Posts

Showing posts from January, 2022

FLASH SALE: Unmetered Bandwidth London Cheap Dedi (e3-1240v2, 4c/8t, 16GB, 800GB SSD): $80/month!

Image
Head’s Up, Lowenders! I’ve been trying to get Tempest Hosting for a while because they’ve got some great dedi offers.  They tend to sell out really quickly so with our lead times it hasn’t worked out.  But right now, I happen to know that they’ve got a fresh set of blades in London available for sale right now: Intel Xeon E3-1240v2 Cheap Dedicated Server 4 cores/8 threads (4c/8t) 16GB of RAM 800 of SSD Disk UNMETERED BANDWIDTH in London Nice!  These won’t last, so if London is where you want to be, then jump on the offer ! The post FLASH SALE: Unmetered Bandwidth London Cheap Dedi (e3-1240v2, 4c/8t, 16GB, 800GB SSD): $80/month! appeared first on LowEndBox . Source link

How to Reclaim Your Keyword Data

Image
In Google Analytics, when you see “(not provided)” instead of the queries that led searchers to your website, this means Google is covering organic keywords data in the interest of protecting the privacy of searchers. But no worries, this doesn’t mean you have configured your Google Analytics wrong or your data is lost. In this article, we’ll cover two solutions to the “not provided” problem and some tips on how to use your newly acquired keyword data: Sidenote. At the time of writing, Google Analytics 4, the successor of Universal Analytics, by default doesn’t show any organic keywords (or the “not provided” token) in the Acquisition report. To solve this problem, you can use the same solutions shown in this article. Solution 1. Use Google Search Console (free tool) Google Search Console  (GSC) is a free tool from Google designed to monitor and troubleshoot your website’s appearance in the search results. On top of revealing organic queries that led to your website, you can use GSC

5 Powerful Marketing Activities: Lessons From Successful Brands

Image
Marketing activities are actions an individual or organization undertakes to achieve specific marketing outcomes. There are probably as many marketing activities as there are marketing goals. It’s hard to evaluate these activities “as they are” because their effectiveness depends on how they’re applied and to which market. Yet there are some activities that seem to stand out from the rest by bringing great results for many companies and standing the test of time. In this article, I’ll show you five such marketing activities and five companies that tested them in real-life conditions. Since each of those activities can be an article on its own (or a book), I’ll be focusing on explaining why they are worth your time. Here they are: 1. Finding product-market fit Finding product-market fit (PMF) means making sure a product can satisfy an existing demand in a market with high potential. Basically, a telltale sign of achieving PMF is when people are willing to buy your product, actively use