If you want findability and good
search engine rankings have a plan!
by Terry Plank
In the beginning, the Web was thought to
be a great new medium that would provide a way to sell nationally and
internationally without all the marketing infrastructure that other
mediums require. However it's turned out to require the same amount
of marketing, promotion and distribution in order to be a profitable
strategy.
This article will focus on findability
and search engine ranking, two elements of a total search engine marketing
strategy. Theoretically, everyone in the world can view your Web site
and respond the way you intend, but only if they can find it and are
stimulated to act on your offers.
The twin goals of your Web site strategy for search engine findability
and search engine ranking are getting customers/clients to your site
and then encouraging them to respond. Accomplishing these goals is 25%
art and 75% science.
The art we all understand: attractive, engaging, interesting,and
professional in appearance. But what is the science of a successful
site?
It begins with strategic planning. A
sure way to fail is to put less time on promotion than on actual production.
One mantra to consider is Plan-Create-Promote-Evaluate.
I start with planning. Creation should
not proceed without a detailed plan established. Certainly things will
evolve throughout development and the ongoing life of the site, but
having a detailed plan helps for integration of new elements and the
eliminatation of others.
Consider the following analogy. Real estate
agents usually don't list a new construction home until it is built
or well along in construction. A contractor cannot build until the architect
designs the home, a design developed to meet certain criteria or specifications.
Rooms can be added on later during construction or decades later if
the initial design was clear and flexible.
Now, who should be in charge of the Web site strategy? The marketing
and sales department is the logical choice for overseeing the work of
the Web promotion specialists. The production team should defer at this
stage to the needs of the Web sit estrategic goals as established by
the marketing department.
Second is clear navigation: getting clients
and customers around the site so they are always oriented to the information
or products that make the site profitable. A site that navigates easily
and informs the guest clearly where they are at all times and what you
have to offer will get them around to the information and leave them
pleased not frustrated.
Let's look at just two pieces of the overall
strategy, findability and search engine ranking.
FINDABILITY SEARCH ENGINE RANKING
Web site findability and search engine
ranking begins with being indexed by the major spider search engines:
HotBot, Google,
AOL Search, Alltheweb,
Netscape,
Alta Vista, Lycos,
These search engines vie for dominance for use and continually make
new liaisons and arrangements to gain that dominance. Each SE spiders
your site to index it by traveling through your site, locating information
that will be stored in their database.
Next, each SE evaluates differently for
inclusion in their database according to different criteria. There is
no way to create your site to be found in the top 10 search results
in all of the engines. Before beginning a site for Sterling Road Jewelry,
we searched 9 SE's using the keyword "custom jewelry" to see
who ranked high. Evaluating the top 10 results on each of the 9 SE's,
we only found 4 sites that were in more than one of the top 10 results.
That means that out of 70+ sites, only 4 were in more than one SE's
top 10 results!
To be search engine friendly and get ranking
for your keyword phrases, it starts with good organic structure of the
pages and of your domain. Later, there can be optimizing strategies
set up to fill in the gaps for traffic generation, but the following
are the major criteria determining search engine findability and ranking
that should be built in from the beginning.
- First, it's the text and its structure. Your text
should reflect the keyword phrases that users would likely use in
searching for you and these keyword phrases should be placed strategically
throughout. Pages of around 300-400 words work well and 3% of the
total words should be your keyword phrases. That's called keyword
weight or density.
- The use of keywords in the <title>. These
words are not viewed on the actual site, but they are seen at the
top of your Browser screen. After text, the <title> is the
first place most SE's evaluate. The Online Web Training Training
site is a good example of a high findability title, description
and keyword tag:
<title>Search engine marketing training programs by the Web
site optimization experts!</title>
Note that the company name does not appear. There isn't high recognition
so few would search for their name. A high recognition company name
might be included.
- When possible, a short descriptive sentence should
be at the top of your page. This descriptive sentence should have
your keyword phrase in a simple sentence. Use only those words that
searchers might use and eliminate as many adjectives and other descriptive
words that are not keywords. This should also be a Header tag <H1>
not a font tag <FONT SIZE="4">.
<h4>Online Web Training offers search engine placement online
training workshops to improve search engine ranking and website
findability leading to a success E-Business.</h4>
- Meta Tags are used by some SE's, but not all. Meta
tags should be just a magnifying glass trained on the keyword phrases
of your text.
<meta name="description" content="search engine
marketing training programs will solve your search engine optimization
woes by helping you learn how to drive traffic to your web site.">
<meta name="keywords" content="search engine marketing
training, search engine optimization training, web site marketing
training">
Different Meta Tags should be used on subsequent pages, whatever
keywords you are targeting for each page.
By using different keywords in the title and Meta tags on subsequent
pages, you can weight different pages for findability for different
keyword phrases. If you use too many keywords on your home page,
the most important keywords related to the total number you use
is reduced and your relevance is reduced. Be aware also that SE's
will bump you if they find that you are spamming by repeatedly using
the same keywords to get a high ranking. So do not insert
"search engine marketing, search engine marketing, search engine
marketing."
