Archive for the ‘Ethical Search Engine Optimization’ Category

A Site Re-Design Can Help Boost Your Site’s Traffic

Monday, November 21st, 2011

Optimizing a website is certainly nothing new for online businesses, and more bloggers and tech journalists are incorporating keywords and relevant topics into savvy content aimed to generate buzz. But web optimization doesn’t end nor begin with key phrases, inbound links and other tricks, it actually begins with your website’s design. Is it visually appealing to your visitors, and will it work well with
search engines to provide as much information as possible? There are some strategies you shouldn’t live without, while other designs are doing nothing for your website.

Keep your website simple and easy to use. Advertisements are fine, but they should never block any content or become the center of attention in a website. Your services and features are the most important sections of your website, and it’s what brings people back for more. With that said, splash pages (intros, loading screens) and Flash have got to go. Because your home page rests at the top of
your website’s page hierarchy, it is usually the address with the most inbound links. When search engine bots scour for relevant sites, your splash page will offer little to no information about your page. Likewise, Flash doesn’t help your website’s appearance to search engines. As mobile use on the web continues to increase, Flash becomes invisible to many users, as well.

Design your site with a common theme. Attract your visitors and engage interaction with something they will want to regularly use. If you need some guidance in creating simple yet effective web design, use a blogging service such as Blogger or Wordpress. Headlines and body copy are your best sources for search engine text crawling, as these bots cannot pick up text embedded in background images.
Blogging services also let you develop site-wide font themes, include metadata for search engine communications and manage pages and posts more easily than any other sites.

Obtaining a High SERP Doesn’t Happen Overnight… Or Even in 30 Days

Monday, October 10th, 2011

Search Engine Optimization, more commonly referred to as SEO, is the key to connecting with a website’s target audience. For more than a decade now, experts and analysts have come together to understand how maximizing a website’s search engine ranking can help grow a business. Bloggers and website administrators can take immediate advantage of SEO techniques to improve a sight’s visibility to search engines. With a wealth of information available through books and online mediums, users now understand the importance of this marketing technology more than ever before.

SERPs (search engine result pages) are the main ingredients in how a website reaches that target audience. When you Google a keyword or phrase, a list of results load in a numbered fashion, the first being the most relevant to the search topic. Studies have shown that users rarely spend a lot of time on SERPs, therefore results on pages after the first rarely even see the light of day. Because of this, ranking high on SERPs is a guarantee to drive more traffic to your website. This should be a webmaster’s mission for the intended site from day one.

Obtaining a high ranking on a SERP doesn’t come overnight, and there are many important factors to consider when structuring a website. One of the easiest ways for your website to get noticed by search engine bots — the vital tools that help sites like Google, Yahoo and Bing determine a website’s relevance — is updating your site regularly with keywords and tags. Website development services such as Wordpress and Blogger feature tag fields for each post, allowing users to easily point bots towards that particular page. When posting a new article or feature to a website, don’t get caught up in trying to manipulate your words into keyword-friendly babble. Search engine bots have been built to catch content that just features recycled keywords and little to no helpful information, therefore quality of writing is certainly a key feature.

How to Beat the Fear of Incorrect HTML for SEO

Friday, July 1st, 2011

Confused by those 2 acronyms in the title? HTML and SEO? These 2 terms are imperative for your website to be indexed properly within the search engines and for visitors, customers and clients to find your site instead of your competitor. One site is making it easier than ever to decipher and decide which markup language is best for your website, Schema.org.

Schema.org is collaborative effort between the top 3 search engines (Google, Bing, Yahoo) much like the 2006 collaboration of sitemaps.org, which was an effort to standardize Web page submission and feeds.

Let’s break these 2 terms down into cookie crumbles:

Example of HTML behind a webpage.

Example of HTML behind a webpage.

HTML = Hyper Text Markup Language – code name for all the gobbly-gook numbers, letters, quotes, carrot marks and other unusual characters on your keyboard that make up the meat and potatoes of your website design and functions.  For those who are not website designers and developers, this markup language is important and needs to be configured a certain way so search engines can find your website.

SEO = Search Engine Optimization – the secret to getting your website on the first pages of the search engines, powered by the protein of specific words and phrases.

Schema.org, according to a Adchemy blog post,

“with the Schema.org markup codes, they can identify specific products, services, people, locations, or events contained within their content. This will result in much more relevant organic search results.”

Great news for web developers and SEO firms across the country, who need a specific recipe for the search engines. But is it enough dough to get the results you need to get the blue ribbon?