Link bait
Link bait is any content or feature, within a website, which somehow baits viewers to place links to it from other websites. Matt Cutts defines link bait as anything "interesting enough to catch people's attention."[1] Link bait can be an extremely powerful form of marketing as it is viral in nature.
[edit] Link bait in search engine optimization
The quantity and quality of inbound links are two of the many metrics used by a search engine ranking algorithm to rank a website. Link bait creation falls under the task of link building, and aims to increase the quantity of high-quality, relevant links to a website. Part of successful linkbaiting is devising a mini-PR campaign around the release of a link bait article so that bloggers and social media users are made aware and can help promote the piece in tandem. Social media traffic can generate a substantial amount of links to a single web page. Sustainable link bait is rooted in quality content.
[edit] Types of link bait
Although there are no clear-cut subdivisions within link bait, many[who?] attempt to divide them into types of hooks. This is a short list of some of the most common approaches with brief descriptions:
* Informational hooks - Provide information that a reader may find very useful. Some rare tips and tricks or any personal experience through which readers can benefit.
* News hooks - Provide fresh information and obtain citations and links as the news spreads.
* Humor hooks - Tell a funny story or a joke. A bizarre picture of your subject or mocking cartoons can also prove to be link bait.
* Evil hooks - Saying something unpopular or mean may also yield a lot of attention. Writing about something that is not appealing about a product or a popular blogger. Provide strong reasons for it.
* Tool hooks - Create some sort of tool that is useful enough that people link to it.
* Widgets hooks - A badge or tool, that can be placed or embedded on other websites, with a link included.
* Unique content hooks - This hook is intended for people that are in need of unique contents or articles for traffic or AdSense revenue. This became popular after Google implemented Duplicate Contents Filter and sites with duplicate contents saw fall in traffic. To use this hook, you have to create unique contents and give it out to Bloggers and webmasters with an obligation to put link back to your site.
Thursday, July 15, 2010
Friday, June 25, 2010
Google's First Page For Free
Google's First Page For Free
By dataminer
Google's First Page For Free
Google's First Page For Free
Is It Possible??
Who else wants to be on the first page of google? Everyone who has a webpage,blog or any other internet community. How many make it to the top? .000000000001 of 1% do you want to succeed? To reach the holy grail of google's first page for free
I can say without a shadow of a doubt YES!!
Why should you listen to me? Well there are quite a few companes that tell you can get ranked by google in days. This is true but what they don't tell you that the listing only last a few days. Even worse they can get you banned! I've been in No1 spot for 16 months now-enough said !
I started marketing online back in 1999 when yahoo and msn ruled the roost. I spent countless hours reading,researching,trial and error with limited success. Back then from time to time I broke into the top 20 for a few months at a time. Which also generated a decent income-fast forward to 2003 and I began to hear rumors of a new kid on the block. It was supposed to do things differently and make changes on the web known as Google.
Plus I had to overcome another hurdle as I'd relocated to Ninety Six, SC and to my dismay found out high speed internet is not readily available which slowed my progress a bit, but it didn't stop me. it was also during this time I realized the true power of web 2.0 and blogging
Since I had been studying I had pretty much figured out how msn and yahoo worked and it was a good relationship. Google however began to shake things up and it' never been the same. Luckily I'd already established a background in seo which is always a big help. Now after a year or so of testing I find myself in the number one spot. This was one of my goals from the beginning. Now you can take 10 yrs to get here or I can help cut your time and expenses to do the same. I'm willing to share what I've learned with you.
Over the last 2 yrs I began to see steady progress and this past week I really got a big surprise. Not only am I on the first page but in No 1 spot from over 230 million sites. This was taken on May 11, 2009
You can see for yourself as you google
google's first page for free
Results 1 - 10 of about 231,000,000 for first page of google for free. (0.19 seconds)
Search Results
1. Google's First Page For Free
When I say Traffic Strategy Juggler I mean do you rush around trying every traffic strategy which comes on the market from the latest PPC and Adsense ideas ...
hubpages.com/hub/Googles--First-Page-For-Free - 34k - Cached - Similar pages
Some of our competitors wil charge you $699 to start for a yr It doesn't cost me a 1/4 of that for life.
My latest results are blowing my mind as of Dec 16,2009
Show options...
Results 1 - 10 of about 2,550,000,000 for GOOGLE'S first page for free. (0.39 seconds)
Google's First Page For Free - Dec 15 Google's First Page For Free To reach the holy grail of google's first page for free I can say without a shadow of a doubt YES!! I started marketing online ...hubpages.com/hub/Googles--First-Page-For-Free - Cached - Similar - [ google page 1, free web traffic ]
Why Is Google Page 1 So Important?
This is a question I get asked all the time, and I cannot stress how important ranking on page 1 of Google for relevant keywords has become.
Search engines are providing users with better search results all the time and the more this happens the less users are searching deeper and past the first page. This is because they are finding what they need on page 1.
Additionally all the paid ads shown above and to the side of search results are taking a large amount of traffic away from pages listed past the first page. So yes it is very important to rank on page 1 of Google.
Recently a client of ours was ranking on page 2 of Google for a heavily searched and competitive keyword and it was bringing in some decent traffic. Then something happened, they jumped onto page 1 and they could not believe the change in traffic, it soared way above anything they ever expected.
So many potential clients in competitive industries come to us saying “We have to rank on page 1 of Google for a particular term” and you know what, YES THEY DO!
It is simple, whether it be a highly competitive term, or a less competitive long-tail phrase there is no doubt… you need to be ranking on page one of Google for it. this will provide you with a steady stream of targeted organic web traffic. Can find the surprise bonus on the secret link ?
* Traffic Geyser: Get Top Search Engine Listings in Google, Yahoo and MSN Within Hours
* Ultimate Tag Ranker
"Powerful New Software Uncovers Hot Tags That You Can Simply Copy And Insert Into Your HubPages' Hubs For Instant Google Rankings, Traffic And Backlinks!"
* how-to-get-listed-on-first-page-of-google-under-24-hours
Get listed on google quickly
By dataminer
Google's First Page For Free
Google's First Page For Free
Is It Possible??
Who else wants to be on the first page of google? Everyone who has a webpage,blog or any other internet community. How many make it to the top? .000000000001 of 1% do you want to succeed? To reach the holy grail of google's first page for free
I can say without a shadow of a doubt YES!!
Why should you listen to me? Well there are quite a few companes that tell you can get ranked by google in days. This is true but what they don't tell you that the listing only last a few days. Even worse they can get you banned! I've been in No1 spot for 16 months now-enough said !
I started marketing online back in 1999 when yahoo and msn ruled the roost. I spent countless hours reading,researching,trial and error with limited success. Back then from time to time I broke into the top 20 for a few months at a time. Which also generated a decent income-fast forward to 2003 and I began to hear rumors of a new kid on the block. It was supposed to do things differently and make changes on the web known as Google.
Plus I had to overcome another hurdle as I'd relocated to Ninety Six, SC and to my dismay found out high speed internet is not readily available which slowed my progress a bit, but it didn't stop me. it was also during this time I realized the true power of web 2.0 and blogging
Since I had been studying I had pretty much figured out how msn and yahoo worked and it was a good relationship. Google however began to shake things up and it' never been the same. Luckily I'd already established a background in seo which is always a big help. Now after a year or so of testing I find myself in the number one spot. This was one of my goals from the beginning. Now you can take 10 yrs to get here or I can help cut your time and expenses to do the same. I'm willing to share what I've learned with you.
