Saturday, 25 February 2017

How to Choose a Good SEO Company in Surrey, Vancouver for Your Business or Website?

When it comes to choosing a reputable company to manage your SEO, there's both a right way and a wrong way to go about the hiring process. In today's Whiteboard Friday, Rand identifies common pitfalls to avoid and advice to take when it comes to selecting an agency or consultant to optimize your site for search engines. SEOs, take note: there are great ideas here for how to market yourselves to clients, as well!

we're going to chat about how to choose a good SEO company, a consultant or an agency. It could be an independent person. What I want to do as we get into this is help you to understand some of the mechanics behind SEO consulting work. This is a critical hire, because if SEO is important to your business, then the choice of which company or person to use is going to have a huge impact, probably one of the biggest impacts on whether you get great results. There are a bunch of mistakes that people make when they go down this selecting an SEO company path.

Don't make these mistakes

Mistake #1: Using Google as your filter

The logic makes a lot of sense here if you think about it simplistically. Simplistic thinking is a good SEO company will do a great job ranking for SEO company Chandigarh or SEO consultant or SEO consultant plus my city name. So if I'm looking for the best SEO in Chandigarh, I have only to Google "best SEO Chandigarh" and surely the number-one company will show up at the top. But, unfortunately, what happens is most of the very good companies, the ones that are in high demand, the ones that do consistently great work and get great referrals, they don't actually need to rank here. They're overwhelmed with clients all the time because their clients refer them to people and lots of people in their network refer folks to them. They have a high retention of clients. Lots of people are very satisfied. They're making plenty of money and they're incredibly busy, so they don't spend any work optimizing their own website to get new clients.

As a result, you are often left with some of the dregs here. Many of the companies that rank well for best SEO plus city name or best SEO plus a region or plus a particular specialty, like best ecommerce SEO, are not the best. They are, in fact, the folks who are simply without any client work and so they're concentrating all their energy on trying to get new clients. Sometimes, maybe, you can find some good folks in there. It's just not a great filter.

Mistake #2: Trusting "Top SEO" lists

Many people will search for "best SEOs" or "best SEO consultants" or "best SEO companies," "best SEO companies United States." They'll get to a website like, I don't know, bestSEOs.com or topSEOs.com. There are a number of these types of websites that are essentially just aggregators. Their business model is they try and rank for terms like this, and then they sell those listings, the listings on their page, to SEO firms and companies. Back when Moz was a consulting company many, many years ago, they'd call us up and they'd say, "Hey, do you want to be number 3, we can make you number 3 on the best SEO companies list for $20,000 a year. Or we can make you number 1, but you're going to have to pay $75,000 a year."

That is not a great... I mean it's a great model for them. Don't get me wrong. But that pay-to-play scheme is not trustworthy for you as a consumer of SEO companies. You would never trust someone that said, "Oh well, what's the best restaurant in this particular region?" You'd never go to a list where the restaurants just paid. That would give you the conglomerates and the people who can afford to spend the most and the worst. Don't trust those types of lists.

There are a few lists, there are a few websites, places like getcredo.com run by John Doherty. There's obviously Moz's recommended SEO list, which is just my personal recommendations and the recommendations of my network. You can't pay to be on there. You can't pay to be listed. Some of those are more trustworthy. We'll try and link to a few of those good ones at the end of this whiteboard.

Mistake #3: Believing there's a "secret sauce"

 

Mistake number three is believing the sales pitch that unfortunately many I'm going to say low-quality SEO consultants use, which is there's a secret sauce. There are no secret sauces in SEO. If you hear like, "This is how Google works blah, blah, blah, and then here's how we do our secret optimization techniques. I can't tell you what those are. It's a proprietary methodology, but it works really well," that's baloney. You should reject that. If you ask, "How do you do it," and they say, "I'm sorry I can't tell you, it's a secret or it's proprietary," that is a very, very bad sign. No one has a secret proprietary process. SEO is a very, very open field. It's well understood. It has origins in a lot of secrecy, but that is not the way it is today and you should never accept that as an answer. That is a red flag.

