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Posts Tagged ‘SEO’

Blog Posting for Maximum SEO Impact with WordPress

Tuesday, September 2nd, 2008

Keeping a regularly updated blog is one of the best ways you can compete for higher search engine rankings. This article will explain how to properly use your blog for great search engine optimization results.

By: RSS Ray

WordPress Logo

No matter how good the blog posting, it will be ineffective if it can’t be found by interested parties via the internet.

In order for a blog posting to be found by people via the internet, it must be structured in such a way that search engines can properly read, classify and index it.

The purpose of this guide is to show you HOW to structure a post so that search engines will properly find it and classify it.

Where to Begin

Here are the post structural elements that you need to be aware of and the actions you need to take for search engine optimization of a blog posting:

Headline:

When you create a blog post, it will have a headline.  The headline serves many purposes in the world of marketing.  For our discussion, be aware that the headline is what entices a person to want to read the posting.  It also serves as one criterion a search engine will use to classify and rank the posting.

Thus, our purpose for the headline is to get a person to read the posting AND to help the search engine classify the material in such a way that it can be found by the target audience of the blog.

To do so, our headlines must contain a keyword or key phrase.  Its purpose should be to let the reader know what the posting is about and to compel the person to read the posting.

Posting Text:

The text of the posting must contain the central keyword or theme the blog is pursuing within one of its opening two paragraphs.

This again aids significantly in search engine indexing and ranking.

Text Hyperlinks: 

Many blog posts will contain links to information resources outside the post (i.e. usually another website).  To hyperlink within the WordPress format, you are asked to provide two (2) bits of information: the URL you are linking to and the descriptive text you want your blog to display.

The key search engine elements within a hyperlink refer to this descriptive text.  Your objective should be to include a “keyword” or “key phrase” within this descriptive text, giving it an accurate description using terms used by people on search engines.

Tags:

Tags are used by blog search engines and blog directories to help classify blog postings.  Your objective here should be to use as many appropriate terms from the CATEGORIES section of the blog.  Enter them EXACTLY as they appear on the categories section of the website.  Enter categories in descending order, with the most RELEVANT category being entered first.  Use commas to separate category entries.

All In One SEO Pack:

This pack is used for search engines and follows the META structure used by them. There are 3 parts that you need to be concerned with:

Title: This should be a 70 character maximum description of what the posting is about and must contain a keyword or key phrase in the title.  Think of it as a title to a book.

Description:  This should be no more than 160 characters in length and is a description of the posting and where the posting came from.

Keywords:  These are the words or phrases used to describe the content of the post.  They should align with the keyword objectives of the website and blog.  They will be similar to the words used as described in the “TAGS” section of this document, although they may be more expansive.  Separate each entry with a comma.

Download the All In One SEO Pack for use on your WordPress blog.

Images:

When inserting images in the blog, it asks you for an image title and description.  It is important to use keywords or key phrases in these as well, following principles as outlined earlier within this document.

By following these steps we maximize the odds of our target audience finding our blog.

If you would like to know more about how you can use blogging to boost your search engine optimization results, contact RSS Ray today.

Can Flash Websites Now Be Optimized For Search Engines?

Tuesday, August 12th, 2008

Adobe and Google
By: Dale Knauss, Show Producer

On June 30th, 2008 Google announced that Flash websites, a previously taboo subject among Search Engine Optimization (SEO) professionals, could now be easily indexed and ranked by Google’s search engine. Concurrently with this announcement, Adobe announced that not only Google but also Yahoo would have the ability to index Flash files.

This announcement has caused great excitement from the Flash faithful who have long been plagued with trouble getting high search engine rankings. It has also caused many HTML fanatics to balk in disgust and quickly try to tear apart the effectiveness of such a search.

According to the developer’s website, Adobe Flash is “the most advanced authoring environment for creating rich, interactive content for digital, web, and mobile platforms. [You can] create interactive websites, rich media advertisements, instructional media, engaging presentations, games, and more.”
Its popularity stems from the ability to animate and design interactive websites and videos in a way that normal HTML sites could never hope to. Many designers enjoy the stunning visual interface that can be created in Flash and prefer it over the text based HTML format.

