Tag Archives: business

Why Your Business Should Be Using A Virus Removal Tool

The post Why Your Business Should Be Using A Virus Removal Tool appeared first on HostGator Blog . Why Your Small Business Should Be Using a Virus Removal Tool As a small business owner, you need to take steps to protect your business. We’re not just talking about insurance or even legal stuff, but something else entirely—your business website. If your website isn’t properly protected you’re leaving yourself susceptible to viruses that can make using your site difficult, and even compromise your website as a whole. Finding a solid virus removal tool will help protect your website from hackers and ensure it’s always safe and protected. Below you’ll learn why your small business needs to use a virus removal tool and the steps you can take to get started. A Virus Can Harm Any Business, No Matter How Small When your computer has a virus it can be an inconvenience, or even make your computer non-operational. Plus, some forms of malware can steal sensitive information like credit card info, or banking information. As a result, you probably already have some form of virus protection installed on your computer. But, what about your website? If you’re using your website for business , then this is an asset that needs to be protected, just like your computer. A lot of website owners think that just keeping their website, themes, and plugins up to date will be enough. Although this will protect you against past security holes it won’t protect you from newer security risks. Most software is updated only after security vulnerabilities are found. Don’t let your website be the testing ground for finding these leaks and security holes. A virus can not only harm your website. But, it can ruin your reputation as well. For example, if your site is infected any sensitive customer information might be compromised. If a user visits your site, and they have anti-virus software installed, then they’ll be warned to leave your site. This makes you come across as spammy. They won’t have any idea of knowing who installed the virus, and the chances are high that they won’t return to your site. As a result, you suffer an immediate loss in user trust and a drop in traffic as well.   The Overall Cost of a Virus A virus removal tool can be a small investment compared to the overall damage it can wreak on your small business. Instead of having to reach out to customers to let them know their data has been compromised, or having to essentially restart your website from scratch, you can simply invest in a virus protection and removal tool. A virus does more than just take down your website. It can potentially ruin your business. Think about the cost of losing your customers for life. Or, the traffic that lands on your infected website and never comes back again. You’ve spent a lot of time and energy designing your website . It’s time to protect it, just as you would your home.   What Does a Virus Removal Tool Do? A virus removal tool will not only scan and remove any kinds of viruses that may be installed on your site, but it’ll keep you protected from it ever happening in the first place. You’ll get access to different features depending upon the tool you choose, but it’ll generally be equipped with the following: A regular malware scanner to detect and delete any malware or viruses A firewall to prevent any DDoS and other forms of attacks A feature to help prevent website blacklisting (this could destroy your search engine rankings) An alert system to let you know of any potential risks, or out of date software Overall, a virus removal tool is an easy investment to make, and your website and visitors will be protected over the long run.   How to Pick the Right Virus Removal Tool for Your Website There are a variety of tools that will help your website stay safe and secure online. If you’re a WordPress user, there are numerous security plugins like: WordFence Sucuri BulletProof Security All In One WP Security However, if you’re currently using HostGator to host your site , then you should consider the SiteLock service . As an add-on to your hosting package, you’ll get regular malware scans and removal, along with features to help prevent website blacklisting.   It’s Time to Protect Your Site Most small business owners understand the need to protect their personal and business computers, but hopefully, you now see why protecting your website is also a must. Remember, it’s a good idea to invest in a virus removal tool before it’s too late. When it comes to online security prevention is always the best route to take. Find the post on the HostGator Blog Continue reading

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Introduction to Social Analytics [FREE Ebook]

