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First 20 DBT Readers Get Free Enrollment to this SEO Program - DailyBlogTips

First 20 DBT Readers Get Free Enrollment to this SEO Program - DailyBlogTips


First 20 DBT Readers Get Free Enrollment to this SEO Program

Posted: 16 Nov 2016 01:39 AM PST

SEO, which stands for Search Engine Optimization, involves optimizing both external and internal factors on a website to make sure that its pages and content will rank as high as possible on search engines like Google. Ranking high on search engines, in turn, will send a lot of organic (i.e., natural and free) traffic to the website, and getting traffic is the most important factor of any website.

For that reason SEO is a field that is always on the rise. From 1995 to 2005 the Web grew a lot, and those who knew how to promote websites and draw web visitors made a lot of money, either for themselves or by providing consulting services for companies and organizations.

In 2005 blogs started to become popular, and content marketing emerged as a very efficient marketing strategy. Those who knew how to craft engaging content and rank that content well on search engines made a lot of money.

Lately, the explosion of smartphones and mobile apps created yet another wave of technology change, and gain SEO was in high demand to be able to rank and promote those mobile apps and mobile-friendly websites.

If you want to get a piece of this pie and learn about SEO, or if you already work in the field but would like to polish your skills, read on!

Where To Learn About SEO

There are basically two ways to learn about SEO. You can start building websites and tweaking them to see what works and what doesn’t in terms of getting traffic (gathering information online to guide your strategies). This first option works, but will take a lot of time (sometimes years) before you start seeing significant results.

The second options is to go through a training program. With this option you will spend a bit of money to get a structured learning environment which will speed up the learning curve for you.

seo-foundations

One place you can go for such training is Simplilearn, an online platform that offers hundreds of online courses and programs, from SEO to Android development, from Data Science to Analytics. Search online and you'll verify that their courses are very well regarded.

Step 1: SEO Foundations

One of their most popular programs is called SEO Foundations. Danny Drover, former lead SEO of MOZ (one of the most respect SEO sites and platforms in the world), is the advisor for the course and help to structure its lessons and content. Here are the main features:

– 2+ hours of high quality eLearning content
– Covers SEO measurement, design and architecture
– Quizzes to measure your progress
– Topics about algorithm updates and SEO changes
– Simulation exams

The program will give you a solid foundation about the SEO, and you’ll be able to use what you’ll learn to make sure that your blogs and websites will rank well and receive a lot of organic traffic.

How To Get This Program Free

The program usually costs $99, but the Simplilearn guys sent us an email and offered free enrollment to the first 20 DailyBlogTips readers. Sweet huh?

If you want to guarantee your spot, simply leave a comment below. The first 20 comments will receive the prize. Keep in mind that comments go through moderation, so your comment might not appear online immediately. The date and time when you comment are registered, though, so if you are one of the first 20 you will receive the prize even if your comment gets stuck in the moderation queue.

Step 2: Advanced SEO Certification Course

Once you complete the SEO Foundation course (hopefully free of charge from the promotion above!) you can take it to the next level with the Advanced SEO Certification Course. This course is was also elaborated by Danny Drover, former lead SEO of Moz, and it was designed to give you all the tools and information you need to optimize your own websites or provide SEO consulting services for other people and businesses.

Here are the main features:

– 25+ hours of high quality eLearning
– Downloadable workbooks and exercises
– Topics about on-page and architecture best practices
– Online progress quiz and practice tests
– Comprehensive and up-to-date content

After taking this course you’ll receive a certificate that is trusted by several companies, including HP, Microsoft and Salesforce.

Who Should Learn About SEO?

In my opinion pretty much every professional should learn about SEO these days, because every single business out there needs a strong online presence. Suppose you are a secretary for a law firm. If you learn about SEO you will be able to optimize and promote the website of your firm, thus increasing its traffic and the number of clients that will come through the website. Guess what, once your bosses see the results they are probably going to give you a raise or a promotion.

Other examples of people who could use SEO to positively impact their careers:
– Freelance Writers
– Doctors, Dentists
– Small business owners
– Lawyers
– Private teachers and tutors
– Marketing professionals
– Consultants

Original post: First 20 DBT Readers Get Free Enrollment to this SEO Program

ProBlogger: How to Conduct Your Annual Blogging Review

ProBlogger: How to Conduct Your Annual Blogging Review

Link to ProBlogger

How to Conduct Your Annual Blogging Review

Posted: 15 Nov 2016 05:00 AM PST

How to conduct your annual blogging review - and get ready for an even better new year! | ProBlogger.net

By ProBlogger Expert Nicole Avery.

If you follow even a few blogs as well as this one, you will know that within a few weeks from now there will be numerous posts about setting goals for the New Year. Goal setting is an essential tool to successful blogging, but before you can set a goal, you need to take time and look back over the last 12 months and review your progress. Now is the perfect time to do it!

There are two components two a blogging review that I recommend you undertake:

1. Quantitative review

This is your typical standard yearly review. You measure your performance against any goals you set for the year, plus a review of your key blogging metrics and analyse the results. The exact blogging metrics you are focusing on may differ to other bloggers, but the ones listed below will provide a solid foundation to analyse the health of your blog, especially if you haven't done this before.

