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South West Web Solutions
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Apple Tree Farm,
PO Box 89, Exeter. Devon.

England. EX2 4YH


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A guide to Search Engine Positioning

A step-by-step guide to creating a Web site that will improve your search engine positioning and generate traffic


This guide to search engine positioning can be used as the basis for planning an online campaign for a Web-based business or service. It will take you through the process of site design, search engine submission, and directory registration

 If you find it useful, please do get in touch. I would be interested to hear from you, especially if you think any of my conclusions are wrong.Many thanks to Danny Sofer for providing help with compiling this information


1. Define your business
A successful search engine marketing campaign starts not with the engines, but with your own site and with the site's users (i.e. your customers). There is not a lot of point attempting to seed the engines with links to your site unless you are clear about the services that you offer and who those services are aimed at.
Once you are clear about who your site is for and what it offers, you are in a position to start.
  • Action: List your key services and your key client groups.
2. Set targets for your campaign
Before embarking on any marketing campaign, online or otherwise, you should have a clear idea of what you hope to achieve: increase traffic to your site; receive more enquiries from site visitors; or increase the value of new orders, perhaps.
Regardless of the size of your budget, costs should be commensurate with results, so you should have some idea of the value of achieving your business goals. As a minimum, it will be useful to set a maximum value for each new visitor to your site.
  • Action: Estimate what each new visitor to the site might be worth to you.
  • Action: Set a target for the number of new visitors you want to attract to the site.
  • Action: These two estimates should set an upper limit on what your campaign should cost you.
3. Translate your business definitions into search phrases
Well-chosen keywords are the pivotal part of any search engine marketing campaign. The aim is to accurately anticipate the search phrases likely to be used by potential users of your site.
Think about what defines your site and also what differentiates it from other sites; what words define your content, your service, it's location, potential users, and their interests.Make a list of words and phrases that describe your service. Try them out in search engines to see what sort of results get returned. View the sites of leading competitors in your field and look out for useful words in the text of their pages.A very useful tool for helping you refine your list is GoTo's search suggestion tool, which is free.  As part of our service we provide you with a much more detailed keyword analysis resulting from extensive research of what people are currently typing in to the top search engines to find sites within your particular industry.
  • Action: Make a list of key search words and phrases that reflect the main themes of your site.
  • Action: Use the GoTo search suggestion tool  to refine your list.
4. Structure your site around your search phrases
Separate content into clearly defined pages and sections that are representative of your site's most important themes, as identified by your search phrases.
Sketch out a map of your site, with pages categorized into sections. Each page should be given a title that reflects the search terms that you are targeting for that page. This map can act as the basis for your site.Try not to bury content too deeply within your site. Create navigation links that minimise the number of clicks required to get from one page of a site to another. For sites of, say, a hundred pages or so, it should be easy to ensure that no page is more than two clicks away from any other.Add a site map to your site with links to every page (for larger sites this can be broken up into sections).These measures will make it easier for search engine spiders to find all your pages (it should help your users, too).If your site contains content that is unrelated (perhaps because the site is used for two separate businesses, or because it is used for both personal and commercial use), then split it up into separate domains.If your site offers services to users in geographically disparate regions, consider country-specific domains. This will make it easier to target the appropriate categories of Yahoo and other directories.
  • Action: Sketch out a map of your site with sections and page titles that reflect your search phrases
  • Action: Let this map be the basis for your site.
  • Action: Create navigation that minimises the number of clicks between pages.
  • Action: Add a site map for visitors to your site.
  • Action: Register separate domains for separate businesses.
  • Action: consider registering country-specific domains for the benefit of overseas users.
5. Design your pages to attract search engine traffic
These design guidelines are specifically intended to increase the likelihood of a page being relevant to a given search phrase, but they also work pretty well for humans, too, and are unlikely to make your pages any less readable.
The document TITLE has the most significant effect on the visibility of a page. Not only will it have a direct effect on the ranking of a page, but it is the text that will be presented in search results. Make it short and relevant. Use words that reflect the theme of the page (i.e. the search phrase) and that will make your title stand out.
