The SEO issue opens up the question of whether being in the top actually produces the leads you want? You can brute force your way into results for those search terms by buying the clicks from ad words. When you do so, do they actually produce leads or are you just paying for casual searches? Perhaps different terms are needed rather tha…
The SEO issue opens up the question of whether being in the top actually produces the leads you want? You can brute force your way into results for those search terms by buying the clicks from ad words. When you do so, do they actually produce leads or are you just paying for casual searches? Perhaps different terms are needed rather than going the last mile on the ones you're using? Do the top holders seem to be targeting those terms and are they doing with their sites what you're trying to do?
The Everest fallacy needs to ask for more information. What did your grandmother do with that $80? Did she have great conversations all night long in a local cafe? Explore parts of the city ignored by tourists obsessed with the mountain? You must weigh those experiences against maybe a half hour packed in a helicopter that may not be the safest out there. It then follows when will your next $80 get spent? By lunch time? Tomorrow? Is that $80 less important because it isn't $80 next door to Everest on the last day of your vacation?
Your SEO advice echoes some other feedback I've gotten on the post. I'm 95% sure I'm going to turn off SEO in the next couple of days, and it's nice to have yet another person giving me the same advice.
The SEO issue opens up the question of whether being in the top actually produces the leads you want? You can brute force your way into results for those search terms by buying the clicks from ad words. When you do so, do they actually produce leads or are you just paying for casual searches? Perhaps different terms are needed rather than going the last mile on the ones you're using? Do the top holders seem to be targeting those terms and are they doing with their sites what you're trying to do?
The Everest fallacy needs to ask for more information. What did your grandmother do with that $80? Did she have great conversations all night long in a local cafe? Explore parts of the city ignored by tourists obsessed with the mountain? You must weigh those experiences against maybe a half hour packed in a helicopter that may not be the safest out there. It then follows when will your next $80 get spent? By lunch time? Tomorrow? Is that $80 less important because it isn't $80 next door to Everest on the last day of your vacation?
Your SEO advice echoes some other feedback I've gotten on the post. I'm 95% sure I'm going to turn off SEO in the next couple of days, and it's nice to have yet another person giving me the same advice.