Study: TV Networks Not Ranking In Key SERP Positions, Losing Valuable Search & Traffic Opportunities.
After evaluating the organic search performance of America’s most popular television networks, SEO research firm RankAbove discovered a majority of the networks are missing out on significant search and traffic opportunities. The study examined four key areas of search, including keywords, rankings, traffic potential and Universal SERPs.
According to the findings, not only are a number of networks performing poorly in their SEO efforts, some are actually performing worse than they were a year ago.
Conversational search has natural language, semantic search and more built into it, and while it’s far from perfect, this really is one of those significant changes that makes even a “seen it all” person like me sit up and take notice.
Source: searchengineland.com
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Using data from more than 35 million search queries performed in 2012, SEO company WebpageFX set out to determine search engine market share by state for Google, Bing and Yahoo.
According to their study, Google dominates across the country, taking 70 percent or more of search engine market share in nearly all 50 states. Delaware represented the only state where Google won less than 70 percent of searches, with 69.49 percent market share.
Source: searchengineland.com
Google dropped a few percentage points while Bing and Yahoo each gained a couple … but the bigger statistic from comScore’s monthly U.S. search rankings for March is that desktop search activity reached an all-time high.
What’s the best way to tap into Universal Search in order to be visible? Have video content, especially on YouTube, according to a new study. See the full infographic here.
Interflora had thousands of links that would probably not pass a manual review by the Google spam team. So how did the site bounce back so fast in search results?
Source: searchengineland.com







