Click here to subscribe to
The Promotion Press

Newsletter - July, 2005

The Promotion Press
Your hosts:
Jason Campbell - Internet Marketing
Shawn Campbell - Search Engine Optimization

Contents

End of article

For webmasters, e-marketers and e-merchants...

A recent study of how Americans search the Internet suggests that still more than half of them (56%) do not understand the distinction between paid and organic listings. These findings are not surprising, given that the average person surfing the web does not need to know the difference between the two in order to find what it is they are looking for in search results. However, people who have a website, who are web publishers and who are trying to get noticed on the web should definitely know this distinction by now.

Often a web site promotion program involves strategies for both organic and paid results. Because of the importance of understanding these two distinct strategies, today's featured article highlights how to get improved results in organic listings. For a similar guide concerning paid results please see our Tips for pay-per-click bidding article in an older issue of our newsletter.

I hope that you enjoy this issue.

- Jason Campbell

End of article


Search Engine Navigator

 
Back to Basics in SEO

There has been a lot of talk about Google and MSN's new algorithms and Yahoo's search engine changes. When these changes finally do occur, it is always important to remember the number one rule in SEO: DON'T PANIC!

If there is one guaranteed constant in this business it is that there will always be changes in the search engines' rankings. Our job, as search engine marketers, is to stay on top of the changes and to monitor how the change affects our clients' site's traffic.

I am actually excited about any algorithm change, because it means that the search engines should actually get better.

What follows is a "back to the basics" on getting good rankings:

Keyphrases

First things first: Always be sure to research the keyphrases you intend on using. Find out what keyphrases Internet users most often employ to find your product or service. There is no point optimizing your site for "online web marketing" if everyone types in "Internet marketing".

Once you have a list of potential keyphrases with a high amount of Internet traffic, comb over that list and see which keyphrases best describe your product or service. These are the ones you should consider.

Here are some sites that can help you in your research:

Competition

Research your competition with these questions in mind:

  • What keyphrases are they using (take a peek at their keyword Meta tag)?
  • What are the titles of their sites?
  • When you do a search for the keyphrases you are considering, who comes up in the top five rankings?
  • What is their title/keyphrases?
  • Are the top ranking sites your competitors or are they industry associations?

Use the keyword effectiveness index (KEI) tool at Wordtracker to compare the effectiveness of your keyphrases. A higher KEI signifies a better ratio of demand-to-competition for a keyphrase.

Do a link search to see who is linking to your competition. In a search engine, type in "link:" (without the quotes) followed by the URL you want to verify. This will allow you to see all the important links to the site that the search engine tracks (I would recommend doing this in both Google and Yahoo).

  • Can you get links from the same sites as your competitors?
  • Are there industry associations or organizations that are linking to the top sites, but not to you?
Get your link campaign going! (see the article about linking for search engines to learn why links are important)

Optimizing Your Web Site

Now that you know what keyphrase you are optimizing for, here is how to optimize your site: write good quality content that focuses on your keyphrases.

Above all else, this is the single most important factor.

Sure there are other on-site factors such as:

  • Getting the keyphrase into the title (this is the second most important factor)
  • Getting the keyphrase into the Meta description tag, the Meta keyword tag, the headers and sub headers, the alt tags, and into some link text (some of these factors are VERY minor)
  • Having a good site map so that the search engine spiders can easily navigate your site
  • Having a robots.txt to include the pages that you want the search engines to include
  • Don't use frames
  • Use flash wisely (not the WHOLE site in flash)
  • Use external files for your java scripts
  • Use cascading style sheets (a .css file)
  • Use dynamic URL's wisely (Avoid using URL's with ? or & in them)

Content is king

Oh…and did I mention that you need to write good quality content that focuses on your keyphrases? All of the points above are superfluous if you don't have good content. Content is the food that the search engine spiders like to gobble up with a voracious appetite. The items below are just the side dishes. You need good content to get decent rankings, but you need the side dishes to become a serious competitor in your market.

  • Write about your keyphrases.
  • Write extra pages.
  • Write about your industry.
  • Write about your product or service's uses.
  • How will your product/service improve the life of the consumer? Find out, and then write about it.
  • Why is your product/service better than your competitor's? Think of a reason and write about it.
  • What is the history of your product/service? Or your industry? Write about it.
  • Who are you? Everyone always enjoys "about us" pages…
  • And of course, be sure to serve the search engine spiders with a tasty main dish full of keyphrases!

Whatever you do, be sure that you don't write junk or filler copy and double check that everything reads well. Keep in mind that writing about your keyphrase doesn't mean adding the keyphrase unnaturally into the text. If you have any doubts, employ the talents of an expert to do the writing for you!

