Senin, 11 Agustus 2008

The Beginner's Checklist for Small Business SEO

by Danny Dover

For the last three months I have been hard at work learning SEO by optimizing a local small business website. The business is called Giggly Wiggly Preschool and is located in the Seattle suburb Issaquah, Washington. This Issaquah Preschool was the preschool I attended many years ago, so I am happy I was given the chance to give back to it. Optimizing for local search is a great way to learn SEO because there is less competition and it is easier to maintain a small and focused scope. It has been a slow process but has taught me a lot. The following is a checklist of all the tasks that have been necessary for me to generate great results. My hope is that this list can be used by inexperienced SEOs who are looking to learn the trade. (As a bonus, I have included checkboxes so you can print this and complete it in your spare time.)

The Beginner's Checklist for Small Business SEO

Research

Before you do any SEO you need to research the part of the web you will be trying to change. Many people believe this is the most important step in the SEO process. No skipping!

Complete the The Beginner's Checklist for Learning SEO - Completing all the tasks on this list will give you all the skills necessary to complete this checklist.


Write down your goal
- Why are you doing this? Why do you want people to find your client's site? Is simply viewing your client's site not enough? My goal was “I want local parents to find my client's website and be persuaded to register their children.”

Brainstorm and write down search queries - What words might people type into the search engines to look for your client's company? For my example, I came up with “Issaquah Preschool,” “Issaquah Daycare,” “Sammamish Preschool,” (a neighboring suburb) “Preschool Summer Camp,” and “Creative Preschool.” Your list should be longer.

Research your chosen keywords - Sign up for Google Adwords and learn how to use the provided “keyword tool” and “ad text ideas” generator. Learn how to use Wordtracker (paid) and/or the Keyword Difficulty tool (free).

Using what you learned from keyword research, record what you believe to be the best keywords - For my project, I used “Issaquah Preschool,” “Issaquah Early Childhood,” “Preschool Summer Camp,” and about five others.

Analyze the current Search Engine Results Pages (SERPs) for your keywords
- Who is ranking? What are they doing effectively and ineffectively? Investigate and get to know your competition.

Create a list of your competition - Use the information from the previous step to create a list of competitors. You will use this to figure out how other sites were able to get into your targeted SERPs.

Use Yahoo Site Explorer to find the sources of your competitor's links - Record the sources of links your competitors have and save them for later.

Yahoo Site Explorer

Search for your client's site
- Use the site command on Google, Live and Yahoo to see if your client's site is indexed. Ex. “site:www.gigglywigglypreschool.com.” If your client's site is not indexed, you need to figure out what is preventing the search engines from crawling it. Be sure to also search the title tags of your client's most important pages to see where/if they rank. Record your results.

Onsite

Sign up and verify with Google Analytics, Google Webmaster Tools, and Live Search Webmaster Center - This is an important step that will become necessary later.

Let Google Analytics run for two weeks before doing any SEO
- This allows analytics to collect data and provides you with a baseline. I recommend you screen capture the relevant pages so you can show your client how your work has positively affected their site.

Evaluate the visual design of your client's site - If the site drives people away, no amount of SEO efforts will help. If the site looks terrible, find well designed sites in your client's niche.

Check compatibility between browsers - Visit your client's site using Mozilla Firefox 2.x and Internet Explorer 6 and 7 and Safari 3.x. Remember to do this on both a Mac and a PC. You want to make sure your client's website renders correctly and won't drive away users.

Create a new e-mail address specific to the site you are working on - Use this address for all e-mails pertaining to your project. This is especially important for link building.

Look at your HTML code and optimize all of the SEO related tags
- If you are unsure what these are, reread the
Beginner's Guide to Search Engine Optimization. Here are a few things to keep in mind:
      • Primary objective should be accomplished from the homepage
      • Keyword in title (unique for each page, include keywords)
      • Keyword in h1 on each page
      • Keyword in text
      • Optimize URL architecture (www.website.com/birds/eagle instead of www.website.com/allanimals/?type=bird&species=eagle). Use 301 redirects if you rename pages
      • Information architecture - as few clicks as possible
      • On relevant images include keywords in alt tags in filenames
      • No-follow appropriate links
Decide if you need a meta description - Modern search engines are great at scanning the text of websites displacing applicable snippets based on user queries. You need to decide if you want to rely on the algorithm or create your own description. I suggest making your own meta description for your homepage and letting the engines figure out the rest. Remember the purpose of making your description is to convince potential customers to click on your link in the SERPs. Make it convincing and use your keywords.

Add company address and phone number - Be sure to do this on every page. The search engines are smart enough to detect address and phone number formats. This data is essential to local search. I recommend adding the the following formatted data (example is for an American company) to the footer of all of your client's pages:

Company Name
1111 11th Pl NE
City, State Zip
(555) 555-5555


Add a robots.txt
- This is important for a couple reasons. First, it allows you to specify exactly what pages major search engines can crawl. Second, including a robots.txt makes tracking search engines easier because they always download the file before navigating your client's site. This characteristic differentiates the SEs from normal human visitors.

