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50 Ways to Make Google Love Your Website

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Google is now a dominant force on the Internet, guiding millions of searches and online purchases every day. Understanding how it works and how to make the most of it is therefore essential to anyone building or running a website, whether for business or as a hobby. This easy-to-follow guide explains not only how Google actually sifts the billions of pages of information its index contains, but shows you how you can improve the performance of your own website in Google's search results, giving specific and detailed instructions about the sort of priority issues you need to address.



50 Ways to Make Google Love Your Website will teach you how to:


- Use Google to help you understand how people search for the sort of things you are offering


- Create a website that your customers will quickly find in Google


- Make your website irresistible to links from other sites


- Help Google understand what your site is about


- Think like Google and win more traffic

234 pages, Kindle Edition

First published February 7, 2008

6 people are currently reading
30 people want to read

About the author

Steve Johnston

25 books3 followers

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for PP |SIRIWIMON WISUTSAKCHAI.
26 reviews12 followers
January 8, 2017
This book is easy to follow. You gonna know Google's decision. I like the conclusion of 50 ways in the end of each session.
Profile Image for Melissa.
8 reviews2 followers
April 25, 2012
Somewhat technical without going in-depth; left me bookmarking multiple pages. I am sure that I will refer back to this numerous times. Great information! Well presented. Very much liked reading it for the information; but of course, it wasn't the most enjoyable because it is business and not so much a leisurely read:)
23 reviews7 followers
March 28, 2011
Telling a story is key we are taught, to getting the message across effectively. This is just as important when considering Search Engine Optimisation which can seem esoteric to the uninitiated. For some it seems like advanced maths, or in the worst case gobbledegook.

Telling the story of how Google organises their search results is the basis of Steve Johnston and Liam McGee’s book “50 ways to make Google love your website”. It is written in an easy-going style that builds a story of how the algorithms work and how a website designer can adopt techniques to promote their interests.

The ‘story’ of the book guides the reader from creating a website for your users, through enhancing its reputation to changing it to fit in with Google’s mathematic formulas. Rounding off the content is a chapter on analytics and how to measure the success (or failure) of your trials.

But an added bonus to this book are the ’50 ways…’ tables that trail five of the chapters. These provide a useful checklist for key points made in the book. Items such as remembering the Tripod of Love when improving your visibility on Google, or using the long tail of search and creating quality content. This is all to push your website up the rankings and hopefully make it more profitable.

There are many SEO books out in the marketplace, but this is one that uses simple terminology and a logical process to allow beginners to this world, access to its advantages. It is a book that anyone who wants to learn SEO but is wary of being overpowered by facts.

This is an excellent handbook to what can seem to be a black art and should be read by anyone who wants an easy yet informative introduction to Google SEO.
Profile Image for Deirdre.
2,030 reviews82 followers
November 7, 2012
Well it wasn't what I needed, it's more orientated towards a small business than a hobby website. It's interesting to read to see a bit about how Google takes information from a site and uses it but I missed seeing a basic one, "if your information is in a graphic, it can't be searched for"
Corrected as it is in the book, see comments below. Page 25 mentions this. I think when I originally wrote it I had been trying to find information that should be readily available if the websites didn't obscure it.

Still not my book, probably more useful for small businesses than for my uses and for a small business would probably be a 4 or 5* book.
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