Unfortunately, as anyone involved in search engine optimization knows, Flash has been practically invisible to search engines because the image based content was entirely unreadable by the search crawler. Text and links could not be seen and therefore it was nearly impossible to assign a page rank. Because of this problem, Flash sites were seen as unusable and generally tossed aside by anyone interested in getting high search engine rankings.

Of course now Google has claimed to solve this complicated issue. That means it’s time to start using Flash to generate beautiful interactive sites while also getting top search engine rankings, right? Not so fast.

While Google is now better at indexing Flash, the technology is not yet perfect. By Google’s own admission “Googlebot does not execute some types of JavaScript.” This means that many Flash pages that utilize JavaScript will still be hidden from search. Google goes on to mention that non-Flash content is indexed separately from Flash content, even if they are on the same page. They also note that the Googlebot is still not able to ‘see’ images and Flash videos.

There are even more not Google related problems with Flash that do not seem to translate well into search technology. For instance, an entire Flash page is generally only one document as opposed to the many different documents in HTML. You will notice that a Flash site stays on http://www.healthdirections.com/ no matter where you go on the website. By contrast an HTML site is made up of many pages like http://www.rssray.com and http://www.rssray.com/blog. Search engines index each page of an HTML website separately, something they will not do with Flash. 

Another major issue has to do with tagging a website, a commonly accepted best practice for HTML websites. Heading, paragraph, image, nofollow, and other tags are not available in Flash but are very important for SEO.

Of course, I have no doubt that Google has a team of highly qualified overworked engineers who will eventually solve these, and the rest of the world’s problems. So let’s look at another issue with Flash that should worry us even after Google has perfected this technology.

First and foremost Flash takes while to load, even with hard work by the designer, Flash intro pages are generally slow loading and may turn many visitors away. Likewise many simply do not like Flash for various reasons and will be instantly turned off by a website that uses it. In fact, many computers and most mobile devices do not have the Flash viewer installed so they would not be able to see a website made in Flash.

Finally a Flash site can greatly impair website usability, a very important part of a successful website. Because the entire site is on one page, clicking the back button leaves the site rather than simply going back one page. This can get annoying if you need to delve deeply into a site to find what you are looking for.

While all this technical jargon is all well and good, what we as marketers should care about is one simple question “will using Flash websites make us more money?” And the answer to that is a resounding no.

Flash websites can be incredibly visually pleasing and the interactivity that Flash allows opens up a world of possibilities. It is certainly understandable why many feel that Flash would be beneficial to visitors who have grown tired of HTML.
Google has made significant strides towards making Flash easily searchable but it is obvious that they still have a long ways to go. Creating a Flash based website at this point would be like buying all the expensive ingredients to turn lead into gold before you were sure the alchemy works, it’s simply a bad idea. For the record: that alchemy thing never worked out.

Though even if Google were to perfect their indexing of Flash pages and their ability to rank them correctly, that still leaves the massive usability issues inherent in the program itself. Load times would likely be an issue for the foreseeable future and many will never download a Flash player. Would we as marketers be wise to create our websites in a way that was inaccessible to many of our target customers? Should we risk alienating the vocal minority who dislikes Flash in order to add some small application or graphic? This seems like a completely unwise strategy for an untested search technology.

Let’s all applaud Google for a great step forward in indexing Flash pages and get back to doing what works: Creating highly optimized, easy to navigate HTML websites that have a proven track record for getting results.

How To Earn Top Organic Search Engine Rankings

Wednesday, July 23rd, 2008

Link building expert Arnie Kuenn of Vertical Measures explains how you can start getting top natural search engine rankings for your business. Learn the importance of link popularity, how to start a link building campaign, and the power of anchor text.

Link Building

Obtaining a top natural search engine ranking is crucial for any company that wants to establish a strong online presence. Top rankings means loads of traffic coming into your site and that traffic means a lot more business for your company. Additionally, studies have shown that top ranked companies are generally considered to be the top in their field, whether or not they actually are. So how do you get top natural search engine rankings?

The short answer is inbound, high quality links – and that fact is not going to change any time soon.