Over the last 2 yrs I began to see steady progress and this past week I really got a big surprise. Not only am I on the first page but in No 1 spot from over 230 million sites. This was taken on May 11, 2009
You can see for yourself as you google
google's first page for free
Results 1 - 10 of about 231,000,000 for first page of google for free. (0.19 seconds)
Search Results
1. Google's First Page For Free
When I say Traffic Strategy Juggler I mean do you rush around trying every traffic strategy which comes on the market from the latest PPC and Adsense ideas ...
hubpages.com/hub/Googles--First-Page-For-Free - 34k - Cached - Similar pages
Some of our competitors wil charge you $699 to start for a yr It doesn't cost me a 1/4 of that for life.
My latest results are blowing my mind as of Dec 16,2009
Show options...
Results 1 - 10 of about 2,550,000,000 for GOOGLE'S first page for free. (0.39 seconds)
Google's First Page For Free - Dec 15 Google's First Page For Free To reach the holy grail of google's first page for free I can say without a shadow of a doubt YES!! I started marketing online ...hubpages.com/hub/Googles--First-Page-For-Free - Cached - Similar - [ google page 1, free web traffic ]
Why Is Google Page 1 So Important?
This is a question I get asked all the time, and I cannot stress how important ranking on page 1 of Google for relevant keywords has become.
Search engines are providing users with better search results all the time and the more this happens the less users are searching deeper and past the first page. This is because they are finding what they need on page 1.
Additionally all the paid ads shown above and to the side of search results are taking a large amount of traffic away from pages listed past the first page. So yes it is very important to rank on page 1 of Google.
Recently a client of ours was ranking on page 2 of Google for a heavily searched and competitive keyword and it was bringing in some decent traffic. Then something happened, they jumped onto page 1 and they could not believe the change in traffic, it soared way above anything they ever expected.
So many potential clients in competitive industries come to us saying “We have to rank on page 1 of Google for a particular term” and you know what, YES THEY DO!
It is simple, whether it be a highly competitive term, or a less competitive long-tail phrase there is no doubt… you need to be ranking on page one of Google for it. this will provide you with a steady stream of targeted organic web traffic. Can find the surprise bonus on the secret link ?
* Traffic Geyser: Get Top Search Engine Listings in Google, Yahoo and MSN Within Hours
* Ultimate Tag Ranker
"Powerful New Software Uncovers Hot Tags That You Can Simply Copy And Insert Into Your HubPages' Hubs For Instant Google Rankings, Traffic And Backlinks!"
* how-to-get-listed-on-first-page-of-google-under-24-hours
Get listed on google quickly
Tuesday, January 12, 2010
Friday, December 11, 2009
organic traffic via search engines
SEO Tips for Small Business: How to Get Good Links
By James A. Martin
December 7, 2009
The most important factor to improve your site’s search engine optimization (SEO) might surprise you. According to the 2009 SEOMoz.org survey of top SEO experts, keyword-rich links from other Web sites (that point back to your site) do more to bump your page rankings than any other element.
Unfortunately, getting those links can be difficult and time consuming. But with persistence, patience and some old-fashioned networking, you can acquire quality links to your site — and greatly improve your chances of ranking highly in relevant search engine results.
Why Links are Important for SEO
“Links are like doors,” says Thomas W. Petty, CEO of the Bay Area Search Engine Academy, which offers SEO workshops in Sacramento and San Francisco. “The more you have, the more likely someone is likely to walk through them.”
Links to your site, as well as within your site (from one page to another), can help search engine robots more efficiently find and then index your site’s content. Conversely, if your content isn’t included in a search engine’s index, people can’t find it when conducting keyword searches.
In addition, links to your Web pages on other sites help potential customers find you. They’re especially valuable if the link is part of an editorial endorsement of your product or service.
Search engines are also likely to interpret legitimate links to your Web pages from other sites as a vote of confidence from those sites. The more votes you get, the more likely search engines are to consider your pages important. And a page seen as important has a stronger chance of ranking high in relevant search queries than a page considered unimportant (or worse, seen as spam).
Consider Google, for instance, which has about 65 percent of the U.S. search traffic. Its search engine technology takes into account more than 200 factors when deciding how important a Web page is to a particular keyword search. Among those factors is PageRank, a patented algorithm that assigns a score of one through 10 to Web pages based on each page’s perceived importance.
A page’s PageRank score is influenced, in part, by the PageRank score of other Web pages that link to it. While some SEO experts debate the overall importance of PageRank to SEO, it still points to a larger truth about SEO.
“Good links to your site are far more important than how you use keywords,” says Rand Fishkin, CEO and co-founder of SEOmoz.org, an Internet marketing and SEO consulting firm.
To see this principle in action, says Fishkin, type the words click here into a search engine. Most likely, the no. 1 result will be Adobe’s page for downloading the free Adobe Reader software (for viewing PDF documents). However, nowhere on this Adobe.com page or within the page’s HTML code is the keyword phrase click here used.
So why does that Adobe page rank number one for a keyword phrase it doesn’t contain? Because countless Web sites include a link to that page with the keyword phrase click here in the anchor text. (Anchor text is the text within a hyperlinked phrase. It’s an important place to put keywords for pages that you want to optimize.)
Keywords Are Still Key
The importance of links vs. keywords doesn’t mean you shouldn’t optimize your pages with relevant keywords, as described in SEO Tips: How to Increase Traffic With Keywords. Keywords are critical to helping a search engine determine the subject of a Web page, blog post, YouTube video or other content.
But keywords alone aren’t always enough to goose your ranking in a Google or other search-engine query. In fact, ranking high for competitive keywords is extremely difficult without a solid network of good-quality links pointing to a relevant page on your site, says Matt McGee, a Search Engine Land editor and search marketing consultant for small businesses.
How to Get Good Links
Not surprisingly, getting good-quality links to your site is more difficult than optimizing your content with keywords. Often, you can’t control if, how, or when another site links to yours. And it takes time. You can’t expect to get dozens of quality links overnight. You can buy links, but Google and other search engines frown upon such “black-hat” tactics. And in extreme cases, the practice can actually cause search engines to penalize your site.
Nonetheless, there are “white-hat” strategies to follow to get links to your pages. Here are some techniques to try.
Create link bait. Write informative, useful, provocative, newsworthy or otherwise “viral” Web content and get the word out about it (more on that topic in a minute). Once other people discover and appreciate your content, they’re likely to post links to it on their own sites.
But don’t make your content overly sales-y. “Eighty percent of searches are done by people looking for information, rather than looking to buy,” says McGee. “A really useful page offering recommendations about how to use an acne treatment will more likely get linked to than a page that simply sells the treatment,” he explains.
Include links to relevant pages on your social media updates. Once you’ve created that fabulous content, spread the word on Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, FriendFeed or other social network and include a link to the content. Sites such as Ping.fm allow you to post to multiple social networks simultaneously and will automatically shorten URLs for you.
Write and distribute press releases. If you’ve got news to share about your company, write a puff-free press release and include a keyword-rich anchor text link to a relevant page on your site. You can submit your release to PR sites, such as PRLog and PRWeb, for free or a fee (depending upon the site).
The release will be posted to the PR site, so you’ll now have a link from that site to yours. News organizations, bloggers and others may post your news on their sites with the link or, even better, interview you for an online article.
Suggest the anchor text. If a blogger or someone in the media writes about your company, give them the URL of an appropriate landing page on your site as a link. Suggest the anchor text for the link too; use a keyword you want to rank highly for in search engine queries. They might ignore your request, but it never hurts to ask.
