March 2014 ~ Website Design, Development & SEO Service Provider @ 08553452211
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Sunday 16 March 2014

How to do Pay Per Click Services (PPC) for website


Pay per Click (PPC) is the quickest way to drive traffic to your site using services such as Google Ad Words or Microsoft Bing Ads.

If you know what you are doing, PPC can be a great way to quickly drive targeted traffic to your website; if you don’t, then it’s a sure-fire way to lose your online marketing budget rapidly.

With the time and knowledge to manage your own Ad Words or Bing Ads account, you may well find that there is no need to outsource to a PPC Management specialist. However, if you’d rather concentrate on running other aspects of your business, then outsourcing your Pay per Click campaigns may well be the best solution.



PPC Management in the Bangalore:

We are Hampshire based PPC specialists. We will review your Ad Words or Bing Ads account for free and without obligation to see how it is currently structured and provide feedback on our findings.

If we believe we can optimize your account to improve it, then we will offer to send you a proposal to carry out the work. No obligation, no pressure. If you’d like to find out more about our services, get in touch.

Google Ad Words Management Services

With Ad Words, Google isn't just running a keyword auction. Of course, you need to be prepared to bid the going rate for your phrase but they also reward relevancy. This means that if you put the effort in, you can still compete with the ‘big boys’ and get quality visitors to your site at a reasonable cost. Let others get embroiled in a bidding war and instead work on ensuring that your keywords, adverts and landing pages are relevant to what the searcher is actually looking for. Do this and Google will look favourably on you!

We provide a dedicated Ad Words campaign management service tailored to your specific needs and to ensure that you maximize the return on your marketing spend.

By investing in a solid and well-thought out online advertising strategy, you can improve your results and effectively meet your business objectives. If you’re a INDIA,UK,USA, based company, please contact us for an informal discussion about your PPC management requirements and to see if we may be able to help you.


Saturday 15 March 2014

Online Reputation Management


We pitched the client, and afterwards enforced, a reasonably formidable set up. Our explicit goal was to possess 90% of the primary 2 pages of Google ends up in six weeks. to regulate a minimum of eighteen positions, we tend to knew we would have liked to target more than simply 20 pieces of content. we have a tendency to set that we might outline 50 pieces of content, and as time went on, we'd confirm that 90th of content Google was signal that it likable (by slowly moving it up) and that it did not. The content we have a tendency to centered on fell into 2 natural classes, Pre-Existing Content and New Content. The content for every of those categories was as follows:

 Pre-Existing Content

  • Subdomains on the client's website - The client had created two of these before we were brought in. They were subdomains setup that specifically addressed the false accusations.
  • News articles - A benefit of the client being a big company is that they've already had plenty of mainstream press. We identified positive articles from Business Week, The Wall Street Journal, and other Industry publications to promote for the scam phrase. We found that, even if the article didn't contain the word 'scam', anchor text alone, linking to these strong domains, could get them to rank for the scam phrase.
  • Wikis - It seems that most industries and niches have their own wiki's. Our client had a page in a niche wiki, so we simply added the word 'scam' into the wiki in a natural way. Doing this, plus a few links, helped it rank for the scam phrase.
  • Blog Posts - There were a number of positive blog posts about the company already online. The problem was, as I mentioned previously, that the comment sections of many of them were overrun with very negative comments (we could tell most of the comments were anonymous and contained inaccurate and fake information, likely from competitors). So, we chose to only promote blog posts that had disabled comments. Even if a blog post had no comments, we didn't use it if comments were open because they could always turn negative.
  • Youtube - The client had created a few Youtube videos disputing the mis-information being spread about their business. Since YouTube allows for full content moderation, we found videos to be a great source of positive content that can be controlled.

New Content

  • Content on the client's website - When the client originally tried to tackle this problem themselves, they had created a few posts on their blog that were optimized for the brand name + scam keyword. Since an official brand site is the most likely site to rank for any query containing the brand name, this was a smart move.
  • Posts on sites we own - We have a fairly large number of blogs that we run as part of our business. Some of these blogs focus on the same industry as the client, so we simply created posts optimized for the scam keyword. Since these domains are aged and trusted, we knew it wasn't going to be too difficult to get them to rank.
  • Article Directories - Squidoo, HubPages, eZineArticles, Buzzle, InfoMarketers, Go Articles, and many more - We have nice, old accounts on many sites like these, so we added new articles optimized for our term to them.
  • Mini Blogs - We setup a number of mini-blogs on WordPress, Blogger, Posterous, Tumblr, and a few other WordPress MU sites we identified that we felt we'd be able to create a blog on that could rank.
  • New Sites We Created -We bought the .com, .net, and .org versions of the exact match domains for the search phrase (including the word 'scam', eg. brandnamescam.com). We also bought hyphenated versions of the domain as well. We then setup mini-sites on different c-class IP addresses.
Link Building

After we had our content targets identified and/or created, we started the link building process. One thing I absolutely loved about getting some of these articles ranked was that it took almost no work to get something on page 1. Some of the positive pre-existing articles that we wanted to get on page 1 were on sites like the New York Post, so it basically took 2 lower-quality links with the exact anchor text 'brand name scam' to get it on page 1. It made me (briefly) dream about how easy a job it must be to do SEO for a site like The Wall Street Journal; you can practically rank #1 for any low-competition search term you want!