"There are times when you want to expand your keywords but you have run out of ideas and places to look. In this post I will examine some alternate tools to help you come up with new keywords.\n\nAlways remember, just because a tool suggested a keyword does not mean you should use it. Consider the implications of cost and profit potential of a keyword before adding it to your account."
"In recent weeks I've noticed a disturbing new trend in Google SERP's: Google has become much more aggressive at trying to reverse engineer the publication date of a post/page.First let's be clear about what we're discussing. In some cases, when you do a search, Google will show a date in the listing. See the example below:"
Google is pretty secretive about all this--understandably, as it's the company's bread and butter and there are viable alternatives out there, like Microsoft Bing and Yahoo--so this infographic is based on the little information and clues Google has given. Even for someone who deals with SEO (search engine optimization) all day (alternate headline for this post: "Google Apple Babies Steve Jobs Boobs iPhone Obama Scandal!"), there's some stuff in here I didn't know.
Customers often perform searches by typing related keywords in specific sequences. This tool helps in visualizing and analyzing the customers' search sequences. For example, you can learn how many people search for BMW and then search for Mercedes Benz, Audi, and other automobiles. Please enter a keyword and select options.
People often type questions into search engines. Now you can find these questions, answer them and get some great search traffic. You'll be targeting long tail keywords and providing content that readers want to read and link to. Also try the keyword tool the professional SEO uses. Enter a single or a short keyword to find the questions people are asking in your market (examples: business, diet, car, organic, climate change, obama).
"If your query includes the name of a company, an organization or any name associated with a website, many of the top search results are pages from that site."
"However, and you might need to sit down for this, not all searches occur on Google, or Yahoo, or Bing. So where do these searches happen, and why should you, the search marketer, care?
These other sites are described as the Search Network. These sites have traffic they are looking to monetize, but they aren't interested in the upkeep and technology required to build their own search engine. These sites partner with an established search engine to power their results. The most common example is AOL leveraging Google to power their search results. "