Link to others as you’d have them link to you. If you link to sites in a positive way, those sites are likely to return the favor. Contact people you know with Web sites and discuss how you might legitimately link to one another. In other words, be generous with links yourself and use old-fashioned networking skills to build links to your site.
Do competitive link-building. Do your competitors have more links than you? If so, it’s time to try some competitive link building, Fishkin suggests.
Here’s how: Perform a search in Google, Yahoo or other search engine using a keyword or phrase for which you’d like to rank highly. Examine the first page of search results. From among those results, copy a URL of a competitor’s Web page.
Next, go to Yahoo Site Explorer. Paste that URL into the blank search field at the top of the browser page and click the Explore URL button. Under Results, click the ‘Inlinks’ tab to get a list of external Web pages that link to the URL you pasted.
In effect, you’ll then have a road map of external pages that link to your competitor’s Web page. Armed with that information, you can contact the Webmasters of those pages. Tell them about your site, explaining why it may be of importance to their readers. Ask the Webmaster to add a link to your site, too. This can be time-consuming, so pick and choose the sites to pursue carefully.
Submit your site to one or more directories. For free or a fee, you can get your site listed, with a link, in one or more online directories, such as DMOZ, Yahoo Directory, Business.com and Yellowpages.com. CitySearch and Yelp can also provide SEO-boosting links to your site. Consider submitting your site to your local Better Business Bureau and Chamber of Commerce directories, too. Look for directories particular to your business or industry as well.
Organize and sponsor events. You’ll increase the chances that bloggers, Facebookers, tweeters and others reporting on those events will link to your site.
Leaving blog comments might — or might not — help. Many Web sites and blogs have dedicated areas where visitors can leave comments with embedded links. Some believe this is an effective way to get external links to their sites and, hence, boost their search result rankings.
The truth is, many spammers use this technique. The result: Most search engines place less trust in these links than in links contained within genuine editorial endorsements.
However, regularly leaving comments can be a great way to get on a blogger’s radar, says McGee. The blogger may end up writing about you — and include a link to a relevant page on your site.
It’s All About Attracting Customers
Ultimately, your goal should be to acquire lots of keyword-rich links to relevant pages on your site from sites that are trusted, popular and authoritative. It’s not easy, and it won’t happen quickly. But when combined with your keyword SEO efforts, you can boost your site’s ranking in search results. And that’s an important step toward attracting potential new customers online.
By James A. Martin
December 7, 2009
The most important factor to improve your site’s search engine optimization (SEO) might surprise you. According to the 2009 SEOMoz.org survey of top SEO experts, keyword-rich links from other Web sites (that point back to your site) do more to bump your page rankings than any other element.
Unfortunately, getting those links can be difficult and time consuming. But with persistence, patience and some old-fashioned networking, you can acquire quality links to your site — and greatly improve your chances of ranking highly in relevant search engine results.
Why Links are Important for SEO
“Links are like doors,” says Thomas W. Petty, CEO of the Bay Area Search Engine Academy, which offers SEO workshops in Sacramento and San Francisco. “The more you have, the more likely someone is likely to walk through them.”
Links to your site, as well as within your site (from one page to another), can help search engine robots more efficiently find and then index your site’s content. Conversely, if your content isn’t included in a search engine’s index, people can’t find it when conducting keyword searches.
In addition, links to your Web pages on other sites help potential customers find you. They’re especially valuable if the link is part of an editorial endorsement of your product or service.
Search engines are also likely to interpret legitimate links to your Web pages from other sites as a vote of confidence from those sites. The more votes you get, the more likely search engines are to consider your pages important. And a page seen as important has a stronger chance of ranking high in relevant search queries than a page considered unimportant (or worse, seen as spam).
Consider Google, for instance, which has about 65 percent of the U.S. search traffic. Its search engine technology takes into account more than 200 factors when deciding how important a Web page is to a particular keyword search. Among those factors is PageRank, a patented algorithm that assigns a score of one through 10 to Web pages based on each page’s perceived importance.
A page’s PageRank score is influenced, in part, by the PageRank score of other Web pages that link to it. While some SEO experts debate the overall importance of PageRank to SEO, it still points to a larger truth about SEO.
“Good links to your site are far more important than how you use keywords,” says Rand Fishkin, CEO and co-founder of SEOmoz.org, an Internet marketing and SEO consulting firm.
To see this principle in action, says Fishkin, type the words click here into a search engine. Most likely, the no. 1 result will be Adobe’s page for downloading the free Adobe Reader software (for viewing PDF documents). However, nowhere on this Adobe.com page or within the page’s HTML code is the keyword phrase click here used.
So why does that Adobe page rank number one for a keyword phrase it doesn’t contain? Because countless Web sites include a link to that page with the keyword phrase click here in the anchor text. (Anchor text is the text within a hyperlinked phrase. It’s an important place to put keywords for pages that you want to optimize.)
Keywords Are Still Key
The importance of links vs. keywords doesn’t mean you shouldn’t optimize your pages with relevant keywords, as described in SEO Tips: How to Increase Traffic With Keywords. Keywords are critical to helping a search engine determine the subject of a Web page, blog post, YouTube video or other content.
But keywords alone aren’t always enough to goose your ranking in a Google or other search-engine query. In fact, ranking high for competitive keywords is extremely difficult without a solid network of good-quality links pointing to a relevant page on your site, says Matt McGee, a Search Engine Land editor and search marketing consultant for small businesses.
How to Get Good Links
Not surprisingly, getting good-quality links to your site is more difficult than optimizing your content with keywords. Often, you can’t control if, how, or when another site links to yours. And it takes time. You can’t expect to get dozens of quality links overnight. You can buy links, but Google and other search engines frown upon such “black-hat” tactics. And in extreme cases, the practice can actually cause search engines to penalize your site.
Nonetheless, there are “white-hat” strategies to follow to get links to your pages. Here are some techniques to try.
Create link bait. Write informative, useful, provocative, newsworthy or otherwise “viral” Web content and get the word out about it (more on that topic in a minute). Once other people discover and appreciate your content, they’re likely to post links to it on their own sites.
But don’t make your content overly sales-y. “Eighty percent of searches are done by people looking for information, rather than looking to buy,” says McGee. “A really useful page offering recommendations about how to use an acne treatment will more likely get linked to than a page that simply sells the treatment,” he explains.
Include links to relevant pages on your social media updates. Once you’ve created that fabulous content, spread the word on Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, FriendFeed or other social network and include a link to the content. Sites such as Ping.fm allow you to post to multiple social networks simultaneously and will automatically shorten URLs for you.
Write and distribute press releases. If you’ve got news to share about your company, write a puff-free press release and include a keyword-rich anchor text link to a relevant page on your site. You can submit your release to PR sites, such as PRLog and PRWeb, for free or a fee (depending upon the site).
The release will be posted to the PR site, so you’ll now have a link from that site to yours. News organizations, bloggers and others may post your news on their sites with the link or, even better, interview you for an online article.
Suggest the anchor text. If a blogger or someone in the media writes about your company, give them the URL of an appropriate landing page on your site as a link. Suggest the anchor text for the link too; use a keyword you want to rank highly for in search engine queries. They might ignore your request, but it never hurts to ask.
Link to others as you’d have them link to you. If you link to sites in a positive way, those sites are likely to return the favor. Contact people you know with Web sites and discuss how you might legitimately link to one another. In other words, be generous with links yourself and use old-fashioned networking skills to build links to your site.
