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Rob Laporte

65+ Best Free SEO Chrome Extensions (As Voted-for by SEO Community) - 1 views

  • Link Redirect Trace — Uncovers all URLs in a redirect chain including 301’s, 302’s, etc. Very useful for finding (and regaining) lost “link juice,” amongst other things.Other similar extensions: Redirect Path
  • Scraper — Scrape data from any web page using XPath or jQuery. Integrates with Google Sheets for one-click export to a spreadsheet. Or you can copy to clipboard and paste into Excel.Other similar extensions: Data Scraper — Easy Web Scraping, XPather
  • Tag Assistant (by Google) — Check for the correct installation of Google tags (e.g. Google Analytics, Tag Manager, etc) on any website. Also, record typical user flows on your website to diagnose and fix implementation errors.
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  • Web Developer — Adds a web developer toolbar to Chrome. Use it to check how your website looks on different screen sizes, find images with missing alt text, and more.
  • WhatRuns — Instantly discover what runs any website. It uncovers the CMS, plugins, themes, ad networks, fonts, frameworks, analytics tools, everything.
  • Page Load Time — Measures and displays page load time in the toolbar. Also breaks down this metric by event to give you deeper insights. Simple, but very useful.
  • FATRANK — Tells you where the webpage you’re visiting ranks in Google for any keyword/phrase.
  • SEOStack Keyword Tool — Finds thousands of low-competition, long-tail keywords in seconds. It does this by scraping Google, Youtube, Bing, Yahoo, Amazon, and eBay. All data can be exported to CSV.
  • Window Resizer — Resize your browser window to see how a website looks on screens of different sizes. It has one-click emulation for popular sizes/resolutions (e.g. iPhone, iPad, laptop, desktop, etc).
  • Ghostery — Tells you how websites are tracking you (e.g. Facebook Custom Audiences, Google Analytics, etc) and blocks them. Very useful for regaining privacy. Plus, websites generally load faster when they don’t need to load tracking technologies.
  • Ayima Page Insights — Uncovers technical and on-page issues for any web page. It also connects to Google Search Console for additional insights on your web properties.
  • ObservePoint TagDebugger — Audit and debug issues with website tags (e.g. Google Analytics, Tag Manager, etc) on your websites. Also checks variables and on-click events.Other similar extensions: Event Tracking Tracker
  • The Tech SEO — Quick Click Website Audit — Provides pre-formatted links (for the current URL) to a bunch of popular SEO tools. A very underrated tool that reduces the need for mundane copy/pasting.
  • User-Agent Switcher for Chrome — Mimic user-agents to check that your website displays correctly in different browsers and/or OS’.
  • Portent’s SEO Page Review — Reviews the current page and kicks back a bunch of data including meta tags, canonicals, outbound links, H1-H6 tags, OpenGraph tags, and more.
  • FindLinks — Highlights all clickable links/elements on a web page in bright yellow. Very useful for finding links on websites with weird CSS styling.
  • SERPTrends SEO Extension — Tracks your Google, Bing, and Yahoo searches. Then, if you perform the same search again, it shows ranking movements directly in the SERPs.
  • SimilarTech Prospecting — Discovers a ton of useful information about the website you’re visiting. This includes estimated monthly traffic, company information, social profiles, web technologies, etc.
  • SEO Search Simulator by Nightwatch — Emulates Google searches from any location. Very useful for seeing how rankings vary for a particular query in different parts of the world.
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    "Find Out How Much Traffic a Website Gets: 3 Ways Compared"
Rob Laporte

Should Google not trust links in all guest blog posts? - 0 views

  • Does Google even know what is a guest post and what is not? That is what Will Critchlow of Search Pilot and Brainlabs asked on Twitter. He said, “It’s also ridiculous because there is literally no way to tell from the outside whether a writer is an employee, a contractor, a freelancer, or a contributor (e.g. my status when I write for Moz.”As a matter of note; we nofollow links from our contributors here on Search Engine Land. In fact, even the links on my bio are nofollowed, and I am a daily writer here on staff at Search Engine Land.But it works. Many SEOs say that links in guest blog posts still work. It still works in that Google still somehow counts those links and they help you rank better in Google. Of course, it is almost impossible to test this to be true, since there are so many variables when it comes to ranking in Google search. But some believe it works.
Rob Laporte

