Post by amirmukaddas on Mar 13, 2024 5:14:44 GMT
In 2008 when I was kicked out of a Web Agency in crisis and after I had seen former colleagues doing SEO (badly). I came from a long experience as a Unix system engineer and then a PHP programmer. A few years later I asked to work in sales to interact with customers and learn how to talk to them to drive the point home. 2) How did you learn to do SEO? As I always say... tin cars (no it's not a typo) I always learned everything on my own, self-taught in fact! I slowly learned the basics of SEO both by studying English language books and by going to events around Europe and most often in London. Furthermore, I have done and continue to experiment with various sites - not those of clients eh! – and various blogs created over the years. A few months ago I also had one of my posts translated into Swedish on how to do e-commerce in Germany. Why? So to see the effect it has and I even paid dearly for it. 3) What would you do to Matt Cutts if you found yourself alone in a dark alley at night with no cameras? Nothing, because I'm not homosexual! Seriously speaking, nothing is the same because Matt does his job and I do mine.
Everyone must play their part as best as possible and participate in this great game with rich prizes or even blows in the teeth. 4) Which Italian SEOs have inspired you? On what basis do you judge them? Well, I won't say anything Denmark Telegram Number Data because I no longer follow the Italian scene much anymore, living in Berlin. Furthermore, I am increasingly focusing on languages other than Italian and apart from German, requests are starting to arrive for exotic languages such as Swedish or even Chinese or even Korean and there we are playing on different fields from the usual Italian or even European one. Gurus in the localization or International SEO sector, if you prefer, are few and often don't even exist. This is because in Europe we are all quite concentrated on national markets or on Google, which is king. As soon as you step out of the way, all jaws on the ground 5) What are the ideal and worst working conditions for an SEO? Well soon said.
The ideal conditions are a customer who pays immediately and understands what you are telling and asking him. The worst conditions are the opposite. It seems trivial, but it's true if you think about it. SEO itself is like all jobs, neither bad nor good. You have to study, experiment, understand what happens and continually improve. In short, evolve and be quick. The real difference between ideal or terrible conditions is made by the customer because the budget and clear ideas help. SEO is not a magician and is often part of a general marketing strategy that must be clear to the customer. If the site is not very usable or you want to sell in Germany, but you don't understand how the minds of German customers work, there is little SEO you can do. In certain conditions you become a lightning rod for unprepared customers trying to understand the wave patterns of Google or the markets where they want to be present. Literateizing the customer and carrying out maieutics to extract strategic information is a cost that we cannot afford very often.
Everyone must play their part as best as possible and participate in this great game with rich prizes or even blows in the teeth. 4) Which Italian SEOs have inspired you? On what basis do you judge them? Well, I won't say anything Denmark Telegram Number Data because I no longer follow the Italian scene much anymore, living in Berlin. Furthermore, I am increasingly focusing on languages other than Italian and apart from German, requests are starting to arrive for exotic languages such as Swedish or even Chinese or even Korean and there we are playing on different fields from the usual Italian or even European one. Gurus in the localization or International SEO sector, if you prefer, are few and often don't even exist. This is because in Europe we are all quite concentrated on national markets or on Google, which is king. As soon as you step out of the way, all jaws on the ground 5) What are the ideal and worst working conditions for an SEO? Well soon said.
The ideal conditions are a customer who pays immediately and understands what you are telling and asking him. The worst conditions are the opposite. It seems trivial, but it's true if you think about it. SEO itself is like all jobs, neither bad nor good. You have to study, experiment, understand what happens and continually improve. In short, evolve and be quick. The real difference between ideal or terrible conditions is made by the customer because the budget and clear ideas help. SEO is not a magician and is often part of a general marketing strategy that must be clear to the customer. If the site is not very usable or you want to sell in Germany, but you don't understand how the minds of German customers work, there is little SEO you can do. In certain conditions you become a lightning rod for unprepared customers trying to understand the wave patterns of Google or the markets where they want to be present. Literateizing the customer and carrying out maieutics to extract strategic information is a cost that we cannot afford very often.