Do competitive link-building. Do your competitors have more links than you? If so, it’s time to try some competitive link building, Fishkin suggests.
Here’s how: Perform a search in Google, Yahoo or other search engine using a keyword or phrase for which you’d like to rank highly. Examine the first page of search results. From among those results, copy a URL of a competitor’s Web page.
Next, go to Yahoo Site Explorer. Paste that URL into the blank search field at the top of the browser page and click the Explore URL button. Under Results, click the ‘Inlinks’ tab to get a list of external Web pages that link to the URL you pasted.
In effect, you’ll then have a road map of external pages that link to your competitor’s Web page. Armed with that information, you can contact the Webmasters of those pages. Tell them about your site, explaining why it may be of importance to their readers. Ask the Webmaster to add a link to your site, too. This can be time-consuming, so pick and choose the sites to pursue carefully.
Submit your site to one or more directories. For free or a fee, you can get your site listed, with a link, in one or more online directories, such as DMOZ, Yahoo Directory, Business.com and Yellowpages.com. CitySearch and Yelp can also provide SEO-boosting links to your site. Consider submitting your site to your local Better Business Bureau and Chamber of Commerce directories, too. Look for directories particular to your business or industry as well.
Organize and sponsor events. You’ll increase the chances that bloggers, Facebookers, tweeters and others reporting on those events will link to your site.
Leaving blog comments might — or might not — help. Many Web sites and blogs have dedicated areas where visitors can leave comments with embedded links. Some believe this is an effective way to get external links to their sites and, hence, boost their search result rankings.
The truth is, many spammers use this technique. The result: Most search engines place less trust in these links than in links contained within genuine editorial endorsements.
However, regularly leaving comments can be a great way to get on a blogger’s radar, says McGee. The blogger may end up writing about you — and include a link to a relevant page on your site.
It’s All About Attracting Customers
Ultimately, your goal should be to acquire lots of keyword-rich links to relevant pages on your site from sites that are trusted, popular and authoritative. It’s not easy, and it won’t happen quickly. But when combined with your keyword SEO efforts, you can boost your site’s ranking in search results. And that’s an important step toward attracting potential new customers online.
Wednesday, June 3, 2009
get more organic traffic
Although I’m not very tech savvy, for reasons that are beyond the scope of this post I have a very good working knowledge of SEO (search engine optimization).
I’ve successfully applied much of what I know to my budding financial planning blog and if I can do it so can you.
In this post, I’m going to share every secret (which aren’t so secret if you know what to look for) that I use to garner organic search traffic from Google and Yahoo (not MSN for some reason).
Originally, I wondered whether I should write this post because, if the concepts are applied properly, many of you can probably outrank me on keyword phrases I target, and my rankings might slip.
But I decided that’s a poor man’s way to think, and much like the approach I take on my blog, I’d like to help some of my personal finance blogging friends take their organic herding skills to the next level. The more good content there is at the top of the SERP’s (Search Engine Results Pages), the better it is for our visitors and for all of us.
Some of you may already be doing some of this, some not. I think most bloggers should be able to take something from a few of the points; if not, then you’re doing a lot better than I am.
Also, please keep in mind, by no means am I an SEO pro, just someone who is self taught, enjoys figuring things out and has a passion for jumping into things head first. Without further ado…
10 SEO tips that I know can have a profound impact on your search traffic:
1. Adopt the proper mindset
You often read from SEO pros that it’s not good to try and write for the search engines. They argue that the pieces will be overly optimized, sound artificial and visitors won’t read it. Now this is true to some extent, but there’s plenty of room to find a happy medium.
I think, especially in the beginning, when your blog is less than 6 months old, it’s very important to find your voice, but why not do it with some SEO attached. If you don’t know anyone in the blogging world who can send you traffic or boost your profile, then it’s up to you to make it happen for yourself.
For this reason, I think you have to target search engine traffic, and as your site gets more and more popular, you can wien yourself off of that. What do I mean by that?
Well in my case, I write many fact based pieces, looking to target a web surfer searching for a specific keyword phrase (not necessarily as interesting as something you might find at Get Rich Slowly, but I don’t have that luxury just yet).
This way I’ll get traffic to my site and start building a solid reader base. Keep in mind this post may not appeal as much to a reader that stumbles upon my site, but is far likelier to interest the search engine targeted visitor.
Always set goals
For the first three months of the New Year my goal is 4 posts a week. Until my daily traffic is consistently over 750 unique daily visitors, I plan to write 2 creative, human interest, pieces and two posts that are more fact based and keyword driven (but still interesting I hope).
Like most things, you need balance when writing a fledgling blog. I recommend a mix of writing articles with a bend towards search engine visitors and articles that are not. I am also introducing a new series of posts called “My Two Cents” that I hope will add some life to my blog, so look out for that.
Averaging 300+ visitors a day, my short term goal is 750
2. Prepare the targeted keywords in advance
This is sort of another way of saying: have a general idea of what you’re going to write about before you sit down to write.
For instance, if I decide to write a post about ‘2008 Roth IRA eligibility‘, well, I know what I’m going to write about and you can see from the phrase I know what my targeted keywords are, as well.
Sometimes I’ll just write the post and when I’m done I’ll find the necessary keyword phrases after re-reading the post.
Rarely, you can stuff a few of the keywords into the post, afterwards, if you think the text needs a little more keyword density, but I generally would advise against that. By doing so, your articles WILL start to sound artificial and then, neither search engine visitors nor direct traffic visitors, will be interested.
3. Target 3 and 4 word phrases
This is especially important in the early days of your blog. Many people make the mistake of targeting highly competitive 1 and 2 word phrases that they can’t compete on. Those type of phrases are for the more established, older, branded sites and generally don’t have the user stickiness of a longer (niche like) phrase anyway.
People searching for longer phrases are far more likely to be the kind of visitor you want. If they take the time to type in ‘2008 Roth IRA Rules‘ chances are they’re more captivated then someone searching for ‘2008 Roth.’ Your goal, at least in the first year or two, should be to become a big fish in a little pond.
My goal is to reach the first page of the SERP’s for these longer phrases. I’m shooting for 5 to 10 new visitors from each of these posts. Many times it doesn’t work, and sometimes you’ll find a gem of a phrase that can bring you 3x-4x the amount of daily traffic you anticipated.
Over the course of a month I’m looking to slowly build my organic traffic base. For me, right now, my goal is 150-200 new unique a month.
I can tell you, since September, my organic traffic has slowly been climbing. And then I got a very nice boost in early January from many of my 2008 Roth posts, which I had been targeting. As you can tell from the images I included (above) you can see:
I rank #1 on Google for 2008 Roth IRA Contribution Eligibility.
I rank #1 on Yahoo for 2008 Roth IRA Rules.
4. Know where to find the right key phrases
I’m going to give you 3 resources (I use) to do your keyword research. All three of these services are free:
Wordtracker- this is what I currently use. It’s very simple to use and gives you a lot of great ideas on ‘your phrase’ and other relevant phrases you may not have thought of originally. Wordtracker is very popular and highly regarded in the SEO world. It gives you the most accurate results. If anything Wordtracker has been accused of erring on the conservative side with the results they return. As a rule of thumb, at this point in my blog’s development, I look to target phrases that return between 15-200 daily searches on Wordtracker, much like the phrases highlighted in the image below.
Overture Keyword Suggestion Tool- I used to use this religiously many years ago. I would think it’s not used anymore by serious SEO’s because the search result numbers are inflated. It’s still useful as a way to get good ideas for future posts because it provides long lists of juicy keyword strings.
