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Website Articles - Search Engine Optimization
Search
Engine Optimization
You can't resist the
temptation. Fixated on your computer screen, you anxiously
type keywords relevant to your business into your favorite
search engine. A list of search results appears. You
cringe as you spot several competitors, then grumble
because your company's Web site is nowhere to be seen.
Where is it? That depends. Where is your search engine
marketing strategy?
Gone are the days when adding keywords
in meta tags to your site produced rankings. Search
engine marketing has evolved into a complex and competitive
program. It's also profitable—according to a March
2003 report by Piper Jaffray senior research analyst
Safa Rashtchy, online search is the most cost-effective
direct-marketing method. The average cost per lead from
search is 29 cents, far less than e-mail (50 cents),
the Yellow Pages ($1.18), banner ads ($2.00) and direct
mail ($9.94).
Gather your Web design and marketing
staff; both teams are required. Understanding search
engine marketing basics will help your team execute
a strategy in-house or outsource it to specialists.
The sooner your site is visible for relevant keywords,
the sooner future customers will find your company.
How Do Search Engines Work?
Many business owners are unaware that
search engines feed their results to each other. For
example, if you type a keyword into MSN Search on Microsoft's
consumer information and entertainment site, the Web
site listings displayed could be from Inktomi, Microsoft
or Overture. Overture provides search results not only
to MSN Search, but also to AltaVista and Yahoo! Could
a top site on Overture then appear as a top site on
a distribution partner's site? Yes. Unfortunately, these
distribution relationships change frequently, making
it difficult to determine exactly where results come
from.
The challenging part, however, is figuring
out how to land a top position in the search engines.
There are two complementary yet completely different
types of methods: optimization and advertising.
Search engine optimization (SEO) refers
to enhancing your Web site design to make it more appealing
to crawler-based search engines. An automated robot,
also referred to as a spider, is sent out to crawl the
Web looking for site pages to add to the search engine's
database. A mathematical algorithm then determines the
ranking of pages in the database for the keywords consumers
use. These rankings are referred to as natural or organic
listings.
Search engine advertising, on the other
hand, enables you to buy listings for your keywords.
Positions achieved this way are referred to as paid
or sponsored listings. The most popular program in this
category is pay-for-placement. These programs typically
allow advertisers to open an account for $5 to $50,
then bid on keywords for a minimum amount of 5 or 10
cents per click. Advertisers outbid each other for a
higher position by increasing their bids by 1 cent per
click. Only when a consumer clicks your listing is your
account debited.
Are you disappointed to learn that
search engines don't magically and objectively find
the "best" sites on the Web? That's understandable.
However, it was always possible to influence search
results. Today, it simply costs more. Yet, for companies
willing to invest the time and money, it's well worth
it. The plan begins with the right set of keywords.
Making Keywords Count
If you have the wrong set of terms,
your site won't rank well in algorithm-based search
engines. Plus, you'll waste money on pay-per-placement
programs by attracting browsers, not buyers. To create
an effective list of keywords, start with these suggestions:
Company names: Start with the name
of your company, products and services. Include misspellings
and plural forms of words, if appropriate.
Themes: Consider related words your
customers might use to describe your business. People
looking for an automobile insurance company might type
in "car insurance" or "auto insurance."
Perhaps drivers are likely to switch insurance providers
when they buy a new car or used car, which would be
good terms, too.
Profile your competitors: Your competitors
are excellent sources of ideas. Study the keywords in
their Web sites and their metatags. From your browser
toolbar, click on "View," and then select
"Source." If they're using metatags, you'll
see keywords listed at the top of the page.
Then, brainstorm ideas about how your
customers are looking for your business. "Think
like your customers," recommends Nacho Hernandez,
30-year-old co-founder of online Mexican grocery store
MexGrocer.com, a La Jolla, California, firm that projects
2004 sales to hit more than $1 million. "A majority
of our customers are English-speaking Americans, but
most use Spanish keywords because they want the more
authentic products. So they'll search for 'salsa verde'
instead of 'green sauce,'" Hernandez says.
"While we market hundreds of
keywords equally split between Spanish and English,
we were surprised to see [that] 440 percent more traffic
and 200 percent more sales come from the Spanish words."
Of course, if nobody is looking for
certain keywords, it's pointless to promote those. That's
why a popularity check is important. Search engine marketers
typically use Overture's free Search Term Suggestion
Tool and the subscription-based program Wordtracker.
These tools reveal how many people search for your keywords.
Moreover, these tools and Google AdWords' free Keyword
Suggestions tool will provide suggestions of related
phrases consumers use. Finalize your list to include
relevant yet popular keywords.
Getting Optimal Results
Modifying your site to please the search
engine spiders can be tedious. Be prepared to wait weeks
or months for your site's natural rankings to improve.
Although top listings aren't guaranteed, time-consuming
efforts can pay off.
"The credibility boost is huge,"
says Gary Salzman, 47-year-old co-founder of coffee
resource retailer site WholeLatteLove.com. The Victor,
New York-based business projects 2004 sales of more
than $10 million. "Consumers see that natural listings
are awarded to highly relevant sites. That's the match
they want."
