Sentences with phrase «competitive head term»

Not exact matches

The beautiful part about those keywords is that they are less competitive, which means it is easier to rank for them, and they convert better than head terms.
Thus, the long - term target incentives for the NEOs who head these significant business segments are determined based on a blend of peer positions with similar titles at peer group companies and CEO positions among smaller companies, using the 75th percentile for peer - company positions and the median for CEO positions at smaller companies as competitive reference points.
Previously, as a practice head at Fuld & Co., a Boston based consulting firm, Kevin, leading the delivery of insights and recommendations on competitive business and talent practices, facilitating scenario planning and war - gaming exercises for Fortune 500 executive teams to align team members with long - term strategic initiatives.
If you target only competitive termshead terms with search volume in the hundreds of thousands — maybe you'll see significant gains in several months.
That's because head terms are generally searched more frequently, making them often (not always, but often) much more competitive and harder to rank for than long - tail terms.
Getting a head start in the transition to the low - carbon economy will give most companies a long - term competitive edge, with compelling medium - term cost savings.
As you note, these long - tail queries are much less competitive (read difficult to appear prominently for) than those head terms.
In fact, these types of head terms are the most competitive (making them the most expensive organically and in paid search) and don't really have all that much volume.
«We've seen how banks have increasingly offered longer - term financing that is competitive with life companies and conduits,» said Brian Stoffers, global head of debt and structured finance, in the report.
Ryan mentions that Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg may have purchased a home in California; Ryan reviews the economic events of the prior week; Ryan notes that interest rate are still heading down; Ryan notes that the DC real estate market is competitive on the buy and rent sides and that would be renters in the DC area are turning into would be buyers; Louis notes that the DC housing dynamic is different from the rest of the country where housing prices are down and there is plenty of inventory; Louis notes that if it is cheaper to buy than rent that it makes sense to get a long term low interest rate loan; Louis talks about the benefits of visiting HomeGain.com; Louis discusses the HomeGain FSBO vs. Realtor survey and the advantages of hiring a REALTOR; Louis and Ryan discuss the HomeGain home improvement survey and recount the types of home improvements that provide the best return on investment; Ryan and Louis talk about pricing strategies for selling a home; Louis and Ryan discuss the differences between pricing a short sale and pricing a non short sale home; Louis notes pricing a home too high may keep the home on the market a long time and that the more days a home is on the market makes a home look like damaged good; Ryan describes short sales as foreclosure avoidance and discusses the impact of each on FICO scores; Ryan talks about the options that people with underwater mortgages have; Louis mentions that 72 % of home buyers and sellers pick the first real estate agent they meet and points out the value in comparing agents first using HomeGain's Find a REALTOR program; Louis can Ryan discuss the level of shadow inventory the impact on sellers as more inventory gets released;
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