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Mediavine provides this image in relative terms, not exact figures:Does anyone know where I can find a list of EMPVs.
Many thanks @Ryuzaki . It certainly helps with the big verticals. All I need to do now is figure out where my niches fit into the bigger picture.Mediavine provides this image in relative terms, not exact figures:
That's plenty enough data to know which verticals perform better than othres.
rocket.net has up to 5,000,000Any recommendations for high traffic web hosting?
Siteground wordpress hosting has up to 400k
Knownhost wordpress hosting has up to 500k
What if I anticipate to exceed all of those limits in the next like 2 months? Sorry, I'm doing research on CMS migration (still on wix) but want to move off of it to WP in the coming months. WIX pagespeed is like the balls... lol.
Well, might as well ask here... Anyone have experience on the least painful way to migrate entire site from WIX ~> WordPress?
Have you considered a DigitalOcean VPS? Or any other VPS for that matter?Any recommendations for high traffic web hosting?
Siteground wordpress hosting has up to 400k
Knownhost wordpress hosting has up to 500k
What if I anticipate to exceed all of those limits in the next like 2 months? Sorry, I'm doing research on CMS migration (still on wix) but want to move off of it to WP in the coming months. WIX pagespeed is like the balls... lol.
Well, might as well ask here... Anyone have experience on the least painful way to migrate entire site from WIX ~> WordPress?
Like @Nabillionaire was inferring, the reason you're running against these ceilings is because you're looking for "Wordpress Hosting", which is supposed to be tuned for Wordpress. Sure, but it costs an arm and a leg for something you can have elsewhere without the extra money. It's a marketing angle to charge more money to unsuspecting newbies who don't know better.Any recommendations for high traffic web hosting?
Siteground wordpress hosting has up to 400k
Knownhost wordpress hosting has up to 500k
Sites get hacked and bad guys set up cloaking for Googlebot where Google sees the page about your dog in pajamas, but the user gets redirected to the crypto site. It's called cloaking. Google eventually figures it out and the entire domain gets canned.I see alot of sites targeting my long tailed keywords but they end their adress with /app.
Lets say it rank for "how to make your dog look the best in a pyjamas"
They have that in their title but when I click the adress I get directed to a crypto site or what ever.
But this sites still rank in the top 10? Whats that about?
There is probably some residual traffic to be had, but a fraction of the search volume reported.Is it worth targeting keywords that have a result directly provided by google?
In my experience, the 'near me' impressions and clicks come from other location-specific keyword queries which do not have a Google map or direct answer at the top of the results. (In other words, from pages which are not directly optimised for a 'near me' phrase.) They are also 70% impressions from mobile devices.For example, with the broad keyword "park near me", google shows a complete map.
I don't know if the users click on the sites with this kind of result.
Google has told us two things that seem to be true:also, when i take a look at search console, it said that already index, but when i trying to use site:domain.com/post , it's not getting indexed.
site:
search operator is not and has never been an accurate count of all of your indexed pages. It doesn't seem to always return a URL that is indexed either. Sometimes searching for the URL or the title in quotes will return the page while the site:
search does not.We've had this question dozens of times recently because something seems to have changed. I wouldn't say it changed so much as became more noticable. It would appear to me that Google has increased the number of URLs that they're willing to have indexed but not show up in the SERPs.
I don't mean they're indexing more URLs. I mean that they're willing to not show the URL in the SERPs while allowing it to remain in the index. This has always been possible, as seen in the supplemental results you could view at the bottom of the SERPs. "There's 15 pages that we've not shown because they're similar to the ones we are showing" and so forth.
A lot of people are complaining about this issue and the one thing that has seemed to hold true is that their sites are either new, very weak in terms of their backlink profile, or both. Does this describe your site?
This is a huge part of it. Most informational articles are literally just rewrites of each other. Dozens or even 100+ of the exact same article targeting any keywords worth targeting. Google doesn't want to have the top 100, let alone the top 10, of every SERP have the exact same set of information in them. That's not helpful to the user.or some kind of unique helpful information
www.xxxxx.com/xxx/feed
or /tag. Either I am running a real life business or I am running a website and monetising it with ads.Question regarding interlinking and content hubs:
For a LOCAL BUSINESS that is attempting to accomplish two separate goals:
- Local service page that converts local customers to paying customers
- Monetize the blog with display ads in the blog section with informational content
The static pages have no Ads, only the blog portion.Either I am running a real life business or I am running a website and monetising it with ads.
If I am a potential client landing on your business site and I see ads, I immediately think a) they are not a serious business, just someone running a website for kicks and pocket money, and/or b) times are so rough for that business that they are having to rent out their website space for ads.
I have never seen a business I would trust running ads for other companies on their own site.
Seriously, if your business conversions from your information pages suck so badly that you are forced into running ads earning comparative pennies, then you need to think about how that business and website is operating.
No. Google crawls everything and anything, even implied URLs. They’re just telling you they found something, crawled it, and didn’t index it. RSS feeds are a prime example, as you’ve illustrated.Back with the most epic question again!
Im starting to notice that my "crawled not indexed" are starting to increase but not from posts that I have published, its variations of my published posts ending with likewww.xxxxx.com/xxx/feed
or /tag.
Is that something to worry about?
And how many visitors does the blog have per month?The static pages have no Ads, only the blog portion.