Offsite

Add your client's business and website to the major search engine's local listings
- This is paramount as local search is likely to drive the majority of your traffic. These are the most important places to submit:
      • Yahoo Local
      • Google Local
      • Live Local
      • Ask City - UNVERIFIED. I think the best way to do this is send an e-mail to askcitybusiness@help.ask.com with the subject line "Ask City Feedback - Business" and include the business name, full address, full phone number, URL, business category, name, and e-mail address. (Can anyone confirm this?)
      • CitySearch (data on this site feeds Ask.com and Live)
      • Yelp (data on this site feeds Live and Yahoo)

Add your client's website to industry specific directories - To find the prevalent directories, use the list of link sources you created earlier. Also, you can try searching for “(your client's local city name) business directory” and “(your client's industry) directory.” For example, I would search “Issaquah business directory” and “preschool directory.” Be sure to record which directories you add your client's site to and the usernames and passwords you use. You should use the e-mail address you created earlier for directory registrations. You should also make sure to use different passwords for different logins. You should always be thinking about maintaining your client's security.

Try to get the links your competition already has gotten - Use the list of link sources you generated from Yahoo Site Explorer and try to acquire links from those sources. This may be as simple as submitting a form or as cumbersome as e-mailing webmasters to find out their link addition policies. Always try to get your keywords in your link anchor text.

Get more links - Scour the internet and find other sites that might want to link to your client's site (site:website.com "submit a link"). Remember the importance of the source of your links and the anchor text used. 100,000 links from spammy sites with bad anchor text will help you less than a single link with excellent keyword anchor text from a super authoritative site. A good place to start is to use the Juicy Link Finder. You should also consider your local chamber of commerce, local networking groups, and local complimentary businesses. Search engines like to see local links pointing at locally targeted websites.

Decide if utilizing social media sites is advantageous - Is your client in an industry that could actively participate in social media? If so, be sure not to be spammy and to only contribute quality and appropriate content. It is much more expensive to fix a ruined online reputation for a business than it is for a standard user. You may also want to consider adding your client's business to professional networks such as Linkedin.

Create and submit sitemaps - Create a sitemap. Then login into Google Webmaster Central and Live Search Webmaster Tools and submit it.

Optimize your client's site from Google's side
- Login to Google Webmaster Tools and click on the tools menu. You will want to set the correct geographical target and preferred domain. In addition, you must also decide if you want to enable image search. It may drive you traffic but the traffic will unlikely be useful.

Track and Improve

Track progress - I recommend taking a monthly screenshot of all of the following SERPs. A screenshot is an easy way to gather a lot of information. The image files contain data on when they were taken so they are easy to organize. I recommend you do this for the following:
      • Ask Local SERP
      • Ask Main SERP
      • Google Local SERP
      • Google Main SERP
      • Google Webmaster Tools
      • Live Maps SERP
      • Live Local SERP
      • Live Search Webmaster Central
      • Yahoo Local SERP
      • Yahoo Main SERP
      • Yahoo Site Explorer
Create and maintain a spreadsheet of your rankings - This gives you a resource to prove to your client that your work is necessary. Be sure to keep it updated monthly so that you are always aware of how you rank.

Continue to make changes, build links, and record your results
- This step will never be completed. You should strive to become number one on all your SERPs and get so far ahead that none of your competitors will be able to compete.

Sabtu, 09 Agustus 2008

Busby SEO Challenge, What is it?

by. Gallagher

Busby SEO Challenge, What is it? I recently discovered this search engine optimization challenge. It's an interesting competition where search engine optimizers are competing against each other for first, second and third place in the search engine results (Google specifically) for the keyword "Busby SEO Challenge".

Currently there is about 400 plus people signed up for the challenge. But I've only seen about 90 or so URLs actually submitted for the competition.

First place is achieved by getting your website ranked the highest among all the other contestants in Google for, as I stated before, the keyword "Busby SEO Challenge". And the prize for first place is $5,000. Following that second place gets $2,000 and third with $500.

Watching the challenge and seeing how is in what place is done from a board setup on Busby's website. The stats board there shows the place each contestant is in and what rank that is in Google. The entirety of the top 10 is also the top ten websites in the Google results - go figure.

The SEO and web design company that puts this challenge on Busby Web Solutions is an average web design and SEO company that appears to be based out of Australia. But they have attracted quite a bit of attention with this competition.

About the author
This author is an expert in search engine optimization, which is the process of getting a website to rank well in search engines for targeted search terms. He has been in the online and Internet industry since 1998 and has built many effective website and ranked many sites high in the search engines. For more information on him or his company please view Pittsburgh SEO.

Google Devaluing Sitewide Links - SEO

by. Swati Haritash

I was reading through the blog of Matt Cutts, one of the head engineer's at Google and a very adamant blogger. He talks a lot about SEO and changes to Google's algorithms along with the normal personal blog topics like personal info and video games.

