Part of the online marketing service, our Google consultant
service is second to none. The aim of this service is to help
clients optimise their website in order to increase their
position in the ranking and maximise the potential from their
Google placement.
We will provide you with:
- High organic listings in Google.
- Pinpoint the weak keywords/phrases within the website.
- Get your website to feature in Google if it hasn't already.
- We can provide statistical packages to help you monitor
the activity of your website.
Maximise the potential of your website by
maximising the number of visitors.
Part of the strategy of any good online marketing
campaign has to include google. Whether its organic
listings or ppc (pay per click),
it is unquestionable that Google is at the top of its game,
and it is essential that the website features in the top 10.

Website analysis is quoted for on an individual
basis. But the total cost of google consultancy in order to
acheive your google ranking potential will certainly be less
than the spend on PPC.
This will include thorough investigation
of:
- Website code
- Website content including text, images, video etc
- Website logs
Once this has been done we can carry out
any work for you at our google consultancy hourly rate.
All work to be carried out will be quoted
for beforehand and carried out upon your approval.
We will work closely with you to help you
maximise the potential from your Google listings.
We provide a range of of Content Management
Systems (CMS) built by Norfolk Design, unlike other CMS our
systems will help and back up the search engine registration
process.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A Google consultant is a person or company specializing in
search engine optimization (SEO) for the Google search.
Because Google is the most widely used internet
search engine, the commercial importance of achieving a good
page rank on Google has grown hugely for many companies -
particularly those businesses that rely on internet marketing
to attract visitors or customers to their websites.
While it is possible for companies to buy
position on Google using the Google AdWords system, the results
tend not to be regarded by those conducting the search as
particularly authentic or as unbiased as the page rankings.
Also, it can be very expensive to advertise with popular keywords.
As Google's popularity increased, companies
tried improving their rankings first by using Google bombing,
in which they created many different sites all linked to one
another through a particular word. This gave the site a high
ranking when the word was searched for. This "abuse"
threatened the utility of Google as a search engine, so Google
responded by adapting its top-secret web crawler technologies
and ranking algorithms.
In turn, SEO consultants tried to reverse
engineer the Google technology in order to gain advantage
in the page rankings, starting a struggle between Google and
SEO consultants.
As it became more and more difficult to trick
the Google system, the Google consultants became more and
more specialised in their work to improve the Google rankings
of their clients (eventually to the point where they don't
work on any other search engine). The careful use of copy
writing, linking strategies and the frequency and timing of
updated content can all help move sites up the rankings; the
closer a site is to the top of the first page of results delivered
by Google, the more likely it is that the person searching
will click on the link.
The boom in popularity of personal blogs
and blogging has also had an impact on the way sites are ranked;
this is reflected in the purchase of blogger.com
by Google.
Google and the Google Consultants have more
or less reached a détente where Google gives a certain
amount of advice to Google consultants on how best to edit
or engineer webpages to allow them to be indexed properly.
However, since Google is now listed on NASDAQ
and its commercial success depends to a great extent on selling
AdWords by auction, it remains to be seen if the symbiotic
relationship between Google and the Google consultants will
survive.
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