Website Design
Business to Business websites tailored to your customers' needs
Are you one of the thousands of websites who uses bit.ly, tiny url and other URL shorteners to redirect people to your site via Facebook, Twitter or any other social networking websites? [Read On]
Mobile search has just entered its next phase thanks to the launch of Google Search, Google’s revamped and hugely important new version of its Google Mobile iPhone app. [Read On]
Paid mobile search is a very new concept here in the UK, but our friends ‘across the pond’ have already started making serious investment in this area. A report released last week from banking and investment firm Macquarie Group shows that nearly five per cent of paid search spending in the United States is now allocated to paid mobile search. Assuming this growth continues at the same rate, that figure will be 10 per cent by the end of the year. [Read On]
Google has made a major upheaval to its search algorithm which will affect 11.8% of queries, as the company decisively acts against 'content farms' and other so-called low quality websites that it has decided are manipulating SEO tactics to secure higher-than-deserved rankings in the search engine results pages (SERPs). [Read On]
Light has been shed on the closer mechanics of mobile SEO after Google recently issued a blog piece about how mobile websites can best interact with search engine crawlers. [Read On]
Google's search results will now show more content about what friends of users have linked to or mentioned on social media sites, the company has said. [Read On]
Google's web browser, Chrome, now has a new extension that allows users to block 'content farms' and sites with low-quality content. In a move that is sure to be welcomed by SEO agencies assisting clients with unique and quality content, the free add-on - called Personal Blocklist - is a direct response from Google on a growing issue that has led to recent accusations about the search engine's declining quality of results (SERPs). [Read On]
Search engine optimisation operations can be undermined by a site that offers a substandard user experience, according to one expert. Osric Powell, head of business development at SLI Systems, wrote in a guest blog post for Econsultancy that hoarding SEO friendly terms into website content was not the way to improve performance, since the use of such concentrated keywords could potentially 'confuse' your site search solution. Moreover, this approach could attract the attention of search engines – and for the wrong reasons - if not executed with due diligence and thought. [Read On]
Recent research has shown that many UK businesses are not using search engine optimisation (SEO) techniques to improve their website’s position in search engine rankings. [Read On]