Click
Here
for more articles |
|
|
Top
Search Engine Ranks- The Only Secret You
Need- Explained: Part 1 |
by:
John
Krycek |
The
top three search pages- the only place you'll
be noticed they say. Unfortunately, they
are correct. How can you possibly compete
with millions of pages? Many represent thousands
of dollars of professional search marketing
and optimization per page, backed by budgets
on which most of us could retire. How can
the little guy have a chance armed with
an already out-of-date search engine marketing
book and a ream of now dog-eared, printed
web pages on the topic? Do you really think
you have a chance to land those top spots?
Yes, you do. the same chance the big guys
have!
Do a search for Internet marketing or some
derivative of that and you'll be thrown
into an expanding mass of theories, techniques,
methodologies, scams and some actual useful
information. Sorting through the latest
trends, applying them to your site, and
most importantly understanding what you're
doing can be confusing to say the least.
Before we discuss how to get on top, let's
define some of the different players on
the field.
If you've guessed it's not about which strategy
to use, but rather how to use each strategy
effectively, you're headed down the right
path. I'm going to show you that all of
these techniques share one common thread.
you master that, and you're in the big leagues!
Here's the team line up in the current Internet
marketing playing field.
RSS
RSS stands for Really Simple Syndication.
It's a kind of programming language format
that lets you share news headlines and stories
through a type of Internet address called
an "RSS feed." You can import these feeds
into your site so you have the latest headlines
from news around the world.
But the great part about them is that feeds
exist for almost every subject matter, in
every genre you can think of. Track a couple
down that pump news about your business
subject matter and you have juicy, up to
date dynamic content on your web page to
attract visitors! You can even take it one
step further.
It's not that difficult to create your own
RSS feed. In this case, you're actually
writing the news about your business. People
around the world can then display your information
on their websites. If you make those news
stories factual, appealing, attractive and
easy to read, you're on your way to becoming
a household name.
Link Popularity
Many would argue that this is the most crucial
factor in search ranking today. You might
have heard the "vote" analogy. Where every
site that links to yours is like a vote
for your site. The more sites you have linked
to you, the more votes you have.the more
votes, the higher your ranking.
That's an extremely simplified definition.
There's a big curve ball though. Votes are
not equal. Search engines weigh many factors
about your site, your link text, the site
that links to you, and the number and type
of sites that link to it, just to name a
few variables.
Link popularity is definitely a big contender
in achieving high rankings. But, you don't
want to link to just anyone. And stay far
away from link farms and free for all link
sites. They usually cover a full gamut of
different kinds of sites. They're scams.
And many are already banned from search
engines and you will be penalized.
You want to stick with sites that are similar
in theme and subject matter to yours. It's
worth paying for some one way links to your
site from well established, authoritative
sources.
Articles
The concept of article marketing in terms
of the Internet is two fold. If RSS were
like a news ticker, articles would be the
equivalent of magazines. Here's how the
process works. Write an article about one
particular interesting facet of your business.
An issue, current event or strategy that
would peak interest in a likeminded reader
are targets. Next, post your article for
free on sites like content-articles.com
and ezinearticles.com that store giant collections
of articles. Post your article on groups
like yahoogroups.com that announce new articles
by particular category.
Then, a person in your related field is
looking to fill their site with some well-written,
interesting things that will keep people
on their site. They select your article
to publish and include it for all of their
traffic to read.
How does this help your business? The key
is in the very bottom of the article, in
few lines of type called the resource box.
Here, you put your name, and a well written
(and varying) text link to your website.
(This is part of the agreement. If someone
wants to reproduce your words on their site
they may do so for free. But they must include
the resource box with the active links.)
Now, a search spider comes along and indexes
your article on their site, with a link
pointing right back to your site! And remember
that links back to your site, in a search
engine's mind, mean that you must be important.
Secondly, people may want to learn more
and follow the link right back to your site.
Hint. post your articles on your own site
too. If someone wants to read more of what
you've written they have immediate access.
