Creating content for local link building can be intimidating.
Sure, you know your business. You know your area, but do you know what locals want to read about?
You can always guess, and you might strike gold. My guess is you don’t have the time, resources, or budget for guesswork.
I don’t either, which is why I like to go in educated.
Enter Moz Content.
Even if you don’t have a Moz account, Moz Content allows you to audit any website and find its most popular content. You can figure out which pages and posts have the most shares, the most links, and the sort of reach each page might have.
You can go much more in-depth with the paid version of the tool, and it’s absolutely worth the money.
But this post is about using the free version to remove the intimidation factor from local-based content, so we might as well start slowly.
By the end, you should have a good idea how to create local content that resonates with your audience and attracts links.
Local links
To my mind, the best links come from relevant websites, but there are (at least) two types of relevance:
- Industry-based
- Local
So, for this article, let’s say you own an auto repair shop in New Haven, Conn., and you want to build links.
You’re just starting, so maybe you don’t have the time or the budget to build a fantastic piece of content about auto repair, the kind that draws links from gearhead hobbyists, dealership blogs, and parts manufacturers.
Local links should be your priority. Local links can be easier to be build and there’s not as much of a barrier to entry.
But you still must create a useful, engaging piece of content that people want to read.
You don’t have to guess, though. You can use the free version of the tool to come up with great ideas for local content, and you’ll have numbers to back it up.
For this hypothetical auto shop in New Haven, I didn’t analyze a single hypothetical competitor. Instead, I analyzed sites focused on New Haven.
I wanted to analyze three things:
- An official city website or a reputable tourism website to see what the big dogs are doing right;
- A popular local site or blog to see how small websites are appealing to locals;
- Content from a big, national brand that writes area-specific content about multiple cities to see how national brands are trying to get links and shares from regional-based content.
Here are the three sites I analyzed and the content ideas they gave me:
Site #1: VisitNewHaven.com
The first site I analyzed was VisitNewHaven.com. It’s full of tourist information, meaning it probably has a good handle on why people enjoy New Haven, and it knows what they like about it.
Heck, many New Haven residents probably use it, too. It’s full of information about local events, businesses, and websites. I thought it was a good start.
So, I put the URL into Moz Content:
When I scrolled down to view "popular pages," I saw that, other than the home page, the annual events page had the most links. The dining and nightlife pages did OK, too, so we’ll file that away for later use.
We’re after links, and the annual events page has the most links, so it’s a good place to start.
I clicked on the analysis for that page:
Reach isn’t great, and it doesn’t have many links, but it beats anything else on the site, so I decided it was worth a look. People like this page enough to link to a tourism website, so they’re doing something right.
Here’s what the annual events page on VisitNewHaven.com looks like:
There’s little text here, but it does the job, providing relevant, up-to-date info about annual events with appropriate links.
Since there’s little here, you could make something better. If it’s good enough, you could probably even get your first link from VisitNewHaven.com, especially if you credit them for inspiring you.
Content Idea: Build a guide to local events from your point of view. You could build one for a complete year or make several and target them to winter, spring, summer, and fall tourists.
To one-up this piece of content, you’d have to write a paragraph about each event, and give local insight.
You’d already have an outreach list, too. You could email the organizers of each event you mentioned and see if they want to link to your guide.
You know people are interested in annual events, and by one-upping this page, you could generate at least five relevant, local links.
When you’re just starting, five links are an excellent bounty.
Site #2: ConnecticutLifestyles.com
Next, I did an audit for ConnecticutLifestyles.com. It has good content, and it does well in Google search results.
It’s not backed by a city government or tourism board, but it’s about as good as you'll find for a local website that’s not a business blog.
I plugged in the URL:
Next, I scrolled down to look at popular pages:
I found that recipes dominated their other blog posts. They had the most shares and links, even when there weren’t many shares or links.
Clearly, Connecticut audiences are interested in authentic food.
Content Idea: Offer some recipes.
Even if you own an auto shop, you still eat food. You probably have family recipes, or you can get them from friends, family, and employees.
Content that focuses on local recipes can work for almost any local business. The recipes must come from you or your employees.
So, you could publish a few recipes, or you can make a guide to spicy Connecticut food or Connecticut desserts and link to recipes from other authentic Connecticut sites.
You could even try to replicate the food from your favorite restaurants. You might even get them in on the action.
As long as you focus on authentic recipes, coming from authentic Connecticut residents, you have a good shot at building links. People care about recipes. We have the proof. They outperform all other content on ConnecticutLifestyles.com.
