Click
Here
for more articles |
|
|
Why
Google Indexing Requires A Complex Blend
Of Skills |
by:
John
Fowler |
If
it was easy, everybody would be doing it.
Getting a company's name and products, or
services, onto the first page of a genuine
Google search isn't a trivial piece of work.
In fact, there are four distinct skills
that a search engine optimiser needs to
possess. Most people possess one or maybe
two of these skills, very rarely do people
posses all four. In truth, to get to all
four, people who are good at two of these
need to actively develop the other skills.
Now, if you are running your own business,
do you really have the time to do this?
Is this the best use of your time?
Specifically the four skills needed for
SEO work are:
Web Design - producing a visually attractive
page
HTML coding - developing Search Engine friendly
coding that sits behind the web design
Copy writing - producing the actual readable
text on the page
Marketing - what are the actual searches
that are being used, what key words actually
get more business for your company?
Many website designers produce more and
more eye-catching designs with animations
and clever rollover buttons hoping to entice
the people onto their sites. This is the
first big mistake; using designs like these
will actually decrease your chances of a
high Google rating. Yes, that's right; all
that money you have paid for the website
design could be wasted because no-one will
ever find your site.
The reason for this is that before you get
people to your site you need to get the
spiderbots to like your site. Spiderbots
are pieces of software used by the search
engine companies to trawl the Internet looking
at all the websites, and then having reviewed
the sites, they use complex algorithms to
rank the sites. Some of the complex techniques
used by web designers cannot be trawled
by spiderbots. They come to your site, look
at the HTML code and exit stage right, without
even bothering to rank your site. So, you
will not be found on any meaningful search.
I am amazed how many times I look at websites
and I immediately know they are a waste
of money. The trouble is that both the web
designers and the company that paid the
money really do not want to know this. In
fact, I have stopped playing the messenger
of bad news (too many shootings!); I now
work round the problem. So, optimising a
website to be Google friendly is often a
compromise between a visually attractive
site and an easy to find site.
The second skill is that of optimising the
actual HTML code to be spiderbot friendly.
I put this as different to the web design
because you really do need to be "down and
dirty" in the code rather than using an
editor like FrontPage, which is OK for website
design. This skill takes lots of time and
experience to develop, and just when you
think you have cracked it, the search engine
companies change the algorithms used to
calculate how high your site will appear
in the search results.
This is no place for even the most enthusiastic
amateur. Results need to be constantly monitored,
pieces of code added or removed, and a check
kept on what the competition are doing.
Many people who design their own website
feel they will get searched because it looks
good, and totally miss out this step. Without
a strong technical understanding of how
spiderbots work, you will always struggle
to get your company on the first results
page in Google.
Thirdly, I suggested that copy writing is
a skill in its own right. This is the writing
of the actual text that people coming to
your site will read. The Googlebot and other
spiderbots like Inktomi, love text - but
only when written well in proper English.
Some people try to stuff their site with
keywords, while others put white writing
on white space (so spiderbots can see it
but humans cannot).
Spiderbots are very sophisticated and not
only will not fall for these tricks, they
may actively penalise your site - in Google
terms, this is sandboxing. Google takes
new sites and "naughty" sites and effectively
sin-bins them for 3-6 months, you can still
be found but not until results page 14 -
really useful! As well as good English,
the spiderbots are also reading the HTML
code, so the copy writer also needs an appreciation
of the interplay between the two. My recommendation
for anyone copy writing their own site is
to write normal, well-constructed English
sentences that can be read by machine and
human alike.
The final skill is marketing, after all
this is what we are doing - marketing you
site and hence company and products/services
on the Web. The key here is to set the site
up to be accessible to the searches that
will provide most business to you. I have
seen many sites that can be found as you
key in the company name. Others that can
be found by keying in "Accountant Manchester
North-West England", which is great, except
no-one ever actually does that search. So
the marketing skill requires knowledge of
a company's business, what they are really
trying to sell and an understanding of what
actual searches may provide dividends.
I hope you will see that professional Search
Engine Optimisation companies need more
than a bit of web design to improve your
business. Make sure anyone you choose for
SEO work can cover all the bases.
About the author:
John Fowler trained as a Mathematican and
has worked in the IT industry for over 30
years, much of the time in sales related
functions. He now spends his time between
being a partner in SEO Gurus and as a sales
and management trainer for ICT companies.
John can be contacted via http://www.seogurus.co.uk
Circulated by Bandoni
Media
|
|