SEO Book Keyword Suggestion Tool - I haven’t used this tool yet but have checked it out. He imports the Wordtracker results and puts them side by side with his own traffic estimates. All of his stuff is excellent so I will assume this is a quality tool, but decide for yourself. (see video)
5. Choose the right 3 and 4 word phrases to target
This is probably the most important of the steps so far. You have to pre-screen the keyword phrases so you have a good idea what kind of traffic you can expect to receive.
You’ll figure out pretty quickly if they are relevant phrases to target, how much traffic they are already receiving, and whether or not you can realistically compete in the SERP’s (Search Engine Results Pages) on that phrase. You also need to find the phrases that are the best natural fit for the post you are going to write or have already written.
In the above image, I’ve circled 4 and 5 word phrases that I have actually targeted in different posts. As you can maybe tell, it should be easier to compete on the phrase ‘roth vs traditional ira’ than the phrase ‘roth ira contribution limits’ because there are far fewer people searching for it across the internet, which usually means fewer sites are optimizing towards it.
Wordtracker gives me a very realistic estimate of how many people (across the major search engines) have searched for that phrase in any given day. For example, Wordtracker predicts that approximately 174 people a day will search for ‘roth ira contribution limits‘ (as seen in the image above).
6. Optimize page titles and permalinks
Everything I’ve written so far deals with things you need to do before you actually sit down to write the post. At this point lets assume I’ve written the post on ‘2008 Roth IRA Rules’. Now I have to do a fair bit of on page optimization.
Optimizing page titles and permalinks is a pretty simple step, but surprisingly this is where the great majority of blogs (and most websites) drop the ball. The search engines place a tremendous amount of importance on what they see in your title tags, and to a lesser degree, the URL of your permalink page.
Think of the search engine spider just like you would anyone else coming to visit the site. You want the spider to know what your page is about, fairly quickly, so he (or she) knows how to categorize it. If you don’t tell it what the page is about, it’s not going to know where to catalog you in the SERP’s and will leave confused or indifferent.
The way to tell Slurp (Yahoo’s spider) or Googlebot (Google’s spider) what your page is all about is by leaving them clues in your source code. And that is done mainly in the title tag and URL permalink.
The title tag:
URL permalink post slug:
The way you optimize the post permalink is by changing the post slug. Wordpress automatically defaults to using the title of your post as the permalink, you can override that by changing the post slug to whatever you want (as seen above).
For good measure I optimize my keyword tags:
ALT (image) Tags:
and page description:
Now everything is tailored towards my key phrases, so there’s no confusion about how I want Google to interpret my page. Would you rather your site resemble a wonderfully tailored suit or some unknown fabric slapped together, that hangs off your shoulder blades?
Using the right ‘SEO Editor’ plug in
When I first started writing my blog, I used the ‘All In One SEO Editor’ plugin for WordPress, but had problems optimizing the meta keyword tag to my liking. The All In One Editor automatically takes the individual post tags and uses them as your meta keywords.
This is a problem if you want to have free reign (which you need) over differentiating between the words you use as meta keywords and the blog post tags. With the ‘All In One SEO’ plugin you’re forced to have your pages’ actual tags commingled with your targeted keyword phrases. That’s no good.
I switched to the plugin ‘SEO Meta Editor Advanced’ and it works like a charm. I recommend it. The only problem is I can’t use some punctuation, like apostrophes.
(btw, I checked the source code for many a personal finance blog, in preparation for this piece, and almost everyone I came across uses the ‘All In One Editor’. I understand newer versions of ‘All In One SEO’ are available, but I believe the problem still persists).
Before and After SEO
If you view my source code for 8 things you need to know about a Roth IRA for 2008, this is what the header looks like:
As you can tell I’ve done a fair bit of optimizing (but not too much, which is key!) alerting the search engine to what this page is all about. Notice I keep the title and keywords tag very lean, focusing only on what I want the search engines to know.
The description I use is brief, enticing (I hope;) and reiterates many of my keywords. In essence, this is how I’m asking the search engine to describe my listing. And if you scroll back up to the Yahoo image I included, you will see Slurp obliged, because that’s how it now appears in the SERP’s.
Many blogs make the mistake of serving up endless lists of words, in all these fields, that confuse the robots more than anything, dilute your message, and end up hurting you in the search rankings.
A willing participant
With the permission of Ana from DebtFree Revolution, I’m going to show you a similar snippet of source code she used for a recent article titled Thrift Savings Plan for Idiots and Dummies.
Ana’s source code is devoid of a meta description and keywords. Her title tag is showing strange characters and unnecessarily listing the name of the blog, which only serves to dilute the power of the other words in the title tag.
ZigZagging
You may say to me, ‘hold on one cotton picking second… I want my blog’s name in there for branding purposes!’ I say it’s a waste of time at this point in your growth cycle. What would you prefer:
more search engine visitors reading good content? or
less search engine visitors seeing your brand name?
When your readership swells to the size of Get Rich Slowly, or dare I say the magisterial A Simple Dollar, then you can begin to worry about your brand.
OK went off on a bit of a zigzag there, back to our example…
So Ana at DebtFree Revolution needs some help revamping the way she approaches SEO for her post pages. Here’s what I would do to the targeted page, if I was her:
Switch plugins: to ‘SEO Meta Editor Advanced’ if having problems optimizing the tags properly
Change the title tag to read: Federal Thrift Savings Plan (TSP) - Military thrift savings plan
Add the following meta keywords tag: federal thrift savings plan, military thrift savings plan, thrift savings plan contributions
Add the following Meta Description: What you need to know about the Federal government’s Thrift Savings Plan (TSP) for military personnel…
Post Title: actually like it a lot, might add the word ‘Federal’ at the beginning
Change the post slug to read: Military Thrift Savings Plan Contributions
and finally, I would recommend (in this case) looking to add the targeted keyword phrases 2 or 3 times throughout the copy. There are plenty of natural opportunities for that on this page.
Now that’s just to give you an idea. I spent about 10 minutes at her page and that’s what I came up with. Obviously, she knows her blog a lot better than I do and can change things more to her liking (i.e. flip flop the title tag phrases).
7. Optimize the internal links within your site
In most every article I post I look for opportunities to add hyperlinks that point back to previous articles that I’ve written.
Sometimes those links will be made up of regular words that flow in the sentence, but often when I see known keywords in a sentence (i.e Roth conversion) I use them to create a hyperlink, much like I’ve been doing throughout this post:) These links have the keywords that match up with keywords in the title tag of the page its pointing to.
The reason to do this is to create balance between the many pages of your site. To use an analogy, it’s kind of like pumping blood to every part of your body to ensure everything is working right.
The better your circulation, the better your body performs. It’s important to have strong internal linking because search engines notice and appreciate it. The more balanced your internal linking is, the healthier your site is in the eyes of the search engines.
TIP: When linking to popular sites that don’t need your links (e.g. Google, MySpace) or internal pages that you don’t want to rank high (e.g. Disclaimer page) add rel=”nofollow” to the links. That way you save your link juice.
8. Add No Index meta tags
Now this is moving toward the outer fringe of my technical capabilities but I understand the concept here.
One of the biggest ‘NoNo’s’ with search engines is having duplicate content on your site. There is a lot of debate surrounding the degree to which you can be penalized, but it’s universally accepted that having the same content on different pages is bad.
