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Rob Laporte

Attribution Models for Marketers: The Definitive Guide - AgencyAnalytics - 0 views

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    "Attribution Models for Marketers: The Definitive Guide"
Rob Laporte

How to measure the brand/non-brand split of your search traffic - 0 views

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    "How to measure the brand/non-brand split of your search traffic"
Rob Laporte

A Practical Guide To Multi-touch Attribution - 0 views

  • According to Salesforce.com, it takes, on average, six to eight touches to generate a lead in the B2B space.
  • The number of touchpoints is even higher for a customer purchase.
  • understand the customer journey
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  • A heuristic model looks at only the paths that lead to a conversion and ignores the non-converting paths. A data-driven model uses data from both converting and non-converting paths.
  • Examine Results From Different Attribution Models In GA4
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    "A Practical Guide To Multi-Touch Attribution"
Rob Laporte

Data sharing settings - Analytics Help - 0 views

  • You benefit when this setting is ON because Analytics data can be used to help build better tools and provide guidance that can help your marketing and analysis efforts. Benchmarking data lets you know where you stand in your industry and contributes to research analyses that uncover important market trends, like year-over-year increase in mobile traffic.
Rob Laporte

Google's knowledge panel: What is it and how to get one? * Yoast - 0 views

  • There are two types of knowledge panels: local panels and branded/personal panels. Google calls both of these knowledge panels, but the process of verifying them is totally different. For the local panels, verification was already possible through Google My Business.
  • For the branded and personal panels, it is much harder to obtain such a knowledge panel.
  • Google will decide whether or not to show a knowledge panel. Relevance, distance, and the prominence of the business are all important aspects for Google in determining if it’ll show knowledge panels.
Rob Laporte

Holding Onto Your Marketing Budget in a Downturn - 0 views

  • As some competitors dial back their spend during the turndown, advertisers who stay the course are likely to realize big benefits.
Rob Laporte

How to Optimize for Google's Featured Snippets to Build More Traffic - Moz - 1 views

  • Multiple studies confirm that the majority of featured snippets are triggered by long-tail keywords. In fact, the more words that are typed into a search box, the higher the probability there will be a featured snippet.
  • To avoid confusion, let's stick to the "featured snippet" term whenever there's a URL featured in the box, because these present an extra exposure to the linked site (hence they're important for content publishers):
  • It helps if you use a keyword research tool that shows immediately whether a query triggers featured results. SE Ranking offers a nice filter allowing you to see keywords that are currently triggering featured snippets:
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  • Tools like Buzzsumo and Text Optimizer can give you a good insight into questions people tend to ask around your topic:
  • Note that Search Console labels featured snippet positions as #1 (SEO used to call them position 0). So when you see #1 in Google Search Console, there’s nothing to do here. Focus on #2 and lower.
  • MyBlogU (disclaimer: I am the founder) is a great way to do that. Just post a new project in the " Brainstorm" section and ask members to contribute their thoughts.
  • 1. Aim at answering each question concisely My own observation of answer boxes has led me to think that Google prefers to feature an answer which was given within one paragraph. An older study by AJ Ghergich cites that the average length of a paragraph snippet is 45 words (the maximum is 97 words), so let it be your guideline as to how long each answer should be in order to get featured. This doesn't mean your articles need to be one paragraph long. On the contrary, these days Google seems to give preference to long-form content (also known as " cornerstone content," which is obviously a better way to describe it because it's not just about length) that's broken into logical subsections and features attention-grabbing images.  Even if you don’t believe that cornerstone content receives any special treatment in SERPs, focusing on long articles will help you to cover more related questions within one piece (more on that below). All you need to do is to adjust your blogging style just a bit: Ask the question in your article (that may be a subheading)Immediately follow the question with a one-paragraph answerElaborate further in the article
  • 2. Be factual and organize well Google loves numbers, steps and lists. We've seen this again and again: More often than not, answer boxes will list the actual ingredients, number of steps, time to cook, year and city of birth, etc. Use Google’s guide on writing meta descriptions to get a good idea what kind of summaries and answers they are looking to generate snippets (including featured snippets). Google loves well-structured, factual, and number-driven content. There's no specific markup to structure your content. Google seems to pick up <table>, <ol>, and <ul> well and doesn't need any other pointers. Using H2 and H3 subheadings will make your content easier to understand for both Google and your readers. 3. Make sure one article answers many related questions Google is very good at determining synonymic and closely related questions, so should be you. There's no point in creating a separate page answering each specific question. Creating one solid article addressing many related questions is a much smarter strategy if you aim at getting featured in answer boxes. This leads us to the next tactic: 4. Organize your questions properly To combine many closely related questions in one article, you need to organize your queries properly. This will also help you structure your content well. I have a multi-level keyword organization strategy that can be applied here as well: A generic keyword makes a section or a category of the blogA more specific search query becomes the title of the articleEven more specific queries determine the subheadings of the article and thus define its structureThere will be multiple queries that are so closely related that they will all go under a single subheading For example: Serpstat helps me a lot when it comes to both discovering an article idea and then breaking it into subtopics. Check out its " Questions" section. It will provide hundreds of questions containing your core term and then generate a tag cloud of other popular terms that come up in those questions:
  • 5. Make sure to use eye-grabbing images
  • How about structured markup? Many people would suggest using Schema.org (simply because it's been a "thing" to recommend adding schema for anything and everything) but the aforementioned Ahrefs study shows that there's no correlation between featured results and structured markup.
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    "Organize your questions properly"
Rob Laporte

Does Review Recency Matter for Google Rankings? - 1 views

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    "GMB Everywhere review audit"
Rob Laporte

Lowdown on the Google Mobile Popup Penalty for Website Users - 0 views

  • It is important to note that this penalty is applied on a page by page basis. Meaning, the page itself will be demoted in Google, but not the entire site.
  • Small app banners. Generally, best practice to ensure that not more than 1/4th of the mobile screen is taken up.
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    "sites that have been negatively impacted"
Rob Laporte

Google September Core Update & Product Reviews Update Both Completed On September 26th - 0 views

  • Both updates were fairly large and had big impacts for many many sites. Which one impacted which, despite what Google said, can be hard to pin point.
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