The 10 Key Elements of a High Quality Website

Posted by myseoin Friday, December 19, 2014 0 comments

Have you ever wondered what makes a great website? You know things like content, videos, and images are all important, but there has to be more to it, right?
There is!
For example, 79% of people scan web pages, so if you don’t know how to make your page optimally scannable, it won’t do well. And that’s just the tip of it… there are a ton of small things you need to do in order to create a high quality website.
Here are 10 of them:
Click on the image below to see a larger view:
The 10 Key Elements of a High Quality Website
Courtesy of: Quick Sprout

Fetch As Google

Posted by myseoin Thursday, May 29, 2014 0 comments

The Fetch as Google feature in Webmaster Tools provides webmasters with the results of Googlebot attempting to fetch their pages. The server headers and HTML shown are useful to diagnose technical problems and hacking side-effects, but sometimes make double-checking the response hard: Help! What do all of these codes mean? Is this really the same page as I see it in my browser? Where shall we have lunch? We can't help with that last one, but for the rest, we've recently expanded this tool to also show how Googlebot would be able to render the page.

How It Works

Before using the Fetch as Google, you’ll need to have added and verified your site in Webmaster Tools. Then, follow these instructions:
  • On the Webmaster Tools Home page, click the site you want.
  • On the Dashboard, under Crawl, click Fetch as Google.
  • In the text box, type the path to the page you want to check.
  • In the dropdown list, select the type of fetch you want. To see what our web crawler Googlebot sees, select Web. To see what our mobile crawler for smartphones sees, select Mobile Smartphone. To see what our mobile crawler for feature phones sees, select Mobile cHTML (this is used mainly for Japanese web sites) or Mobile XHTML/WML.
  • Click Fetch for having Googlebot fetch the path you entered, or click Fetch and Render to have Googlebot both fetch the path and render it as webpage.

You can use this tool to fetch up to 500 URLs a week per Webmaster Tools account. When rendering a page, Googlebot will try fetch all the external files as well. Such as images, CSS and JavaScript files. These files are then used to render a preview image that allows you to see your page as Googlebot sees it.

Although this series is targeted to agencies, it is also relevant to marketers and general users of Google Analytics.

This is simply a demonstration of the new interface, and is intended to help locate reports and analysis tools in their new locations, not a guide for deep analysis. The next four sessions in this seven part series will provide analysis techniques to identify opportunities for optimization.