My recommended process for choosing an SEO company:

Step 1

I want you to establish, sit down with your team, with your CEO, with your executive team, your board, whoever you've got, and figure out the goals you're trying to achieve with SEO. Why do you want to do SEO? Why do you want to rank organically for keywords? Then, figure out how you're going to judge success versus failure. In this process, there are good goals and bad goals.
Good goals:
  • I want to get in front of a lot of people who are researching this, and so we need traffic from these specific groups. I know that they perform searches for this. Great.
  • We're trying to boost revenue, and we're trying to boost it through new sales and SEO is a sales driving channel. Fine, great.
  • We're trying to boost downloads or free sign-ups or free trials. Also a fine goal.
  • We're trying to boost sentiment for our brand. Maybe if you Googled some of our branded terms today, there are some poor reviews, there's lots of good reviews that rank below them, and we want to push the good reviews up and the bad reviews down. Fine. Sentiment, that could be something you're driving as well. You know a lot of people are researching your brand or branded terms. Those are all good goals.
Bad goals:
  • We just want traffic, more traffic. Why? Well, because we want it. Terrible, terrible goal. Traffic is not a goal in and of itself. If you say, "Well, we want more traffic because we know search traffic converts well for us and here are the statistics on it," fine, terrific. Now it's a revenue driving thing.
  • Rankings alone, unfortunately this is a vanity thing that many people have where they want to rank for something simply because they want to rank for it. Usually a bad sign for SEO companies considering clients. You shouldn't have that on your goals list. That's not a positive goal.
  • Beating a particular competitor out for specific keywords or phrases. Again, not a great goal. Doesn't drive directly to revenue. Doesn't drive directly to organizational goals.
  • Vanity metrics. I still see people who are saying, "Hey, does anyone know a great SEO company that can help bring our domain authority up or our Majestic trust flow up or, worst of all, our Google PageRank up?" Google dropped PageRank years ago. It's terrible. Vanity metrics, bad ideas too.

Step 2

Once you have a list of these good goals that you're trying to optimize for, my suggestion is that you should assemble a list of usually three to five is I think sort of the right comfort zone. You can do more if you have the bandwidth to evaluate more, but three to five, at least, consultants or agencies. Those could be by a bunch of criteria. You might say, "Hey, look we really need someone in our region so that we can meet with them in person or at least someone who can fly to us on a regular basis." Maybe that's a requirement for you. Or you might say, "That's not important. Remote is great." Fine, wonderful. You might say something like, "Our price range or our budget is this particular thing."
You want to find whatever those criteria are and make sure you've got a list of three to five folks that you can consider against one another. Have some conversations with them and dig into references.Good sources:
  • Your friends and personal networks and professional networks as well.
  • Similar non-competitive companies. You will find that if you're, for example, in a B2B space or in an ecommerce space and there's a non-competitive ecommerce company whom you're friendly with, you can build those relationships. You should certainly already have those relationships. Talking to those folks about who they use and whether they were successful, great way to find some good people.
  • Industry insiders. If you're watching Whiteboard Friday here on Moz, chances are good that you follow some great SEO people on Twitter, which is a very popular network for SEOs, or that you read SEO blogs. You can reach out to some of those influential insiders with whom you have a relationship or whose opinion you really like and care about and ask them who they would recommend.
Good questions to ask:
  • By the way, I like asking SEO companies: What process are you going to use to accomplish our goals, and why do you use those particular processes? That's a really smart one to start with.
  • Ask them about their communication and reporting process. How often? What's their cadence like? What metrics do they report on? What do they need you to collect? Why do they collect those metrics? How do those match up to your goals and how do they align?
  • What work and resources will you have to commit internally? You should know that before you go into any arrangement, because it could get very complex. If your SEO company says, "Great here's a list of recommendations," and you say, "Fine, we don't have the development bandwidth, or we don't have the content creation bandwidth, or we don't have the visual or UI or UX exchange bandwidth to make any of those. So what do we do?" Well, now you're road blocked. You should've had that conversation much earlier in time. *By the way, SEO usually requires some intensive resource allotment. So you should plan for that ahead of time.
  • What do you do when things aren't working? I love asking that question, and I like asking for specific examples of when things haven't gone right and what they've done to fix that in the past and work around it.
  • I like asking broadly. Especially when you open a conversation, especially if you're feeling like, hey I want to get to know this company's approach to SEO and their understanding of Google, you can ask them something like, "Hey, tell me how does Google rank results, and how do you as a company influence them?" You should hear good answers about, yes, this is how Google does things, and here's how we know that and here's how we do our process of influencing those results. That's great.