Link popularity is one of the most important factors search engines use in determining where you will rank in the search engine results for your keywords and phrases, as it helps them to determine how important or popular your site is and what its reputation is. In essence, the search engines are saying “we’re going to give top ranking to pages that have important and relevant sites linking to them”.

Link Building is the process of finding related/relevant websites and receiving a link from them to you. Natural linking occurs when a site has good content that others will link to without being asked. But to get these links, people have to know about you. It is a catch 22. Building links has become pretty sophisticated over the last couple of years. Today you need a mixture of links from many sources including blogs, articles, press releases, social media, directories and others.

Some common ways to improve Link Popularity:

  • Offer unique and helpful information on your website which will make others to want to link to you without even asking.
  • Ask friends, business partners, vendors, distributors, family members, golf partners, etc. to link to you!
  • Distribute optimized press releases to news related sites to generate qualified traffic & links.
  • Look at the websites who are linking to your competitors and ask them if they would link to you.

The Power of Anchor Text

In the following example, the blue underlined words link building are an example of anchor text within a link pointing to our home page. If a competitor of yours is both optimized and has a stronger number of inbound links from quality, relevant websites with proper anchor text, they are going to outrank you. Link popularity has become the dominant factor in who ranks the highest within Google. Other major search engines such as Yahoo and MSN also give a strong emphasis to back links for their ranking criteria.

Search for the words click here and you will see Adobe’s Reader download page coming up first in Google. Interesting enough, the words click here do not appear anywhere within their title tag nor anywhere on the content of that page. Yet, they rank # 1 out of 857,000,000 results. The reason is they simply have more links pointing into their website (using the words click here as the anchor text) than any other website. On a smaller scale, if you are targeting a fairly niche industry, you may only need a handful of strong, relevant inbound links to move you to the top of the rankings.

If Link Building is so powerful, do I still need to be concerned about SEO efforts?

The answer is YES. Proper use of title tags, site maps, link structures, header tags, alt tags and good content is critical to communicate to the search engines what your pages are about. Most search engines pull your title tag as the first line of text within their search engine results. So it is important to work on good content, on-site optimization and inbound links. That is the winning formula.

What a Top Google Search Ranking Means to Your Bottom Line: The Value of Search Engine Optimization

Monday, July 14th, 2008

Have you ever wondered just how much a top search engine ranking is worth to your business? Obviously a high Google ranking will get you a lot more traffic to your website without requiring you to pay a dime for clicks. Yet even still, most business owners are left to wonder if the results of running a search engine optimization campaign are worth the costs.

Today we are going to show you a simple process that you can use to determine how valuable a high Google ranking in a single keyword is to your business. Using this information you can see for yourself if an investment in a search engine optimization campaign is worthwhile or if you are better off with your money elsewhere.

We have chosen to use Google for this article because it makes up 60%-70% of the U.S. search market and will therefore be the most valuable source of traffic for your website.

How People Use Search Engines

Getting higher search engine rankings is all about getting more visitors to your website. It’s common sense that the more visitors you get, the more sales you make, and the more sales you make, the more money that ends up in your pocket.

According to several well documented studies, between 68% and 90% of people only click on results on the first page of Google. This means that pages that are not included on the first page are practically invisible to your average searcher. Being in 20th place or 200th hardly makes a difference because either way your website will be rarely seen by most searchers.

For some further insight into just how important high search rankings are we can look at some data that was accidentally leaked by AOL in 2006 about their users’ behaviors during 9,038,794 searches and 4,926,623 total clicks. The original article about the leaked AOL search data was written by Donna Fontenot.

Here is how those numbers work out:

AOL leaked data table

The released data also confirmed that most people click on a result in the first page of searches with 89.82% of search users never going past page one.

These findings are fascinating because they indicate not only how important it is to be on the first page of results, but also how much your ranking on the first page will affect your traffic. With a number one ranking getting 42% of all of the clicks for a keyword and a tenth ranking getting only 3% it is quite obvious where you should attempt to position your company.

