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Maui Search Engine Optimization: Lesson #12

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This entry was posted on 21 December 2006, 7:02 AM and is filed under SEO News,SEO Tutorial.

 I know search engines ignore stop words in meta tags and title tags. Do search engines ignore stop or common words in domain names?

Answer: Yes, to the degree in which the keywords have any effect the more common words within a domain name would be ignored. It is, however, important to keep in mind that search engines only place a limited amount of weight on keywords in a domain name. In my opinion the only time where a site keyword within a domain name wins a ranking war is when all other elements are equal between you and near-ranked competitor

Question 2) “ One of my clients has expanded their business into another state with a different name, but it is ultimately the same business. In order to develop a Web presence for this new, duplicate company in a new area, we created a second Website that has its own unique design, etc, but is ultimately a take off on the original site, using the same content, just minor differences to allow for the new name, geographic area, etc. The original site is optimized and of course contains the original content. The duplicate site is not optimized. In no way is our intention to "dupe" anything, but will this cause problems with the engines? We are not trying to get mileage off of the content by duplicating it... this is simply a second company that offers the same services, just in a different state. Each site is in its own domain and has its own URL. Your input? Your suggestions for a different solution? Thanks for your time."

Answer: Simply put if you are truly not looking to get any mileage out of the content then you do not want rankings for it which implies that the site should be blocked to the search engines. I would recommend using your robots.txt file to block the spiders entirely to that website so you do not negatively affect your rankings on the original site. The fact is that duplicate content, good intentions or not, is frowned upon by the search engines and you are gambling by having the site available for spidering.

If, however, you do want the search engines to spider the content then you must rewrite it to avoid duplicate content penalties.

As a final note I would like to pose a question; did your client absolutely have to create a secondary website? In many cases I find that a client need not have created a second site; they just needed to add a new section to their site to manage the new target marketplace. The other option, which may have been appropriate in this case, is to add a subdomain to enjoy the benefits of a secondary home page on a pre-branded domain and fresh marketable URL; nearly the same benefits of having a secondary domain without the headache of marketing an entirely new website. Even in this case, however, you would not be able to use duplicate content so you would be faced with the same issues; either rewrite the content or block it from spiders.
 
Question 3) " I have been writing articles for article directories in the hopes of receiving quality backlinks. Recently I came across a site mypagerank.net, which I decided to check on my link popularity. The result indicated that I only had 18 backlinks. What can I do to increase the number of backlinks I am getting? I would have expected more as I have written many more articles and submitted my URL to many directories. Thanks, enjoy reading your articles" - Peter

Answer: First, good work making the effort to write articles, they are an excellent medium for promotion and I commend you for dedicating the time to writing. I certainly understand the significant commitment to time and research required to write usable content. Fortunately, there are a few techniques that may help you squeeze some extra benefits from your hard work:

Be Clear - Request Credit
Are you being very clear to those republishing your content that you expect a linked credit for the copy? Simply stating that you allow syndication but request credit laid out in a particular linked format will do wonders. At StepForth we clearly request credit and we occasionally troll Google looking for those who have republished our content without credit; it is usually a simple matter to have the content removed or the appropriate link added.

Pick a Powerful, Timely Topic
Have you noticed a topic coming up regularly in forums? Perhaps a question that appears to be asked regularly? This is usually a good indication that an article discussing the topic would do well. Remember that many of the syndication networks online are looking for topics that will get readers and ultimately provide impressions for their advertisers. As a result, picking a hot topic will make a world of difference in how widely your article will get picked up.


Optimize the Title
The title of your article needs to clearly relay the topic and should engage readers and editors alike. The title can make or break a story if it is too vague or boring.


Refer to Your Own Content
It helps to provide inline links from your article to relevant previous articles or pages on your website. With practice and once you have built up a healthy reservoir of linkable articles it will soon be second nature to refer to links in a manner that is crucial to the article; so that editors note that the backlinks are relevant and play a legitimate role in the purpose of the article. Legitimacy of backlinks is crucial to make the ‘cut' because editors are more likely to remove a link than keep one if it appears merely promotional.


Give Praise Where it is Due
Within an article don't be afraid to link to other sources where you have noted particularly good information, particularly other small business blogs. The fact is that some bloggers take a real shine to those who syndicate or give credit to their content and may just link back to you in thanks.


Put RSS On Your Side
If you have not already done so ensure that your articles are syndicated on your website in RSS format as well. This can be easily accomplished by using a blog to publish your articles because most blog systems include automated feed creation. Many of the article syndication networks use articles solely through RSS. So as soon as you get a RSS feed you should go out and tell the world about it.

 

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    • 21 December 2006, 7:13 AM Lanna Martin wrote:
      For every page you want to have crawled and indexed by search engine spiders, you need to have enough readable content on the page with keywords specific to your site embedded. This will allow the search engines to index your page content.

      Your main content should be above the area called the fold in the page; this is where the web page drops off the bottom of your screen before scrolling down. There has been much rumor that when the search engine spider crawls the site it travels so far down looking for relevant information to match with your heading meta tags, if the information is not found it will go to the next page and your page will not be indexed correctly.

      Make sure the heading meta tag title, description, and keywords are relevant to the content on the page and to your specific industry. Do a search on Google, Yahoo, and MSN for specific keywords in your industry and see who comes up in the top of the free listings.



      Click the view, page source in your browser window and you will see the met tags they use. Compare the 3 different search engine listings and use ideas from each. See how each website has their content laid out and that you can find the meta tag keywords in the page content.