Step 3

I like to recommend that folks choose on these four things:
  1. The trust that you've established with a company. That's through references, through the conversation, through people that you've talked to in your network.
  2. Through referrals. If you hear great referrals and you trust those referral sources, that's a wonderful signal.
  3. Through communication style match. If your communication style, even if everything else is good, but when you have conversations, you walk away from them feeling a little frustrated, maybe you got the things you needed, but it didn't flow smoothly, I would suggest that maybe that's a cultural mismatch and you should look for another provider.
  4. Price and contract structure. Many SEO firms have a contract structure that's month-to-month and that has a certain length of time. You should expect to pay some upfront payment and then some ongoing monthly fee. There's usually a time at which the payment will recur and the contract will renew. It's pretty similar to a lot of other services, consulting types of agreements, so you should expect that. If you're seeing very non-standard stuff, that can be a bad thing sometimes, but not always. A lot of times SEOs have more creative pricing, and that's all right.

Pro tips

Three pro tips:
  1. If SEO needs to be a core competency at your company, bring it in-house. An agency or consultant can never do as much with as much resources, with as much communication, as someone in-house can do. Starting with a consultant externally and then bringing someone in-house is a fine way to go.
  2.  
  3. If the quality SEO folks that you're considering are too pricy, my suggestion might be to say, "Okay, how about you just advise us on the work, and we'll hire an in-house person, maybe who's more beginner-level and you coach that person?" That can work well, again especially if you have that budget to bring that person in-house.
  4.  
  5. Remember that SEO is not for everyone. SEO is extremely competitive. Page 1 gets 95% plus of the clicks. The top 3 or 4 results are getting more than 70% of those clicks, 65% or 70%. So a lot of the time, if you can't afford yet to do SEO or to engage in it seriously, it may not be all that valuable to go from ranking on page five for a lot of your key terms to page two or the bottom of page one. Unless you have the budget and the energy to really commit yourself to SEO, it might be a channel you consider later down the road.
All right, everyone, hope you've enjoyed this edition of Whiteboard Friday. Would love to hear your thoughts on how you've picked good SEO companies in the past and the experiences you've had there. We'll see you again next week for another edition of Whiteboard Friday. Take care.

If You are Looking for BEST SEO COMPANY IN CHANDIGARH.
WEBIHAWKS IS BEST CHOICE FOR YOU.


Source copy From :- https://moz.com

Friday, 10 June 2016

Affordable SEO and PPC plans for your website & e-store - Best SEO Company Chandigarh

Affordable SEO and PPC plans for your website & e-store - Best SEO Company Chandigarh

Are you Looking for Best SEO Company in Chandigarh? If yes then WebiHawks is your Best Option for Best SEO. WebiHawks Providing Affordable SEO and PPC plans for your website & e-store. Call +91-9592910030 or Visit www.webihawks.com

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Social Media Exposure: ‘Word of mouth’ publicity is the best form of promotion that your brand/product/service can get. Our social media exposure service propagates your brand/product/service on social networking sites, where it will be recommended by hundreds of users.

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Saturday, 16 January 2016

Online Reputation Management



ORM - Online Reputation Management
OnlineReputation management is the practice of monitoring the reputation of an individual or brand, addressing contents which are damaging to it, and using customer feedback to get feedback or early warning signals to reputation problems. Online Reputation Management has become an essential component of any brand management strategy.
But even if you are ranking well for keywords, if someone is saying bad things about your company is messes up all of your good work and really damages your ability to compete.



If you have bad business reviews or something negative about your business that you want to hide, you need online reputation management. We help businesses in Chandigarh. India and across the world get back to the top and repair the damage.

We help you in maintaining your brand equity, Online reputation and awareness through strategic internet marketing and social media marketing. We will design campaigns, events and other necessary messaging content to reach right customers to build long term relationship and a positive feedback cycle.
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Friday, 25 December 2015

7 Reasons Why Your Business Should Invest In SEO

7 Reasons Why Your Business Should Invest In SEO

 he term “Is SEO dead?” and what comes back in return is over 44 million references including the aptly titled article of the same name by fellow Forbes contributor Jayson DeMers. In his article DeMers shares a conversation he had with Sam McRoberts, CEO of VUDU Marketing and a widely published expert in the SEO field.

