Ten Steps To A Well Optimized Website (Parts 1 - 5)
Over this ten part search engine positioning (SEO) series we will go through ten essential elements and steps to optimizing a site.
Dave Davies
Mary Davies
Step Two - Content Creation
Welcome to part two in this search engine optimization series. In part one
we covered the importance and tactics for choosing the keywords and keyword
phrases that will provide the highest ROI for your optimization efforts. In
part two we will discuss how to properly write content for high search engine
positioning.
Content is the key to search engine rankings. While there are numerous factors
involved with the search engine algorithms, content remains a constant in stable
rankings for a number of important reasons.
Over this series we will cover the ten key aspects to a solid search engine
positioning campaign.
The Ten Steps We Will Go Through Are:
- Keyword Selection
- Content
- Site Structure
- Optimization
- Internal Linking
- Human Testing
- Submissions
- Link Building
- Monitoring
- The Extras
Step Two – The Importance Of Content
There are many aspects of your content that are of key importance to your search
engine rankings and for a variety of reasons. That said, they can be broken
down into their three main benefits. The three main things you should be targeting
with your content are:
- Unique and well-written. The search engine spiders are looking for unique
content and your visitors are looking for well-written content.
- With articles come links.
- With quality content comes even more links.
As long as you keep these three main purposes in mind while you are deciding
what you want on your website and how it should be worded, you will fill this
area nicely.
Unique & Well-Written Content
The importance of unique and well written content cannot be overstated. This
is the backbone and purpose of your website’s existence and it deserves
the time it will take to create. When you are considering what content you want
on your site (or what content should be on your site if this is part of SEO
or a redesign) you will want to make a few considerations.
- What does your audience want to find?
- Will you have to do additional research?
- Are you an expert writer or do you have one on staff?
What Does Your Audience Want To Find?
Assessing your potential visitors wants does not require a crystal ball. If
you have completed and spent quality hours on Step One of this series, fully
researching your keywords, you are already well on your way. Delving into those
keywords you will often find hints that will push you in the right direction.
If you have an acne site and you have found a number of people searching for
“acne treatment” and “natural acne treatment” and have
thus chosen these as your targeted keyword phrases you already understand your
visitors current situation and more importantly, their desire. Similarly, if
you are a real estate agent and have chosen “los angeles real estate”
as your phrase you know more than simply characters strung together and dropped
into a search box. You know that you are dealing with people wishing to purchase
or sell a home in Los Angeles. In both scenarios you know what your visitors
want and, assuming you are already successful in your industry, you know what
you have to do to convert that desire into a client.
Now what has to be done is to create solid, compelling content that will both
grab your visitor’s attention and at the same time, make them want what
you have to offer. This is not the same as selling to them when you have the
opportunity to speak to them face-to-face. You are working without the benefit
of watching their expressions, speaking to them about their objections, or even
understanding whether they are looking for information for a friend or if it
is they themselves who require your services.
This leaves you with a lot of room for content. In the online environment you
have to deal with every question before they ask it, and make every person feel
that you can help them even though you’ve never met.
What does your audience want to find? They want to find a solution to their
problem. How do you provide that? By supplying them answers to the questions
that they don’t have the opportunity to ask and may not want to give you
their email address to find out. FAQ pages are good but often used as sales
pages, which is fine so long as you are still providing good content that your
visitor isn’t reading as “sales” but rather “solutions”.
Perhaps create pages of replies to emails you have received. Perhaps place a
related “fact of the day” on your homepage with a link to an archive
of facts related to your industry, product and/or business. You might even want
to add a blog to your site. Regardless, give your visitor the answers they’re
looking for and keep this information updated as you get new information and
you will stand a much better chance of keeping that person surfing through your
website. The longer you can keep them on your site, the greater the chance that
you will build trust and once you’ve got that, you can help them with
the solution to their problem.
Will you have to do additional research?
For many business owners the gut instinct to this question is“no”.
