

"Smartphone users are a significant and fast growing segment of Internet users, and at Google we want them to experience the full richness of the web." Google's Yoshikiyo Kato and Pierre Far of Goolge co-blogged recently:

Page Not Optimized for Mobile? No High Google Rank for You (Soon) It's not always best from usability point of viewĥ.Feature phones do not support CSS media queries.Responsive layout often increases load time significantly.Mobile users may use different keywords than non-mobile searchers.Mobile users are often looking for different information than desktop users." The one URL argument for dynamic serving and responsive designs superiority is moot with the introduction of switchboard tags, as Google can now understand which site should appear when, regardless of URL structure." - Bryson MeunierĪs Bryson points out, there may be certain reasons the webmaster may want to choose a separate mobile URL over responsive Web design, these being: However, it is by far not always the best solution from the SEO point of view, says Bryson Meunier (emphasis and links are mine). Responsive Web design seems to be enjoying its moment of glory with both SEOs and web developers right now. Mobile SEO tip: Responsive Web Design Is Not Always the Best Option

So, it is best if the prices on your landing page go from highest to lowest, not vice verse. Mona also says that, when expensive products are placed near the top of the list, they get selected more often. In the book called Predictably Irrational by Dan Ariely, when test subjects were asked to think about their social insurance number and then guess the price of a product, people with higher social insurance numbers guessed that products were more expensive than people with lower social insurance numbers." - Mona Elesseily In her recent article, Mona Elesseily talks about how placing higher-priced items first thing on your page helps you boost sales. Did the wording make a difference?ġ1% more voted when the the noun (be a voter) was used instead of the verb (to vote)." - Susan Weinschenk The second sentence emphasized "to vote". The first sentence was phrased so that the emphasis was on the noun, "voter". "In a survey about voting, Gregory Walton at Stanford sometimes asked "How important is it to you to be a voter in tomorrows election?" versus "How important is it to you to vote in tomorrows election?" Susan Weinschenk, also known as "the brain lady", says that, when you use nouns instead of verbs on a landing page, this trigger greater response from your audiences. To Get People to Do Stuff, Use Nouns Instead of Verbs "Hey, let's use a rotating hero image!" - Brian MasseyĢ.

We know we're blending when we want to put one more "value proposition" on a webpage, even when we dont have room. "Our solution is the most cost-effective, easy-to-use, colorful, highest-intensity, waterproof, process-oriented available on the market." When we start adding adjectives to our sentences.