In my case, I had many copies of the same page on my site. So, to avoid the possibility of duplicate content penalties, I use No Index tags for the category, archive and tag pages. Here’s the piece of text you need to insert in the head section of your header.php file:
To learn more about this go to Ryan Caldwell’s blog.
9. Remove unnecessary links
Each one of my permalink posts has a title (obviously). In my case, each permalink post title had a hyperlink in it. That’s unnecessary, since you’re already on the page; I’ve read that it can affect your rankings negatively. So I removed it by going to Presentation > Theme Editor > Single Post and editing the following line of code:
10. Building up a ridiculously sized tag cloud can be a good thing
As far as I’m concerned you need to use everything in your arsenal to get noticed. In addition to everything else I do, for each individual post I create tags to feed my ever growing tag cloud, which I take pride in.
(Remember I have ‘No Index’ code setup for the Tag cloud pages so the search engines don’t index them, but visitors are invited to play around in my cloud as much as they like).
My tag cloud is just another way for readers to get to their final destination. I actually have quite a few readers clicking thru on tags and going to other pages. I focus on building certain areas of my tag cloud, (which stand out) so visitors are more likely to click thru those areas.
Eventually (6 months from now), by glancing at my tag cloud you will have a very good idea what my blog is all about;) And at the same time, its just another signal you’re sending to the search spiders, letting them know what pages are most important to you.
Wrapping up
Most of the personal finance blogs I come across are severely lacking good SEO (as opposed to bad, black hat SEO) and with a few simple adjustments would be competing for far more eyeballs.
It only takes about an extra 15 minutes per post once you learn the routine, and after a while it becomes like old hat. I hardly think about it anymore.
Unofficial Disclaimer
To be fair, if you examine my site you will see that there are some violations of my own rules. A few of these points I was unaware of myself early on. Just recently I started to optimize the post slug to focus more on my targeted keywords and as I come across old posts I often take a moment to mend the fences.
Final piece of advice
Please take everything I’ve written with a grain of salt, and understand, I don’t advocate writing ONLY for rankings. You should always write what comes naturally to you, but at the same time, be very cognizant of how to remain in the good graces of the Google and Yahoo gods.
Trust me, they want you to properly optimize your pages as much as you do. That way they can categorize them properly, resulting in higher quality, relevant search results for their visitors. A search engine purist might muse… the Holy Grail.
I’ve successfully applied much of what I know to my budding financial planning blog and if I can do it so can you.
In this post, I’m going to share every secret (which aren’t so secret if you know what to look for) that I use to garner organic search traffic from Google and Yahoo (not MSN for some reason).
Originally, I wondered whether I should write this post because, if the concepts are applied properly, many of you can probably outrank me on keyword phrases I target, and my rankings might slip.
But I decided that’s a poor man’s way to think, and much like the approach I take on my blog, I’d like to help some of my personal finance blogging friends take their organic herding skills to the next level. The more good content there is at the top of the SERP’s (Search Engine Results Pages), the better it is for our visitors and for all of us.
Some of you may already be doing some of this, some not. I think most bloggers should be able to take something from a few of the points; if not, then you’re doing a lot better than I am.
Also, please keep in mind, by no means am I an SEO pro, just someone who is self taught, enjoys figuring things out and has a passion for jumping into things head first. Without further ado…
10 SEO tips that I know can have a profound impact on your search traffic:
1. Adopt the proper mindset
You often read from SEO pros that it’s not good to try and write for the search engines. They argue that the pieces will be overly optimized, sound artificial and visitors won’t read it. Now this is true to some extent, but there’s plenty of room to find a happy medium.
I think, especially in the beginning, when your blog is less than 6 months old, it’s very important to find your voice, but why not do it with some SEO attached. If you don’t know anyone in the blogging world who can send you traffic or boost your profile, then it’s up to you to make it happen for yourself.
For this reason, I think you have to target search engine traffic, and as your site gets more and more popular, you can wien yourself off of that. What do I mean by that?
Well in my case, I write many fact based pieces, looking to target a web surfer searching for a specific keyword phrase (not necessarily as interesting as something you might find at Get Rich Slowly, but I don’t have that luxury just yet).
This way I’ll get traffic to my site and start building a solid reader base. Keep in mind this post may not appeal as much to a reader that stumbles upon my site, but is far likelier to interest the search engine targeted visitor.
Always set goals
For the first three months of the New Year my goal is 4 posts a week. Until my daily traffic is consistently over 750 unique daily visitors, I plan to write 2 creative, human interest, pieces and two posts that are more fact based and keyword driven (but still interesting I hope).
Like most things, you need balance when writing a fledgling blog. I recommend a mix of writing articles with a bend towards search engine visitors and articles that are not. I am also introducing a new series of posts called “My Two Cents” that I hope will add some life to my blog, so look out for that.
Averaging 300+ visitors a day, my short term goal is 750
2. Prepare the targeted keywords in advance
This is sort of another way of saying: have a general idea of what you’re going to write about before you sit down to write.
For instance, if I decide to write a post about ‘2008 Roth IRA eligibility‘, well, I know what I’m going to write about and you can see from the phrase I know what my targeted keywords are, as well.
Sometimes I’ll just write the post and when I’m done I’ll find the necessary keyword phrases after re-reading the post.
Rarely, you can stuff a few of the keywords into the post, afterwards, if you think the text needs a little more keyword density, but I generally would advise against that. By doing so, your articles WILL start to sound artificial and then, neither search engine visitors nor direct traffic visitors, will be interested.
3. Target 3 and 4 word phrases
This is especially important in the early days of your blog. Many people make the mistake of targeting highly competitive 1 and 2 word phrases that they can’t compete on. Those type of phrases are for the more established, older, branded sites and generally don’t have the user stickiness of a longer (niche like) phrase anyway.
People searching for longer phrases are far more likely to be the kind of visitor you want. If they take the time to type in ‘2008 Roth IRA Rules‘ chances are they’re more captivated then someone searching for ‘2008 Roth.’ Your goal, at least in the first year or two, should be to become a big fish in a little pond.
My goal is to reach the first page of the SERP’s for these longer phrases. I’m shooting for 5 to 10 new visitors from each of these posts. Many times it doesn’t work, and sometimes you’ll find a gem of a phrase that can bring you 3x-4x the amount of daily traffic you anticipated.
Over the course of a month I’m looking to slowly build my organic traffic base. For me, right now, my goal is 150-200 new unique a month.
I can tell you, since September, my organic traffic has slowly been climbing. And then I got a very nice boost in early January from many of my 2008 Roth posts, which I had been targeting. As you can tell from the images I included (above) you can see:
I rank #1 on Google for 2008 Roth IRA Contribution Eligibility.
I rank #1 on Yahoo for 2008 Roth IRA Rules.
4. Know where to find the right key phrases
I’m going to give you 3 resources (I use) to do your keyword research. All three of these services are free:
Wordtracker- this is what I currently use. It’s very simple to use and gives you a lot of great ideas on ‘your phrase’ and other relevant phrases you may not have thought of originally. Wordtracker is very popular and highly regarded in the SEO world. It gives you the most accurate results. If anything Wordtracker has been accused of erring on the conservative side with the results they return. As a rule of thumb, at this point in my blog’s development, I look to target phrases that return between 15-200 daily searches on Wordtracker, much like the phrases highlighted in the image below.
Overture Keyword Suggestion Tool- I used to use this religiously many years ago. I would think it’s not used anymore by serious SEO’s because the search result numbers are inflated. It’s still useful as a way to get good ideas for future posts because it provides long lists of juicy keyword strings.