SEO Starter Guide: The Basics | Google Search Central - 0 views

  • To tell Google not to follow or pass your page's reputation to the pages linked, set the value of the rel attribute of a link to nofollow or ugc. Nofollowing a link means adding rel="nofollow" or a more specific attribute such as ugc inside the link's anchor tag, as shown here:
  • Use the HTML <img> or <picture> elements
Jennifer Williams

Do Social Media Links Translate In Organic Rankings? - 0 views

  • Social media links (when not part of a larger strategy) are most effective for mid to long tail keywords. The head keywords were dominated by bigger brand domains with more domain trust and inbound links. Getting your most desirable keywords into the Digg title is crucial since subsequent links will use it as for the anchor text. Links and rankings gained from social media “stick”.
Rob Laporte

Two Ways To Justify SEO In Uncertain Times - 0 views

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    Oct 22, 2008 at 10:55am Eastern by Paul Bruemmer Two Ways To Justify SEO In Uncertain Times In House - A Column From Search Engine Land During uncertain economic times like these, our advice is to always stick with the fundamentals to maintain business efficiency and progress. No matter what your business model, performing the fundamentals will keep you on-track and in-line for leveraging future success. If the C-level executives in your company are having any doubts about the value of SEO and are hesitating to release more funding, it's time to perform a cost-benefit exercise. It's your job as an in-house SEO manager to reestablish their confidence in the value of SEO as well as your value and the value of your team. When funding gets in the way, having a narrow focus, putting it on the table, and describing company goals you are committed to are all very important. 1) Leverage Your Paid Search Data To demonstrate implicit value for SEO, start with a baseline. Show where your key terms currently rank in organic and multiply by the cost-per-click value. Run the numbers for the value of direct clicks with high search intent. One way to go about this is to calculate an Effective Cost-Per-Click (eCPC) for your organic listings: 1. Access the Keyword Tool within your Google AdWords account. 2. Type your best performing (for instance, 20) keywords. 3. Select descriptive words or phrases and synonyms. 4. Click Get Keyword Ideas. This will produce a report; select Exact within the "Match Type" field and click on Approx Avg Search Volume. 1. Look at the Cost-Per-Click column to acquire the CPC value (let's assume it's $2.00). 2. Go to your web analytics data and identify the number of organic clicks for these keywords (let's assume 20,000/month). 3. Multiply the two (CPC times the number of organic clicks (in this case $40,000/mo)). 4. Create a spreadsheet with your best performing keywords and make the statement, "if we
Rob Laporte

Invest Time in Twitter Now for Long-Term Rewards - Search Engine Watch (SEW) - 0 views

  • In terms of short-term gain, this can lead to links from outside of Twitter (links within Twitter are nofollowed). Those links can drive a handsome return on the time you invested. Links are still the short-term payout. Will there come a time where "social media mentions" are a factor in search engine rankings? Or will Twitter ever be able to send thousands or tens of thousands of visitors per day to Web sites? Probably, but for most people it isn't here yet. But links are available now. Focus on building a topic-matter-specific Twitter account, publish quality content, network with influencers, and you'll get links. If you do this well, and have a bit of luck, some of them may be from highly trusted and authoritative sources. In addition, you'll put yourself in a position where your direct Twitter traffic can grow as Twitter moves towards the mainstream. Publishing this type of quality content in sufficient volume is hard work. You can't dip your toe in the water, you need to dive in, and you need to be patient because the process takes time. Focus your goals on the right objectives and your chances of success go up significantly.
Rob Laporte

