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Content-schedule. Content Creation - UXmatters. 50 Questions to Evaluate the Quality of Your Website. How do you evaluate a website?

50 Questions to Evaluate the Quality of Your Website

By asking the right questions. No website is perfect. Every website has flaws. Many things that can go wrong, whether due to technical SEO, on-page optimizations, page speed, or something else. Ready to find your website’s flaws so you can get them fixed and working properly? Great! Read on to learn 50 questions you should ask to evaluate the quality of your website. 1. There shouldn’t be multiple H1 tags on the page. The H1 tag is the focus of the page’s topic, and thus it should only occur on the page once. If you include more than one H1 tag on the page, it will cause the dilution of the focus of the page. 2. One major issue that can impact a website negatively are 4xx and 5xx error pages. If your site cannot be crawled due to these issues, you can experience decreases in performance when search engines cannot effectively crawl the site. 3.

Issues can occur when error pages are not properly configured. This can introduce conflicts in crawling and indexing. Learning is Change - Question 203 of 365. Access to information never gets old.

Learning is Change - Question 203 of 365

I coveted it when all I could access was the universal search on AOL. I still covet it now that nearly every good piece of information comes directly to me through the various networks I take part in and blogs I read. I will never get over having knowledge at my fingertips. It is intoxicating. I have to remember almost nothing on my own. This all means that the process of collecting and processing what is new is stupefyingly easy. Throughout all of this aggregation, the creative process is taking place. It is af the trending topics are simply there to suggest what the trending topics should be. And the semantic web is playing right into the sincere nature of recycled content. As the comment becomes our currency and the remix takes on new levels of respect, there is little doubt that the act of writing will become still easier.

Should the penning of one’s thoughts be a part of everything we read and interact with? Five Minute Upgrade – Writing Blog Post Titles That Grab Attention. You’ve just spent a ton of time putting together your latest blog article, and now it’s finally time to launch it.

Five Minute Upgrade – Writing Blog Post Titles That Grab Attention

You know the quality is there, but how can you possibly summarize the entire thing into a one line title? How are you going to make the perfect elevator pitch for your article? Hold on a second, take some deep cleansing breathes, let’s take a look at some ways to make titles really grab the attention of your audience. 1. Create Curiosity Let’s say one day, after a good deal of research and hard work, I make a post entitled Little Known CSS Secrets. An individual that believes they have CSS locked down might not be as receptive to an article named Common CSS Techniques, but once you create a potential gap in their knowledge – aka little known CSS secrets – they will want to fill that gap. Titles that include terms such as “common mistakes/misuses”, “secrets of”, “little known”, “must see/have” and “essential” imply that there is something you might be missing.

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