SEO Book Keyword Suggestion Tool - I haven’t used this tool yet but have checked it out. He imports the Wordtracker results and puts them side by side with his own traffic estimates. All of his stuff is excellent so I will assume this is a quality tool, but decide for yourself. (see video)
5. Choose the right 3 and 4 word phrases to target
This is probably the most important of the steps so far. You have to pre-screen the keyword phrases so you have a good idea what kind of traffic you can expect to receive.
You’ll figure out pretty quickly if they are relevant phrases to target, how much traffic they are already receiving, and whether or not you can realistically compete in the SERP’s (Search Engine Results Pages) on that phrase. You also need to find the phrases that are the best natural fit for the post you are going to write or have already written.
In the above image, I’ve circled 4 and 5 word phrases that I have actually targeted in different posts. As you can maybe tell, it should be easier to compete on the phrase ‘roth vs traditional ira’ than the phrase ‘roth ira contribution limits’ because there are far fewer people searching for it across the internet, which usually means fewer sites are optimizing towards it.
Wordtracker gives me a very realistic estimate of how many people (across the major search engines) have searched for that phrase in any given day. For example, Wordtracker predicts that approximately 174 people a day will search for ‘roth ira contribution limits‘ (as seen in the image above).
6. Optimize page titles and permalinks
Everything I’ve written so far deals with things you need to do before you actually sit down to write the post. At this point lets assume I’ve written the post on ‘2008 Roth IRA Rules’. Now I have to do a fair bit of on page optimization.
Optimizing page titles and permalinks is a pretty simple step, but surprisingly this is where the great majority of blogs (and most websites) drop the ball. The search engines place a tremendous amount of importance on what they see in your title tags, and to a lesser degree, the URL of your permalink page.
Think of the search engine spider just like you would anyone else coming to visit the site. You want the spider to know what your page is about, fairly quickly, so he (or she) knows how to categorize it. If you don’t tell it what the page is about, it’s not going to know where to catalog you in the SERP’s and will leave confused or indifferent.
The way to tell Slurp (Yahoo’s spider) or Googlebot (Google’s spider) what your page is all about is by leaving them clues in your source code. And that is done mainly in the title tag and URL permalink.
The title tag:
URL permalink post slug:
The way you optimize the post permalink is by changing the post slug. Wordpress automatically defaults to using the title of your post as the permalink, you can override that by changing the post slug to whatever you want (as seen above).
For good measure I optimize my keyword tags:
ALT (image) Tags:
and page description:
Now everything is tailored towards my key phrases, so there’s no confusion about how I want Google to interpret my page. Would you rather your site resemble a wonderfully tailored suit or some unknown fabric slapped together, that hangs off your shoulder blades?
Using the right ‘SEO Editor’ plug in
When I first started writing my blog, I used the ‘All In One SEO Editor’ plugin for WordPress, but had problems optimizing the meta keyword tag to my liking. The All In One Editor automatically takes the individual post tags and uses them as your meta keywords.
This is a problem if you want to have free reign (which you need) over differentiating between the words you use as meta keywords and the blog post tags. With the ‘All In One SEO’ plugin you’re forced to have your pages’ actual tags commingled with your targeted keyword phrases. That’s no good.
I switched to the plugin ‘SEO Meta Editor Advanced’ and it works like a charm. I recommend it. The only problem is I can’t use some punctuation, like apostrophes.
(btw, I checked the source code for many a personal finance blog, in preparation for this piece, and almost everyone I came across uses the ‘All In One Editor’. I understand newer versions of ‘All In One SEO’ are available, but I believe the problem still persists).
Before and After SEO
If you view my source code for 8 things you need to know about a Roth IRA for 2008, this is what the header looks like:
As you can tell I’ve done a fair bit of optimizing (but not too much, which is key!) alerting the search engine to what this page is all about. Notice I keep the title and keywords tag very lean, focusing only on what I want the search engines to know.
The description I use is brief, enticing (I hope;) and reiterates many of my keywords. In essence, this is how I’m asking the search engine to describe my listing. And if you scroll back up to the Yahoo image I included, you will see Slurp obliged, because that’s how it now appears in the SERP’s.
Many blogs make the mistake of serving up endless lists of words, in all these fields, that confuse the robots more than anything, dilute your message, and end up hurting you in the search rankings.
A willing participant
With the permission of Ana from DebtFree Revolution, I’m going to show you a similar snippet of source code she used for a recent article titled Thrift Savings Plan for Idiots and Dummies.
Ana’s source code is devoid of a meta description and keywords. Her title tag is showing strange characters and unnecessarily listing the name of the blog, which only serves to dilute the power of the other words in the title tag.
ZigZagging
You may say to me, ‘hold on one cotton picking second… I want my blog’s name in there for branding purposes!’ I say it’s a waste of time at this point in your growth cycle. What would you prefer:
more search engine visitors reading good content? or
less search engine visitors seeing your brand name?
When your readership swells to the size of Get Rich Slowly, or dare I say the magisterial A Simple Dollar, then you can begin to worry about your brand.
OK went off on a bit of a zigzag there, back to our example…
So Ana at DebtFree Revolution needs some help revamping the way she approaches SEO for her post pages. Here’s what I would do to the targeted page, if I was her:
Switch plugins: to ‘SEO Meta Editor Advanced’ if having problems optimizing the tags properly
Change the title tag to read: Federal Thrift Savings Plan (TSP) - Military thrift savings plan
Add the following meta keywords tag: federal thrift savings plan, military thrift savings plan, thrift savings plan contributions
Add the following Meta Description: What you need to know about the Federal government’s Thrift Savings Plan (TSP) for military personnel…
Post Title: actually like it a lot, might add the word ‘Federal’ at the beginning
Change the post slug to read: Military Thrift Savings Plan Contributions
and finally, I would recommend (in this case) looking to add the targeted keyword phrases 2 or 3 times throughout the copy. There are plenty of natural opportunities for that on this page.
Now that’s just to give you an idea. I spent about 10 minutes at her page and that’s what I came up with. Obviously, she knows her blog a lot better than I do and can change things more to her liking (i.e. flip flop the title tag phrases).
7. Optimize the internal links within your site
In most every article I post I look for opportunities to add hyperlinks that point back to previous articles that I’ve written.
Sometimes those links will be made up of regular words that flow in the sentence, but often when I see known keywords in a sentence (i.e Roth conversion) I use them to create a hyperlink, much like I’ve been doing throughout this post:) These links have the keywords that match up with keywords in the title tag of the page its pointing to.
The reason to do this is to create balance between the many pages of your site. To use an analogy, it’s kind of like pumping blood to every part of your body to ensure everything is working right.
The better your circulation, the better your body performs. It’s important to have strong internal linking because search engines notice and appreciate it. The more balanced your internal linking is, the healthier your site is in the eyes of the search engines.
TIP: When linking to popular sites that don’t need your links (e.g. Google, MySpace) or internal pages that you don’t want to rank high (e.g. Disclaimer page) add rel=”nofollow” to the links. That way you save your link juice.
8. Add No Index meta tags
Now this is moving toward the outer fringe of my technical capabilities but I understand the concept here.
One of the biggest ‘NoNo’s’ with search engines is having duplicate content on your site. There is a lot of debate surrounding the degree to which you can be penalized, but it’s universally accepted that having the same content on different pages is bad.