Links

Start soliciting links today! Get people in your industry to link to you. Contact:

  • Industry associations and organizations
  • Web sites about your industry
  • Sites related to your product or service
  • Suppliers
  • Resellers
  • Competitors who don't compete in the same region
  • Sites that sell products/services that relate to your, but don't compete directly

See my article on soliciting links for more information on how to go about it: Linking is Queen

Submissions

Submit to all the directories you can find, so long as they are related (e.g., don't submit to the Abba directory unless your site is about Abba). Submitting to a directory should not be a mindless activity. Read the directory's directions on how to submit VERY CAREFULLY. Write your description very well, and tailor it to each directory in order to follow their guidelines. Make sure you submit (and get in) to www.dmoz.org - it is probably the most important directory out there today.

Do research and find "vertical directories" that focus on your industry, and submit to them. These directories are very important because, for example, if you have a dodo bird site, what better potential client than someone who found you through a dodo bird directory!

Search engines and directories are different. Do not confuse them. You can submit to all the search engines you can find, but it usually won't do much because the good search engines will find you anyway. Submitting to random search engines will usually only increase your email spam. Don't waste your money on search engine submission software for the same reasons.

Here is a partial list of the current important search engines:

  • Google
  • Yahoo
  • MSN

Conclusion

  • Build your web site for your customers, within the guidelines that the search engines set out.
  • Don't make the site awkward by over-conforming.
  • The site's first focus should be on what your clients want.
  • Create good content. Good, quality content that reads well and flows seamlessly.
  • Update it regularly. An active, living site is healthier than a stagnant, dead one (the search engines spiders like their food alive and full of life).

And remember: Content is King!

Shawn Campbell

Shawn Campbell is the co-founder and Chief Search Engine Optimizer at Red Carpet Web Promotion, Inc.
www.redcarpetweb.com

End of article

Statistics

Market share of the search engines

The chart below shows the share of all visits made to both search and directory sites, during May 2005

38.3% Google (www.google.com)
18.4% Yahoo (search.yahoo.com)
15.6% MSN (search.msn.com)
4.5% Google Images (images.google.com)
2.4% Ask Jeeves (www.askjeeves.com)
1.6% Yahoo Images (images.search.yahoo.com)
1.1% My Web Search (www.mywebsearch.com)
0.8% DogPile (www.dogpile.com)
0.7% My Search (www.mysearch.com)
0.6% AOL Search (www.aolsearch.com)
16.0% Others

Statistics are by Hitwise

End of article

Stay on Top

Jason's picks - For each newsletter I review articles from leading industry magazines and newsletters. The following articles are the most interesting. Click on the links below to read the full articles.

No Search Is an Island
www.cmomagazine.com/read/columns/ca_062305.html
CMO magazine - June 23, 2005 - Online searches don't take place in a vacuum. They are triggered by offline events, and they lead to other offline events, preferably to someone paying money to your company.

How Americans Search
searchenginewatch.com/searchday/article.php/3519361
SearchEngineWatch - July 12, 2005 - A recent study from Harris Interactive shines interesting light on the behavior and preferences of Americans when searching the web.

"The study suggests Americans are getting savvier about the distinction between paid and organic listings, but still more than half (56%) do not understand the difference between the types of listings. Among those that do know the difference, only about half (51%) prefer organic listings. And in general, men express a stronger preference for organic results than women, who tend not to have a preference."

The State of Search in Europe
searchenginewatch.com/searchday/article.php/3517891
SearchEngineWatch - July 6, 2005 - What is the state of search in Europe and how do the major players see search developing over the coming years?

Hitwise Releases Keyword Intelligence Service
http://blog.searchenginewatch.com/blog/050706-121601
Search Engine Guide - July 6, 2005 - Hitwise, best known for tracking the online behavior of 25 million internet users every day, has introduced a new keyword research tool designed for small and medium sized businesses. The tool, which monitors usage at all of the major search engines, also provides guidance on "successful" search terms--those that actually resulted in a user visiting a web site. Like the popular Wordtracker [www.wordtracker.com] keyword research tool, Hitwise Keyword Intelligence offers a number of tools that help search marketers with search term research and management.

Keeping an Eye on Google
http://searchenginewatch.com/searchday/article.php/3517551
SearchEngineWatch - July 5, 2005 - A new report offers fascinating, in-depth insights on how users interact with Google search results, based on studies using eye-tracking technology.

Survey Looks At PR Aspect Of Search Listings
http://blog.searchenginewatch.com/blog/050705-121846
Search Engine Guide - July 5, 2005 - Brands suffer from negative PR on Google from NetImperative looks at a survey that examines not how companies are placed in search results but how well the PR spin is for them, based on the top results. Coca Cola, for example, was found to have 4 of the 10 ten pages in a search at Google UK for on its name containing negative comments about the company.