How Individuals Can Build a Robust Social Presence - ClickZ - 0 views

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    How to Build a Robust Social Presence Get your basic data out there. For many professionals, the core of your social presence probably involves one or more of these: LinkedIn, Facebook, and Twitter. Each of these can be set up in less than five minutes and costs you nothing. Before jumping in, a few tips are in order: * When creating your profile, be sure to include a nice photo, and follow the steps suggested at each site to complete as much of your profile as you can. When you're considering adding, following, or contacting someone, think about the impact of missing or otherwise insufficient information. Business networking should not feel like you're living in a mystery novel. None of us has time for that, so think about the people who are looking at you. Make it easy for them to understand who are and what you do. * Thoughtfully add people to your network. I overheard someone on a plane last week saying "I have over a thousand people in my personal network but have no idea who most of them are." If the people in your network lack credibility, what's that say about you? These are your "friends," right? * On LinkedIn, seek out recommendations, but only from people who are qualified to give them. Five hundred professional connections without a single recommendation sends an unfortunate message. Likewise, a recommendation that starts out "I've never actually worked with Dave, but..." is useless, and detracts from social capital and personal credibility. * Participate. Leverage your ability to add or become friends, to post, and to comment to your advantage. Talk about your business, about news that relates to you or your profession, about things that are of interest to your audience. Do not shill or spam. * Be careful with questions like "What are you doing right now?" This common question -- in the context of business -- is a thought-starter, not a literal interrogative. The best response is less along the lines of "ea
Rob Laporte

Official Google Webmaster Central Blog: Make your 404 pages more useful - 0 views

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    This Blog Google Blogs Web Blog News This Blog Google Blogs Web Blog News Make your 404 pages more useful Tuesday, August 19, 2008 at 10:13 AM Your visitors may stumble into a 404 "Not found" page on your website for a variety of reasons: * A mistyped URL, or a copy-and-paste mistake * Broken or truncated links on web pages or in an email message * Moved or deleted content Confronted by a 404 page, they may then attempt to manually correct the URL, click the back button, or even navigate away from your site. As hinted in an earlier post for "404 week at Webmaster Central", there are various ways to help your visitors get out of the dead-end situation. In our quest to make 404 pages more useful, we've just added a section in Webmaster Tools called "Enhance 404 pages". If you've created a custom 404 page this allows you to embed a widget in your 404 page that helps your visitors find what they're looking for by providing suggestions based on the incorrect URL. Example: Jamie receives the link www.example.com/activities/adventurecruise.html in an email message. Because of formatting due to a bad email client, the URL is truncated to www.example.com/activities/adventur. As a result it returns a 404 page. With the 404 widget added, however, she could instead see the following: In addition to attempting to correct the URL, the 404 widget also suggests the following, if available: * a link to the parent subdirectory * a sitemap webpage * site search query suggestions and search box How do you add the widget? Visit the "Enhance 404 pages" section in Webmaster Tools, which allows you to generate a JavaScript snippet. You can then copy and paste this into your custom 404 page's code. As always, don't forget to return a proper 404 code. Can you change the way it looks? Sure. We leave the HTML unstyled initially, but you can edit the CSS block that we've included. For more information, check out our gu
Rob Laporte

How to report paid links - 0 views

  • Q: I’m worried that someone will buy links to my site and then report that. A: We’ve always tried very hard to prevent site A from hurting site B. That’s why these reports aren’t being fed directly into algorithms, and are being used as the starting point rather than being used directly. You might also want to review the policy mentioned in my 2005 post (individual links can be discounted and sellers can lose their ability to pass on PageRank/anchortext/etc., which doesn’t allow site A to hurt site B).
jack_fox

- 0 views

  • There are lots of ways to work on getting links that are fine, and useful for both the site and the rest of the web. To say all link building is bad would be wrong.
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    "There are lots of ways to work on getting links that are fine, and useful for both the site and the rest of the web. To say all link building is bad would be wrong."
Rob Laporte

Google Discover SEO Best Practices - Moz - 0 views

  • Most article links that appear in Google Discover are sourced from non-Google publishers.
  • There are not many technical requirements to be featured in Google Discover, compared to Google News. You do not need a specific sitemap for Google Discover, nor is there any sort of manual submission process to make your content eligible for Discover feeds.
  • less predictable or dependable when compared to Search
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  • Technical Guidelines for Article Links There are two technical requirements that are recommended by Google in order to be featured in Discover feeds, listed below. These recommendations apply only to the ‘Article Link’ content types. These technical guidelines do not apply to YouTube videos or shorts, web stories or Ads.
  • Images are a major part of the Google Discover experience
  • RSS Feeds
  • Follow Feature
  • quality of its content
  • Provide content that's timely for current interests, tells a story well, or provides unique insights
  • The “shelf life” of an article within a Google Discover feed may only be 1 or 2 days.
  • According to a Search Engine Journal study, 46% of a sample size of Google Discover URLs were news sites and 44% were Ecommerce.
  • It's important to note that impressions are only counted when a link from your site is scrolled into view.
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    "Most article links that appear in Google Discover are sourced from non-Google publishe"
Rob Laporte