The post Introduction to Social Analytics [FREE Ebook] appeared first on HostGator Blog . Free Ebook: Introduction to Social Analytics You know it’s important for your business to have a presence on social media, but figuring out what you’re doing on there is an ongoing challenge. Each social media platform is unique and requires its own approach and strategy. And no matter what you do when you’re just starting out, there will be room for improvement. The only way to learn how to get better as you go is to pay attention to what works . The way to do that is with social analytics. If you’re just starting to venture into social media marketing for your business, our ebook on social analytics provides all the information you need on how to access social media analytics and what to do with them.  Click here to download now or keep reading to learn more about what you’ll learn in this FREE ebook.   What Are Social Analytics? All of the major social media platforms offer data on how people interact with the posts and content you share. Some of the information they provide is fairly basic, like showing you how many people viewed or liked a post you published. Some of it goes deeper, providing demographic data on the people who interact with your posts or details about their behavior on the platform. All of this information can be put to use to strengthen your social media strategy and get better results for the time you spend on social media, but only if you know where to find it, and how to use it.   Why Social Analytics Matter There are thousands of blog posts and articles out there about how to do social media marketing well. And they’re a good place to start. Knowing the best practices and seeing examples of what has worked for other brands does help in establishing a solid plan when getting started. But ultimately, you don’t need to know what works on social media for another brand or media property – you need to know what works for your audience . The best way to figure that out will never be someone else’s blog post; you have to turn to your own social analytics for that.   What You’ll Learn When You Download the Ebook This ebook delves into how to access social analytics data for the five main social media platforms:      Facebook      Twitter      Instagram      LinkedIn      YouTube While there’s a lot of overlap in the kind of information each platform provides, each one supplies a different dashboard and layout for finding the analytics they make available. Once you’ve found the analytics, you’ll need to understand what you’re looking at. Our Social Analytics Ebook also covers the most important categories of data the platforms offer and why each one is valuable to users.   Download Now You know from running your website how important analytics are to analyzing what’s working and what’s not. You’d never know if your website was doing its job or not without useful metrics that show you how people find and interact with your pages. Social analytics do the same job for your social media profiles. With their help, you can optimize your social media efforts to make sure you’re reaching the right people, at the right times, with messaging and content they’re likely to appreciate. Download the Social Analytics for Business ebook to learn all the basics you need for success on social media. Find the post on the HostGator Blog Continue reading

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About Us: How to Tell Your Business Story the Right Way

The post About Us: How to Tell Your Business Story the Right Way appeared first on HostGator Blog . About Us: How to Tell Your Business Story the Right Way The About Us section of your website has the potential to draw in customers, establish trust, and make people want to do business with you. But choose a couple of dozen small-business sites at random and you’ll find that many have About Us pages with next to no information, or that overload visitors with full-page blocks of texts that go into far more detail than most people can absorb. Here’s how to write an About Us section that showcases your business story, demonstrates to customers that you’re the right choice, draws in people searching for what you sell, and sets the tone for your customer outreach. Show What You Can Do for Your Customers It’s about you only to the extent that you have something your customers want or need. So tell your story in a way that shows you understand the problem your visitors want to solve. Zappos does a great job by describing the founder’s failed, frustrating shoe-shopping experience at a mall. No one wants to waste an hour and go home without new shoes, so right away, Zappos shows it understands something about its customers : They want convenience and selection. What if you’re blogging? Blog and media site Scary Mommy uses some frank descriptive wording on its About Us page to show that they get the struggles and rewards of motherhood: “We’ve seen it all, heard it all, and smelled it all, but we wouldn’t have it any other way.” You don’t have to be that direct if it’s not your style or not on-brand, but there are many ways to show that you get what your audience needs.   Establish Your Trust and Expertise Besides looking for a solution to a problem, people who check out your About Us page want to see if you are the right person to solve their problem. An effective way to show your expertise and at the same time show that others trust you with their problems is with social proof . Your About Us page can include: positive customer reviews testimonials case studies from clients media mentions awards you, your employees, and your business have earned If you provide services, you can include well-known clients on your About Us page , as visual organizing tool Trello does. You can and should inject some personality into your About Us page, because site visitors want to know there’s a real person behind your site. That’s why popular toymakers Melissa & Doug come right out and say they’re real people on their About Us page, which is every bit as lighthearted as you’d expect for people who make toys. Your About Us page also needs to include: your name your location a photo or video of you that reflects your brand and personality contact details like a phone number, email address, and company social media accounts. Before they shop with you, customers also want to know that they can reach you if they need to. Consider this About Us excerpt from Round Rock Honey: “We believe in our honey so much that if you ever have a question, just look on the back of our bottle. You’ll find our names and phone number.”   Get Found by Your Audience A good About Us page helps prospects decide if your site is a good match for what they need. A great About Us page also helps more people find your site. To do this, you’ll need to use some SEO tools to help your site show up when people search for what you offer. Make sure your About Us page includes: Long-tail keyword phrases that help people zero in on what they need. If you sell school uniforms in Dallas, don’t rely on “school uniforms” to drive search traffic to your site. Include “school uniforms in Dallas” or “school uniforms for Dallas-area charter schools” or whatever is accurately describes in detail what your customers search for. On-site SEO titles, meta descriptions, and tags for your About Us page with your most important keywords. Your meta description will appear in search results, so make every word count: “Zippy’s is the fastest and best courier service in the greater Houston area. Call 703-555-1212.” Optimized images for the best possible search results. Tag and describe them in ways that help people find your site. That team photo on your About Us page can be titled “Bakers of Custom Birthday Cakes in Duluth” instead of “teamphoto,” for example. Fast load times. When you’re done with your About Us page, run it through Google’s PageSpeed test to make sure it loads quickly enough to avoid getting downranked in search results. Mobile-friendly display and navigation . While you’re testing your About Us page, use Google’s mobile-friendly test tool to see how it performs on mobile devices. Better performing pages tend to rank higher in search results. Schema.org markup tools to optimize search results displays. You can use a schema plugin for your WordPress site or delve into this step-by-step guide on schema and Google Rich Snippets to format your About Us page for good-looking search results. For more information on these and other SEO strategies for your About Us page, check out HostGator’s ABC’s of SEO e-book .   What’s Your Business Story? However you set up your About Us page—a serious rundown of your firm’s accomplishments or a set of whimsical videos about your handmade housewares shop—keep the tone, appearance, and language consistent with the rest of your site and with your brand. Consider your About Us page an ongoing project, keep it updated and focused on the goals above, and it can be a powerful marketing and customer relations tool. Find the post on the HostGator Blog Continue reading

