Post by amirmukaddas on Mar 13, 2024 4:15:02 GMT
It was a very dark and stormy night way back in 2009! To be honest it wasn't, but I wanted to create some initial pathos . In reality, after my work experiences with a small company and two large brands, such as Lottomatica and Unicredit, passing through ICM Italia (Hey, yes...), I wanted to "get back into the game". So I founded the Arkys agency, together with my partner Pierfrancesco Rizzo and, fascinated by the idea that search engines could "be manipulated" to bring sites to the front page, I began to study SEO in depth. It all comes from the intriguing world of that type of challenge in which a finite number of steps leads to a solution. 2) How did you learn to do SEO? The passion that followed my university studies at the Faculty of Engineering (Computer Science, of course!) pushed me to want to learn about this discipline, in all its facets! I study SEO, and I still do today, as if I were always at the beginning, never forgetting that you never stop learning .
I started (because learning is a big word!) by reading texts in English, delving deeper online and repeatedly testing what I had learned. Above all, I never stopped listening! 3) What would you do to Matt Cutts (or whoever) if you found yourself alone in a dark alley at night and Denmark Telegram Number Data without cameras? Hit on the head, tied and gagged, Chinese torture and a constant: "Hey, tell me all the secrets of Google!!" Jokes aside, I'd like to know the real future plans of the engine, what it wants to do and where it wants to go! Last but not least, it would be interesting to understand how they want to get rid of SEOs. 4) Which Italian SEOs have inspired you? On what basis do you judge them? All my colleagues (no one excluded!), some in one way and some in another, have taught me and still teach me something today.
If I had to name names I would say: Piersante Paneghel and Enrico Altavilla . I'm no one to judge them , but I can tell you that they gave me a lot and that every one of my first tests started from what they had, unknowingly, left me (whether for an intervention, a post, a speech or something else). Other names are: Ivano Di Biasi , Andrea Pernici , Gaetano Romeo to name a few others. 5) What really is SEO? And you ask me who still studies it? I think that SEO is made up of a triptych: Observation – Study – Practice . Observe what happens on search engines, find out why certain actions lead to one or more reactions and put into practice (testing) what you have learned. Technically speaking, however, it is a mix of onsite and offsite activities, but the one that is still important today remains link building .
I started (because learning is a big word!) by reading texts in English, delving deeper online and repeatedly testing what I had learned. Above all, I never stopped listening! 3) What would you do to Matt Cutts (or whoever) if you found yourself alone in a dark alley at night and Denmark Telegram Number Data without cameras? Hit on the head, tied and gagged, Chinese torture and a constant: "Hey, tell me all the secrets of Google!!" Jokes aside, I'd like to know the real future plans of the engine, what it wants to do and where it wants to go! Last but not least, it would be interesting to understand how they want to get rid of SEOs. 4) Which Italian SEOs have inspired you? On what basis do you judge them? All my colleagues (no one excluded!), some in one way and some in another, have taught me and still teach me something today.
If I had to name names I would say: Piersante Paneghel and Enrico Altavilla . I'm no one to judge them , but I can tell you that they gave me a lot and that every one of my first tests started from what they had, unknowingly, left me (whether for an intervention, a post, a speech or something else). Other names are: Ivano Di Biasi , Andrea Pernici , Gaetano Romeo to name a few others. 5) What really is SEO? And you ask me who still studies it? I think that SEO is made up of a triptych: Observation – Study – Practice . Observe what happens on search engines, find out why certain actions lead to one or more reactions and put into practice (testing) what you have learned. Technically speaking, however, it is a mix of onsite and offsite activities, but the one that is still important today remains link building .