Google
AdWords can show what search queries users look for, how many searches are
performed on those words and how much competition there is for that search
phrase. Understanding these search phrases is important to learning how to get
on the first page of Google.
The words
have to be located together on the same page of the site; Google searches pages
only when looking for phrases, not whole websites. Give the pages names that
tell search engines and users what they are instead of using generic names like
"page1."
Submit
your website's URL and sitemap to Google. Get linked to other sites. Google uses PageRank to
determine a website's importance based on how many other pages link to it. Google
searches the business profiles on this website.
Add
the physical location of your business to Google maps, if applicable. Businesses listed in Google Maps
are displayed first when a user enters a regional search phrase.
Getting ranked on the first page of Google's search listings is
no easy task.
Get your site listed on other sites already listed high in Google's search
rankings. Make sure the links have relevant keywords pointing to your site. For
example, a link pointing to "tattoo removal" will rank the linked-to
page higher in Google's search results rather than a link that says "click
here."
Create meaningful titles to your posts and pages. A sample of over 8 million
clicks shows that over 94% of users clicked on a first page result and less
than 6% actually clicking to the second page and selecting a result displayed
there. I wonder if the top few spots have increased in clicks with the
fairly new Google Instant feature. Are you still typing your query and
scrolling through the page? It seems like the chances for sites to get their
content into organic Google search results is continuing to decrease. Google
appears to be showing less organic results for SERPs that contain a result with
its sitelinks feature. Specifically, for many SERPs that display these kinds of
results, Google is now showing only a total of 7 organic search results (that’s
regular results, not including any universal search results that might appear):
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