Alexa.com is a site owned by Amazon that’s been tracking global user traffic rank data for well over a decade, the results tend to be biased towards websites with users who are more likely to install the Alexa toolbar (main method Alexa uses to track traffic data): website owners, techy geeks and nerds, you know, the people reading this article about increasing Alexa traffic rank :-) I’ve installed/uninstalled the Alexa toolbar so many times I’ve lot count, install it because I know running the toolbar means when I visit my web sites they’ll get an Alexa traffic rank boost, then uninstall it because it adds no useful features I use. Shame they don’t provide frequent install Alexa toolbar miles :-) […]
Continue Reading Alexa Traffic Rank
Improve Alexa Traffic Rank
Officially broken through to the Alexa top 50 thousand sites online in September 2014.
Guess I’ll be seeing an increased number of reciprocal link requests when Google updates PageRank: not had a PR update this year and my domain is listed PR0 because it’s newish (guess the home page will be PR4).
Haven’t done any Alexa traffic rank manipulation to improve the Alexa rank, so these are based on real visitors who use the Alexa Toolbar: I’m not using the toolbar, slows the browser down and gets in the way, so deleted it again :-)
You can see my Alexa site rank is having a nice boost right now from the Alexa screenshot below.
Currently breaking into the Alexa top 40,000 websites.
I think the best Alexa rank I’ve had for a domain is in the 25K range, I’ve tended to spread my content thin over multiple domains (own ~130 domains), which means though my Blog Network generates a LOT of traffic overall, it doesn’t equate to a particularly high Alexa ranking for any one domain (take a top 100 Alexa site and break it’s content over 100 domains, no longer top 100).
I wonder what my Alexa rank would be if all my content was on the one domain?
David
Improve Alexa Traffic Rank
Alexa Website Rank
Excellent article David – wow maintaining a 100 sites I admire you – how do you do that? One of my sites www.yourpersonalbrandname.com sits today at 73,000 and has dropped from 68,000 ish because I haven’t been adding content – my fault so must get back on it. Really want to get it under the 50,000 mark..
Personal Branding vs Performance SEO
Took a look at your personal brand name website yourpersonalbrandname.com and assuming no Alexa traffic rank manipulation (Alexa rank is easy to manipulate) you’ve done well, similar sort of result as this sites seen : steady Alexa improvements with the odd dip.
I’ve struggled with balancing branding with performance SEO in the Stallion Responsive WordPress SEO package, I don’t envy your personal branding niche if you also try to sell SEO type services, which based on a simple site search in Google (see below) you don’t. You’d have a hard time with adding interesting features (image slides etc…) without damaging performance SEO.
The above searches your domain for all webpages mentioning SEO, zero use SEO as a title tag strongly suggesting you don’t really target SEO per se. My sites on the opposite spectrum, though I’ve discussed branding (mostly in comments, like this one) the SEO has taken priority (something I need to work on without damaging SEO, not easy).
I just wrote a post why Yoast SEO and Genesis are awful performance SEO wise. Your domain (uses Yoast and Genesis) has the same performance SEO issues as yoast.com, but much worse:
http://developers.google.com/speed/pagespeed/insights/?url=yourpersonalbrandname.com
Because of all the flashy features you need to sell a personal branding website building service, I don’t envy you next year if Google goes the way I think it will in 2015!
On your homepage alone you have dozens of page speed issues:
WOW, 56 render-blocking scripts! Before a mobile visitor sees your content their browser which could be on a slow 3G network has to process 56 CSS/JS files, if one of those files is delayed loading the entire webpage stops loading! This is why Google wants us to reduce render-blocking resources, so search engine users especially on mobile devices get a good experience. Remember research has shown every second a user waits for webpage to load costs the business money, they leave!
Will be very interesting to see how websites with lots of flashy features react if Google starts to take performance SEO metrics more and more into account: currently it’s a small SEO metric, but as an SEO metric performance is still new and Google tends to roll out new metrics slowly to avoid the sort of mess early Panada algorithm updates caused.
What Google has been doing suggests they will take performance SEO more into account, as the world moves more towards using mobile devices webmasters have to react to the restrictive nature of mobile devices (slow 3G networks…) and make our websites lightening fast and manage resources better.
When I wrote the SEO 2015 Article just 5 short weeks ago my mobile Google Page Speed Insights results looked like this:
In September 2014 mobile was 88/100 (in May 2014 it was in the 90’s).
Today (October 10th 2014) mobile is 77/100 and the pagespeed issues didn’t change, actually fixed the Optimize Images issues, so should be higher than 88/100 not lower.
Google has changed the insights results to make render blocking issues more important: I have only one render-blocking issue: main CSS file which has to load before the main content otherwise it looks horrible.
Yoast with Genesis can result in mobile as low as 27/100.
That’s BAD.
BTW Maintaining 130ish domains isn’t hard, the difficulty is SEO promoting 100+ domains without breaking Google’s webmaster guidelines, would be very easy to turn a private blog network into a link farm (made that SEO mistake in the past).
David
Personal Branding vs Performance SEO