Site #3: Movoto
Next, I analyzed Movoto’s New Haven section. Movoto is a real estate website, but they also pump out local-based content that strokes the egos of local residents and earns plenty of links and shares.
You’ve probably seen your friends share some of their content on Facebook. Movoto puts a lot of money into earning shares and links from locals, so I thought they were a good site to analyze.
I plunked the URL into Moz Content:
Immediately, I looked at this section of Movoto’s most popular pages:
And we’re not seeing many links. That’s a bummer.
But we are seeing plenty of shares on one post.
You might have guessed it, based on the previous two websites. An article about restaurants is in the lead.
Here’s what it looks like:
These Movoto articles might not be getting the links they do in other cities, but knowing that a list of 15 restaurants blows everything else away might give you some ideas.
Content Idea: This piece of content features a quality photo for each restaurant. They could be stock photos, but they look authentic. It also gives each restaurant’s Yelp score, with a paragraph about the food.
And that’s it.
Chances are, you eat food every day. You might not be a food critic, but you’re qualified to talk about why you like your favorite restaurants. All you’d have to do is take photos, write something more in-depth, and keep it authentic.
Hear me out.
Restaurants write about their own food all the time, and it often comes off as salesy.
As a non-food-related, local business, you’re writing about the food you like. You’re not trying to sell it. That puts you at an advantage, because you’re inherently trustworthy.
Plus, you could likely get a link from most restaurants you write about.
This wouldn’t have to be a huge piece of content. It would just have to be better than an article that’s 15 paragraphs and 15 photos.
That’s doable.
Putting it all together
So, what’s the real reason I analyzed three websites for content ideas?
I wanted to see if I could combine three ideas into something unique.
You could find success with a single idea from any of these websites I audited, but I wanted to dig a little deeper.
So, in the VisitNewHaven audit, dining and nightlife were popular, although not as popular as annual events. With ConnecticutLifestyle and Movoto, recipes and restaurants blew away all the competition.
You could combine them all into:
- A piece that shows New Haven’s favorite foods based on ConnecticutLifestyle’s recipes;
- The best restaurants to find those foods in New Haven;
- The best annual events for foodies in New Haven.
Basically, you’d make a post that highlights annual food-based events. Within the post, you’d highlight the participating restaurants and food vendors and then talk about the New Haven favorites they serve.
Heck, you could even link to recipes for those foods.
That post seems like a win in my book.
You’d have a big list of restaurants, food vendors, event sites, tourism sites, and lifestyle blogs to contact for links as well.
Creating content for local link building need not be overwhelming or scary. With just an hour or two of extra research, you can find out what people in your area are reading about.
Then, no matter your industry, you can come up with an idea for local content that kills the competition.
I always advocate starting small. I recently wrote a post about building links at the neighborhood level and working your way up. You can use Moz Content for local link building at any level.
If you start small, armed with the knowledge of what a local audience wants, you’ll be creating bigger and better content in no time.
You have the tools. They’re free and at your disposal. You simply have to get started.
What about you? Have you tried Moz Content yet? Do you have other tools/workflows you'd recommend?
An auto repair shop creating pages on their site reviewing food or posting recipes?
Is this what you are recommending?
By all means, let's throw out relevance and forget about improving user experience and focus on creating link bait.
If there's ever a gray area, you sir, are in it.
Which is fine, as long as you understand and acknowledge that you aren't creating content or creating value in order to improve the visitors experience, but instead you are creating content 100% for the purpose of link building.
I'd rather spend my time and resources elsewhere
Hey Tyson,
In my opinion a local asset from a local company is indeed relevant and is creating a lot more value for the people of your community (and your customers!) then the 10 millionth definitive guide to flossing your teeth.
And besides for the value it'll bring to the locals, it will also get you relevant links from other local companies, sending all the right signals to your site. A win-win on all ends.
If your client has an auto repair shop and you don't like the idea of having recipes on your site then you could put together a guide of good, cheap parking places for local concerts, sporting events, or any other popular events in your area or come up with something totally different that resonates with you.
I suppose you're correct that recipes may not make sense for everyone, but it was just an example.
Either way, best of luck allocating your resources!
I have to agree with Tyson, the recommendations given in this guide make little sense. Just because you find out that a lifestyle publisher has success with posting recipes, that doesn't mean that you, an auto repair shop, should do it as well.
