5 Ways Google Will Help You With Your Traffic
Tinu AbayomiPaul
If you’ve ever had a severe drop in your Google rankings in search
results, you may think of Google more of an enemy than an ally.
But if you knew what I do, you’d realize that there are tools
provided by the search engine that help you learn more about your
traffic, and may even help drive visitors to your site.
Here
are five ways that Google provides free traffic assistance.
#1 - Google will Help Your Pages Get Discovered with Google Sitemaps
http://www.google.com/webmasters/tools
Google
Sitemaps is a program that gives you the opportunity to present your
site’s pages to Google in XML or text.
Google will then come by
and spider the pages, getting you indexed faster.
Take note
that this doesn’t necessarily mean that your pages will be listed
for your favorite keywords, only that discovery will take place a
lot faster than with manual submission. Google Sitemaps will also
give you some basic site stats if you verify your site, such as the
top keywords for discovery, errors it found when crawling, and the
types of documents at your site.
If you find compiling your
sitemap for Google in the correct format difficult, try the SOFTplus
GSiteCrawler Google Sitemap generator. It’s my favorite Sitemap
generator, free and easy to use.
#2 - Google Will Talk To You
and Your Webmaster In His or Her Native Tongue or Plain English with
the Webmaster Section
http://www.google.com/webmasters/
The Google Information
Page for Webmasters should be your first stop when you want to know
more about anything that has to do with your site and its
relationship to Google and any of its many flavors of search such as
Froogle.
Particularly for new site owners or operators, checking
this page first has saved many from needless anxiety.
Most of
the basic information is in straightforward language, with links to
details for geeks like me.
#3 - Google will Tell You What It
Knows with Web Page Information
If you type info:yoursite.com
into Google, Google will tell show you a page that has your link at
the top of the page, with a short description, and the following
phrase “Google can show you the following information for this URL”.
This special page compiles several queries about your site including
pages that contain your URL (all the pages Google knows of that are
linked to you).
#4 - Google will Help You Analyze Your
Traffic with Google Analytics
http://www.google.com/analytics/
After a recent purchase
of Urchin Stats, a free online version has been made available, and
re-branded as Google Analytics. This cookie-based invisible visitor
tracker can give you information that go a bit beyond standard stats
such as bounce rates, visitor loyalty, keyword discovery results for
a single day, click paths through your site, and page views per
visit.
With the ability to analyze your traffic, you can help
learn where the holes in your site are, and how to keep them on your
site for longer periods of time, as well as better ways to steer a
visit towards a specific action, such as a subscription. Results
come in flavors for the executive and the search marketer alike.
There’s currently a waiting list to use Google Analytics due to
popular demand.
#5 - Google Will Advise On Getting the Most
from Your Traffic with Conversion University
http://www.google.com/analytics/conversionuniversity.html
Google Analytics also has two content sections that are available to
all, called Conversion University. While the articles are decidedly
slanted towards AdWords users, a prudent read yields many clues that
can be applied to preparing for visitors who arrive through organic
search discovery. One reference area is called “Driving Traffic”,
the other “Converting Visitors.”
At the end of the day, the
process by which your site gets ranked in Google search engine
results is a computation of a complex algorithm, which means Google
- the search engine - really isn’t capable of being your best friend
or your worst enemy.
Meanwhile, Google - the company - also
provides access to resources that will help give your site a
fighting chance.
Is it possible to build
a site that withstands the search engine updates? Join the
speculation
at http://www.freetraffictip.com/algorithm-proof
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