When queried if in fact SEO  is dead, McRoberts said “SEO is far from dead” but added the caveat that “it’s changed so drastically that people really need to learn to think of it as less of a marketing tactic, and more of a branding play.”

Not sure I agree with that assessment but regardless of that and contrary to what you may have read recently, organic search engine optimization is far from dead.

In fact, many companies, including the London based SEO agency – Go Up, are making a renewed commitment to investing into developing solid, SEO optimized web infrastructure that is search-engine friendly, given the engines’ continued commitment to improving their algorithms over time.

SEO3

Here’s a list of seven specific reasons why your business should definitely consider investing in your organic SEO:

    It still works – First and foremost, the techniques employed to improve SEO still work. Even though data regarding organic traffic from Google was pulled fairly recently, the techniques themselves remain sound. Plenty of SEO case studies performed post-Hummingbird can verify this. Joshua Guerra, CEO of marketing firm BIZCOR says “As long as you are focusing on optimal user experience while performing methodic SEO strategies, you will be rewarded with higher positioning and organic traffic.”
    It is not going to stop working any time soon – Based on the way search engines appear to be developing, it is not likely that SEO will cease to be effective any time in the foreseeable future. On some level, even audio and video searches ultimately depend on keywords the same as traditional text-based content; this link ensures the continued success of SEO techniques as long as it exists.
    Recommended by Forbes

    It is cost-effective – Compared to the costs associated with other forms of online marketing such as PPC advertising, social media marketing, or purchasing leads for an email marketing program, SEO provides fairly good ROI. While PPC may drive more revenue and social media may be more important for your image, your organic SEO in many ways remains a bedrock of your online presence.

    Search engines grabbing more market share – Somewhere between 80-90% of customers now check online reviews prior to making a purchase, and this number is only expected to increase. It won’t be long before virtually everyone is searching for products and services online. Do you want them to be able to locate your business, or not?  Without organic SEO in place, people will have a very hard time finding you and will instead find your competitors.

    Rise of mobile bandwidth and local search optimization – Later this year, the amount of traffic delivered to mobile devices is expected to exceed that delivered to traditional desktop devices. With this dramatic explosion in mobile usage, a whole new world of effective SEO techniques have opened up for companies, such as local search optimization.

    Not having a healthy content profile is damaging – With each and every update to its search algorithm, Google and other engines change the way they look at websites. Things which didn’t exist a few years ago, such as social media indicators, are now given fairly high importance in terms of their impact on your rankings. Not building a healthy content profile spread out months and years is potentially damaging to your business, as it is one of the factors Google evaluates when looking at your site.

Investing in organic SEO is more important now than ever before, despite the current difficulty everyone finds themselves facing regarding the lack of organic keyword data and traffic. Your business definitely needs to have an SEO strategy in place if you are interested in succeeding in terms of online marketing; it remains one of the single most important components of any organization’s branding efforts and online presence.


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Monday, 3 February 2014

Cancer Survivor: Zach Zeiler | Great Motivation

Cancer Survivor: Zach Zeiler Talks With Simplyshredded.com

Quick stats:

Age: 19
Height: 6’0” – 183 cm
Weight: 170 lbs – 77 kg
1

How did you get started?

At the age of 15 I was diagnosed with Hodgkin’s Lymphoma. Treatment for this type of Cancer meant that I would have to undergo chemotherapy and radiation therapy. During these treatments, I missed the majority of my sophomore year in high school, lost time with friends, missed out on sports, and even spent my 16th birthday in a hospital bed. No matter how sick I got, or how depressed I became, I told myself that I would push through, that I would one day look back at my past experiences, as a stronger and more mindful individual. I did just that. After treatments were over, I weighed close to 106 lbs. I went from having an athletic build before chemo, to becoming deathly skinny, and very fatigued mentally from all that I had went through. I needed a way to gain my strength back, and needed something to take out my frustration. This is where I discovered the weights. I started out simple, just small bodyweight workouts in my basement, with some thrown in weight training, but eventually that lead to me getting my first gym membership. Once I had the proper equipment available, it motivated me to learn as much as I could about proper form, exercise, nutrition, and fitness in general. I learned very quickly that results came as a result of sacrifice, and that the more I put into the lifestyle, the more I got out of it. Putting the endless hours in the gym most definitely lead to noticeable gains, and to the physique that you see me with today.
I don’t really know where it may take me, but every day what I have is an opportunity that may lead to success. The overall factor on where I end up is myself, so I do not plan on stopping any time soon.
2

Where does your motivation come from?