Blog statistics

For these first statistics I have used Google Analytics latest terminology. While the exact wording of the statistic may differ in other analytics packages, the metrics should still be easily found:

  • Sessions – a session is a group of interactions that take place on your website within a given time frame. You can read more about sessions here. What is the trend for the year?
  • Acquisition – this refers to how visitors came to your site. Within this you can find out who your top referring sites and social media channels were. This data is important to know so you can make decisions about where you invest your time with activities like guest posts and how much time you spend on a particular social media for example.
  • Average session duration – measures how long visitors are spending on your blog. Within this data set it is important to note the behaviour of different sources of traffic. Pinterest referrals may be your biggest referrer of traffic for example, but they may actually stay on your site for the shortest duration, bouncing quickly away from your site, giving you eyeballs but not engaged readers. This analysis allows you to place a more holistic view of the quality of the traffic you are receiving from differing sources.
  • Popular posts overall – this will show you what posts are evergreen for your blog. By looking at these posts you can generate ideas for future content.
  • Popular posts for 2016 – as with your evergreen content, finding out what has resonated with readers this year can help with ideas for content for the New Year. (You may need to do a manual analysis to collate this list of popular content.)

You can see Darren's post on 17 Statistics to Monitor on Your Blog if you want to look into this area further.

Newsletter statistics

The next statistics to look at are your newsletter statistics. If you don't have a newsletter for your blog then that should definitely be on your list of key actions to do this week! To see why it is so important to have a newsletter read these posts from Darren 8 Reasons to Add a Newsletter to Your Blog and 4 Pretty Pictures to Illustrate Impact of Email Newsletters on Traffic.

If you have a newsletter take time to review these stats:

  • Average open and click rate – to see how you compare to industry averages you can use this table as a guide
  • Average subscribe rate – this looks at what your monthly average subscribe rate for your newsletter list. If there are months where you had higher subscribes, look to find the cause and see if you can replicate it.
  • Annual subscribe percentage increase – while monthly subscribe rates are useful, it is good to see a longer term trend and know how your list has grown over the year.
  • Average unsubscribe rate – look at what campaigns where above the average and try and identify what factors may have caused the increase. See if you can make changes to your campaigns to prevent it from occurring again.
  • Popular campaigns via open rate for the year – like your popular posts on the blog, analysing the data can help you create content that will resonate with your subscribers for the coming year
  • Popular campaigns via click rate for the year – if click through is something you are focusing on for your newsletters, then examine this stat, looking at what type of links get people clicking through to your blog and replicate it where possible.

How to conduc

Social media statistics

For those social media networks you are active on, it is important to analyse their performance over the year. The purpose of having a presence on social media networks may be different for each blogger. For some being on social media is key to amplifying blog content and having people click through to blog. For others it is about building community, engagement and trust. How you analyse the statistics of each social media platform will therefore depend on your purpose:

  • if click-through is your purpose, then you will need to dig into your Google Analytic referral stats to see which networks are performing the best for you and what posts are gaining the most traction on your networks. You will also need to examine the reach you have on each network and what the trends have been over the year.
  • if you are using social media for community then looking at engagements and growth stats would be your focus to assess if the time you are spending on the networks is giving the results you are after.

Monetization statistics

If you have monetized your blog, then you will also need to review this aspect of your blog's performance for the year. A base review should include the following:

  • Percentage changes from previous year in revenue, expenses and net profit – look at why the changes occurred and take this take this into account for your plan for 2017.
  • Revenue make up – analysing key sources of revenue and their trends. This means breaking down revenue into streams like advertising, sponsored posts, product, freelance work, affiliates etc.
  • Most profitable revenue streams – while revenue in raw total maybe high for a particular stream, once expenses including your time are accounted for it may not be the most profitable revenue stream. For most bloggers time is a key restraint, so working out where you are getting your best return for time invested is important.

2. Qualitative review

Once you have completed the number based review, it is important to undertake a qualitative review of your blog as well. This allows you to take a bigger picture look at the performance of your blog for the year. The blogosphere is fast moving and changes rapidly. So you can capture all of what you achieved, not just the numbers that fell out at the end, there are some questions you can ask yourself:

  • What were your key achievements – you may have failed to achieve some of the goals you set yourself, but you may have scored your first speaking gig that you hadn't set as part of your goals. It is important to take time to acknowledge your successes that cannot be measured by a stats package.
  • What challenges did you overcome – blogging will have thrown you many challenges over the year. What did you face and overcome? Your blog might have been hacked, you might have lost some freelance work from one source but pitched for new work and won it.
  • What did you learn – there is always so much we can take away from the challenges we face, so take time to reflect on what you learnt and how you can apply it to improve you blogging for the year to come.
  • How do you feel overall about your year – some years are definitely better than others! How did this year feel for you and what does that mean for how you want to approach your blogging in 2017?
  • What are your initial thoughts for the New Year – without even having thought about goals or targets for the New Year, you may already have a feel for how you want to tackle 2017. Is this the year you ramp it up and go full time? Or is it a year where you want to reclaim your nights and not work so much on your blog?

Once you have completed your annual blogging review, you will be in a much better place to be able to set a goal for your blog for the New Year; a goal that will truly reflect where you are and where you want to go.

How has your blogging year been for you?

Nicole Avery is a Melbourne mum to five beautiful kids aged seven to 17. She is the master organiser behind the popular parenting blog Planning With Kids and the creator of the Planned & Present e-course, a step-by-step guide for mums on how to organise the chaos of family life while still leaving space to enjoy it.

 

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