Avoid prefacing your title with the words "Welcome to..." and resist the temptation to place your company name in the title of every page. Aim for the editorial brevity of a newspaper headline.
Use the DESCRIPTION meta-tag, because by default this is what will accompany your entry in the results of most search engines. Make it short - about 150 characters or so - to ensure that it does not get truncated in search results, and make it interesting. Reiterate the TITLE and expand on the search phrase.Use the KEYWORDS meta-tag.
Not all search engines use them, because of the potential for abuse, but they are strongly recommended. They should be used to reiterate the words used in the title and description, including synonyms, plurals, regional variations and even common mis-spellings. In general: use all lower case (because most searches do); don't use commas (they are unnecessary); and don't repeat words more than once or twice (because some search engines penalise excessive repetition).
The over-enthusiastic use of search terms in your TITLE, DESCRIPTION and KEYWORDS tags is self-defeating and is likely to dilute the rank of your site; it is usually better for a page to appear near the top of one search query than for it to appear lower down on several.The first content that appears on every page should be a heading that reiterates the text of the TITLE. This should be followed by a repeat of the DESCRIPTION, and then the text that describes the main theme of the page. For all search engines, and particularly those that ignore meta-tags, the use of relevant text is essential.
If you keep your pages on-topic, mindless repetition of keywords should not be necessary, although it is important that the key search words appear frequently in your text, particularly in the first couple of hundred words, and particularly in permutations that echo likely search phrases.
Make sure that navigation links and other text do not appear above your main text in the HTML source of your pages. If pages are designed with supplementary text in the left margin, then the rowspan tag should be used to move the main text to the top of the page:
When linking to a page on your site, use the TITLE of the page as the link text. For search engines that measure the relevance of links, this is likely to help reinforce the relevance of the page to the search terms used in the TITLE.Try to avoid representing any of your link text as images. If you insist on it, then use ALT tags, so that the engines can identify the text.Don't use frames.
Some indexing agents will still ignore your frameset and go straight to the "your browser does not support frames" message. Furthermore, if you do manage to get your pages indexed, visitors to your site are likely to be referred to an orphaned frame lacking the navigational structure carefully constructed for it.
Every page is a potential gateway to your site, so apply these guidelines to all pages on your site.If you already have a site, then mapping existing content onto a new structure and undertaking a major re-design, may take time and resources.
Get advice from your site designer about costs before committing to widespread changes. In the short term, you may prefer to concentrate on optimizing just a few pages, until you have evidence of the effectiveness of the approach outlined above.
Also, be wary of tampering with the content of existing pages that already bring traffic to the site, either through search engines or through other external links.
  • Action: Place your key search phrase in the TITLE tag.
  • Action: Use the DESCRIPTION tag to provide a short summary of the page contents.
  • Action: Use the KEYWORDS tag to reiterate the search phrase and to add variations.
  • Action: Repeat the page TITLE in a heading at the top of the page.
  • Action: Repeat the page DESCRIPTION in the first paragraph below the heading.
  • Action: Write copy that echoes your page TITLE, DESCRIPTION and KEYWORDS.
  • Action: Place the copy above any navigation links and other text.
  • Action: Link text should use the TITLE of the page being linked to.
  • Action: Try to avoid using graphics for internal links. If you do, add ALT tags.
  • Action: Do not use frames.
  • Action: Decide on whether to re-design the site all at once or gradually.
  • Action: Be careful not to over-write or remove existing pages that already bring in traffic.
6. Submit your site to Directories and Search Engines
Before submitting your site to any directories, you should be satisfied that the TITLE and DESCRIPTION of your home page reflect your most important search terms and that they convey the right impression of your site
. This should be the text that is submitted.
If you've already submitted a different description to Yahoo, tough luck. It is very unlikely that you will be able to persuade them to change your listing.If you have any sort of budget for web marketing, paying for entries in the Yahoo and LookSmart directories looks like good value for money. For advise on how to submit to Yahoo, read the Yahoo guidelines, then check out How to Get Listed in Yahoo!. LookSmart also encourages submission of more than one page per site, which you may wish to consider if you are offering several different services on one site.You should also add an entry to dmoz, the Open Directory Project. Dmoz is now used by several search services, including AltaVista, Hotbot, Lycos and Google, and it's free. Re-submit your site if doesn't appear on dmoz within a month.You should submit your home page and site map page to the major search engines. This should include, as a minimum: AltaVista, Excite, Fast, Google, HotBot, Lycos, and Northern Light.Opinion is somewhat divided on the value of submitting multiple pages and of