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10 Things You Can Do With Google Search Console

The post 10 Things You Can Do With Google Search Console appeared first on HostGator Blog . 10 Things You Can Do With Google Search Console If you have a website, Google’s free webmaster tools are invaluable resources that you should be taking advantage of. Chances are, you already know about and regularly use Google Analytics , but if you haven’t yet, you should add Google Search Console to your list of go-to Google resources to help you get more from your business website as well. How to Set Up Google Search Console To start, go to the Google Search Console . To access it, you’ll be required to log in with your Google account – make sure you use the same one here you use for any other Google Webmaster tools you use. Once you’re logged in, look for the red button that says Add a Property. Enter the html for your website and click the button. From there, Google may ask you to verify you’re the owner of the website. There are a few different ways you can do this . If you’re already using Google Analytics, then the easiest option will be to choose Google Analytics Tracking Code as your preferred method of verification. As long as your Google Analytics tracking code is in the section of your homepage, you’ll be in with no problem. When you’re on the homepage of the Google Search Console, notice a link on the top left that says “Try the new Search Console”. You currently have two options for using the tool: the old, traditional one which keeps more of the functionality; and the newer version Google’s rolling out that has a more intuitive visual design, but fewer of the features and functionality of the older version. Over time, Google plans to move all the Search Console’s features into the newer version, but for now, a lot of the benefits of the tool remain in the traditional version. In the images below, the old version is on the left and the new version is on the right: 10 Ways to Use Google Search Console With access to the Google Search Console, you can now get to work accomplishing a number of different tasks. Here are some of the most important ways to use it.   1. Submit a sitemap. While Google’s web crawlers can learn a lot about a website and its individual web pages on their own, you can give them a little extra help in learning the information they need by submitting a sitemap to Google. A number of websites will automatically generate a sitemap for you. Once you have it, loading it to the Google Search Console is extremely easy. In the traditional version, while on the main page of the dashboard, look on the right side of the screen to see the Sitemaps section. Click on the gray bar that says Sitemaps. Then find the red Add/Test Sitemaps button in the top right corner of the screen. Click on it and fill in the URL for your website’s sitemap. In the new dashboard, click on Sitemaps in the menu on the left side of the page, then fill in the sitemap URL where instructed. 2. Learn common keywords people use to find you. Anyone that finds your website through search used a specific search term to get there. Google Search Console shows you the most common keywords bringing people to your website. In the traditional Google Search Console view, you’ll find this information by clicking on the Search Analytics bar in the middle of the page in the main dashboard. A little bit down the page, you’ll see the list of all the keywords people found you with and the number of times someone has clicked on your link after searching each keyword. By clicking on a particular keyword in the list and using the filter options in the top menu, you can go a little deeper to learn which pages show up for the specific keyword, what countries people are coming from when they search the keyword, and what devices they’re using. And you can see how different keywords fare in terms of clicks, impressions, and click-through rate. In the new Google Search Console, you’ll find the same information by clicking on Performance either in the left-side menu or in the top box in the main dashboard. In this version, Google shows you both the number of clicks each keyword earns you and the number of total times your website shows up in search for that keyword (impressions) on the main page, and you can view the other categories (CTR, position) by clicking on the upside-down triangle above the list. This information shows you if you’re successfully attracting people based on the keywords targeted in your SEO strategy. And it will reveal any keywords people find you with that you weren’t meaning to target at all.   3. Identify your most popular pages. Every website will have pages that perform better in the search engines than others. Google Search Console will help you determine which of your web pages is bringing the most people to your website. You can find your most popular pages in the same section you found the keywords, and filtering and viewing different subsets of data works pretty much the same. In both versions of the site, in the same Search Analytics section you viewed the keywords in, select Pages in the menu. You’ll see a list of all the pages people have seen and clicked in descending order of popularity, with your best-performing pages right at the top. The default view in the old version shows you the most popular pages in terms of clicks; in the new version, clicks and impressions. You can also see which perform best in terms of click-through rate and position as well.   4. See where your visitors are coming from. If your business serves a particular part of the world, then it’s more important to get traffic from visitors that live in a set geographic area than anywhere else. Google Search Console will also provide you data on where your visitors are located, so you can make sure you’re reaching the right people. This is in the same section as the keywords and pages data. In both versions, select Countries in the menu. You’ll see the number of clicks your website receives from each country, with the highest numbers at the top of the list. As with the other categories, you can also switch to view the results based on impressions, click-through rate, and search ranking position.   