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Read through your various threads again.I welcome your recommendations on strategies to enhance conversion rates for the National Bailiff Advice website.
You were giving lots of advice in your website review thread. Implement those and your conversions will increase.I welcome your recommendations on strategies to enhance conversion rates for the National Bailiff Advice website.
So you don't recall people talking about CTA's, user experience, improving your form structure, navigation, marketing plans, page structure ..... ? And a lot more.This is the first time the topic of Conversion Rate Optimisation has been raised. Therefore, reviewing the existing threads alone will not provide the necessary answers.
It was discussed in your website review thread - just not using those words.This is the first time the topic of Conversion Rate Optimisation has been raised. Therefore, reviewing the existing threads alone will not provide the necessary answers.
Those are not useful keywords. The search target is far too wide....key search words, which are "bailiffs" and "enforcement agents."
Why do you want visitor seeking information? You want visitors who need help and are willing to pay for that help.This approach will help ensure that the content effectively reaches those searching for information on bailiffs and enforcement agents.
Given that Google ignores meta page descriptions and titles on a regular basis, this is going to be a waste of time and money and anyone offering to do this is probably not an SEO professional.I will seek SEO advice on optimising individual article titles and descriptions to include relevant keywords and improve page descriptions. This approach will help ensure that the content effectively reaches those searching for information on bailiffs and enforcement agents.
Following this, I will engage an SEO professional, who may also be the same individual handling the web development, to ensure that the site is fully optimised for search engines to improve the visibility of its key search words, which are "bailiffs" and "enforcement agents."
The purpose of the site is to get people paying for a £35 phone call. That should be the sole focus of everything you do. Your prospective clients don't want to read a load of legal stuff, they just want to make the bailiff go away.I wrote the site content with a primary focus on engaging potential clients, prioritising their perspective over solely optimising for search engines. My goal was to ensure that visitors would find the information both informative and relevant rather than just tailoring the content to please Google.
Shopclicks, your interpretation of my client selectivity approach misses the mark. My websites are designed to cater to high-value clients, such as businesses and traffic debt enforcement cases, rather than lower-value cases like court fines and council tax.
This contradiction clearly shows why you need to revisit your fictional marketing plan.While increasing customer spend is undoubtedly a key goal, I have maintained the £35 consultation fee to ensure affordability for those in debt, demonstrating my commitment to providing accessible services.
The £35 phone call initiates the relationship. You can then upsell other services.
This is why I said you need a new marketing plan. If your current plan was effective you wouldn't be on UKBF asking for help, you would be so busy you wouldn't time to post.
This contradiction clearly shows why you need to revisit your fictional marketing plan.
Move the website to a CMS and embrace all the features this will give you and make the changes detailed in your website review.Your insights are welcomed, especially in improving services related to bailiffs and enforcement agents.
So why havent you done it?My primary concern is enhancing the SEO performance of the website, as I recognise it is currently trailing behind competitors and requires improvement. If this necessitates moving away from outdated HTML and its PHP backend, I am prepared to make that change.
It’s a 10 minute job. Easy for any halfway decent developer to do with a simple script.The website comprises over 169 pages, making it impractical for me to address immediately.
NickGrogan: Having no prior experience with WordPress and not currently hosting it on my server, I find the prospect quite appealing. It appears straightforward, so I will need to familiarise myself with WordPress.
In a different discussion group, a recommendation was made to use Yoast for SEO. However, my previous encounters with AI tools for SEO have been less than favourable to my search rankings.
What is your perspective on integrating Yoast as a plugin for SEO, especially in terms of its effectiveness?
I want to echo this as it's a really good post.That's why I'd set it up on a "hidden" server first, learn, make mistakes, start again, etc with no impact at all on your site.
I went from using Dreamweaver to Wordpress many years ago, 600 page website with scripts. It takes a bit of getting used to, you have to do things the way Wordpress wants rather than having complete freedom with HTML, but its worth it and I wouldn't go back.
Yoast is a very big plugin, it claims to do all sorts of things and it does them with varying degrees of success. I have used it and I removed it, it didn't help rankings and it makes doing the simplest things far more awkward.
You don't really need much from an SEO plugin to keep Google happy.
I use a plugin to create sitemaps and track redirections automatically, so when I move a page, it tells Google where to look or if I delete, it prompts me for a URL to redirect to. I also track 404 errors and set up redirects for those, too.
A lot of SEO plugins do things like add the site name to the title, but that just gives long repetitive titles, which wont boost your SEO anyway.
Schema data can be useful, but again you don't need AI and you don't really want to fully automate it.
Metadata does nothing much - if it doesn't match the content, Google ignores it. If it matches the content, it adds no value, so, Google ignores it.
Use AI for suggestions and think about what it's telling you.
Dont use any tools that say AI will fix things automatically. They'll mess you up.
There are good Wordpress set-ups and bad. Fast & slow. I'd suggest when you're ready to start, open a new thread and ask lot's of questions. You will need advice on themes, plugins and security. Your site is currently passing Core Web Vitals. You don't want to lose that.I'm gearing up to dive into the world of WordPress, as it seems everyone and their dog sings its praises these days.
They already position well and are getting decent traffic. What they aren’t doing is converting as well as they could.What makes you think you have a right to position well?
which is a good definition of SEObest thing to do is to create good, regular, easy-to-read content that imparts information to the searcher
No, that's just a definition of good copy. It just so happens that Google is trying to find good copy, so the Venn diagram of good copy and well-optimised copy do overlap considerably. But you could conceivably have good copy that is sub-optimised for search. In niche segments, good copy is almost all you need to do to get onto the front page of organic. For more competitive search terms there is a bit more work to do than just writing good copy. But, again, Google explains all of this. The only problems occur when people try and out smart Google.which is a good definition of SEO