My answer is outdated, now it works like this:
- Go to Google Search Console (former Webmaster Tools) and chose the site you want.
- On the left-hand menu, select LINKS, there you can also see your sites Internal links.
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Job Title: Business Owner
Company: Cesare Marchetti Online Marketing
Favorite Thing about SEO
When my plans work out well...
My answer is outdated, now it works like this:
@sceorily Yes my answer is more than 4 years old...
now the link in the Google Search Console (former Webmaster Tools) is called LINKS. There you can also see your sites Internal links.
The asteriks were wrong formatting from my side I guess.
Hi Judd,
Google will for sure notice that you are hiding elements and probably also look thoroughly into it (algorithmically) but as long as it is for the user's sake, i.e. make the user experience better on mobile and its NOT about trying to cheat (SEO wise) somehow you are pretty much on the safe side. So no problem in my opinion.
Hi Miriam,
Very good video with even further things to look into.
By the way I liked the guy on the other side of the table that is contributing to the video by basically saying absolutely nothing but eating hamburgers and lying on the bench...LOL...
Hi Ben,
You are welcome. Its also interesting for me to digg deeper into the Yelp-SEO...
Right the centroid thing (is Google not relying on distance right now and not using the centroid anymore?) could be a trigger too. Try to check that out systematically, maybe you can exclude it then as the source of the above situation.
If you liked my answers you can also mark one as a good response.
Cheers,
Cesare
Hi Ben,
Honestly I think you are doing more than most business' do on Yelp actually. And also the right things. My 2nd suggestion is something extremely marginal I thought of that can give you an advantage if everything else is done and the competition is top too.
But this doesn't seem to be the main problem in your situation.
It seems you did your "on-page" homework on Yelp already rather well. So the reason must lie somewhere else.
Right now these are my thoughts:
Yelp takes also into account behavioural KPI's like CTR, dwell time, etc. on the business page. Are they really so advanced? Are your competitions business pages that are 1/2 empty, with no reviews generating a better CTR, etc.: don't think so...Is there something on your pages that is negatively affecting the above KPI's, that turns off visitors?: maybe.
Some algorithmic thing (disadvantage) from Yelp: because of your size? looks spammy? "duplicates" in different locations are normal when you have different branches. because they want to force you to CPC? hope really not: that would be very short sighted saying the least...looks over optimized? maybe yes to some extent (text/keyword-wise). on the other hand they actually want you to fill in everything and use all their features... maybe something happens here by mistake due to the poor implementation of their algorithm: rather unlikely, one should first try to look for the errors with himself and not with the others...lol
my guess (not having seen your pages) right now is some kind over optimization...
Just some other thoughts that may help you in your quest.
Cheers,
Cesare
Hi Ben,
Very interesting indeed.
We do almost nothing, i.e. only the absolut minimum for our yelp pages and rank for the relevant keywords for all of them on the 1st position. But unfortunately Yelp is of very little use over here for the industry we are in...so I don't care so much..
Independently from that I have 2 points you didn't mention explicitly above but you might already have taken care about:
Hope this gives you additional inspirations...
Cheers,
Cesare
Hi Mike,
Yes I do have experience with that as our company has also several branches.
What you should do, probably in this order and that is in my opinion by far more important is the following:
More information on the topic you can find in this new section: https://moz.com/learn/seo/local
I didn't know of the Facebook Local thing honestly. Not sure if there is a clear mapping of a business with the according address/cities. I checked the source code of your Starbuck example. Facebook also uses JSON LD (schema markup) so they might do exactly what I suggest in point 3 for their Local Businesses (not completely sure but I don't have time to check that in depth...) in the background.
With point 1 + 2 you should already achieve a lot, point 3 is nice to have.
Hope this helps.
Cheers,
Cesare
HI
Will a Metadescription with GREEN checkmarks be perceived as spammy in general? Or is one with BLACK checkmarks better? Depends on the topic/target audience, etc.? --> see screenshots.
No doubt that the green will stand up more (increases CTR) in the SERPS but if it is perceived as less trustworthy or even spammy by the target audience its not worth doing it.
Any experience with that? Would really like to know what do you think about it.
Cheers,
Cesare
Hi,
If you use GTM to do it its a piece of cake. Really. I use that regularly. A click on a button its normally the same as clicking on a link. Here is the GTM help to set that up: https://support.google.com/analytics/answer/6164470?hl=en
By using GTM to set up conversion tracking goals you gain a lot of flexibility and speed. The first time you use GTM it might take some time to learn it, but its definitely worth the time investment. By the way its the method of choice for conversion tracking if you use it regularly.
I use to track all kind of conversions, A/B testing, add all kind of scripts, etc. with GTM for ourselves and all my clients.
You have to set up the GTM container on your website only once then you can add conversions, scripts, etc. without having to touch your websites code anymore, just by using the GTM backend, its as easy as publishing new versions of a website on Wordpress.
Hope this helps.