Google Confirms "Mayday" Update Impacts Long Tail Traffic - 0 views

  • Google Confirms “Mayday” Update Impacts Long Tail Traffic May 27, 2010 at 11:02am ET by Vanessa Fox Google made between 350 and 550 changes in its organic search algorithms in 2009. This is one of the reasons I recommend that site owners not get too fixated on specific ranking factors. If you tie construction of your site to any one perceived algorithm signal, you’re at the mercy of Google’s constant tweaks. These frequent changes are one reason Google itself downplays algorithm updates. Focus on what Google is trying to accomplish as it refines things (the most relevant, useful results possible for searchers) and you’ll generally avoid too much turbulence in your organic search traffic. However, sometimes a Google algorithm change is substantial enough that even those who don’t spend a lot of time focusing on the algorithms notice it. That seems to be the case with what those discussing it at Webmaster World have named “Mayday”. Last week at Google I/O, I was on a panel with Googler Matt Cutts who said, when asked during Q&A,  ”this is an algorithmic change in Google, looking for higher quality sites to surface for long tail queries. It went through vigorous testing and isn’t going to be rolled back.” I asked Google for more specifics and they told me that it was a rankings change, not a crawling or indexing change, which seems to imply that sites getting less traffic still have their pages indexed, but some of those pages are no longer ranking as highly as before. Based on Matt’s comment, this change impacts “long tail” traffic, which generally is from longer queries that few people search for individually, but in aggregate can provide a large percentage of traffic. This change seems to have primarily impacted very large sites with “item” pages that don’t have many individual links into them, might be several clicks from the home page, and may not have substantial unique and value-added content on them. For instance, ecommerce sites often have this structure. The individual product pages are unlikely to attract external links and the majority of the content may be imported from a manufacturer database. Of course, as with any change that results in a traffic hit for some sites, other sites experience the opposite. Based on Matt’s comment at Google I/O, the pages that are now ranking well for these long tail queries are from “higher quality” sites (or perhaps are “higher quality” pages). My complete speculation is that perhaps the relevance algorithms have been tweaked a bit. Before, pages that didn’t have high quality signals might still rank well if they had high relevance signals. And perhaps now, those high relevance signals don’t have as much weight in ranking if the page doesn’t have the right quality signals. What’s a site owner to do? It can be difficult to create compelling content and attract links to these types of pages. My best suggestion to those who have been hit by this is to isolate a set of queries for which the site now is getting less traffic and check out the search results to see what pages are ranking instead. What qualities do they have that make them seen as valuable? For instance, I have no way of knowing how amazon.com has faired during this update, but they’ve done a fairly good job of making individual item pages with duplicated content from manufacturer’s databases unique and compelling by the addition of content like of user reviews. They have set up a fairly robust internal linking (and anchor text) structure with things like recommended items and lists. And they attract external links with features such as the my favorites widget. From the discussion at the Google I/O session, this is likely a long-term change so if your site has been impacted by it, you’ll likely want to do some creative thinking around how you can make these types of pages more valuable (which should increase user engagement and conversion as well). Update on 5/30/10: Matt Cutts from Google has posted a YouTube video about the change. In it, he says “it’s an algorithmic change that changes how we assess which sites are the best match for long tail queries.” He recommends that a site owner who is impacted evaluate the quality of the site and if the site really is the most relevant match for the impacted queries, what “great content” could be added, determine if the the site is considered an “authority”, and ensure that the page does more than simply match the keywords in the query and is relevant and useful for that query. He notes that the change: has nothing to do with the “Caffeine” update (an infrastructure change that is not yet fully rolled out). is entirely algorithmic (and isn’t, for instance, a manual flag on individual sites). impacts long tail queries more than other types was fully tested and is not temporary
Rob Laporte