I was doing some SEO research for a new client's website and I was looking into evidence for the devaluation of sitewide links. A sitewide link is a link on every page of a single website. In the past sidewide links were great for SEO, still are, but they are becoming less effective on Google. Matt particularly comments on GoogleĆ¢€™s devaluating of sitewide links in a few posts. From my experience, on older sites if you have a large amount of other links, and you get say a link on 50% of pages on another websites Google will count them all as links and this will be a bit more valuable then say a single link, but for a new website, avoid sitewide links on Google. If you go from having a few links to having a bunch of links all from one website it's appears that Google will completely devalue those links because they appear to have been paid for and one of Google's current crusades is to cut down the power of paid links.

Currently buying and selling links on the "black market" is one of the major and very important tactics of modern SEO. You build a good site, optimize for the search engines, are creative, try to get as many links as possible and then buy the rest to give you that "push" above the competition. Although Matt talks about how they won't help you, I believe a lot of this is wishful thinking, or a prediction of the near future. Currently as long as the advertiser doesn't label your link with a title link "advertisement, sponsor, link partner" etc, the link will still count, especially if they include it in the body of their content with normal anchor text. Of course you'd better be ready to pay a pretty price for that service, because they'll actually be sending you some of their traffic and promoting your product as opposed to just providing a link for SEO.

One interesting thing to note from Matt Cutts. He retentions the rel="no" tag. Again for reference this is the tag that you can add to your links to have them not pass on page rank. Now youĆ¢€™re first question may be "why would anyone want to stop a linking from passing page rank of relevancy".

There are a bunch of creative answers for that one, but at the basic level this was designed for bloggers who could reduce the power of links contained within blog comments in order to discourage comment spammers. Matt cuts recommends adding rel="no" to any links you sell. Now if I was going to sell a link to a poker site or a bad neighborhood. This might be a good idea as to not hurt my relevancy in Google, but if a website had a similar topic, and was very legitimate, I'll get a lot more money and they'll get a lot more benefit from a regular intact link, and if I hide it correctly, Google will never be able to tell It was paid for it. Especially if for an additional fee or course, I added a page to my blog or to my site describing what the other website was and why I was linking to them, but that's all hypothetical.

Right now Adsense is my only way to monetize this website and it isn't paying too well, but then again I just launched this redesign and with some hard work I should be able to dramatically increase my traffic levels, hopefully enough to earn a nice monthly check from Google.

http://www.the20seotools.com http://www.seo.reprintarticlesite.com

I was doing some SEO research for a new client's website and I was looking into evidence for the devaluation of sitewide links. A sitewide link is a link on every page of a single website. In the past sidewide links were great for SEO, still are, but they are becoming less effective on Google.

Rank Boosters and more traffic upon your website

by. ASHWANI KUMAR MANHOTRA

Getting the highest possible traffic is what most websites aim for. Since a large amount of traffic comes from the search engines, it is equally important to aim for higher rank on the search engines. On the internet alone, you can find hundreds of strategies that tell you how to increase your rank and traffic. This only means these two factors are very important.

The ranking of your site on the search engines and the rate of traffic that your site receives are reliable factors that can determine the overall success of your website. Because they are important, you need to increase them both! Here are some of the ways to do it simultaneously:

Site Submission to Directories

Submit your website to these kinds of directories:

1. Open Directory Project or Dmoz,org;

2. Directories related to your website theme or subject;

3. Local or regional directories;

4. Multiple subject directories; and

5. Yellow pages and superpages.

After several weeks, check your listing on these directories. Follow up if you cant still see your site listed after quite a long time.

RSS Feeds

Internet marketers and promoters are looking into the benefits of the RSS Feeds. It allows you to add new content to your website without much difficulty. It also allows you to endorse your website's new content.

Solicit Incoming Links.

Look for high ranking websites that are willing to give a link to your website. However, don't participate in link farms and link scams. Achieve incoming links naturally. All you have to do is make your site relevant and informative so that other websites will be tempted to link to your site.

Write and Submit Articles.

This is one of the most cost-effective ways to increase your website's rank and traffic. The strategy works as simple as writing an article and submitting it to good ranking article directories. Aside from the fact that these articles are helping your website to rank well on the search engines; they are also indispensable doors to your website. Online users are more likely to click on the resource box that goes along with each article especially if the article is very informative and significant.

Involve Press Release

You can try creating press releases to the media indicating updates about your website, company, online business, products and services. This is a good start to make your website visible even on printed materials.

These techniques will give your site a higher rate of traffic while giving it a higher rank on the search engines. Isn't it great? You will just have to use the same techniques and the result is double: higher rank and traffic!

About the author
Did you find this article useful? For more useful tips & hints, Points to ponder and keep in mind, techniques & insights pertaining to Google Ad sense, Do please browse for more information at our website :-

http://www.seo-prediction.com http://www.seo.reprintarticlesite.com