My motivation comes from the results that I get. Building the body is one of the very few things in this world, where you can physically see the outcome of your dedication and devotion, as you progress.
That, in my opinion is the most rewarding aspect of lifting weights, fitness, or working out in general, the fact that you get everything that you are willing to give.
3

What workout routine has worked best for you?

One thing about my training that sets me apart from other individuals is my perspective on training styles. Now I understand that every individual has their own training style, and no two individuals are alike. My personal belief is that each individual should adopt multiple training styles for themselves. What I mean by training style is to really be proactive in changing up what you do, and confusing the body. There are dozens of ways to do this such as changing rep ranges, numbers of sets, exercises, weights, and even the way in which you train. One week, I will really back off on the weight, concentrating on constant tension, form, balance, contraction etc. The next week I will stop preaching strict form a little less, and focus on hitting the heavy weights using everything possible to get them up (doing it safely of course.) By incorporating different “styles” in your training, your body will never have the chance to adapt to one style of training.
Full Routine:

Monday: Chest/Triceps

  • Dumbbell Pullover: 3×12,10,6
  • Incline Dumbbell Press: 4×12.10,8,6
  • Flat Dumbbell Press: 4×12,10,8,6
  • Decline Isolateral Machine Press: 3×10
  • Dumbbell Fly’s: 3×10-15
  • Cable Crossovers: 3×10-15
  • Overhead Dumbbell Extension: 4×12,10,8,6
  • Overhead Single Arm Triceps Extension: 3×10
  • Dumbbell Triceps Skull Crushers: 4×10
  • Single Arm Cable Triceps Pushdown: 3×10

Tuesday: Legs

  • Squats: 5 working sets 14.12.10,8,6 (last set a dropset)
  • Hack squat: 4×12,10,8,6
  • Leg Press: 4×10-14
  • Leg Extensions: 4×10-20
  • Laying Leg Curl: 4×8-12
  • Stiff Leg Dumbbell Deadlift: 4×12,10,8,6
  • Standing Leg Curl: 4×10

Wednesday: Back/Biceps

  • Lat Pulldown: 4×8-12
  • Isolateral Lat Pulldown: 4×8-12
  • Pull-ups: 2x failure
  • T-Bar Row: 4×10
  • One Arm Dumbbell Row: 4×12,10,8,6
  • Isolateral Row: 3×10
  • Cable Row: 4×10-15
  • Barbell Curl: 4×20-30
  • Dumbbell Alternating Curl: 3-4×20-30
  • One Arm Preacher Curl: 4×15-20

Thursday: Shoulders

  • Reverse Pec Dec (Rear Delts): 3×15
  • Rear Delts Cable Fly: 4×10
  • Dumbbell Shoulder Press: 5×14.12,10,8,6
  • Side Lateral Raise: 4×8-12
  • Upright Row: 3×10
  • Single Arm Side Lateral Raise: 3×10
  • Dumbbell Front Raise: 3×8-12
  • Isolateral Shoulder Press: 4×10
  • Barbell Shrugs: 6×20,16,12,10,8,6 (last set a dropset)
  • Dumbbell Shrugs: 5×10

Friday: Chest/Triceps

  • Dumbbell Pullover: 3×10
  • Barbell Bench Press: 4×12,10,8,6 (last set a dropset)
  • Incline Isolateral Bench: 4×12,10,8,6
  • Cable Crossover: 4×10
  • Pec Dec Fly: 4×10
  • Weighted Dips: 4×12,10,8,6
  • Barbell Skull Crushers: 4×12,10,8,6
  • Cable Overhead Triceps Extension: 3×10
  • Rope Triceps Pushdown: 3×20

Saturday:Legs

  • Leg Extensions: 4×10
  • Squats: 5×5
  • Hack Squat/Lunges Superset: 4×10
  • Sissy Squats: 4×15
  • Single Leg Hamstring Curls: 4×10
  • Reverse Hack Squats: 4×10
  • Barbell SL Deadlifts: 3×12,10,8
  • Laying Leg Curls: 3x failure

