I've been messing around with the functions.php file and now can't login to my site from WA site manager (login button). Cheers
See more comments
Can you help me login to my site?
I've been messing around with the functions.php file and now can't login to my site from WA site manager (login button). Cheers
Do you have a ftp program? Such as, FileZilla? If so, log into your website via your program. Rename your current theme's main folder to "yourtheme.HOLD". Then, log into your website. Should work.
What this does is deactivate your current theme and reverts back to the standard, which I think through WA is twentythirteen. Then, go edit your functions.php file.
See more comments
Hi, is there any way of finding out the geographical origin of searches? I'm using Jaaxy to find my keywords and I'd ideally like to know a breakdown of the countries from which
Thanks but I mean search engine keyword searches (average monthly searches shown in Jaaxy). I think google analytics is site analysis.
In Google Analytics, left column, click on Audience, then click on
Geo, then click on Location. Hope this helps
Thanks but I mean search engine keyword searches (average monthly searches shown in Jaaxy). I think google analytics is site analysis.
Thanks, I mean where are people google searching from eg. UK / US etc. So for instance I can see from Jaaxy I have an average of 4000 searches a month for my keyword, but is there any way to see where those searches are coming from eg. is that an average of say 3500 from the US and 500 from the UK and elsewhere?
Thanks heaps. So is that the origin of searches that end up on my site or the origin of all searches for that keyword? I'm looking for the origin of all searches for the keyword.
See more comments
Can we find the origin of searches?
Hi, is there any way of finding out the geographical origin of searches? I'm using Jaaxy to find my keywords and I'd ideally like to know a breakdown of the countries from which
Thanks but I mean search engine keyword searches (average monthly searches shown in Jaaxy). I think google analytics is site analysis.
In Google Analytics, left column, click on Audience, then click on
Geo, then click on Location. Hope this helps
Thanks but I mean search engine keyword searches (average monthly searches shown in Jaaxy). I think google analytics is site analysis.
Thanks, I mean where are people google searching from eg. UK / US etc. So for instance I can see from Jaaxy I have an average of 4000 searches a month for my keyword, but is there any way to see where those searches are coming from eg. is that an average of say 3500 from the US and 500 from the UK and elsewhere?
Thanks heaps. So is that the origin of searches that end up on my site or the origin of all searches for that keyword? I'm looking for the origin of all searches for the keyword.
See more comments
I have exactly the same result in Jaaxy for slightly different keywords (one keyword has the word "in" in it, the other doesn't). I thought that the exact wording was important?
You want to use the data from the keyword that makes sense, often times they will have the exact same traffic data which is completely normal (because they are in essence the same keyword).
Just make sure your final search for competition/traffic in Jaaxy is done on the keyword that actually makes sense.
Hmmm, I'm still curious though why other very similar keywords can show entirely different results in Jaaxy. Any ideas?
Different competition and search numbers. One might be searched much more than another one.
Yes but that was why I was asking about the similar but different keywords that had the same search numbers. Why would a keyword with "in" in it be searched exactly the same number of times (in the tens of thousands I think it was) as the almost identical keyword without "in" in it?
Search for "latent semantic indexing - why it matters" at the top of this page, good explanation, with examples. Hope this helps.
Sometimes this makes a difference, sometimes not. I never really had that explained to me yet. Maybe someone here can enlighten us :)
Hi Emma, the best way to explain this is if you google those keyword phrases, look at what comes up. It will not always be exact match, unless you use quotes.
Google is very, very clever in the way that it determines what we are looking for, using synonims and similar phrases in what it returns.
So, exact wording is becoming less important, but so long as your article content supports the keywords you will be fine.
In fact, you are better incorporating both keyword phrases and more variations into your article. Not keyword stuffing, but learing from google searches what other phrases have the same meaning as the ones you got from Jaaxy.
Hope that makes sense.
Craig
See more comments
I have exactly the same result in Jaaxy for slightly different keywords (one keyword has the word "in" in it, the other doesn't). I thought that the exact wording was important?
You want to use the data from the keyword that makes sense, often times they will have the exact same traffic data which is completely normal (because they are in essence the same keyword).
Just make sure your final search for competition/traffic in Jaaxy is done on the keyword that actually makes sense.
Hmmm, I'm still curious though why other very similar keywords can show entirely different results in Jaaxy. Any ideas?
Different competition and search numbers. One might be searched much more than another one.
Yes but that was why I was asking about the similar but different keywords that had the same search numbers. Why would a keyword with "in" in it be searched exactly the same number of times (in the tens of thousands I think it was) as the almost identical keyword without "in" in it?
Search for "latent semantic indexing - why it matters" at the top of this page, good explanation, with examples. Hope this helps.
Sometimes this makes a difference, sometimes not. I never really had that explained to me yet. Maybe someone here can enlighten us :)
Hi Emma, the best way to explain this is if you google those keyword phrases, look at what comes up. It will not always be exact match, unless you use quotes.
Google is very, very clever in the way that it determines what we are looking for, using synonims and similar phrases in what it returns.
So, exact wording is becoming less important, but so long as your article content supports the keywords you will be fine.
In fact, you are better incorporating both keyword phrases and more variations into your article. Not keyword stuffing, but learing from google searches what other phrases have the same meaning as the ones you got from Jaaxy.
Hope that makes sense.
Craig
See more comments
What's the go on writing more than one post for the same keyword? Not sure I can fit everything into one post.
Yes, this is a good thing to do so long as the content is different. You'll find that one article will rank better than another with the same keywords.
The H1 is normally your post title, so best to make each one slightly different, even if its adding 1,2,3 etc
See more comments
Multiple posts for one keyword?
What's the go on writing more than one post for the same keyword? Not sure I can fit everything into one post.
Yes, this is a good thing to do so long as the content is different. You'll find that one article will rank better than another with the same keywords.
The H1 is normally your post title, so best to make each one slightly different, even if its adding 1,2,3 etc
See more comments
I understand from a training video by Jay that the keywords we choose should not be date-specific. Does anyone know why and whether content (apart from keywords) can nevertheles
You could use time sensitive keywords, that is fine. Just understand that if you are doing this you will likely only be relevant for a year (and maybe some trickle through for the following year).
Ex. best boy names in 2015
That would likely be a relevant and highly searched term this year and next year and if i was in the baby names niche I would definitely target that.
With specific keywords users would never see your site. Keywords helps your posts get indexed SEO engines.
Why should keywords not be date specific?
I understand from a training video by Jay that the keywords we choose should not be date-specific. Does anyone know why and whether content (apart from keywords) can nevertheles
You could use time sensitive keywords, that is fine. Just understand that if you are doing this you will likely only be relevant for a year (and maybe some trickle through for the following year).
Ex. best boy names in 2015
That would likely be a relevant and highly searched term this year and next year and if i was in the baby names niche I would definitely target that.
With specific keywords users would never see your site. Keywords helps your posts get indexed SEO engines.
Do you have a ftp program? Such as, FileZilla? If so, log into your website via your program. Rename your current theme's main folder to "yourtheme.HOLD". Then, log into your website. Should work.
What this does is deactivate your current theme and reverts back to the standard, which I think through WA is twentythirteen. Then, go edit your functions.php file.
Genius! Thank you
You're very welcome! :D