Designing Websites for Multivariate Testing
October 20, 2008
Request Your Free Information Brief:
“Designing Websites for Multivariate Testing: Top 3 Tips to Ensure Your Success”
Learn how to reach your marketing goal and gain the competitive advantage that makes it possible to out-test, out-learn and out-optimize competitors.
If you are like most online marketers, you are doing everything you can to optimize your website. One of the best ways to optimize your site is through multivariate testing, which is a technique that enables your visitors to tell you what’s working on your website and what isn’t. Download this information brief to find out how you can evaluate the effectiveness of your web site using three top tips to prepare your site for multivariate testing success.
Geographic Eligibility: USA
Publisher: SiteSpect
Other Resources from:
SiteSpect
New Traffic Blazer® Update Saves Time, Improves Information
June 10, 2008
Analyze and optimize your site for search engine submission faster than ever. We’ve improved the Site Spider in Traffic Blazer so the Site and Keyword Analysis Tools work even faster than before. Plus, to make sure you have a better understanding of how search engines are promoting your site, we’ve updated our news and article feeds to receive the latest news and developments direct from Search Engine Land, a leading site for the search engine industry.
Wordpress sites blocked by search engines
May 6, 2008
At Dream Whisper Designs, we truly love working with our customers to develop sites built on WordPress. WordPress is a stand alone blogging platform that is highly customizable and easy to use. And, WordPress is available as a one-click install on our Linux hosting accounts as part of our free Value Applications.
Wordpress updates have been released, but many sites are still running on old Wordpress installations which have known vulnerabilities open to spammers, who insert links to spam destinations within the blog page. These links are invisible to the general user but are available to web crawlers such as Google, Yahoo, and Technorati. As a result many sites that have not updated their installations are being delisted from the internet search engines. Yes, delisted – the crawlers don’t simply cease crawling these sites, but actually remove them from their indexes.
Case in point:
Fitzmorris Horse Logging, a site we built for a client in 2006, was built on Wordpress 2.1.1. Though the site was indexed, it wasn’t ranking very high in the search engine results, so our client asked us to take a look at what we could do for SEO. In actuality, the SEO for the site was very easy. We discovered that posts on the site weren’t being categorized properly when publishing. For example, a post that belonged in “Horse Training” was being published to all available but irrelevant categories, so we did a little editing and training to resort the posts appropriately. In addition, we installed a few handy plugins to increase the site speed and provide better SEO, along with a better bookmarking system. Voila! Inside of a week, the site was listed on page 1 in Google for “horse logging.”
But….within a week after making these simple changes, the site didn’t appear in Google’s index at all! Why? WordPress 2.1.1. The site had been delisted.
Once discovered, we immediately upgraded the installation to WP 2.3.3 and resubmitted the site to be crawled. The results: after 2 weeks of patience, the site is now back on page 1 for “horse logging.”
Lesson: Keep your software up-to-date!
Caveat: If you are using plugins, they may no longer work or break the site when upgrading. Check to see if there is a new version of your plugins. If you are using a custom design, some changes may be necessary with the new version. Visit the Wordpress Documentation and Wordpress Forums for help.
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