5. Learn which devices they use. By now, every business should have a mobile-friendly website . But even if you’ve already taken steps to make sure your website looks good on mobile devices, it’s still good to know what portion of your visitors are interacting with your website on each different type of device. The Google Search Console has you covered there. This is the last piece of data we’ll find in the same section as the last three. In both versions, select Devices in the menu. You can see here the distribution of how many clicks you get on each type of device and you can switch over to see the number of impressions, click-through rate, and average position as desired (you know this song and dance by now). Note that this is the last item on our list that you’ll find in both versions of the product. For the rest, at least at the time of this writing, you’ll be sticking with the traditional version of the Google Search Console.   6. Check that your website works well on mobile. While it’s a good idea to do mobile testing on your website on your own, you can also use the Google Search Console to confirm that your website passes their mobile usability standards. In the Search Traffic section on the left-side menu, select Mobile Usability. If everything about your site looks good to Google based on their standards for mobile usability, you’ll see a green checkmark telling you that no errors are detected. If it identifies something about your website that doesn’t work well on mobile, such as the use of flash or a small font size, you’ll get a message in this section letting you know what the problem is so you can work on fixing it.   7. See which sites link to you. For anyone focused on SEO, this is important information to have access to. Backlinks are one of the biggest ranking factors, so every time another authoritative website links to you it increases your website’s authority in the eyes of Google’s algorithm. Under Search Traffic in the left-side menu, select Links to Your Site. You’ll see a list of websites that include a link on their website back to yours, as well as a list of the pages on your website that other sites link to the most.  Under the section labeled “How your data is linked,” you can also see the anchor text other sites use most often when linking back to yours. You can find more information on each backlink by clicking on the website, and then clicking on the link listed. From there, you can see specific pages that include the link and visit them yourself to see how it’s used. 8. Check for broken links. Broken links provide a bad experience for your users and lead people away from the functioning pages you want them to be on. As if that wasn’t bad enough, they also make you look bad to Google and can have a negative effect on your rankings. In the Crawl section of the Google Search Console, you can find details on any errors Google found when crawling your website, including all URLs that returned a 404 error . If you click on each entry, you can find information on what the problem with the link is and where the link is located both on your website and others. This is valuable information you can use to improve your website experience and cut out any frustrating errors your visitors may be dealing with now.   9. Identify website security issues. Big website hacks are in the news every day lately it seems. Even if your business isn’t big enough to make the news if you get hacked, it can still cause you serious problems. And that goes double if you have an ecommerce site that collects sensitive customer data like credit card information. The Google Search Console provides a quick and easy head’s up if your website has a security flaw you should be aware of. Click on the Security Issues option on the left-side menu. If you don’t have anything to worry about, the Console will let you know. If Google does spot an issue, you’ll learn the details you need to figure out how to fix it here.   10. Confirm your schema markup or structured data is working. Finally, if you use schema markup or other structured data on your website, Google can confirm for you whether it’s set up right to work in the SERPs. Under Search Appearance, you’ll find categories for Structured Data, Rich Cards, and Data Highlighter, all of which are methods you can use to communicate more information to Google’s crawlers about how to display your web pages in the search results. The Console provides details on whether or not you have all your coding set up right for these categories, or if you need to make changes.   Conclusion The Google Search Console is entirely free and, as you can see, thoroughly packed with useful information for any business website. If you care about where and how you show up in the search engines, this is your best resource for digging into the data available and making an action plan for how to improve your SEO moving forward. Discover how HostGator’s expert SEO services can help your search rankings. Find the post on the HostGator Blog Continue reading

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