Cheers,
Cesare
Hi, you can use Search Console (Webmaster Tools) for that and see a list of internal links for your website as follows:
Cheers,
Cesare
Hi,
This won't be enough. You have to add markup. Google recommends doing this with JSON-LD. JSON-LD has the advantage of not being visible on the site. You also don't need to mix it within your HTML. It would look like this:
Breadcrumbs in the SERP's are nice but they won't bring you the gold... This kind of formatting ( > ) is easily overlooked. Almost only people that know about it like you and me would notice it...
Personally I would rather focus on reviews/ratings: https://developers.google.com/search/docs/data-types/reviews (add the markup if you have already ratings for your products or make it easy for people to rate your products so you can include that later). --> Reviews/Ratings might appear with stars on the SERP's: this is going to bring you the gold CTR wise you will see.
You could also add markup for the products to make Google better understand about your products and and what their according properties are.
And/or add your logo and all the social media profiles on your Knowledge Graph cards: https://developers.google.com/search/docs/guides/enhance-site
Depending on the shop CMS system you are using you might even find plugins that help you doing that., e.g. https://de.wordpress.org/plugins/json-api/.
Hope this helps.
Cheers,
Cesare
Hi Brian,
The external website could put a "nofollow" on their link to your website, but you can't do anything like this from your side. So if you want the links on the external website not to be followed by Google the only thing you can do is:
Cheers,
Cesare
Hi Ben,
Honestly I think you are doing more than most business' do on Yelp actually. And also the right things. My 2nd suggestion is something extremely marginal I thought of that can give you an advantage if everything else is done and the competition is top too.
But this doesn't seem to be the main problem in your situation.
It seems you did your "on-page" homework on Yelp already rather well. So the reason must lie somewhere else.
Right now these are my thoughts:
Yelp takes also into account behavioural KPI's like CTR, dwell time, etc. on the business page. Are they really so advanced? Are your competitions business pages that are 1/2 empty, with no reviews generating a better CTR, etc.: don't think so...Is there something on your pages that is negatively affecting the above KPI's, that turns off visitors?: maybe.
Some algorithmic thing (disadvantage) from Yelp: because of your size? looks spammy? "duplicates" in different locations are normal when you have different branches. because they want to force you to CPC? hope really not: that would be very short sighted saying the least...looks over optimized? maybe yes to some extent (text/keyword-wise). on the other hand they actually want you to fill in everything and use all their features... maybe something happens here by mistake due to the poor implementation of their algorithm: rather unlikely, one should first try to look for the errors with himself and not with the others...lol
my guess (not having seen your pages) right now is some kind over optimization...
Just some other thoughts that may help you in your quest.
Cheers,
Cesare
Hi Mike,
Yes I do have experience with that as our company has also several branches.
What you should do, probably in this order and that is in my opinion by far more important is the following:
More information on the topic you can find in this new section: https://moz.com/learn/seo/local
I didn't know of the Facebook Local thing honestly. Not sure if there is a clear mapping of a business with the according address/cities. I checked the source code of your Starbuck example. Facebook also uses JSON LD (schema markup) so they might do exactly what I suggest in point 3 for their Local Businesses (not completely sure but I don't have time to check that in depth...) in the background.
With point 1 + 2 you should already achieve a lot, point 3 is nice to have.
Hope this helps.
Cheers,
Cesare
Although its possible to have multiple H1 tags on one page I personally wouldn't do that. There is no reason to make things more complicated than they should. 1 H1 for every post, 1-3 H2 if needed. Thats is. Like this its clear and unambigious.
Another discussion here about that topic: https://moz.com/community/q/multiple-h1-tags-for-different-section-on-one-webpage-in-html5-website-should-i-have-only-one
Hope this helps.
Hi Ben,
Very interesting indeed.
We do almost nothing, i.e. only the absolut minimum for our yelp pages and rank for the relevant keywords for all of them on the 1st position. But unfortunately Yelp is of very little use over here for the industry we are in...so I don't care so much..
Independently from that I have 2 points you didn't mention explicitly above but you might already have taken care about:
Hope this gives you additional inspirations...
Cheers,
Cesare
Hi,
Moz in general doesn't show you all the links to your website only the most important ones. It depends on how authoritative this sites are seen by MOZ. With time the might appear, but you will most likely never have a "complete" list like inside Google Search Console. They probably cover the US/UK webspace more thoroughly as they do with the rest, as this is their main target market.
I guess you have to live with that but in my opinion their platform and their tools are still very useful either way.
Cheers,
Cesare
You are using the 'LocalBusiness' schema to tell Google twice about the same business (location) at the exact same address. Its not about different braches or so. The 'LocalBusiness'' schema goal is primarly about one or more business and their location(s) and not about languages.
In my opinion you should put the ld+json script on the start page (https://beassistance.com) and declare your business only once, with the description in English. The other one is probably not necessary.
Its mainly about ONE business (location), to say the same in 2 languages is simply not necessary though its not going to do any harm its just redundant.
Cheers,
Cesare
You can find out how it all began here: https://www.cesaremarchetti.ch/en/about-2/
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