Domain Anaylsis

Domain Analysis by SEO Manipulator is a service that provides detailed evaluation of a website’s ability to rank organically. This thorough breakdown is an identification process that creates a customized solution for your domain, all the elements required to make your website rank well. Organic terms refer to the terms in a website’s content and coding that influence the site’s ranked position in search engine results pages (SERPs).

SEO Pricing

Need to hire an SEO Company? Looking for an SEO Package?

Google your business’s most important keyword. Where does your page land? The third page, fifth page, or even the tenth page? If so, your chances of being found are minimal. Your Internet Marketing efforts need to start with proper Search Engine Optimization.

Our team of SEO experts will help you analyze your website and digital assets, incorporate winning keywords, and build effective, natural links so that you can get the top spots on the major search engines using our SEO services. Through proper on-site and off-site SEO, your website will shoot to the top of the search engines. Whether you are looking to target local traffic or the entire World Wide Web, proper SEO is the first step towards success, and we are ready to help.

Link building Services – Article marketing, Press Releases, Web directories, Blog Posts, and Social Media Accounts

  • Billed at $20 per link
  • With a growth trend monthly
Primary Site Number of Links Cost Per Link Monthly Link Cost
Month 1 50 $20 $1000
Month 2 100 $20 $2000
Month 3 150 $20 $3000
Month 4 200 $20 $4000
Month 5 300 $20 $6000
Month 6 400 $20 $8000

 

SEO Pricing will depend on – Site size (amount of pages), Current site status for SEO (age of domain/amount of quality back links), Search engine friendly site (Ex. php or flash), national or local website, and the competitiveness of niche/keywords.

PPC Management

PPC Campaign Setup by SEO Manipulator promises that the traffic you’ll receive is not only relevant, but that it will positively impact your bottom line. We initiate PPC Campaign Setup with the goal of not just exposure, but appropriate exposure – Not happy with your current PPC Campaign results? Our pros are also equipped to correct, manage, and maintain existing PPC Campaigns.

Domain Acquisition

Domain Acquisition procedures can consume massive amounts of time and often become very costly.  The process may require domain name research, domain name tracking and possibly negotiating the purchase with a third party.
The SEO Manipulator team understands that acquiring the right domain name is key to establishing your online home. It is where your customers or prospects will learn more about your business and purchase your products or services.
Let our team of experts assist you with your domain acquisition and find a marketable, memorable domain for your business

In Google we trust

“In Google we trust.” That may very well be the motto of today’s young online users, a demographic group often dubbed the “digital natives” due their apparent tech-savvy. Having been born into a world where personal computers were not a revolution, but merely existed alongside air conditioning, microwaves and other appliances, there has been (a perhaps misguided) perception that the young are more digitally in-tune with the ways of the Web than others.

That may not be true, as it turns out. A new study coming out of Northwestern University, discovered that college students have a decided lack of Web savvy, especially when it comes to search engines and the ability to determine the credibility of search results. Apparently, the students favor search engine rankings above all other factors. The only thing that matters is that something is the top search result, not that it’s legit.

“I Googled It”

During the study, one of the researchers asked a study participant, “What is this website?” The student answered, “Oh, I don’t know. The first thing that came up.”

That exchange sums up the overall results from this study: many students trusted in rankings above all else. In fact, a quarter of the students, when assigned information-seeking tasks, said they chose a website because – and only because – it was the first search result.

Only 10% of the students made mention of the site’s author or that author’s credentials while completing tasks. However, in reviewing the screen-capture footage of those respondents, the researchers found that even in this supposedly savvy minority, none actually followed through to verify the identification or qualifications of the site’s authors.

Google was not the only search engine used in the study, but it was one in which the students put a lot of trust. The students felt emotionally tied to the service in some cases, noting how much they loved it and depended on it. (Those who used Yahoo! said they merely “liked” it.)

Regardless the choice of search engine, though, the first step in information-seeking was always the use of such a service, which was typically referred to as a verb. And yes, in addition to “google it,” some even said they would “yahoo it.”

Wikipedia Not Trusted as Much

Another interesting finding from the study involved the use of Wikipedia. Perhaps because of teachers’ insistence over the years that the user-generated encyclopedia is not a credible source of information, only a third of the students used Wikipedia to search for answers when given particular tasks. This is a drop from earlier studies (like Raine & Tancer, 2007) which showed Wikipedia use at 46% among students.

Other popular trusted sources included SparkNotes (a study guide site), WedMD, Planned Parenthood, CNN, BBC, Microsoft (specifically Encarta and Office-related resources) and those sites with a .gov or .edu extension. Some students even thought that .org domain name meant a site was inherently trustworthy – they weren’t aware that the .org extension can be freely registered just like .com and is not for nonprofit use only, as may have originally been intended.

Students Need Media Literacy Education

Over 1,000 students were surveyed and then the researchers randomly sampled 102 students from 1,060 students who had participated in the survey. The demographics of the group were both ethnically and racially diverse, reaching a representative sample of first-year college students at the University of Illinois, Chicago.

In summary, the findings showed that students are not always turning to the most relevant clues to determine the credibility of online content, said the researchers Eszter Hargittai, Lindsay Fullerton, Ericka Menchen-Trevino and Kristen Yates Thomas. Further initiatives that help educate people in this domain are needed, they claim.

Note: This article was corrected to read “University of Illinois, Chicago,” not “University of Chicago.” The original student count details were also clarified: 1,060 students were surveyed, but 102 were activity monitored. We apologize for the error and confusion.

via So-Called “Digital Natives” Not Media Savvy, New Study Shows.

The One Page SEO Cheatsheet

If you’re responsible for writing articles, uploading images or otherwise handling individual pages of your company site, the on-page SEO cheatsheet maps the highest single-page SEO priorities:

Download the On Page SEO Cheat Sheet

Dedicated Server - Powered by SEO tools