Blogs
According to Princeton University, a blog
is a "web log, a shared on-line journal
where people can post diary entries about
their personal experiences and hobbies."
What makes blogs so exciting is that anyone
can have a blog. It's a chance to establish
yourself in your area of expertise. Get
your name around. People will keep coming
back to your blog to hear what you have
to say about a particular subject matter.
While the term "diary" conveys a free writing
style, the content of blogs can be quite
educational and come from some powerful
high ranking industry people in an easy
to understand, all professional titles aside
type of atmosphere. Hint: A blog can be
an unprecedented educational tool.
Imagine that your passion is physics and
you could read Einstein's own, every day
thoughts on relativity in an atmosphere
of his laptop by a fireplace, typing away
at night in his jammies very relaxed, outside
of the office. You have access to some great
minds and thinkers, learn from them, expand
upon their ideas, and become a leading mind
yourself.
Search Engine Optimization
This is the combination of art, creative
writing and statistical analysis that give
your site viewers rich content and presents
it to the search engines in the most efficient
method of achieving you high ranks. Optimization
includes researching keywords, analyzing
your competition, having just the right
keyword in just the right place on the page
in just the right frequency in just the
write line of code so the engine feels your
page is relevant. It involves streamlining
your code, placing things like CSS and Java
and other scripts in external files. Search
engines love text, not the framework that
makes it look pretty on the page.
The Dilemma
Search engines are evolving at an exponential
rate, forced to adapt and develop battle
strategies to combat programs and technology
developed to outwit them. When link popularity
became important, software to create hundreds
of doorway pages to sites was invented,
to cite one example.
The consequences from these people trying
to outmaneuver the search companies are
chaotic and create virtual gridlock on the
Internet. However, statistics overwhelmingly
show 75-80f site traffic comes from search
engines. So search engine marketing must
be an equally strong part of your web development
thrust.
You think ok, but if search engines are
always evolving to stay a step ahead of
the abusers, what if I manage to get my
site way high on the list, only to be at
the bottom again because a modification
in the search-ranking algorithm is made.
Suddenly my top 10 results plummeted to
position 880 overnight. That's pretty upsetting,
not to mention a huge waste of money.
The Secret
Diversify
Don't rely only on keywords in your pages
to get to the top. Like you would diversify
a stock portfolio, write some articles,
make sure you get yourself listed on good,
quality directories and sites, and optimize
your code. Develop an Internet marketing
plan that won't cause you to plunge in the
search ranks because of an algorithm change.
Insert appropriately the eggs in one basket
cliché here.
The Common Thread
RSS feeds, articles, link text, blogs. the
combination of these and other methods will
bring you to the top. But they have to be
effectively consistent in one thing. They
must all have superior content written for
the end user, not the search engines. Remember;
always sell to your potential customers,
not the engines. Here's why.
A search engine company's goal is to provide
the end user with the best, most relevant
matches to a search inquiry. If they fail,
the user moves to a different search engine.
They don't want to lose customers any more
than you do. To keep a customer, a search
must be matched to the best content. Period.
No matter what defenses or blockades or
changes they evolve with overnight. If they
don't provide results a user can use, they
lose that user. And they wont allow that.
Therefore, only legitimate, quality content
will be matched to the end users request.
No matter what modifications to algorithms
or stops to doorway pages or link farms
a search engine company integrates into
their defenses, they wont deviate from their
goal of being the best. They can only do
that by providing the best results.
An assortment of carefully planned and executed
Internet marketing strategies and techniques
will get you to the top. It does take some
time, but your efforts must start with a
solid foundation. You must look at the big
picture. It's not something that can be
done in an evening, so don't try. Instead,
focus on building a well diversified skeletal
system to your Internet marketing.
In Part two learn what good content consists
of, how to write it, how to get it, how
to keep it fresh and keep your audience.
About the author:
John Krycek is the owner and creative director
of http://www.themouseworks.ca.Read
additional articles on identity, web and
graphic design and logo creation in easy,
non-technical, up front English!
Circulated by Bandoni
Media
|
|