using automated submission services. A very high percentage of submitted pages received by search engines come from automated services. As a result, the engines are now becoming less reliant on submissions and links from existing pages are of increasing importance. So, use automated submission services with care and don't expect amazing results.Consider using GoTo, which charges advertisers for click-throughs from searches and has a growing number of "sponsored link" deals with well-known search engines. GoTo is unlikely to generate a large proportion of your traffic, but for more niche market operators, phrases  can cost as little as 0.01pence per visitor. This compares pretty favourably to costs of up to £7 per visitor for the average banner ad campaign. We would strongly advise that this area is looked at, as it can be a very lucrative source of visitors to your site, and GoTo is becoming more and more popular as the page results returned are not going to be 'spammed' entries, giving the user a much more relevant set of results. Again, keyword strategy is everything and whilst pay per click strategy is in it's infancy, some real bargains can be had. If you think paying for traffic is a waste of money and your energy would be better spent learning the secrets of the search engine wizards, then just look at the bidding on the phrase "search engine positioning".  If these companies knew a more cost-effective way of generating traffic, one supposes they would be using it. Finally, you should look into industry- and country-specific search engines. The overall traffic levels on these are likely to be orders of magnitude less than on the major engines, but they are likely to be considerably more targeted.
  • Action: Review the TITLE and DESCRIPTION of your home page
  • Action: Submit to the major directories using this TITLE and DESCRIPTION
  • Action: Submit to the major search engines.
  • Action: Contact us to discuss a 'pay-per click' strategy.
  • Action: Research industry- and country-specific search engines.
7. Get your site linked from other sitesIdentify other sites that offer complementary services which are likely to be of interest to users of your site; link to them and invite them to reciprocate.In particular, do this with popular sites and do it with those sites that appear near the top of searches that use the keyword phrases that you are targeting.If your industry or interest area is served by specialist directories, get listed in them. Pay for entries if it is cost-effective to do so (a good comparative measure is the cost of click throughs from GoTo).If your site contains news, you might want to consider a syndication service like moreover or isyndicate.These efforts will have the two-fold effect of driving traffic directly from those sites and of building the ranking of your own site on those search engines that measure the number and quality of inbound links (and an increasing number do).
  • Action: Research complementary sites that might be willing to link to pages on your site.
  • Action: Request links from those sites.
  • Action: Pay for links if it is cost effective to do so.
8. Monitor the results
Check your ranking on the major search engines for your most important search phrases and your site coverage (i.e. the number of your pages indexed) on the major search engines.Check your logs to see which search engine queries are sending traffic to your site. In particular, check that the most popular search terms match your expectations. Look out for any unexpected search terms that might be worth incorporating into the text of your site. If you can't read your logs, then get help. Whenever content changes or new pages are added, re-submit the changed pages. However, don't get hung up on site submission. Over 90% of unpaid submissions to search engines are what is generally regarded as spam, i.e. automated and repeated submission of existing sites by submission software. Increasingly, search engines are ignoring these submissions and basing their indexing on: a) paid for submissions; b) the number and quality of links from other sites; and c) the scheduled re-indexing of existing sites. Unless your site changes significantly from week to week, scheduled indexing may well be sufficient for your needs. You should be able to tell which indexing spiders have visited your site recently by looking at your logs. Re-submit to any that don't appear to be giving your site due attention.
  • Action: Measure your ranking for different search phrases on different search engines.
  • Action: Measure your site coverage on different search pages.
  • Action: Check your logs to see which search engines are sending you traffic.
  • Action: Check your logs to see how frequently your site is being spidered.
  • Action: Re-submit pages when and if necessary.
Still think you can do it yourself?
Then Good Luck.



ClickZ have two articles that you might find useful: Selecting a Search Engine Optimization Agency and What to Look for in a Search Engine Optimization Specialist.

Resources

There are several sites on the web that offer more background information. These include the Web Search section at About.com, the Search Engine Marketing page at Wilson Internet, the Submission Tips at the truly comprehensive Search Engine Watch (you may also want to subscribe to their newsletter), the Search Engine Optimization articles at ClickZ, and a useful tutorial, How AltaVista Works, which contains guidelines that can be applied to most of the major search engines. Also, Jay Griffin provides a useful Search Engine Glossary.
For a discussion of why you should not use frames, see Framed No More on the net.Opinion site.



 

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