To make your site relevant for your
keywords, it's important to realize that sites don't
compete against other sites for rankings. It's Web page
against Web page. Therefore, each site page needs to
be assigned a set of keywords. Focus on the pages that
have valuable content for your visitors and are good
for new visitors to land on first. A few places your
keywords need to be included:
Meta tags: This tactic alone has absolutely
no impact on your rankings, but your keywords still
need to be in the meta title, description and keyword
tags of each site page you'd like ranked. The page title
and description are often used as the Web site listing
in the search results.
Alternative text (ALT tag): Mouse over
an image, and you may see a text box appear if the Web
designer has used alternative text. Try to use a different,
but related, phrase for each ALT tag on a page.
Page copy: The keywords you want your
site to rank well for must be in your page copy. The
thought is, if your site visitors can see them, then
your page is relevant for those terms.
Hyperlinks within your site: Don't
link "click here" copy to other pages within
your site. Hyperlink keyword phrases instead, because
search engines follow these links and the keywords in
them.
Link popularity is also a chief ingredient
in an SEO campaign. Your site needs to link to other
related sites and, more important, well-ranked and content-relevant
sites should link to yours. Run a search for your keywords
in Google or Teoma and evaluate the natural listings.
Contact sites that aren't direct competitors, and offer
to trade links or buy one. Marketleap has a free Link
Popularity Check tool which shows you how many pages
link to yours and how many link to your competitors.
You're not done yet. Once your site
is optimized, a majority of search engines need to be
notified to crawl your site. Unfortunately, most search
engines now require an inclusion fee. It may be a per-URL
fee, a fixed per-click fee on any site rankings you
achieve, or a combination of both. Inktomi, Overture
and Teoma are examples. Google is still free and will
index your site on its own; however, you can use the
"Add URL" form if your site isn't in its database.
"Analyze, optimize, submit, monitor,
then repeat the process," says Shari Thurow, webmaster
and marketing director of SEO firm Grantastic Designs
and author of Search Engine Visibility. "Getting
top-10 positions and maintaining them is an ongoing
process. A site should always get consistent, high-quality
traffic from the search engines," Thurow adds.
"It's also an ongoing challenge to determine what
competitors are doing to achieve search engine visibility."
Thurow recommends evaluating site statistics
reports monthly. Once your site is fully optimized and
submitted to the search engines, maintenance can usually
be done on a quarterly basis.
Is your anxiety level increasing yet?
Don't worry. There's a quick way to get any position
you want. Just buy it.
Buying Your Way to the Top
Pay-for-placement is the easy way to
get a top position in search results. Open an account,
then choose your keywords, set keyword bids, write a
title and description for each keyword or group of keywords,
then designate a landing page for each keyword or group
of keywords. Your ad listings will be live as soon as
editors approve them. Typically, these listings are
placed under a "Sponsored Listing" type of
header to set them apart from natural listings.
On FindWhat.com, Kanoodle.com and Overture,
positions are awarded to the highest bidder. A one-penny
bid over an advertiser moves your listing above his.
On Google AdWords, positions are given based on the
combination of bid amount and click-through rate. That
means the highest bid doesn't automatically get the
number-one spot.
Consumers are part of the voting process.
Ad listings that aren't clicked will drop.
Wondering how often to update your
bids? Watch your competitors. If they perform daily
or weekly updates, you'll probably need to do the same
to keep the positions you want. Maintaining a top-three
to top-five position is important, because those generally
appear as sponsored listings across the distribution
network. That means greater visibility and resulting
traffic.
Bid management tools such as BidRank
and PPC Pro automate this process for you. Companies
such as Atlas OnePoint (formerly Go Toast) and Did-it.com
even offer tools that manage your bids based on your
cost-per-lead or cost-per-sale goals. Pay-per-click
is still time-consuming to manage, but at least the
results are instantaneous and often rewarding. For example,
these campaigns added more than 60 percent to WholeLatteLove.com's
total growth in 2003.
Tools alone won't improve your conversion
rates. Compelling ad listings and landing pages that
persuade people to complete an intended action make
or break your results.
"Don't misrepresent your offer,"
warns Salzman. He noticed that out of 60 competing ad
listings for "espresso machine reviews," only
38 percent showed what they said they would in their
ad copy. "Consumers make snap judgments in seconds.
Lose their trust, and they'll back out of your site
to click on your competitors' listings. The back button
is not your friend."
Don't panic over this crash course
in search engine marketing. In addition to the resources
listed here, you can turn to SearchEngineWatch.com,
the educational hub for search engine marketers. You
can also meet with search engine representatives and
marketing experts at Jupitermedia's Search Engine Strategies
conferences, or breathe easier by outsourcing your campaigns.
Just make sure your Web site can be found by using relevant
keywords. Your customers are waiting.
Catherine Seda is author of Search
Engine Advertising, and runs search engine marketing
seminar series.
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