People expect recipes to be written from that publisher because it make sense that they would find that kind of information there - it's relevant content for that niche. It has literally no relevance when it comes to auto repairs (or auto in general). Imagine the menu on such a website: "Repairs", "Towing", "Wheels", "Recipes".
You cannot simply search for popular content ideas then create them for your site without making sure they're relevant first, just for the hope that you'll get links out of it (and let's be real, how many would link to an auto repair shop's recipes). If you extrapolate from that strategy, you'll start posting TV shows reviews, online marketing guides and celebrity gossip.
Know where to look first, then this guide will start to make sense.
Appreciate your thoughts, Mihai but it seems very logical to me to research other local sites in order to take a pulse of which type of content does well within your community or city.
Your research is not the issue, your conclusion is.
I think a way to look at this is that having out of the box ideas is great when dealing with certain local businesses. You can only create so much local user experience based content to help drive traffic to the site, but with this approach after you exhausted the others you can help the business owner actually become part of the community.
Some may say link bait but if you choose to create post on what to do in a certain area, or post a recipie from your family as a auto repair shop owner you are taking the vale of strickly business away from it, and in a small town that is what matters.
Well said, Tim!
Thank you David for the guide but I must admit the first thing that came to my mind was topical relevance.. I am not sure I would be writing about food if I was a mechanic :-) but either way, its a great tip that I did not think of and I will be using the process... kudos.
Hey Tyson,
I totally get where you are coming from regarding relevance, and at the same time, I do see opportunity here. My take on this is that David has done a good tutorial here of the how Moz Content can be used to surface resources. Where I'd take it from that point for a local client (let's say David's example of an auto repair shop) might looks like this:
Events: The auto shop could create a guide to classic car shows in the area, adding a lot of color to what to look for at these shows, the history of some winning car models (with photos), and why these events are fun for tourists or neighbors to attend. In fact, the auto shop could go for a double whammy here and become a sponsor of one of these classic car shows. Link opportunities could, indeed, abound!
Recipes: Yeah, a bit of stretch for an auto garage, but l'd really interview the owner of the business before I totally dismissed the idea. Maybe they come from a town-founders family with a well-known name. Where I live, many founders were Italian families (and really good cooks!). Maybe Grandpa Capaletti not only founded the auto shop in the 1950s but also used to take the family on car picnics out in the countryside (something I've seen referenced in vintage cookbooks). Maybe Grandpa Capaletti used to fix 'Capalletti Car Picnic Caponata - Easy To Eat On The Road'. We're talking about local relevance as well as industry relevance when evaluating link opportunities, and if that surname is locally famous, it is almost like a brand. For all we know, locals may have been on one of those car picnics in their youth and have coveted the secret recipe for years. They'd not only be glad to discover the recipe on a local site, but if it were brought to them by 'Capaletti's Auto Repair', it could reinforce for them that old Sal's grandson, Mike, runs the auto shop now and might be a good fellow to shoot the breeze and do business with. Will every car repair place have local color opportunities like this? No, but as the marketer, it would be up to me to really investigate this before dismissing the idea out of hand.
The Real Estate Site: If this place is a popular local resource, as David mentions, I wouldn't ignore it, but I would look for a way to contribute something that ties in with my client's industry + local relevance. Maybe not current restaurants - maybe some kind of do-you-remember post that relates to the old drive-in movie theater that closed in 1985, or the drive-in dairy where everyone used to go for ice cream until 1979, or the drive-in diner, or old auto shops, or cruising in old 70's boat cars on Main St. If you've got photographic evidence, nostalgia posts can drive local sharing, as many people love remembering curious or funny things about their own local past. It is a bit unusual that a real estate website would become the local hub for off-topic discussions, as the one David has highlighted has, but I've seen similar phenomena in small towns, where people congregate in unexpected places online. Topically, the relevance of such links may be a bit of a bit of a stretch, but locally, participation in a community hub can reinforce brand awareness while creating a pleasant impression of the auto shop's involvement on the local scene.
So, just some ideas off the top of my head, but I think David's piece is a good jumping off point for creative local marketing.
I agree with Miriam and David. Local links from businesses in your community, which people are familiar with, and Google knows is down the street from you, have great value. Google wants to know what your business does, where it is located and if it is a known commodity in the community. You can accomplish the first two with relevant content and schema. The last item you will need to build local links.
