Here is a very good blog post on the seo.com/blog that i read back on the 2nd and should share this with everyone incase you don't visit this blog.
Steps 2, 3, and 4 i have been doing for awhile now. I just need to work a little harder on these step's but i tend to get lazy every once and awhile with SEO stuff. Little bit of a long post but it's a very good one.
Quote: The road map of a successful SEO campaign usually follows something like this:
■ Keyword Research
■ Competitive Analysis
■ Site Optimization
■ Link Building
■ Boost In Rankings & Increase In Traffic
After completing these steps and seeing results, what now?
One thing that professional SEOs struggle with on a regular basis is how to maintain steady growth once an SEO campaign is fully underway. If you truly desire to be the best SEO you can be, stopping at that point will just not do. Nor will your clients be too happy if that is what you are doing... Continued at: Supercharging Your Campaign
Have you been doing any of these steps? I think step 3 is the most important thing to do. This is my biggest problem i am trying to master. lol I think spending too much time optimizing your site for on page factors is a complete waste of time. Building a content rich site written for your potential customers is important, but building links is much more important these days then on-page optimization. Quote: Originally Posted by Ace2110 I think spending too much time optimizing your site for on page factors is a complete waste of time. Building a content rich site written for your potential customers is important, but building links is much more important these days then on-page optimization. I think both onpage and offpage optimization for a website is equally important in any SEO campaign. You cant just start doing offpage without a proper onpage optimization in your site and having a good onpage content with bad off page methods. The thing is.. you can spend some time on having a good onpage content and you can spend more time on offpage optimization. That was a great article. many people stop their seo efforts once they get their or their clients site up to where they want it, but when it stops and other sites surpass it that actually moves their site down. So no matter what you can't stop seo, you can only change your methods. Quote: Originally Posted by webspider20 That was a great article. many people stop their seo efforts once they get their or their clients site up to where they want it, but when it stops and other sites surpass it that actually moves their site down. So no matter what you can't stop seo, you can only change your methods. Yes, its good if you have all the time in the world to do seo for your site forever. A better strategy would be to target links that can spread on its own. A good example of this is when you posted a good content on any forums or a blog post and people will find it interesting, then chances are high that they will blogs about it or spread the link on other sites of forums becasue simply the liked your content. So you have to stick with good and unique content if you want it to be liked by many.
Steps 2, 3, and 4 i have been doing for awhile now. I just need to work a little harder on these step's but i tend to get lazy every once and awhile with SEO stuff. Little bit of a long post but it's a very good one.
Quote: The road map of a successful SEO campaign usually follows something like this:
■ Keyword Research
■ Competitive Analysis
■ Site Optimization
■ Link Building
■ Boost In Rankings & Increase In Traffic
After completing these steps and seeing results, what now?
One thing that professional SEOs struggle with on a regular basis is how to maintain steady growth once an SEO campaign is fully underway. If you truly desire to be the best SEO you can be, stopping at that point will just not do. Nor will your clients be too happy if that is what you are doing... Continued at: Supercharging Your Campaign
Have you been doing any of these steps? I think step 3 is the most important thing to do. This is my biggest problem i am trying to master. lol I think spending too much time optimizing your site for on page factors is a complete waste of time. Building a content rich site written for your potential customers is important, but building links is much more important these days then on-page optimization. Quote: Originally Posted by Ace2110 I think spending too much time optimizing your site for on page factors is a complete waste of time. Building a content rich site written for your potential customers is important, but building links is much more important these days then on-page optimization. I think both onpage and offpage optimization for a website is equally important in any SEO campaign. You cant just start doing offpage without a proper onpage optimization in your site and having a good onpage content with bad off page methods. The thing is.. you can spend some time on having a good onpage content and you can spend more time on offpage optimization. That was a great article. many people stop their seo efforts once they get their or their clients site up to where they want it, but when it stops and other sites surpass it that actually moves their site down. So no matter what you can't stop seo, you can only change your methods. Quote: Originally Posted by webspider20 That was a great article. many people stop their seo efforts once they get their or their clients site up to where they want it, but when it stops and other sites surpass it that actually moves their site down. So no matter what you can't stop seo, you can only change your methods. Yes, its good if you have all the time in the world to do seo for your site forever. A better strategy would be to target links that can spread on its own. A good example of this is when you posted a good content on any forums or a blog post and people will find it interesting, then chances are high that they will blogs about it or spread the link on other sites of forums becasue simply the liked your content. So you have to stick with good and unique content if you want it to be liked by many.