Google: Moving Links Around On A Page Won't Boost Your Search Rankings

John Mueller of Google said that by just moving a link from one position on a page to another position on a page - you likely won't see any ranking boost from that action. He said on Twitter "I wouldn't assume that you'd get a boost out of just moving links from one part of the page to another part though."

Sure, moving links around from a usability perspective might make sense. But for SEO purposes alone, it probably won't make a huge difference in your rankings.

There are probably exceptions to this, like having a link in your footer's legal disclaimer versus your body content - that probably is a bigger change from Google's perspective.

4 Simple Marketing Rules that Drove $370 Million in Sales

These four simple steps can help you ensure your sales and marketing efforts are successful instead of a waste of time and resources.

Define your audience

Who are you targeting? Are there specific roles or titles you're going after? Do these people come from a certain industry or companies of a specific size? Maybe you have decision-makers at 100 targeted accounts you want to engage. Or perhaps it's a specific age group you're trying to reach.

Whatever you're marketing or selling, you need to clearly define who your audience is as much as possible. Without that, you're bound to fail.

Target them with a specific message

Generic messaging is never effective. I've seen many marketers be indecisive about which value proposition they should focus on. Instead of being laser-focused about one core benefit or use case, they try to do five different things. However, this leaves your audience distracted and confused about what to focus on.

Other times, inept marketers will just opt for a generic message that vaguely describes everything. But this just leaves people bored and uninterested since it doesn't apply to any specific pain point or desired outcome.

Instead, make your message as specific and simplified as possible. Focus on one core benefit or pain point, and try to think about a common use case for your prospective customers.

Test and measure to see what works

Effective sales and marketing are always data-driven. I personally recommend always testing multiple variants whenever running any campaign. It's important to measure the right variables, though.

With outbound email campaigns, for example, you can look at email deliverability (how many emails bounced versus were successfully delivered) and open rates. But the most important metrics are positive response rates, as well as qualified appointments set. I also like to analyze the entire sales funnel to see which emails drove the biggest deals or fastest closes.

Keep iterating to stay effective

The hustle never ends. Marketers and salespeople who get complacent fall behind fast. Even if you had a really successful ad campaign or email template one day doesn't mean it will keep working for you in two months.

Markets change. Your customers' needs change. How your competition is targeting your prospective audience will also change and evolve. Eventually, everything gets stale and ineffective.

You must constantly be testing and analyzing data in order to stay on top and keep ahead of trends.  If you don't, your efforts and your business can quickly become obsolete.

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Ready For Answers?
Call Us 1-949-954-7769
eMail us at: wantmore@teamdebello.com