Another interesting study that deals with the importance of being especially high in the rankings comes from Enquiro Research’s Eye Tracking Report. Using a special technology that tracks participants’ eye movements, researchers were able to understand exactly how users interact with search engines. Take a look at these pictures to see what the average user is looking at when using Google and its closest competitors.

Enquiro Research’s Eye Tracking Report

Notice the concentration of eye focus on the upper left hand side of the screen, particularly for Google. This seems to demonstrate that users click on the first result the most because that is where their eyes are focused.

We can continue to go through study after study but the results are all the same, being high in the rankings will provide you with far more visitors then you’ve ever dreamed of.

Determining Visitor Data and Conversion Rates

Now that we know just how important getting a high Google search ranking is, it’s time to figure out how much traffic you are already getting. Using this information we can determine how much more money you would make if your Google rankings were to rise.

The information we are aiming for here is:

  • Number of visitors to your website who are using the keyword you are interested in.
  • Percentage of visitors who buy something (also called a conversion rate).
  • The average value of each customer. This could be the return on investment for each online sale or, if you have it calculated, the lifetime value of customers to your business.

If you already have an established website, ranked by Google, with analytics to measure customer behavior then you should be able to get all of that information in just a few minutes. If not, don’t worry, you still have a couple of options to choose from.

The first thing you will need to do is get the Google Analytics code added to your website. It’s completely free and more then worth its weight in gold for anyone looking to sell online. Google analytics will let you know exactly how many people visit your website, where they come from, what pages they look at, if they buy anything, and a whole lot more.

With analytics in place, you will want to get at least a thousand page views from your intended keyword so you can get a really good feel for what people do on your site. If your website is not currently getting enough traffic to get those 1,000 visitors then you might consider using Google AdWords to bid on your keywords and get conversion numbers that way.

If for whatever reason you do not want to or are unable to get the information we are after that way, you can also choose to use a free tool offered by Google.

The Google Keyword Tool has recently been updated to provide estimates of how many searches are performed for each term on a given month. Enter in the keyword you are interested in and not only will you be given suggestions for other phrases you might want to target but you will also see last month’s search volume for your keyword as well as the average volume for the year.

Google Keyword Tool

With search data acquired, let’s take another look at the AOL search results to see how you can easily determine the increased traffic you can get for any ranking on the first page.

AOL search data table

We know that the first ranking will get approximately 421,300 hits each month (1,000,000 x .4213) because with 1,000,000 searches for the keyword Kitten, our AOL data tells us that 42.13% will click the first result. You can go on to do the same calculation for the rest of the rankings if you would like.

Examine this table with the number of clicks that each ranking for the word Kittens should receive each month:

Clicks by ranking table

Unfortunately there is currently no easy way to determine your conversion rate or average value of a visitor without past history. If your business is already established outside of the web then you likely already know the average lifetime value of your customer. In terms of conversion rates, each business is entirely different and so there is no average rate. Where some companies might be overwhelmed with a 3% rate, others need 30% to really get them going.

The only real way to quickly test conversion rates is by using Google AdWords and bidding on the keyword you are looking at. This way you can a decent amount of traffic fairly quickly to determine where your conversion rates are at. Remember a conversion rate is simply the number of sales per one hundred unique visitors.

Doing the Math to Find the Value of Google Search Rankings

Let’s take a conservative approach for our Kittens example and assume that our average conversion rate is 5% and the average value of a customer is $50. That means that for every 100 visitors to our website, 5 of them will make a purchase with an average price of $50.

That means that if we were to be ranked first in organic searches on Google then we could expect 21,065 (421,300 x .05) additional sales each month and $1,053,250 (21,065 x $50) in increased sales revenue!

If we were to rank in fifth place instead of first we could expect revenues of $123,000 every month. That’s a huge difference from being ranked first but it is still quite good.

You can do this same comparison for any keyword but remember that since there are a lot of variables involved for each specific keyword that the results will not always be entirely accurate. These estimates are meant to be a guide to what you could achieve with high search engine rankings, not a crystal ball.

If you are already ranked highly on Google and want to know how much more you will make if you climb even higher in the rankings, these results will be much more accurate thanks to the data you should already have collected.

