seo – FAQ https://clix.co/faq Tue, 04 Jun 2013 18:51:54 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.5 What Is Inbound Marketing? https://clix.co/faq/2013/06/04/what-is-inbound-marketing/ Tue, 04 Jun 2013 18:51:54 +0000 http://faq.clix.co/?p=156 Inbound marketing is an approach to marketing that focuses on “pulling” clients in rather than “pushing” advertising in their way. When you think of online advertising, you may think of banner ads at the top and sides of a website, those video ads before a Youtube video, or email spam. All of these are examples […]

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Inbound marketing is an approach to marketing that focuses on “pulling” clients in rather than “pushing” advertising in their way.

When you think of online advertising, you may think of banner ads at the top and sides of a website, those video ads before a Youtube video, or email spam. All of these are examples of interruptive, or, “outbound” marketing methods.

Inbound marketing, on the other hand, is the opposite. In fact, it doesn’t really look like marketing at all. The focus of inbound marketing is creating fresh, relevant, quality content in order to draw potential customers (and Google) to a website that will better answer their questions. The goal is to make your website—and therefore you—a resource and an authority in your industry.

 Inbound vs. outbound marketing

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Why inbound marketing? https://clix.co/faq/2013/06/04/why-inbound-marketing/ Tue, 04 Jun 2013 13:55:08 +0000 http://faq.clix.co/?p=159 Part of the reason why inbound marketing is becoming so important is necessity. In the last couple of years, Google has released two updates to its search algorithm, that is, the rules that Google uses to rank search results. The first update, called Panda, was released in 2011. The purpose of this update was to […]

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Part of the reason why inbound marketing is becoming so important is necessity. In the last couple of years, Google has released two updates to its search algorithm, that is, the rules that Google uses to rank search results.

The first update, called Panda, was released in 2011. The purpose of this update was to lower the ranks of sites which exploited loopholes in Google’s algorithm in order to rank higher. This was the beginning of a transition that would see Google focus more on quality of links and website content rather than mere quantity of links when ranking a website. Subsequent updates in 2012 and 2013 by the equally benign name of Penguin (versions 1 and 2) further devalued so-called “black hat” practices in order to focus on link and content quality.

google penguin panda seo inbound marketing

Looks can be deceiving.

It’s strange to think about, but as Google refines its increasingly-complex search algorithm, it is able to value content on the internet more like a human would. For example, under the pre-Panda algorithm, Google saw a quality website as one which had many links leading to it, no matter how irrelevant. People, on the other hand, see a quality website as being informative, helpful, and up-to-date, among other things. Therefore, Google itself has changed in order to be what it is now looking for: a more helpful and relevant tool for its users.

In addition to alterations to search algorithms, inbound marketing is gaining popularity because it works. And why shouldn’t it? When we have a question, a need, or a problem that needs fixing, we want an authority, not an advertisement. We want a website to have plenty of accessible information available, perhaps in the form of a blog or a FAQ like this one. We want the ability to ask questions and interact, either through a phone call, an email, or even a tweet or Facebook post. We want other people on other websites to be talking about this trusted source, maybe in the form of a review. These have always been elements of a customer-friendly website. The only difference now is that Google is beginning to see things the same way.

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What Does The “Average Visit Duration” Metric Mean? https://clix.co/faq/2013/05/15/term-of-the-week-average-visit-duration/ Thu, 16 May 2013 02:37:53 +0000 http://faq.clix.co/?p=140 Average Visit Duration: the average time duration of a website session.

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Average Visit Duration: the average time duration of a website session.

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What Does The “Pages Per Visit” Metric Mean? https://clix.co/faq/2013/05/15/term-of-the-week-pages-per-visit/ Thu, 16 May 2013 02:35:39 +0000 http://faq.clix.co/?p=138 Pages Per Visit (Average Page Depth): is the average number of pages viewed during a visit to your site. Repeated views of a single page are counted.

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Pages Per Visit (Average Page Depth): is the average number of pages viewed during a visit to your site. Repeated views of a single page are counted.

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What Does The “Percent of New Visits” Metric Mean? https://clix.co/faq/2013/05/15/term-of-the-week-percent-of-new-visits/ Thu, 16 May 2013 02:32:31 +0000 http://faq.clix.co/?p=136 Percent of New Visits: an estimate of the percentage of first time visits.

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Percent of New Visits: an estimate of the percentage of first time visits.

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What Does The “Pageviews” Metric Mean? https://clix.co/faq/2013/05/15/term-of-the-week-pageviews/ Thu, 16 May 2013 02:29:50 +0000 http://faq.clix.co/?p=134 Pageviews: the total number of pages viewed. Repeated views of a single page are counted.

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Pageviews: the total number of pages viewed. Repeated views of a single page are counted.

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What Does The “Bounce Rate” Metric Mean? https://clix.co/faq/2013/05/15/term-of-the-week-bounce-rate/ Thu, 16 May 2013 02:28:07 +0000 http://faq.clix.co/?p=132 Bounce Rate: the percentage of single-page visits (i.e. visits in which the person left your site from the entrance page without interacting with the page).

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Bounce Rate: the percentage of single-page visits (i.e. visits in which the person left your site from the entrance page without interacting with the page).

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What Does The “Unique Visitor” Metric Mean? https://clix.co/faq/2013/05/15/term-of-the-week-unique-visitor/ Thu, 16 May 2013 02:24:47 +0000 http://faq.clix.co/?p=130 Unique Visitor: the number of unduplicated (counted only once) visitors to your website over the course of a specified time period.

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Unique Visitor: the number of unduplicated (counted only once) visitors to your website over the course of a specified time period.

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Black Hat Techniques https://clix.co/faq/2013/05/15/term-of-the-week-black-hat-techniques/ Thu, 16 May 2013 01:53:09 +0000 http://faq.clix.co/?p=103 Black Hat Techniques: off-page tactics that are referred to as “black hat” are deprecated measures taken by backlink building agencies in the past and present to build backlinks from a quantitative standpoint. Black hat techniques explicitly manipulate search engines and violate search guidelines. Companies who have used SEO agencies in the past could be subject […]

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Black Hat Techniques: off-page tactics that are referred to as “black hat” are deprecated measures taken by backlink building agencies in the past and present to build backlinks from a quantitative standpoint. Black hat techniques explicitly manipulate search engines and violate search guidelines. Companies who have used SEO agencies in the past could be subject to penalization as a result of black hat link building techniques.

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