Archive for the ‘seo’ Category

SEO Considerations #4

Sunday, March 7th, 2010

Five Local SEO Tips you should consider to increase the probability of higher search engine ranking page (SERP).

  1. Claim your listing on major search engines.
    This is a simple step, but it is also very important. Claiming your business listing at Google, Yahoo, and Bing will give your company exposure and imrpove your rankings. You can do this by searching your business and once located you can claim the business, well actually anyone can also.
  2. Make sure you are listed in the correct categories.
    Having your business correctly listed is important in targeted searches.  As an example DMOZ will require you to “drill into” by clicking your way through a specific category (e.g., Computing > Internet Services > Search Engine > SEO ). Making sure the mapping is correct and updating your listing can help with your higher placement on SERPs.
  3. Keep your business information consistent.
    Having your information match up throughout the web helps Google know that the information is correct and relevant. More specifically, your description and your opening paragraph on the landing page. This also means not keyword stuffing your titles because that makes the information look incorrect to Google.
  4. Have Analytics on your website.
    It is important to have Analytics for your site so you can see exactly what keywords bring in traffic, and what pages of your site are helping or hurting your turnover. By watching these statistics, you can figure out exactly how to imrpove your website. Google Analytics offers something called Overlay, which will place statics on your links and will show you where your traffic is being drawn.
  5. Check out the competition.
    Look at both natural and local search results for your targeted keywords and see who shows up. See how your competition lists their businesses and see if you can apply any of that to your company. Remember, success breads success!

These are basic steps every company should take in order to make sure your business ranks better in search engines, brings more eyes to your company, and eventually brings in more business.


SEO Considerations #3

Thursday, January 14th, 2010

Be Mindful of Length – 65 characters is the maximum amount that will display in the search results (the engines will show an ellipsis – “…” to indicate when a title tag has been cut off), and sticking to this limit is generally wise. However, if you’re targeting multiple keywords (or an especially long keyword phrase) and having them in the title tag is essential to ranking, it may be advisable to go longer.

Place Important Keywords Close to the Front – The closer to the start of the title tag your keywords are, the more helpful they’ll be for ranking and the more likely a user will be to click them in the search results.

Leverage Branding – Start every title tag with a brand name mention, as these help to increase brand awareness, and create a higher click-through rate for people who like and are familiar with a brand. Many SEO firms recommend using the brand name at the end of a title tag instead, and there are times when this can be a better approach – think about what matters to your site (or your client’s site).

Consider Readability and Emotional Impact – Creating a compelling title tag will pull in more visits from the search results and can help to invest visitors in your site. Thus, it’s important to not only think about optimization and keyword usage, but the entire user experience. The title tag is a new visitor’s first interaction with your brand and should convey the most positive impression possible.


SEO Considerations #2

Sunday, December 20th, 2009

When considering how relevant your copy affects where you come up in SERP you may want to remember the following:

Inbound links to your web page

  • Are the web pages linking to your web page relevant to the primary search term?
  • How fast does your web page get new links pointing to it?
  • Do the web sites which link to your page belong to the same content category?
  • Since when do the links to your page exist?
  • Is the text surrounding the link to your page relevant to the primary search term?

Your web page

  • How many important links from your other pages point to your web page?
  • Do the links on your web page point to high quality, topically-related pages?
  • How often and how many changes do you make to your web page over time? Is your content up-to-date?
  • How often and how many web pages do you add to your web site?
  • How long do your visitors spend time on your web page?

Search engine result page

  • Do your competitors on the search engine result page get a manual ranking boost by The search engine you are focusing on, for example Facebook, Twitter, Amazon or Wikipedia?
  • How many visitors of the search engine result pages click through to your page?


3 Free SEO Tips

Saturday, December 12th, 2009

1. Your key words need to be found in the body of your document. If they are truly key words they will appear at least 3% of the time on your page.

2. Try and focus on getting traffic for relevant key words on your web site that do not have as much competition as others. For example, if you want to get a person to your web page when they type in the single search term “health”, you are going to have a tough time getting page 1 results. However, if you are offering manicures, you might want to attract people looking for information about “fingernail health”, which would be far easier. (A good test is to go to your favorite search engine and type in your key words and then look at the number of results displayed. The fewer there is, the easier it will be for you to get good results for your relevant key word searches.

3. You need to have a minimum of 100 words of text on your pages. Content is king.


SEO Considerations #1

Thursday, December 10th, 2009

The algorithm for Google’s search engine is tip-top secret (sort of), not to mention constantly changing.  As we know, there are a number of factors that we can pin point with a fair amount of certainty. However, it is commonly understood that if others think you are worthy — say by linking to your website, or your link in search results gets lots of clicks/traffic — this can help raise your rank in the search engine results page because you are being defined, by Google, as an authority. It’s no different that people in real-time taking your advice and the more people who ask your advice the more that other people will listen and make recommendations to come to you in the future. And yes, there’s more to it and that I am way over-simplifying, still, the gist is that indicators of quality and/or popularity matter.

With real-time flow of information it’s challenging to ascertain what’s deemed good quality. Sure you’ve got retweets, tags, bookmarks and social news sites that can infer a degree of popularity (which is not the same as quality, to be sure). There’s also authority of domain to go by. Regardless, the concept of relevance is harder to pin down when messages are pumping out at a furious pace.


Caught in a Google Experiment as Test User

Wednesday, December 9th, 2009
Google Search Experiment

Google Search Experiment

Look ma’ no hands!! While looking into an issue (beyond the fact that I misspelled Atlanta in my search)  as a web developer and seo practitioner I ran into a Google search results page that displayed far more than I was expecting. I came across an article on Mashable that said Google randomly selects people for beta testing. Although, a cursory search did not locate the article (I’ll update with a link once located).

There are pro’s and con’s to that, which I’ll outline later but an FYI would have been appreciated. I’ll see if Google equally surprises me with a phat fat check!

I’ve since learned that I accidently enabled an SEO toolbar and Firefox plugin that modified my Google SERPs.

Web Design Galesburg, Illinois 61401
Serving Web Design in Knox County