For example, let’s say that you sell paper airplanes and are currently ranked 4th for the keyword “paper airplane.” You currently get 1,000 clicks a month from that keyword and make $500 each month from those 1,000 clicks. This means that you are making $0.50 for every click Google sends your way.

If you wanted to know what would happen if you went from 4th rank to 1st all you would need to do is look back at those AOL clicks. A 4th ranking gets 6.9 times less clicks then 1st so that means you can estimate that the person in 1st is getting 6,900 clicks each month. Since you make $0.50 a click your revenues will go from $500 all the way up $3,450 a month for that single keyword!

Hopefully this guide has helped encourage you to fight for top search rankings in Google. I encourage you to look at the keywords you would like to compete for, generally between 10 and 20, and determine how much you can make with a top ranking in each. Looking at your own results, you should realize that investing in search engine optimization and link building can bring huge profits to your business and give you a big edge over your competitors.

Are you interested in getting high natural search rankings for your business? Contact RSS Ray today to find out what you can do to rank highly on the key search terms for your website.

- By Dale Knauss, Show Producer for Online Marketing with RSS Ray

Online Marketers Rejoice: Google Releases Search Volume Data

Wednesday, July 9th, 2008

To the excitement of online marketers everywhere, Google has released an updated version of its Keyword Tool that promises to alleviate one of the major headaches of keyword selection.

The updated tool, announced yesterday, will go beyond simply providing keyword suggestions and competitive data. The new version will allow users to get the approximate search volume by month as well as the approximate average search volume for every keyword that Google has collected data on.

This will allow marketers to assess at a glance which keywords are best for their search marketing campaigns without needing to rely on third party sources to collect search data.

This updated tool is incredibly valuable to both AdWords advertisers, who are looking to add more keywords to their PPC campaign, as well as search engine optimization professionals, who can use this data to determine the most valuable keywords to compete for.

Here is the type of result you can now expect to get from the Google Keyword Tool.

Google Keyword Tool

Here is an excellent guide by Google on how to use the Keyword Tool.

If you need help selecting keywords for your search engine optimization or Google AdWords campaign we can help. Contact RSS Ray today to learn more.

Google’s Advice about How to Get Top Search Engine Rankings on Google

Wednesday, June 25th, 2008

Google’s Matt Cutts tells you what’s important for getting top search engine rankings on Google.

Google Logo The USA Today recently published tips on how to achieve top search engine rankings on Google.

The neat thing about the article is that the top search rankings advice came from Google itself in the form of Google engineer and blogging legend, Matt Cutts.

The article identifies 5 tips to get top search engine rankings on Google:

1. Spotlight your search terms on the page

2. Fill in your “tags”

3. Get other websites to “link back” to you

4. Create a blog and post often

5. Don’t overdo it

You can see the entire USA Today article and can contact us if you need professional help in obtaining high natural search engine rankings for your business.

RSS Ray’s Advanced Guide To High Search Engine Rankings

Tuesday, May 13th, 2008

An Advanced Guide To High Search Engine RankingsMy alter ego, Brian Offenberger, as part of his duties with BizGrowth Search Engine Solutions, recently conducted a webinar for the Specialty Equipment Market Association (SEMA).

The webinar topic was “An Advanced Guide To High Search Engine Rankings” and was a follow up to the Beginners Guide To High Search Engine Rankings webinar I also conducted for SEMA.

You can access the slides to the presentation here.

Beginner’s Guide to High Natural Search Engine Rankings

Friday, May 2nd, 2008

guide to high natural search engine rankingsI had a lot of fun when conducting a webinar for SEMA members Thursday. The seminar was in my capacity as CEO of Arizona based BizGrowth Search Engine Solutions and explained steps beginners can take to achieve high natural search engine rankings for their web pages.

Take a look at the beginners guide to high natural search engine rankings.

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About Our Radio Show

Online Marketing with RSS Ray is a weekly radio program about internet marketing best practices. It is carried live on wsRadio.com, the internet's leading talk station with more than 3 million listeners. You can listen live Wednesdays at 1pm Eastern/10am Pacific or get free podcast versions of the show.

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