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Keywords,
Competition And Being Number One- Uncovering
The Algorithm |
by:
John
Krycek |
By
following these steps you will see that
most closely guarded secret-- the search
algorithm. Remember the movie "The Matrix?"
The Matrix is there, you just can't see
it. So is the search algorithm.
It's easy to pay a Search Engine Optimizer
to give your pages some ranking power. Unfortunately,
given the inherent time factor involved
in climbing the ranks, your money may be
long gone before you know if you've spent
your money well.
THERE IS NO MAGIC PILL
Forget any advertisement you see for instant
number one search results or automated this
or that. Most are scams, and the ones that
aren't might get you positioned, but it
will be very short lived.
Search engine optimization is an ongoing
process. Achieving and maintaining a high
rank, especially on highly competitive keywords,
requires constant maintenance. If you do
find a legitimate SEO firm, it is well worth
the money to pay their monthly maintenance
fee and let them continue to help you after
the initial project. At least for 6 months
or a year as you establish yourself.
In this article we'll look at some of the
intricate and complex tasks of optimizing
a page for long term ranking power. You
will learn how to read between the code
and the content to find what is necessary
to bring you to the top. Being number one
is easy to say, but is quickly overwhelming
when you stare at tens of thousands of pages
you want to out rank. So how do you begin?
The starting line on the road to that first
page SERP (search engine results page) ranking
is not as blurry as you might think. In
fact, you can uncover the starting line,
the route, and all the scenery along the
way to the finish line without knowing the
search engine algorithm.
STEP 1- YOUR KEYWORDS ARE THE CROWNING ACHIEVEMENT
OF GRUELLING DAYS OF WORK
If you have investments in the stock market
you know how much research and thought goes
into choosing those securities. Now take
that same effort and multiply it by three.
That's how much planning and revision your
keywords should take.
A simple, broad key phrase like "shoes"
could hypothetically bring you up in a countless
stream of different searches. Women's shoes,
baby shoes, sneakers, high heels, etc. If
somehow you manage to settle into a good
ranking (which would be difficult) you would
have more traffic on your site than you
could handle. But traffic is worthless is
it doesn't get to it's destination. Chances
are, you weren't that destination.
Your keywords must be focused and precise,
specific to what you are selling. Using
a key phrase like "Gucci mens black leather
loafer" will bring a targeted lead to your
site. You may not reach as many people as
the more generalized keyword, but the people
that do come to you have a much deeper interest
in the specific product you are selling.
Therefore you have much greater chance of
converting that targeted lead to a sale.
Your keywords are your magic beans, your
winning lotto numbers, your energizer bunnies,
your sales force, whatever you want to call
them. They must be perfect.
STEP 2- WANT TO BE NUMBER ONE? LOOK AT WHO
ALREADY IS
Competition Analysis- no SEO book can give
you this information.
Now take your keyword list and type them
into a search engine. Who comes up in the
first ten results? That company that is
number one is because they have most closely
matched what the search engine algorithm
says should be number one. You can learn
a great deal from them.
A. INTERNAL FACTORS
Take that number one page, and the other
top 9 pages and study them, look at the
code, break them down. You are looking at
the first half of what is needed to rank
in the top 10 pages for your key phrases
on that particular search engine. The list
of what to look for is enormous.
Studying the Internal Factors on a page
is taking it apart to see how it's put together.
Not how it works, but statistical research
into the precise construct and layout of
keywords and phrases in relation to each
other within the page.
Start with these areas:
URL address, Page Title, Meta description,
Meta Keywords, First sentence on the page,
Body copy, Bold or Emphasized Phrases, H1
or other tags, Alt Tags, Navigation system
In each of those sections, look at:
Keyword densities- the number of times your
phrase and each word in your phrase appears
compared to the text around it
Where and in how many times the same phrase
and words appear in different sections
The word and character position of each
phrase in each
The total number of characters
The total number of words
The quality and thought of the content
Beginning with these comparisons should
keep you quite busy for a while. A spreadsheet
is quite useful. Some commercial products
are also available that can make this daunting
task much more feasible. Keep looking for
other patterns and differences. You want
to duplicate them in your own page. NOT
copy and steal. You want to mimic the patterns
that are bringing that page to the position
it is. Then move onto to examining the external
factors of these pages.
B. EXTERNAL FACTORS
External factors of a web page deal with
the links to, from and within a web page,
both inside the same site, and out into
the web. This analysis usually takes more
time because it involves more dissection
of pages beyond the one you're trying to
optimize.
In this analysis as with Internal Factors,
you want to compare and contrast your page
versus the top 10 competitors, find similarities
and differences. Here is a list of criteria
to get you started.
Number of internal (to the same site) on
that page
Number of external links
Number of links pointing TO that page* (see
below for details)
The link/anchor text- which keywords are
used and where
Google Page Rank value of incoming links
Alexa Rank of incoming links
*To get a listing of the links that point
to a site, type the following into Google,
MSN and Yahoo searches: "link:www.domainname.com".
Google tends to only show a small portion
of the links back, but MSN and Yahoo will
give you much more pertinent data.
Now you want to compare the content on each
of these pages to the one they point to.
Is it of similar theme, in what context
does the link back appear and where. Subject
of much debate, the consensus is that Google
Page Rank does not mean what it used to.
However, if it is in some fashion a measure
of how significant or "important" a site
is, it is worth looking more closely at
the sites that link back that are of high
page rank.
EVEN A SURGEON USES TOOLS
Now, this is definitely a ton of work to
do all by hand. There are software programs
that can help do some of the digging and
mathematical computations for you, figuring
out densities and organizing information.
Tools like this are definitely ones a professional
SEO will have in their arsenal. But remember,
these are tools, not miracle workers. It
takes a human being to evaluate and realize
connections, similarities, draw conclusions
and interpret the data. Then, you have to
extrapolate this data.
Remember, you want to do one better than
every site you just examined. To do that
you have to draw some conclusions and make
some educated guesses and link to even better
sites.
FINAL THOUGHTS
You have access to the inner workings of
every page that you want to beat. Learn
from them and do one better. This process
is not a one-time shot. It is ongoing. Check
your key phrases every week. Do the same
people still rank in the top ten?
Some have probably moved. Remember too that
they're going to adapt to maintain their
positions too. If you want the ranks, you
have to spend the time, and not just once,
or pay someone to do it for you.
Don't ever believe anyone who says they
can guarantee any kind of results. And ask
them how they will optimize your pages.
If they explain to you something like the
above, then you've probably got yourself
someone experienced and honest. You money
will be well spent and you'll quickly recover
it.
About the author:
John Krycek is the owner and creative director
of http://www.theMouseworks.caweb
design in Toronto. Learn more about search
engine optimization and internet marketing
in easy, non-technical, up front English!
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