Optimize
Your Website and They will Come
The Art of Traffic
Generation
Designing a new website is
just the first step of many when starting an online
business or personal Internet site. You must
optimize to get traffic. Here are a few tips and
misconceptions.
What's the big deal about
search engine optimization? Isn't it enough that
you've put up a website, purchased some Google
AdWords, and sent out an email to everyone you know
announcing your site? In short, no.
There is an art and science
to search engine optimization (SEO), and it is
critical for web-based businesses to know,
understand and utilize if they want to drive
quality traffic to their website via the
Internet.
- Where do you begin,
though?
- How can you
possibly know whom to trust or what to do first
with so much information out there on SEO? Do
you buy links or not?
- Pay per click or go
organic?
- And what about
those SEO companies who are aggressively
promising #1 rankings?
When it comes to search
engine ranking, there are a lot of rumors and myths
about what will increase your rankings and what
won't.
Debunking Some Popular
Search Engine Ranking Myths
- Pay per click (PPC) ads
will either help or hurt organic rankings. (Organic
simply means the process by which web users find
websites having unpaid search engine
listings.)
Debunked: PPC is categorized
differently than organic listings. There is no
effect, one way or the other, on
ranking.
- Websites are banned if they
ignore Google guidelines.
Debunked: While it's a good
idea to read Google Webmaster Guidelines or Google
101: How Google Crawls, Indexes and Serves the Web,
you are not banned if you ignore their
guidelines.
- Websites are banned if they
buy links.
Debunked: Sites are not
banned. The links just aren't counted.
- Copy must be a certain
number of words, use a specific keyword density,
and contain bold or italicized keywords.
Debunked: It used to be
thought that there was a magic number of words used
or certain times a keyword or keyword phrase should
be repeated. Not so. Same with bolding and
italicizing. They don't do anything for
ranking.
- Duplicate content will get
your website penalized.
Debunked: It will just get
filtered out and not counted.
- Reciprocal links won't
count.
Debunked: Every link counts,
to a certain extent.
- SEO companies can increase
your rankings without doing any on-page
work.
Debunked: Run if an SEO
company tells you this.
What do Search Engine
Optimization Experts Say?
According to SEO expert Jill
Whalen, SEO isn't magic and isn't a crap-shoot.
"SEO is about making your website the best it can
be for your site visitors and the search engines."
Want to help the right kind of people find your
website?
Then you need to design your
site so search engines can find, crawl and index
your pages.
Seven Ways to Get Your
Website Crawled
1 It's better to have one
main website with numerous domains pointing to the
main domain, than to have mini-sites or multiple
sites with similar content. Mini-sites and multiple
sites with similar content do not increase search
engine listings and are frequently viewed by search
engines as SPAM.
2 If you do have several
stand-alone websites, make sure each serves a
different target audience and has unique content
with different domain or sub-domain
URLs.
3 Search engines need to be
able to follow internal links. To make that happen,
use tags, text links, image links, and CSS menus.
Spiders have difficulty with JavaScript menus,
popup windows, dropdown menus, and flash
navigation.
4 Choose keyword phrases that
are most relevant and specific to what your web
page is about. Think from the perspective of
someone searching for what you are offering on your
site. Ask, as if you were they: What would I search
for if I am looking for something on your
page?
5 Validate your keyword
phrases through either paid or free services, such
as Keyword Discovery, Wordtracker, or Google
AdWords.
6 Check for keyword
competitiveness. Take into consideration the size
of your business. In this case, size does matter.
If you are a major player with a major brand, you
can play in a larger competitive pond than a
smaller company just starting out. Know what size
pond is right for you, and check for
competitiveness by putting: allintitle: "keyword
phrase" in your browser and check the number
count.
7 Once you have your keyword
phrases validated and checked for competitiveness,
use them in anchor texts, clickable image alt tags,
headlines, body text copy, title tags, and meta
descriptions. Meta tags aren't all that important
for crawling.
SEO can be both intimidating
and exhilarating. Intimidating because it seems as
if just about everyone has an opinion on what it
takes to get a high ranking in Google, so it's hard
to know what to believe.
Exhilarating because, once
you understand the method behind the madness of
SEO, you see the art and science of it. Then it
becomes fun and easy to come up with a strategic
plan about where to place keyword phrases,
how
to write copy, and
what size pond is best for your company to compete
in. Optimize your website, and they will come.
P.S. Want to
find more ways to get your site to the top of the
major search engines like Google, Yahoo and others?
Here is another report you should absolutely
read...
Read
Top of the Search Engines Now
>>>>
About the
Author - Dr. Susan L. Reid is a business coach and
consultant for entrepreneurial women starting up
businesses. She is the Award-winning author of
Discovering Your Inner Samurai: The Entrepreneurial
Woman's Journey to Business Success. Susan provides
intuitive small business solutions, powerful
attraction marketing tools, inspiration, and
direction. Visit http://www.SuccessfulSmallBizOwners.com
and download your copy of her latest free business
success article.
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