Of course not, you are an expert right? Well you may be, and so is Professor
Stephen Hawking, however my bet would be he still does his research.
No matter how much you know there is always more out there and your visitors
are probably well aware of that. If you fail to address all their questions,
your visitors may very well leave your site in search of the answer. Once they’ve
left your site it becomes other webmasters who now have the opportunity to present
the benefits of their products or services.
Find all the information that you can and make sure that you include as much
as possible on your site. The additional benefit in doing this is that constant
new information on your website will not only keep visitors coming back to find
new information but the search engines spiders too. If your site changes often
the spiders will pick up on this and will visit you more often. While this by
itself will not improve your rankings it does give you an advantage. The more
often search engine spiders visit your website the faster changes you make will
be picked up. The faster these changes are picked up the quicker you will be
able to react to drops in rankings. If you know the spiders visit your site
every second day and you drop from #8 to #12 you know that with proper tweaking
to your content you may be able to recover that loss in as little as two days.
Are you an expert writer or do you have one on staff?
When you need a doctor do you read a book entitled “Heart Surgery For
Dummies” and buy yourself a very sharp knife. Of course you don’t
and while your website may not be quite as important as your heart, it is how
your company is being perceived online. This perception can be the make-or-break
of all your online marketing efforts.
If you are committed to attaining high rankings, to making money online and/or
promoting your business through your website, shouldn’t you also be committed
to insuring that your conversions are maximized. High search engine positioning
is important but so too is converting those visitors once they get to your site.
You may be an expert in your field but if that field isn’t writing, and
you don’t have a writer on staff, be certain to at least consider hiring
one to make sure that your website is conveying the message you want in verbiage
that your visitors will understand. Assuming you choose your writer well you
will not only have a well-written site but you will also gain the advantage
of having an outsider, who is more likely to write for people who aren't experts,
creating your content.
If you feel that you are qualified to write your own content (which you may
very well be) be sure to have it proofread by someone from the outside. Find
someone (ideally plural) from within your target market and demographic, and
have them go through your content giving suggestions and criticism. Don’t
take it personally, every change they recommend is earning you extra money.
Whether you implement the changes or not you are learning something new about
what people will want and expect to see on your site.
With Articles Come Links
Writing content is not just an exercise for your own website. We all know that
inbound links to your site help rankings. Additionally, if those links can be
ones that provide genuine targeted traffic you’re doing very well.
There are a number of methods for driving traffic to your site with paid advertising,
PPC, etc. however one of the most cost-effective methods is to publish articles.
Article writing is no simple task however the rewards can be enormous. Articles
server two great purposes:
- Increased Link Popularity – When you write
an article and submit it to other website to post, they will generally link
to your website from the page the article is on. Here’s a completely
legitimate, relevant, and quality link to your site.
- Exposure & Credibility – The added
credibility that article writing lends to your business coupled with the added
benefit of the visitors who come to your site directly from your article are
invaluable.
When it comes to article writing there is little in the way of more effective
advertising. You will have to find sources to publish those articles on, but
once you’ve done this time-consuming task you can reuse the same list
for future articles.
Get those articles on a number of quality resource sites and enjoy watching
your stats and your rankings improve.
With Quality Content Comes Even More Links
Yet another benefit that derives from having a website with great content and
writing articles is that, with time, your website itself will become a resource.
If you provide great information that other people will find useful people will
link to it naturally.
With so much emphasis in recent times on reciprocal linking some might think
this is the only way to get links at all. Believe it or not there are still
webmasters out there who will link to sites for no other reason than they feel
their visitors will be interested in it’s content.
Build a good site with quality content, keep it easily navigated and create
sections for specific areas (articles for example) and you will find that people
will link to your site and may even link to specific articles or your articles
index. Perhaps then your articles index is a good page to target an additional
keyword phrase.
Next Week
Next week in part three we will be covering site structure and the importance
it plays in your rankings and in visitor experience. This will cover getting
a spider through your site while also giving your visitors an easy path to the
pages you want them on.
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