If links are local and people continually talk about your business in the online community, Google will notice and the business will rank. If much of the website is off topic and does not relate to the business, there will be a problem. Simply having a few posts or pages with locally relevant links will only help, not hurt even if the topic is not completely relevant.
Miriam, in that context, and with that explanation, then yes, it would seem to make more sense. The examples given in my opinion were a stretch.
Tyson!
Really? I mean really?
At first I thought you were joking with your comment about non-relevant content not improving the user experience. But then realised you meant it.
WOW, and also very interesting that you have had quite a few upvotes, to me that indicates that there is a lot of educating to do in these parts.
Because the fact of the matter is, you are totally wrong.
Producing content not relevant to the brand in a logical way will in no way detract from the user experience. It will if it's bad, or does not resonate, but that is an entirely different thing.
What has a caffeinated, heavily sugared drink from Thailand got to do with going into space?
https://econsultancy.com/blog/65416-red-bull-vs-go...
And a tire company that produced a restaurant guide?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Content_marketing
If you want no further evidence that you can produce content that users LOVE that has nothing to do with the brand, the Michelin guide is it, this and I like the way it ties in to your shock that a garage would produce recipes.
In the training I have performed over the years I have noticed a resistance from those with an SEO mindset to understand the nuance of how good content marketing works. It tends to be seen in the context of gaming Google when intent is simply to enrich the user experience and to add and improve on the content already existed, which is what I think is the intent of David Farkas,
People are best to forget the bot and simply create content for people, content that excites and drives them to emotional induced action.
Even to possess them to link.
Which I think goes to prove that the devil makes a great content marketer ;)
Cornwall, yes I was serious.
If I do happen to go to my mechanic's website (as opposed to just googling it and calling the number in the SERP's), having a top 100 recipes page, banner, etc. will not improve my user experience.
Make sense?
If anything it will detract from it.
Now, if that company wants to spend millions of dollars and create the next Betty Crocker cookbook and promote that (a-la Michellin Stars, and the millions spent by Red Bull), then if executed, that could bring immense value.
There's nobody disputing that. At least I'm not...
That said, I'm surprised you thought I was disputing that, as opposed to what was discussed in the post?
Exactly what I am looking for thanks for sharing a great post!
Hey David!
Thanks for walking folks through your process. Glad Moz Content has been helpful! Feel free to reach out if you have any thoughts on improving the reporting...or other interesting use cases you want to share.
- Jay (Product Manager for Moz Content)
You're welcome, Jay and I'll for sure connect if anything comes to mind :)
Keep up the great work!
Nice try David but I think it is not a good idea to build a food/restaurants content for a website of auto repair shop. I don't need to be on the top on food related keywords because it's a auto repair website! I should foucs on my niche. Have you done any seo tests using your strategy.
This is an awesome read for real. I have to say that coming up with content ideas can be the most challenging at times after you go through your main keywords. What you did hear though is not only highlight a great Moz tool but also took a business that would not seem in the mix outside of auto repair and literally turned it into a community hotspot for information. This did two major things for me the first was taking a small business and actually turning it into a community contributor which then would bring clients in naturally, but also the point of mentioning posting recipies even though you are a focused auto repair shop provides that opportunity the competitors would not sticking to post on oil changes or transmissions. Great outlook and contribution to the community.
Happy you found it helpful and thanks for sharing your thoughts, Tim!
Thanks, David.
I understand where you're going with this helpful example and will use Moz Content to analyze opportunities for local links - though at first I thought it was an unusual test scenario. All I needed to do was remember the goal is to build local reputation, interest and, eventually, engagement.
What I've found while wearing my Local SEO hat is that local businesses are interested in supporting each other - almost no matter what the topic. As Miriam Ellis noted in the comments, once we broaden our perspective and consider our audiences, it's much easier to see how an auto store owner could relate to his (or her :) ) local community by posting food/event-friendly content, from his own perspective.
Sounds Good !!!
I am going to try moz content.. Thanks for sharing this valuable information, with help of this article I am going to try Moz content for my local business.
Hope for the best..!!!!
You are very welcome and best of luck with that!
Wow. Seems as if it is time for me to give this Moz Content a whirl. Thanks for giving me the heads up David.
Hi David, Thank you very much for your advice. For me catch it is critical of the ideas discussed in MOZ because I have a local company and every time I want to position better. It is extremely difficult to do, but with deliveries like this we are making it easier to control the management of our website.
I'll be tuned for more posts you make!!
Glad I can help, Enrique and best of luck with your local company!
thank you very much
Good morning David!