Myths and Truths About Google GrayBar PR - 0 views

  • 2 opposing opinions on Graybar PR expressed: TBPR (and consequently Graybar PR) is just broken (as well as Google back link operator). OR: Both Toolbar PR and Back link operator are not broken but “de-SEO-usefulised“. Google uses them for disinformation. Graybar PR plays the role of a warning: the message might be that the page has been algorithmically flagged as looking like the kind of page that might be selling links. If this is the message, it would be directed both to the potential link buyer (to fuzz up what the TBPR of the page is) and to the potential link seller (as a note that Google is watching this page). Graybar PR might also mean the page was dropped out of index (or just not indexed yet) or penalized for infringing the guidelines. Graybar PR facts: FACT: gray PR is not the same as PR 0 (zero); FACT: graybar PR can mean the site is new and has not yet been into PR update; FACT: gray PR doesn’t directly mean the site is penalized or is deindexed; FACT: gray PR can be a signal of improper behavior (more checks are needed to make sure your OK / not OK); FACT: Toolbar PR can change and even become gray with no impact on performance; FACT: if gray PR did not effect other aspects of your site web life (rankings, number of indexed pages, etc), that might be a glitch inherent in the bar (wait a bit and see; or try to open the page in other browsers). Another possible signal of a glitch is that TBPR goes gray without waiting for the next PR update.
Rob Laporte

Google Says Domain Registrations Don't Affect SEO, Or Do They? - 0 views

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    Google Says Domain Registrations Don't Affect SEO, Or Do They? Sep 9, 2009 at 2:01pm ET by Matt McGee Over at Search Engine Roundtable today, Barry Schwartz writes about the latest comments from Google about domain registration and its impact on SEO/search rankings. In this case, it's Google employee John Mueller suggesting in a Google Webmaster Help forum thread that Google doesn't look at the length of a domain registration: A bunch of TLDs do not publish expiration dates - how could we compare domains with expiration dates to domains without that information? It seems that would be pretty hard, and likely not worth the trouble. Even when we do have that data, what would it tell us when comparing sites that are otherwise equivalent? A year (the minimum duration, as far as I know) is pretty long in internet-time :-). But let's look at some more evidence. Earlier this year, Danny spoke with Google's Matt Cutts about a variety of domain/link/SEO issues. In light of the claims from domain registrars that longer domain registrations are good for SEO, Danny specifically asked "Does Domain Registration Length Matter?" Matt's reply: To the best of my knowledge, no search engine has ever confirmed that they use length-of-registration as a factor in scoring. If a company is asserting that as a fact, that would be troubling. But wait, there's more! Shortly after the Q&A with Danny that we posted here, Matt published more thoughts on the matter in a video on the Google Webmaster Central Channel on YouTube. If you don't have time to watch the video, Matt says, "My short answer is not to worry very much about that [the number of years a domain is registered], not very much at all." He reiterates that the domain registrar claims "are not based on anything we said," and talks about a Google "historical data" patent that may or may not be part of Google's algorithm. He sums it up by saying, "make great content, don't worry nea
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    Google Says Domain Registrations Don't Affect SEO, Or Do They? Sep 9, 2009 at 2:01pm ET by Matt McGee Over at Search Engine Roundtable today, Barry Schwartz writes about the latest comments from Google about domain registration and its impact on SEO/search rankings. In this case, it's Google employee John Mueller suggesting in a Google Webmaster Help forum thread that Google doesn't look at the length of a domain registration: A bunch of TLDs do not publish expiration dates - how could we compare domains with expiration dates to domains without that information? It seems that would be pretty hard, and likely not worth the trouble. Even when we do have that data, what would it tell us when comparing sites that are otherwise equivalent? A year (the minimum duration, as far as I know) is pretty long in internet-time :-). But let's look at some more evidence. Earlier this year, Danny spoke with Google's Matt Cutts about a variety of domain/link/SEO issues. In light of the claims from domain registrars that longer domain registrations are good for SEO, Danny specifically asked "Does Domain Registration Length Matter?" Matt's reply: To the best of my knowledge, no search engine has ever confirmed that they use length-of-registration as a factor in scoring. If a company is asserting that as a fact, that would be troubling. But wait, there's more! Shortly after the Q&A with Danny that we posted here, Matt published more thoughts on the matter in a video on the Google Webmaster Central Channel on YouTube. If you don't have time to watch the video, Matt says, "My short answer is not to worry very much about that [the number of years a domain is registered], not very much at all." He reiterates that the domain registrar claims "are not based on anything we said," and talks about a Google "historical data" patent that may or may not be part of Google's algorithm. He sums it up by saying, "make great content, don't worry nea
Jennifer Williams

