by robots.txt, meta robots or X-Robots-Tag directives such as ‘noindex’ or ‘nofollow’, as well as canonicals and rel=“next” and rel=“prev”. Quickly create XML Sitemaps and Image XML Sitemaps, with advanced configuration over URLs to include, last modified, priority and change frequency. Connect to the Google Analytics API and fetch user data, such as sessions or bounce rate and conversions, goals, transactions and revenue for landing pages against the crawl. Licences last 1 year. After that you will be required to renew your licence. * The maximum number of URLs you can crawl is dependent on allocated memory and storage. Please see our FAQ. " Out of the myriad of tools we use at iPullRank I can definitively say that I only use the Screaming Frog SEO Spider every single day. It's incredibly feature-rich, rapidly improving and I regularly find a new use case. I can't endorse it strongly enough. " " The Screaming Frog SEO Spider is my "go to" tool for initial SEO audits and quick validations: powerful, flexible and low-cost. I couldn't recommend it more. " The Screaming Frog SEO Spider is an SEO auditing tool, built by real SEOs with thousands of users worldwide. A quick summary of some of the data collected in a crawl include - Errors – Client errors such as broken links & server errors (No responses, 4XX, 5XX). External Links – All external links and their status codes. Protocol – Whether the URLs are secure (HTTPS) or insecure (HTTP). Page Titles – Missing, duplicate, over 65 characters, short, pixel width truncation, same as h1, or multiple. Meta Keywords – Mainly for reference, as they are not used by Google, Bing or Yahoo. hreflang Attributes – Audit missing confirmation links, inconsistent & incorrect languages codes, non canonical hreflang and more. Rendering – Crawl JavaScript frameworks like AngularJS and React, by crawling the rendered HTML after JavaScript has executed. Outlinks – All pages a URI links out to. Anchor Text – All link text. Alt text from images with links. Images – All URIs with the image link & all images from a given page. Images over 100kb, missing alt text, alt text over 100 characters. User-Agent Switcher – Crawl as Googlebot, Bingbot, Yahoo! Slurp, mobile user-agents or your own custom UA. Custom HTTP Headers – Supply any header value in a request, from Accept-Language to cookie. Custom Source Code Search – Find anything you want in the source code of a website! Whether that’s Google Analytics code, specific text, or code etc. Custom Extraction – Scrape any data from the HTML of a URL using XPath, CSS Path selectors or regex. Google Analytics Integration – Connect to the Google Analytics API and pull in user and conversion data directly during a crawl. Google Search Console Integration – Connect to the Google Search Analytics API and collect impression, click and average position data against URLs. External Link Metrics – Pull external link metrics from Majestic, Ahrefs and Moz APIs into a crawl to perform content audits or profile links. XML Sitemap Generator – Create an XML sitemap and an image sitemap using the SEO spider. Custom robots.txt – Download, edit and test a site’s robots.txt using the new custom robots.txt. " I’ve tested nearly every SEO tool that has hit the market, but I can’t think of any I use more often than Screaming Frog. To me, it’s the Swiss Army Knife of SEO Tools. From uncovering serious technical SEO problems to crawling top landing pages after a migration to uncovering JavaScript rendering problems to troubleshooting international SEO issues, Screaming Frog has become an invaluable resource in my SEO arsenal. I highly recommend Screaming Frog for any person involved in SEO. " " Screaming Frog Web Crawler is one of the essential tools I turn to when performing a site audit. It saves time when I want to analyze the structure of a site, or put together a content inventory for a site, where I can capture how effective a site might be towards meeting the informational or situation needs of the audience of that site. I usually buy a new edition of Screaming Frog on my birthday every year, and it is one of the best birthday presents I could get myself. " The Screaming Frog SEO Spider allows you to quickly crawl, analyse and audit a sites’ onsite SEO. It can be used to crawl both small and very large websites, where manually checking every page would be extremely labour intensive (or impossible!) and where you can easily miss a redirect, meta refresh or duplicate page issue. You can view, analyse and filter the crawl data as it’s gathered and updated continuously in the program’s user interface. The SEO Spider allows you to export key onsite SEO elements (URL, page title, meta description, headings etc) to Excel so it can easily be used as a base for SEO recommendations. Our video above provides a demonstration of what the SEO tool can do. The ‘lite’ version of the tool is free to download and use. However, this version is restricted to crawling up to 500 URLs in a single crawl and it does not give you full access to the configuration, saving of crawls, JavaScript rendering, custom source search or extraction, Google Analytics, Search Console and link metrics integration. You can crawl 500 URLs from the same website, or as many websites as you like, as many times as you like, though! For just £149 per year you can purchase a licence, which removes the 500 URL crawl limit, allows you to save crawls, opens up the spider’s configuration options and custom source code search, extraction and Google Analytics, Search Console and link metrics integration features. Alternatively hit the ‘buy a licence’ button in the SEO Spider to buy a licence after downloading and trialing the software. As default the SEO Spider crawls sites like Googlebot (it obeys allow, disallow directives and wildcard support like Googlebot), but presents its own user-agent ‘Screaming Frog SEO Spider’, which it will obey specific directives for in robots.txt. If there are no directives, it will crawl your site like Googlebot. while still presenting its own UA. For more guidance and tips on our to use the Screaming Frog SEO crawler – Please see our recommended hardware, user guide and FAQ. Please also watch the demo video embedded above! Please read our introduction to crawling using the SEO Spider to get started. Check out some of our featured guides, including how to use the SEO Spider as a broken link checker, generating XML Sitemaps, crawling JavaScript, robots.txt testing and web scraping. Keep updated with future releases of the by subscribing to the our RSS feed or following us on Twitter @screamingfrog. If you have any technical problems, feedback or feature requests for the SEO Spider, then please just contact us via our support. We regularly update the SEO Spider and currently have lots of new features in development!