First of all thank you much for sharing the post. it's a great post for local clients.
Can I add multiple clients on these tools?
Thanks a lot David, Awesome takeaways, it really helps a lot for local business.It depends on user how they evaluate the results from the reports.
When you say this post is about using the free version of Moz Content... are you referring to the ONE free content audit per month? Unless I'm missing something, it seems your suggested strategy isn't useful with the free version.
Excellent tips David. I really find your method of using Moz very effective and time saving.
Great work and research ;) I run a small digital agency in Cheltenham and your tips will be very useful for our customers. We concentrate on mainly Local SEO and believe both normal and rich media citations are the way to go, along with some solid 'high authority' domain backlinks. I love the SEO game... Read, learn, test and adapt ;)
Very useful article. We prove with data and knowledge that you contribute
Hi David.
How are you?
Great post you have shared on creating content for local backlinking.
Problem is, I do not know where to go to find places in my locality, to do local back linking.
Thanks for the share.
Regards.
Veena :)
Awesome post!
Great post and how you use Moz with unique opportunities Link and guesswork.
David, really enjoyed the post. I've had a number of conversations with our junior team members about digging into competitor sites and auditing what's been successful for them as a proxy for understanding a little bit more about customer intent and interests. I'll definitely be sharing your post around the office.
^^^ hate when that happens
Excellent, and keep me posted how it makes out!
Great post and how you use Moz with unique opportunities Link and guesswork.
How different is this to Ahref's content explorer?
Another great tool there, Justin and I believe you'd use their 'Best by links' or 'Best by shares' feature in the Site Explorer to identify which pages performed best on a particular site. Thanks for the input!
Hey Justin!
Ahref's Content Explorer doesn't have an "audit" feature, where with Moz Content you can audit your, your client's, or your competitor's sites to discover what content is performing well and what isn't in terms of link activity, traffic, and social engagement. You can set up a Tracked Audit for any of these sites and find deltas over these metrics week over week to see if your content strategy is paying off. You can filter by discovered authors or extracted topics across the site to see what is being written about, who is writing it, when it was written, and how well it is performing.
A feature of the Moz Content product called Content Search is more in-line with Ahref's Content Explorer's offerings, where we continuously discover new content every day, computing performance metrics of this content and serving it up for users similar to the way Ahref's Content Explorer does.
Hope this helped!
Hey Chris,
Might if I add my 2 cents? :)
> Content Explorer doesn't have an "audit" feature
I see that Moz Content can aggregate data and show "trends" for:
It's true that Ahrefs doesn't do that.
We show you all articles of a target website and their metrics, but we don't aggregate any averages.
> what content is performing well and what isn't in terms of link activity, traffic, and social engagement.
I just tried your tool and didn't see any traffic numbers there.
With Ahrefs you can get an estimate of search traffic for any piece of content and see what keywords it ranks for.
Here's a screenshot of the best article from Moz Blog in terms of organic search traffic, along with the keywords that this article ranks for in search:
https://imgur.com/b0ftBpa
Hey Tim!
Thanks for weighing in. Couple things to add:
On-Demand Site Crawls - Since the Audit is a real-time crawl of the site, it isn't limited to the content found in a given index (Ahrefs, Buzzsumo, Mozscape, Fresh Web Explorer or otherwise). One of the advantages is you can get a more complete view of the page content (including articles, landers, category pages...etc) on sites that may not be fully represented elsewhere.
Content Filtering and Segmentation - The real power comes with the filtering. For example, you can filter and segment content by topic, type, author or url/title filters - and then compare those segments to understand what's most effective. For Moz we can answer questions like "how do our guides about content strategy compare with videos about link building". When you run a filter, the aggregate metrics update so you can see how that content grouping is performing. You can also perform the same comparison across multiple sites to understand what's working for competitors and where there are missed opportunities.
Google Analytics Integration - Good question re: traffic. We could definitely do a better job of explaining that in the marketing. When you set up a Tracked Audit we re-crawl the site every week and trend the metrics. It's kind of like a content-focused Moz Analytics campaign. For users at the Teams tier, you can link up Google Analytics for traffic reporting which includes segmented page views by channel, social network, time spent and a few other metrics. The Moz Blog demo Tracked Audit on the dashboard (https://moz.com/content) will give a sense of what's available.
Hope that clears things up. Send any questions my way!