      Site navigation is crucial in web site planning. All pages should link to each other and there should be no broken links. Text links give search engine spiders an easy way to get from page to page so use them when ever possible. Many sites are built using PHP and ASP scripts and the navigation links are not found by the spiders.

      If you have asp or psp navigation links, create an html site map. There are many free site map generation tools available today. Place this link on every page and you are sure to have all your important pages indexed.

      The key to a great web site is quality design layout and great content that is updated often. Rotate banner ads and post newsletters to keep you content fresh. This will keep the search engine spiders coming back for more.

      Most importantly design keeping your visitors in mind. If they can't find your products and services, then all of your hard work is just a waste of time. Put yourself in your customers shoes and think about what they want to see when they get to your site and how fast they expect to locate what they are looking for. If they can't find it fairly quickly, then you most likely gave your competition another sale.
      Reply to this
    • 21 December 2006, 7:17 AM Robert Patterson wrote:
      When you size up the search marketing industry, you really have to marvel at all the different information sources, many of them conflicting, and how search marketers are able to stay on top of what's current and relevant compared to noise and malarkey.

      In the course of talking to prospective clients, prospective business partners, attending conferences and events, reading blogs, books, discussion threads, forums, newsletters and industry publications, you can get exposure to an amazing variety of observations about SEO. Many of them are spot-on. Some of them are tales of a mythical nature. A few are just plain bunk.

      For some context on this post, I think it is important to note the distinction in intent for most search engine optimization efforts: SEO for publishers, blog networks and affiliates is a different thing than SEO for lead generation and on-site transactions/sales. Many tactics are the same, but the intentions and outcomes are very different.

      The myths outlined below are more concerned with SEO for lead/sales generation that we work with at TopRank.

      1. "Search Engine Optimization is a collection of tricks to fool search engines".

      If you're "fooling" the search engines, then you're probably fooling users too. Guess how well that kind of activity converts? "Real" SEO involves a lot more than optimizing content, getting links and using disposable marketing "tricks". Tricks and tactics may be a matter of semantics depending on who you talk to, but many of the tactics we associate with productive and long term SEO include:

      Search Marketing Strategy


      Benchmarks


      Competitive Analysis


      Keyword Analysis


      Creative Copy Writing


      Web Design & User Experience


      Information Architecture


      Server Side Issues


      Code Optimization


      Other channel marketing that affects SEO (social media, news search, blog search, etc)


      Ongoing Content Development


      Ongoing Link Building


      Web Analytics


      Conversion Analysis
      2. "People in our market don't use search engines."

      I actually used to keep my laughter to myself when people would say this. You don't have to do too much research to find out if a market is viable for marketing via search engines.

      According to a study by comScore qSearch, there are 4.9 billion internet searches per month and 133 million unique searchers. Those numbers have actually gone up a bit since the study. It is certainly true that in some market categories in the developed world that search usage is minimal, but I have a hard time thinking of any.

      A quick way to start investigating a market is to search and find out if how much relevant content is out there. If your market is brand new, then you may have an easier time dominating it on search engines by becoming an authority on the topic earlier than your competition.

      Submitted by -->MAUISEO.COM
      Reply to this
    • 21 December 2006, 7:20 AM Lucy Benn wrote:
      With the explosive popularity of video content on the web, savvy search marketers can be among the first to catch a prime trend this coming year by optimizing video content to outperform in search engines.

      A special report from the Search Engine Strategies conference, December 4-7, 2006, Chicago, IL.

      The Video Search Optimization session was designed to educate marketers on how to make relevant video content highly accessible to searchers. Moderated by Chris Sherman, the presenters included Jon Leicht of Intuit, Eric Papczun of Performics, and Gregory Markel of Infuse Creative, LLC. All experts in the field, these three brought invaluable data, strategy, analysis, and anecdotes to help SEOs start mapping the contours of the video terrain.


      Video, the wild west of search 2007
      As Jon Leicht illustrated, video search is still a new and relatively cumbersome niche. That has its pluses and its minuses. Leicht first and foremost advises that marketers map out a plan and develop what he calls a meta toolkit for a business' video developers. A video developer may understand the importance of good meta information but it's entirely possible that he or she may not know how to do it right. Don't leave it to chance. Give developers solid instructions before they get started. As with any optimization campaign—and even more so with video—it is always better to do it the first time around then to have to go back and do it all over again.

      Video search engines are like any regular content search engine. To be successful, and to avoid making mistakes, know where you are submitting your content and what information you need to have for each individual engine. Search engines are all different and results will be enhanced when you understand the medium and can play the field according to the rules. Those rules, however, are rapidly changing. A smart marketer will keep an eye on the trends in the industry, and stay just ahead of the field.

      As Leicht reminded us all, video is very new content delivery medium. So new in fact that most people are still doing little to no optimization. Just applying the basics will put a search marketer leaps and bounds ahead of everyone else.

      Leicht's top 3 tips include:

      Name your files accurately, with keyword rich filenames. For example: October-space-shuttle-launch.mov rather than 345654-lb.mov

      Optimize the content on the webpage that launches your video

      Submit, submit, submit
      "The Search Engines themselves are very open to working with you. If you have good content, they are happy to help. Call them!" said Leicht.

      The power of video site maps
      Following Leicht's overview of basic video SEO technique, Eric Papczun recommended optimizing not only for content related keywords, but for generic keywords related to video. "News video," "ipod video," "[location-specific] video." Even popular terms like "travel video" are still relatively easy to rank for.

      Contact Mauiseo.com for more information.
      Reply to this

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