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Search Engine Ranks, Part 2- Mastering
The Secret- Explained |
by:
John
Krycek |
In
the first part of this series on ranking
at the top of the search engines, we discussed
diversifying your Internet marketing efforts.
We introduced several methods including
RSS feeds, Link Popularity, Article Marketing,
Blogs, and physically altering your pages
to make them more target-able for select
keywords. All of these share the key of
great content in order to unlock success.
Think of each method as a vehicle that carries
the greatest cargo in the world. That cargo
is your business, your product, and the
word you want to get out.
Now....
So you're thinking, "show me how to set
up these things and get traffic coming in!"
We'll get to that, but imagine if you go
to all the trouble of rewriting ten of your
web pages, setting up a blog, writing some
articles, buying some text links, syndicating
your site over RSS, and you flip the switch
and everyone hears you...
But then surprise! Your audience feels like
they're watching an old, dubbed Karate movie...
the words come in English three seconds
after the guy moves his mouth...in Chinese.
Your new parade of eager visitors turns
away and never comes back.
Then you'd hate me, the Internet, your old
first grade teacher... and we don't want
that! So before we start adding marketing
bells and whistles to your site, lets focus
on the secret ingredient they all share,
the solid foundation... super, juicy, colossal
content! And, you can start drafting that
immediately.
Great Content- What Makes It?
Is there a site you visit nearly every day?
Why do you go there? Do you learn something
or take back some knowledge? Guess what...
the site has "good" content.
In terms of business, you're probably on
the web researching, buying, or selling
something. The Internet is all about information
exchange. In whatever vehicle it's delivered
to you, if the information is simple to
find and well packaged in easy to understand,
bite size pieces, you're happy. And you'll
probably go back to the same place when
you need more of that information.
In your case, content is information about/promoting/creating
awareness about your business. To turn a
new visitor into a new client or customer,
you want to convey that information in a
genuine, honest, no strings, down and dirty
package.
So then, on the surface, your packaging
should be:
-Professional
-Clean
-Attractive
-Interesting
-Simple
-Straight Forward
-Intriguing/Enticing
Let's take this article... the layout, wording,
sentence structure, and my personality package
the content. The content is the underlying
message I want to share with you-- that
all of the latest e-marketing techniques
won't help you one bit if you don't understand
the ideology behind them first, how they
work, and how to adapt them to attract people
to your own, unique piece of the Internet.
Great Content- How to write it
That's going to vary depending upon your
audience. So let's start there! First, know
who your audience is. Be yourself. If you
are dishonest and pretend to be something
you're not, it will show in time and you'll
lose all the work you put in.
Which brings me to another important point.
Write with confidence. If you are confident
in what you are writing and you aren't attempting
to deceive anyone (i.e. you are not selling
seeds to an audience of botanists when your
only skill is brick laying), you will earn
people's respect.
Trust goes a long way. You don't have the
luxury of delivering your content in person.
You have a very short time to convince people
you are not the latest scam, you have something
to offer that will help them, and they can
feel safe doing business with you or at
least willing to learn more.
That's a pretty tall order! But you can
do it. Let's start with some guidelines
for writing your content. Remember... a
web page, an RSS feed or a news article
will all share these commonalities.
Great Content- Thematic Essentials
-Be informal, but structured
-Know your audience. Pretend you're talking
to them. If you wouldn't say something in
person, don't say it online.
-Don't be boring. Would you read what you've
written?
-Do NOT lie
-Writing for the Net is not the same as
writing for print
-Keep it simple- one idea at a time, don't
overwhelm
-Inform, educate and show the reader what's
in it for them.
-Do not saturate your content with sales
hype. You are slowly building trust, making
a name for yourself, and not producing an
infomercial.
Great Content- Mechanical Essentials
-Divide your document into headings and
sub points. People scan a page until something
catches their eye, they don't read.
-Make your titles and headings catchy, yet
poignant.
-Do not try to incorporate a keyword in
every sentence. Be natural, your keywords
and synonyms will enter themselves.
-Spell Check
-Grammar Check
-When finished, put your document down and
go do something else. Come back later and
revise. Repeat, rinse.
How to keep it fresh and keep your audience
-Earn their trust by being honest
-Identify with a common problem or solution
to which all can relate
-Don't shove your product or service in
their face
-Show them something cool
-Give them something they can try immediately
-Leave them wanting to come back
Concluding Thoughts...
Internet marketing takes time, perseverance,
and practice. A ton of all three. If you
are swamped with work and honestly can't
commit, hire someone to help you or do it
for you.
You wouldn't allow a brochure to be printed
with spelling errors and bad photos. Your
online presence is no different.
Now that you're working on writing, next
time we'll learn how to encase your content
in some of the latest Internet marketing
methods. I'll show you how they really can
increase links and get traffic flowing.
In this series we'll delve into details
about the pros and cons of each method,
and how you can start using each right away
to increase traffic and links. Start writing
and revise, revise, revise! See ya soon!
About the author:
John Krycek is the owner and creative director
of http://www.themouseworks.ca.Learn
more about search engine marketing and web
design and development in easy, non-technical,
up front English at http://www.themouseworks.ca/html/website_articles_indx.html
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