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New features still come along quite often

Posted: Mon Dec 23, 2024 5:13 am
by zihadhosenjm60
New features still come along quite often and they’re never released at the expense of their most loved features—they still boast the largest index of backlinks of any blogging tool in its class.

While their Keywords Explorer tool is my go-to (paid keyword tool) these days, Ahrefs really earns its stripes as a backlink analysis tool. When conducting an analysis of either your own backlink profile or uk ka number kya hai of a competitor you’re trying to learn from, you can choose to view columns like only new links, lost links, no follow, or do follow links. You also can group similar links, see just one link per domain name or view links by blogging platform. The flexibility lets you easily get to the bottom of your queries.

Here are a few of my daily searches on Ahrefs:

Top Pages: This shows you a list of the highest traffic-grossing pages for the site you’re analyzing
Best by Links: This view ranks the pages of a site based on the number of backlinks it’s received
Content Explorer: Allows you to quickly generate blog post ideas that put the spotlight on trending topics in your space
Competitor Research: This’ll quickly show the keywords a competitor site ranks for (along with traffic estimates)
Keep in mind that traffic estimates are calculated based on a site’s organic ranking positions, their number of featured snippets, search carousels and everything else in between. As such, organic traffic reports can be shockingly accurate, even for small blogs. And if you want another SEO tool to compare Ahrefs against, check out SEMRush.

5. Google Analytics
How I Made $54923 Blogging on the Side in June 2019 Google Analytics Screenshot Traffic
Since 2005, Google Analytics has been a (free) web analytics service built and offered by Google that allows blog and website owners to track and report on their website traffic. Today, it’s just one of the tools offered inside of the overall Google Marketing Platform brand, designed for marketers and advertisers to reach more readers.

In the screenshot above (from my own Google Analytics dashboard for this blog), you can see critical data points like how many readers come to my blog each month, the breakdown of new vs returning visitors, how many pages the average visitor views, how long they spend on a page, my blog’s bounce rate—and so much more. Here’s a step-by-step guide from Google on how to install Google Analytics on your blog.