Sunday: Back/Biceps

  • Deadlifts: 6×20,14,12,10,8,6
  • Barbell Row: 4×12,10,8,6
  • Wide Grip Cable Row: 3×10
  • One Arm Dumbbell Row: 3×10
  • Unilateral Row: 3×10
  • Weighted Pullups: 3×10
  • Dumbbell Pullovers: 3×8
  • Close Grip Lat Pulldown: 3×10
  • Dumbbell Hammer Curl (One Arm): 4×20-30
  • Concentration Curl: 4×20
  • Preacher Curl: 3×20
  • Cable Curl: 2×30

Calves/Abs

I alternate between hitting calves and abs every day. For example, on Monday I will train abs, Tuesday calves, Wednesday abs, Thursday calves, etc. For each workout I go through a small circuit of exercises typically lasting 15 minutes.
Calf Workout:
  • Seated Calf Raises: 5×10
  • Standing Calf Raises: 5×15
Abs Workout:
  • Hanging Leg Raises: 4×15
  • Crunches: 4 sets to failure
4

If you had to pick only 3 exercises, what would they be and why?

  1. Dumbbell Bench Press: This has become one of my favorite exercises of all time. From the start, I had always struggled to develop my chest, and I stuck to the barbell bench press primarily for a long time. Using a barbell was never as effective for me, especially starting out, because I would always lift without a spotter. (I was one of those skinny dudes who was too afraid to ask someone for a spot on 135lbs.) With dumbbells, I not only can do the exercise to its full potential without a spotter, but I also find it being much more effective for isolating my chest.
  2. Squats: One of my biggest regrets in the entire world, was not learning to squat sooner. I have never been the type of person to miss a leg day, but in my beginning stages of training I had never learned how to squat. It wasn’t until my third year of training, that I absolutely forced myself into learning proper squat technique, and implementing it into my training. Squatting has easily become one of my favorite exercises, and has proven to be the secret in leg development for me.
  3. Deadlifts: Another exercise that I wished I had been doing from the start, deadlifts. Just as squats, I had not introduced myself to doing deadlifts until around my third year of training. It was not that I was afraid of doing them, I just had no idea on how to do them, or proper technique. The biggest suggestion I can give to someone new to an exercise, is to PRACTICE. Do some research, perfect your form, and the weight will come in time!
5

What is your diet like?

My diet for the most part if pretty laid back. I stay lean year round, and aim on making lean gains without ever having to go into a “bulking” phase. I follow the idea of going SLIGHTLY over my maintenance calories, allowing myself to grow while still being relatively lean. Of course I do my best to eat as clean as possible, but I have always believed that if your nutrition is not enjoyable, you aren’t going to follow it. If I were to ever prepare for a competition, at that point I would of course really crack down on myself and my nutrition. I have developed enough control to be able to manipulate my body to my liking, whether it be for a photo shoot, vacation, or something else that calls for me to be shredded. At these times, I will resort to counting my macronutrients for complete manipulation in “bulking up,” or “cutting down.”
Daily Diet:
  • Meal 1: Protein Shake & Cereal
  • Meal 2: Eggs, Oatmeal & an Apple
  • Meal 3: Chicken Breast, Pasta & Vegetables
  • Meal 4: Protein Shake & a Banana
  • Meal 5: Hamburger, Baked Potato & Milk
  • Meal 6: Protein Shake, Cottage Cheese, Protein Bar & Nuts
6

When trying to cut down do you prefer to use HIIT or just normal cardio?

I will utilize both depending on what type of mood I am in. Sometimes it is beneficial for me to just run on the treadmill for 30 minutes instead of doing Interval Training.
If I am I’m need of something harder, or higher intensity, then I will of course resort to HIIT before regular cardio. I don’t really have a preference overall.
7

What is your supplementation like?

My supplementation is fairly simple, and I like to keep it that way. I never like sharing what exact brand names I consume, mostly because I preach that you should find what works for you. The main supplements that I stick with are a protein, a pre-workout, and a creatine. Those, in my humble opinion, are all that you need to be successful.
Everything else out there may be beneficial, but for me these three do the trick. As I said before, the hard part is trying to find what works the best for you, and what is the most supportive of your progress.
8

Favorite Quote?

“Pain is nothing. It is absolutely nothing compared to the victory achieved after the pain is over” – Zachary Zeiler
9
Instagram: http://instagram.com/zachzeiler
Website: https://www.facebook.com/zachzeilerfanpage

Source From http://www.simplyshredded.com/
By :- Webihawks