Disable your Web History when doing a Keyword Research

Posted by | August 29, 2010 | Internet Marketing, SEO | One Comment
keyword research

Last Thursday I attended another Google Insider Secret on SEO on my vacation in the Philippines. Honestly, I never thought I’d still learn a lot after doing SEO for 3 years now in Toronto. I guess we sometimes don’t notice small things that could mean a lot in our SEO campaign.

Here’s how it goes, I don’t know if some of you know about it but definitely I was not aware of this one. Until, I heard it on Mr. Fabian Lim himself. The CEO of Asia Largest Internet Academy – Asia Internet Academy Pte Ltd. Google actually provides you with a result page patterned to your computer’s behavior. Meaning, if you are logged-in and your web history is enabled, your SeRP (Search Engine Result Page) is not the same as with others that are not logged. Google provides you with a result that you wanted.

Frequently visiting a particular site leads to the site being on your first page. Therefore, logging in will give you a skewed keyword research. Which most of us are once we checked our email, we no longer log-out. There’s a big difference when you try and search a particular keyword if you are logged-out. This is one of the best lesson I’ve learned on the seminar. If you are optimizing a site, you might get a wrong impression that you already made their site number one on Google SeRP…well that’s on you PC not on the rest of the world.

So what do you do with it, first sign-out of Google, go to web history and disable it. Simple as that, and make sure you sign-out first before you use Googling for a particular keyword, keep this in mind. It is simple yet it could give you a wrong data and could sabotage the whole campaign. Wrong data – wrong analysis.

The rest, as usual I can’t provide all the details, that one is enough though. I also enrolled on his Advanced SEO Training, you should try it. It could give you mastery on Search Engine Marketing, it’s also on-line education with students worldwide. Don’t get me wrong, I’m not affiliate, I just thought I’d share it, something worth investing for.

About Margaret

For the past three years, Margaret had worked within the non-profit sector doing grantwriting, copy writing for social media and print platforms, Website and CMS management and graphic design. She recently left her job as the executive director of the Alaska Farmland Trust to focus on other things, but she still enjoys the challenge of helping others with their website and technical copy writing needs, skills thatI she has had the chance to develop for years.

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