Skip to main content

What kind of approach would be best for an e-commerce website?

Hi guys,

Recently I have built up a website for my e-commerce business which specifies in BMW styling/tuning parts, mainly carbon fiber parts. After creating the website for the first time, without previous experience, I discovered that, of course, there isn’t no traffic coming to website, that’s how I found out about SEO and am willing to learn. I do have read about the basic principles of SEO, but still find myself confused on how should I approach it and improve website’s ranking. The website itself is pretty young and I know that it is a process and takes time. I have already set up an on-page SEO, which helped some products to be found in Google. Also, I am trying to assign relevant keywords such as “bmw carbon parts” or “bmw styling components” to the website.

I still have many questions on where should I start and which ways would be most effective.

1.For example, for an e-shop, is it worth it do a blog and for example post new product updates or post customers’ cars every week/month with some writing which includes relevant keywords?

2.How can I create backlinks for the shop?

  1. Is there a way to access Google’s Keyword Planner without buying any ads?

I would really appreciate any insights or ideas, that anybody can suggest. Thank you very much!

submitted by /u/influence0
[link] [comments]

from Search Engine Optimization: The Latest SEO News http://bit.ly/2EWZRdu

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Local seo vs. natiowide seo?

I've done SEO for local businesses but I recently got my first client that sells an item nation wide. ​ Any suggestions for doing nationwide SEO? ​ I am used to making geopages for local towns. I was going to do the same with some input from the client about what cities or towns he would like to show up in? submitted by /u/Letmeinterviewyou [link] [comments] from Search Engine Optimization: The Latest SEO News http://bit.ly/2JHy0k0

Clients site has a weird issue with 302 redirects that I haven't seen before.

Site is in Drupal, hosted on Amazon CDN & Cloudflare. So here's a quick breakdown: The site itself works normally. It's a bit dated, but you can click on links and navigate around as you'd expect. Seeing no obvious issues, I run a Screaming Frog crawl to begin my audit. Only 5 pages were picked up by the crawl which was super weird, since all internal links are regular html and there shouldn't be any issues. So I go through the site and manually collect a bunch of URLs, which I submit to SF again as a list. Every single link bar the 5 originally crawled return a 302, with the 'redirect' pointing back to the home page. Except as I said, those pages don't browser redirect. Browser side, they work fine. I guess they redirect the crawl bot though, since the rest of the site is functionally invisible. Other tools I've looked at say that the pages return simultaneous 302 and 200s, which doesn't make too much sense. These 302s are also old enough ...