Good One
Hi David,
Thanks so much for your thoughtful article! To be honest, I never thought to analyze what performs best on local websites so I'm pretty excited to try that out. I wanted to ask what your experience has been reaching out to local bloggers? Understandably, most personal bloggers want some sort of monetary compensation--how do you work around that? Or are your clients open to compensating them?
Thank you (liked your outreach piece too)!
Hey Alice,
Thanks so much for taking the time to comment :)
If your content is solid I'm sure locals would be eager to link to you for free since it's useful. But of course, you'd have to do a good job at reaching out to as many locals as you can. Best of luck!
Good morning David!
Thanks for your article!! A good link could come, por example, from a website as a great online newspaper nationwide? This is for the large number of visits to a day and the quality of its content.
Have a nice day!
Hey David,
This was a fun read, thank you! Admittedly, I have not used Moz's content audit as of yet, but I will make a point to do so... Link building is tricky these days and almost always time consuming, the more tools at an SEOs disposal the better.
I will say, identifying areas of opportunity and drafting the content to support it is half the battle. Most of the legwork in acquiring content based links comes from being persistent in your outreach. We’ve recently put together a piece of content that summarizes the top 10 commercial real estate conferences to attend in NYC. We then created bios depicting each keynote speaker and are still following up with the various hosts/organizations for backlinks. In short, a good piece of content will fall flat if you don’t put in the time to place it before others. This to me is the real challenge.
Thanks again David, have a great evening!
Good call on the importance of effective outreach, Paul and I completely agree that outreach can be a lot more challenging then creating a linkable asset. For most people, outreach is the hardest part of link building, so you're not alone.
I recently wrote an article about some outreach tactics I use which you can read here. Hope you find it helpful :)
Appreciate the comment and best of luck!
The link to your article on link outreach brings up some interesting points and I really enjoyed Mr. Miyagi's "Wax on, Wax off" reference. I'm setting some time aside this afternoon to experiment with your email subject lines. Thanks David.
Very helpful. Thank you for posting!
My pleasure :)
Wow, thanks for the post, David! I've been searching for a while on an effective way to use Moz Content for link building purposes, and this is a great start. Definitely going to give it a try.
Have you executed this strategy at all? Any data to back up this technique? Would love to take a look at it if available.
Glad you liked it, Brandon and thanks for the feedback :)
We have indeed executed this for a number of our Local SEO clients and it works like a charm. It just takes a bit of research and planning to come up with a good piece of content. Outreach is also a necessary component, of course, but it's usually easier and has a higher conversion rate since you're reaching out to local companies and many of which you've included in your guide.
Best of luck!
Makes sense. Thanks for the share! I'll let you know how it goes...
Thank you David for your study.
You bet, Carlos :)
Nice tips and a good article David. I didn't know that Moz Content existed!
Well, better late than never!
Different David, I like it. I think a lot depends on the perception you want to achieve with your content. Who says an auto repair shop blog has to be about cam shafts? Auto repair shop owners are interested in other things including food and why shouldn't they right about it? If the content is written with feeling and appears to reflect a genuine interest by the owner then why not?
Exactly, Jay!
Hi David
Thanks for the post and most of all thank you very much for heramienta. I did not know her and I think it may be important to determine how and where to focus my forces in SEO.
Very nice post. Can I translate this post to my language and post at my site SEO paslaugos with your reference?
Good morning David,
First of all, thanks for the post. I've never used this tool before and in just half an hour I've found find different topics to write posts about which is pretty awesome!
Great to hear you found the tool useful!
If i Can use Moz Content for My SEO business Promotion and Gives the Referral Link to Moz that was the Great Way to Promoting Website or it will count in a Spam Suggest me. I want to put moz content in My Bloging site
Hello david!
Thanks for the recommendation. I ignored the tool. I'll put it into practice .
Greetings.
Sounds like a plan and good luck!
Thanks David,
I used this tool once before only. I will come back to it with your ideas
Best of luck with that, Luis!
Hello David,
Thanks for the post. I wanna ask you something...
How to rank locally if you run a business where nobody´s doing Google searches in your city?
Google Keyword Planner shows 10 in "average monthly traffic" for target keywords.
Bad news..
I suppose you'd first need to introduce the Internet and Google to your city. After it picks up traction you can come back to this article. Thanks for the comment, Miguel :)
Thanks for the research!)
As I was skim-reading it through, something in your words made me re-read it from the top thoroughly.
Google analytic and backlinking is the best process i think...here is a link you can get a lot of idea generating for your website......https://www.linkcollider.com