- Have links to all your other pages on the Home
page and on every other page of your site if possible. This ensures
that the SE robot gets to all the other pages and considers what
you have provided for them to determine your ranking.
- Popularity has become an essential element to good
ranking. Popularity has to do with quality links pointing to your
site from other sites. These links indicate to the SE that others
consider you important enough to link to, so the SE may consider
you an important site for the content area they are indexing. This
means that you should have as many links to your site as possible
that are part of the theme of your page and of your site. SE's also
note the popularity and the theme appropriateness of the pages that
are linking to you.
The above are important variables, but
there are other things that can be included in the structure of the
site to push up your search engine rankings. The average Web developer
or talented graphics/production team in your company will usually not
have the training and marketing expertise to do this crucial first-level
strategic planning. Make sure you use a Web development company who
will strategize from the beginning with you on your findability and
ranking . Or, hire a Web marketing/promotion specialist to work with
you and your development team.
Now, what about the submission process?
Search engine findability and ranking requires some initial submissions
of the site to the search engines.
Some SE's will index your whole site from
your Home Page (index.html), while others need you to submit every page
you want them to index. This process can be done by automatic submissions
programs like Web Positio Gold. But, some SE's don't recognize these
automatic programs. We have found that submissions have a better guarantee
of being accepted if you take the time to submit individually to each
search engine. Or by usingPosition
Technologies. They have a spam free process and are respected by
the search engines.
Another strategy that is becoming more
necessary is to pay for Inclusion at Inktomi, AltaVista, AskJeeves,
and AllTheWeb. For a per page fee, per year, you can insure that your
pages are indexed and kept indexed. This has nothing to do with ranking,
but it will ensure that the search engine has at least indexed your
selected pages.
Apart for Inclusion, can you submit once
and then be finished with the process? Definitely not! An ongoing evaluation
of the site's placement is essential. Even if you don't make changes
to your site, sites are being submitted by the thousands every day,
and many will be your competitors. You may be found very high, even
the top 10, on any given week and find yourself #25 a week later. Not
only will new sites be coming out that push you down, but other Web
marketing teams will study your site and copy how you got such a high
rating. They will then try to do you even one better.
If you are serious about using the Web
to increase revenue for your company or get the information out, you
must consider doing this process quarterly at a minimum, preferably
monthly. Do the research on your location, look at your competitors,
and follow up with modification of your site to raise placement. There
are many modifications that can be made to help your chosen search engines
recognize you as the one who fits the keyword used in their search.
DIRECTORIES, LINKAGES AND ADVERTISING
As important as SE's are to findability,
you must also submit the major directories in order to have a successful
site. Yahoo,
Directory Project, and Look Smart
are necessary for two reasons. First, because they are directories,
many people use for finding information. Second, a significant number
of SE's use the information and the status of your listings with these
directories.
Industry-specific directories are important
to consider. In real estate for example, an agent would consider the
International Real Estate Digest important.
Linkages with other sites takes time, but
is a great broadcast medium for your site. Linking strategies include:
intrasite linking, linking within your site to your other pages; intersite
linking, linking to other sites chosen according to a predetermined
criteria of usefulness; reciprocal linking, trading links with other
sites on an equal basis; and banner linking, your banner is found on
another Web site and links to yours.
Web news releases sites, sponsorship or
banner advertising on high-traffic sites, email marketing, and the use
of newsgroups are other ways of getting your information out.
AGAIN AND AGAIN
AND AGAIN
Web site findability and search engine
ranking finally is a commitment to ongoing promotion, marketing and
monthly evaluation using the newest tools of evaluation. The
Academy of Web SpecialistsTM, other promotion services,
or your Web development team can perform this essential activity. Participation
in newsgroups and informational web sites and newsletters can keep you
abreast of all the developments in the search engines and the newly
developing ways to market/promote your site to profitability. Search
Engine Update, http://searchenginewatch.com],
the WebPosition Newsletter http://www.webposition.com/newsletter.html
and the Academy of Web Specialists Newsletter [/newsletters
are all helpful.
An ongoing evaluation of your Web site's
position was mentioned earlier as another essential tool. A good statistical
package that shows where users came from and where they went within
your site is useful. Web Trends,
for example, is a program that uses your Internet Service Provider's
server log to evaluate your site and provide an HTML document to use
on your browser.
Finally, update your site regularly with
current information or new products and submit new pages to the search
engines on a monthly basis. Once you have been found by a user, make
sure you keep them by having something there for them to use regularly!
TRADITIONAL MARKETING
Lastly, don't forget to market your site
on your business cards, brochures, stationary, voice mail, newspaper
advertising, professional or trade journals, and any other printed communication,
advertising or marketing.
Now, what about the allocation of funds
to finance a profitable site, if it is truly 25% art and 75% science?
For every $2.50 dollars you spend on development and updating, spend
$7.50 dollars on findability and ongoing promotion and marketing.
Happy Internet Marketing!
Terry Plank is Director of Business Development and Promotion for the Academy of
Web Specialists. The Academy has educated 2,000+ companies online and
onsite in search engine
marketing since 2000. Visit the Academys training site to
learn more about their online
search engine marketing training and search
engine optimization software. He has also offered search
engine marketing consultation services since 1996.