SEOmoz | Link Building Notes of an SEO Kindergartner - 0 views

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    This is my attempt to share all those link building tips that I learned from SEOmoz in a well structured manner so that they can be read as a complete document and can be referenced later when we need help in any particular area. I hope that all the SEO beginners out there will find this helpful and maybe, just maybe (a little tiny maybe), those SEO ninjas will also find it helpful in case they need to brush off a bit of rust here and there from their swords.
Jennifer Williams

Review: LinksManager Reciprocal Links Service - 0 views

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    Link manager tool.
Rob Laporte

Google Zaps Another Link Network, 'Several Thousand' Link Sellers Hit - 0 views

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    Cutts published a video
Rob Laporte

70+ Best Free SEO Tools (As Voted-for by the SEO Community) - 1 views

  • Soovle — Scrapes Google, Bing, Yahoo, Wikipedia, Amazon, YouTube, and Answers.com to generate hundreds of keyword ideas from a seed keyword. Very powerful tool, although the UI could do with some work.Hemingway Editor — Improves the clarity of your writing by highlighting difficult to read sentences, “weak” words, and so forth. A must-have tool for bloggers (I use it myself).
  • Yandex Metrica — 100% free web analytics software. Includes heat maps, form analytics, session reply, and many other features you typically wouldn’t see in a free tool.
  • For example, two of my all-time favourite tools are gInfinity (Chrome extension) and Chris Ainsworth’s SERPs extraction bookmarklet.By combining these two free tools, you can extract multiple pages of the SERPs (with meta titles + descriptions) in seconds.
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  • Keyword Mixer — Combine your existing keywords in different ways to try and find better alternatives. Also useful for removing duplicates from your keywords list.Note: MergeWords does (almost) exactly the same job albeit with a cleaner UI. However, there is no option to de-dupe the list.
  • LSIgraph.com — Latent Semantic Indexing (LSI) keywords generator. Enter a seed keyword, and it’ll generate a list of LSI keywords (i.e. keywords and topics semantically related to your seed keyword). TextOptimizer is another very similar tool that does roughly the same job.
  • Small SEO Tools Plagiarism Checker — Detects plagiarism by scanning billions of documents across the web. Useful for finding those who’ve stolen/copied your work without attribution.
  • iSearchFrom.com — Emulate a Google search using any location, device, or language. You can customise everything from SafeSearch settings to personalised search.
  • Delim.co — Convert a comma-delimited list (i.e. CSV) in seconds. Not necessarily an SEO tool per se but definitely very useful for many SEO-related tasks.
  • Am I Responsive? — Checks website responsiveness by showing you how it looks on desktop, laptop, tablet, and mobile.
  • SERPLab — Free Google rankings checker. Updates up to 50 keywords once every 24 hours (server permitting).
  • Varvy — Checks whether a web page is following Google’s guidelines. If your website falls short, it tells you what needs fixing.
  • JSON-LD Schema Generator — JSON-LD schema markup generator. It currently supports six markup types including: product, local business, event, and organization.
  • KnowEm Social Media Optimizer — Analyses your web page to see if it’s well-optimised for social sharing. It checks for markup from Facebook, Google+, Twitter, and LinkedIn.
  • Where Goes? — Shows you the entire path of meta-refreshes and redirects for any URL. Very useful for diagnosing link issues (e.g. complex redirect chains).
  • Google Business Review Link Generator — Generates a direct link to your Google Business listing. You can choose between a link to all current Google reviews, or to a pre-filled 5-star review box.
  • PublicWWW — Searches the web for pages using source code-based footprints. Useful for finding your competitors affiliates, websites with the same Google Analytics code, and more.
  • Keywordtool.io — Scrapes Google Autosuggest to generate 750 keyword suggestions from one seed keyword. It can also generate keyword suggestions for YouTube, Bing, Amazon, and more.
  • SERPWatcher — Rank tracking tool with a few unique metrics (e.g. “dominance index”). It also shows estimated visits and ranking distribution charts, amongst other things.
  • GTMetrix — Industry-leading tool for analysing the loading speed of your website. It also gives actionable recommendations on how to make your website faster.
  • Mondovo — A suite of SEO tools covering everything from keyword research to rank tracking. It also generates various SEO reports.SEO Site Checkup — Analyse various on-page/technical SEO issues, monitor rankings, analyse competitors, create custom white-label reports, and more.
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