Taking a URL approach helps you see how many topics (and what types) are relevant to those specific pages. For example, URLs that appeared more than once in our data set had an average of 3.02 distinct topics per SERP.
we found that with an average of 54.46 related topics per SERP, 31.58 percent appeared more than once. If we're rounding to the nearest whole topic, that means a single query could give us 37 unique related topics to explore.
Especially if you're tracking every call that's made from your benin number data website, CallRail will have an Analytics integration, and then you'll be tracking taps and maybe you'll be tracking telephone clicks as well. So you can track that if you want to see how many people tap versus pick up the phone and call the old-fashioned way with landlines. You can do that too, but it's completely up to you. But just keep that in mind if you're going to track telephone links.
That's it. That's all you have to do. Just like a link, except instead of going to , you're going to a phone number. This will make your visitors' lives a lot easier, especially on mobile devices. You always want to be able to tap them. So then you can track the number of people who tap on phone links and people who tap on mailto: links in the same way. Now something I have to say, though, is that if you're using a call tracking provider, for example CallReel, which is what we use, you might want to turn that off, because then you might get double counting.
From a query perspective,
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