Search Engine Sales vs. Search Engine Marketing
http://www.clickz.com/experts/search/strat/article.php/3516691
Clickz -July 1, 2005 - Hundreds of thousands of marketers who place pay-per-click (PPC) search engine listings on Google, Yahoo!, MSN, and other venues think of themselves as search engine marketers. In fact, they're not behaving like search engine marketers at all. Most engage in search engine sales, not search engine marketing (SEM).

New Study Sizes Up the Web
www.clickz.com/experts/search/opt/article.php/3512376
Clickz - June 29, 2005 - It's been ages since I've seen anyone try to estimate the size of the Web. Now, a new paper puts it at 11.5 billion pages or more for January 2005.

"One easy way to think about search engine sales versus search engine marketing is marketing is designed to create interest, awareness, and demand. Sales fulfills an existing demand."

Google Relaunches Personal Search - This Time, It Really Is Personal
http://blog.searchenginewatch.com/blog/050628-073541
SearchEngineWatch - June 28 , 2005 - Google has released a new version of Google Personalized Search [www.google.com/psearch], this time in a format intended to constantly monitor what people select from search results and shape future queries based on their choices. More on the service and how it puts spam facing a war on thousands of fronts.

"Link analysis itself is facing problems. Link spammers and others overtly manipulate links. Links are also created naturally in ways much different than in the past, polluting their usefulness in search. Personalization poses a potential next leap forward -- and clickthrough measurement can provide that."

Yahoo Integrates Personal & Social Search with MyWeb 2.0
http://searchenginewatch.com/searchday/article.php/3516381
Search Engine Guide - June 28, 2005 - Now you can search both your own "personal web" and pages saved by members of a trusted community of contacts with Yahoo's just-launched MyWeb 2.0.
Also see Yahoo's announcement "Search, with a little help from your friends"
http://www.ysearchblog.com/archives/000130.html

ET Don't Go Home, Go To A Targeted Landing Page!
http://blog.searchenginewatch.com/blog/050624-055939
Search Engine Guide - June 24, 2005 - The Simple Pay Per Click Change That Could Earn You More [www.searchengineguide.com/laycock/004845.html] from Jennifer Laycock is a plea to marketers that if you buy a paid listing, send people to the very best page in your site that has information about what you're selling, not your home page. IE, selling red shoes? Send them to a landing page that shoes all your red shoes, not your home page that lists shoes among all the other types of clothing.

The Google Patent and SEO
http://www.seo-news.com/archives/2005/june/23prt.html
SEO-News: June 23rd, 2005 - Google's Patent Application contains a lot to read and reading it may take some time, but if you own any type of website, this is all information you need to know. It also brings some interesting points up.

MSN Search Gets Neural Net/RankNet Technology & (Potentially) Awesome New Search Commands
http://blog.searchenginewatch.com/blog/050622-082709
Search Engine Guide - June 22, 2005 - Local, Relevance, and Japan! from the MSN Search WebLog talks about MSN Search using a new relevancy ranking system based on "Neural Net" technology, along with new search commands -- such as anchor text searching -- now available.

FAST Web Search Is Back Via New Miva Editorial Results
http://blog.searchenginewatch.com/blog/050621-082454
Search Engine Guide - June 21, 2005 - Miva -- the newly rebranded company encompassing FindWhat and Espotting -- has launched its own editorial or "algorithmic" results to compliment the paid listings it offers.

Google Maps Now Offering Satellite Imagery In Lots Of Places
http://blog.searchenginewatch.com/blog/050621-132124
Search Engine Guide - June 21, 2005 - Satellite images in Google Maps come to many places outside the US. Examples and more, in this post.

PageRank Decoder Offers Flash-Based Guestimates On Linking Impact
http://blog.searchenginewatch.com/blog/050617-085707
Search Engine Guide - June 17, 2005 - Want to understand how PageRank will build between pages you link? Only Google actually knows how that works, but a new tool makes use of an old formula for those who want to play.

End of article

Letters to the Editor

Email the editor Send your questions and comments for our next issue to news@redcarpetweb.com. Be as specific or general as you want -- other subscribers are probably wondering the same things you are. You should also let us know of any promotions, sales or new products on your web site.

End of article

Next Issue

- New feature article - More on how Search Engines work
- Stay on top: Articles from industry newsletters and magazines
- And more...

End of article

To subscribe to the Promotion Press, go to the subscribe page and fill in your email address.

To unsubscribe from the Promotion Press, go to our unsubscribe page and fill in the address you subscribed with.

Red Carpet Web Promotion This Newsletter is produced and published by
Red Carpet Web Promotion, Inc. © 2000

Home · Services · Request form · Contact us
Newsletter · Resources · Proven results · Site map


1-877-717-3667 (toll free)
info@redcarpetweb.com