In my case, I had many copies of the same page on my site. So, to avoid the possibility of duplicate content penalties, I use No Index tags for the category, archive and tag pages. Here’s the piece of text you need to insert in the head section of your header.php file:
To learn more about this go to Ryan Caldwell’s blog.
9. Remove unnecessary links
Each one of my permalink posts has a title (obviously). In my case, each permalink post title had a hyperlink in it. That’s unnecessary, since you’re already on the page; I’ve read that it can affect your rankings negatively. So I removed it by going to Presentation > Theme Editor > Single Post and editing the following line of code:
10. Building up a ridiculously sized tag cloud can be a good thing
As far as I’m concerned you need to use everything in your arsenal to get noticed. In addition to everything else I do, for each individual post I create tags to feed my ever growing tag cloud, which I take pride in.
(Remember I have ‘No Index’ code setup for the Tag cloud pages so the search engines don’t index them, but visitors are invited to play around in my cloud as much as they like).
My tag cloud is just another way for readers to get to their final destination. I actually have quite a few readers clicking thru on tags and going to other pages. I focus on building certain areas of my tag cloud, (which stand out) so visitors are more likely to click thru those areas.
Eventually (6 months from now), by glancing at my tag cloud you will have a very good idea what my blog is all about;) And at the same time, its just another signal you’re sending to the search spiders, letting them know what pages are most important to you.
Wrapping up
Most of the personal finance blogs I come across are severely lacking good SEO (as opposed to bad, black hat SEO) and with a few simple adjustments would be competing for far more eyeballs.
It only takes about an extra 15 minutes per post once you learn the routine, and after a while it becomes like old hat. I hardly think about it anymore.
Unofficial Disclaimer
To be fair, if you examine my site you will see that there are some violations of my own rules. A few of these points I was unaware of myself early on. Just recently I started to optimize the post slug to focus more on my targeted keywords and as I come across old posts I often take a moment to mend the fences.
Final piece of advice
Please take everything I’ve written with a grain of salt, and understand, I don’t advocate writing ONLY for rankings. You should always write what comes naturally to you, but at the same time, be very cognizant of how to remain in the good graces of the Google and Yahoo gods.
Trust me, they want you to properly optimize your pages as much as you do. That way they can categorize them properly, resulting in higher quality, relevant search results for their visitors. A search engine purist might muse… the Holy Grail.
Tuesday, May 5, 2009
yahoo overture cost per click checker
http://sem.smallbusiness.yahoo.com/searchenginemarketing/marketingcost.php
Tuesday, April 28, 2009
free ways to better your sites page rank and traffic
april 27 2009
Search engines can drive a great deal of traffic to your website. This is something worth paying attention to! You might think the situation is hopeless--there may be a million websites that come up when you type in your keywords in Google or other search engines--but with a few simple steps you can make a HUGE difference in your website’s standings.
First let me say that I strongly recommend against hiring one of those services that claim they can increase your search engine status to the top page right away. Many of these companies try to “trick” the search engines with various illegal tricks, and if the search engines catch them it could get your website banned. And these companies normally charge a lot of money, which would be better spent elsewhere.
So it’s best to do the work yourself, the old-fashioned way. If you do not know how to work on your own website you are at a disadvantage; you’ll need to hire someone to do the work for you. But it’s not that complicated, so try finding a college kid or someone to barter with, so it doesn’t ending up costing you too much money. (Better yet, take a basic web development class and take charge of your own site. It’s way worth it!)
The main investment you need to make to improve your standing in the search engines is time. With a few simple changes (and no cash outlay) you can be within the top one to two pages of results.
Here’s the steps to accomplish this:
1) Pick your keyword phrase carefully - this step is crucial. You need to pick a search term that relates to your website. (It’s best to focus on just one phrase at first, and then once you’ve perfected that go on to others.) Target this for your home page, if at all possible, not some obscure page on your site. The more specific you can be, the better--in other words, it’s much easier to get results for “holistic health magazine” than it is for “holistic health” or simply “holistic.” The more specific your search term is, the easier it will be for you to achieve results. You also want to choose a phrase that people actually use in search engines--if you make it too obscure your website might be listed first for that search term, but if no one types in this term then it doesn’t matter! Not sure what people are looking for? The free tool at the link below will show you how many people looked up your proposed search term: http://www.digitalpoint.com/tools/suggestion/
Sometimes a small change can make a big difference: you might discover that 10,000 people looked up the phrase “natural diet program” but only 500 people looked up “holistic diet program.” You want to choose a search term that’s popular and that relates directly to your website, while being as specific as possible.
2) Make sure you have good content on your home page (or the page you’re choosing to optimize for the search engines). The keyword phrase you decided on in step one should appear several times. (Not a ridiculous amount of times, or it will be considered spamming by the search engines.) If you have a “splash page” on your website--in other words, if your home or “index” page is just a pretty graphic that says “welcome” or enter”--get rid of it! Splash pages will really hinder your search engine results.
Here is another tip relating to content: don’t use graphics instead of text! It’s not worth it, because the search engines can’t read it. Function wins over style in this case. Make sure all of your key content appears on your web pages as text. (It can be colored or bold or italic, large or small, just not converted to an image.) As a matter of fact, if your search term is in bold or larger text, the search engines like that, because it shows emphasis.
3) Give your web pages good titles that include your search term. You must know how to access the html code for your web pages to do this, but it’s not hard. There are actually three key items of html code that you need to pay attention to for each page: the Title name (most important), the Description, and the Key Words. Different search engines give these things different importance, so best to do them all correctly. The title line should be short (no more than 5 words) and don’t include any uneccesary words like “the.” Make sure what you say is what they get: in other words, don’t try to cheat with a catchy title that does not relate to the content of the web page. For the key words, list 10 to 12 words, and include variations (e.g. health, healthy, healing).
4) Get your website linked with other sites that relate to your search term-- preferably those sites that already have a good search engine ranking. The number of websites that link to you is called your “popularity” and this can affect your website’s standing with the search engines quite a bit. Want to know how popular your website is? Go to http://www.linkpopularity.com/ for a free tool to see how many websites link to you.
Here’s what you do to accomplish step 4: do a search for your search term. (I recommend using Google.com as it’s the most popular search engine by far.) Then check out all the websites that come up in the first two or three pages of results. Put a link to them from your website, and then send them an email telling them you did this and requesting a reciprocal link back to your website. They won’t all answer you, but if you keep at it you will eventually build up a good list of websites that link to you. This is the time consuming part, by it’s worth it. Keep a running list so you know who you’ve contacted and who has responded.
Search engines can drive a great deal of traffic to your website. This is something worth paying attention to! You might think the situation is hopeless--there may be a million websites that come up when you type in your keywords in Google or other search engines--but with a few simple steps you can make a HUGE difference in your website’s standings.
First let me say that I strongly recommend against hiring one of those services that claim they can increase your search engine status to the top page right away. Many of these companies try to “trick” the search engines with various illegal tricks, and if the search engines catch them it could get your website banned. And these companies normally charge a lot of money, which would be better spent elsewhere.
So it’s best to do the work yourself, the old-fashioned way. If you do not know how to work on your own website you are at a disadvantage; you’ll need to hire someone to do the work for you. But it’s not that complicated, so try finding a college kid or someone to barter with, so it doesn’t ending up costing you too much money. (Better yet, take a basic web development class and take charge of your own site. It’s way worth it!)
The main investment you need to make to improve your standing in the search engines is time. With a few simple changes (and no cash outlay) you can be within the top one to two pages of results.
Here’s the steps to accomplish this:
1) Pick your keyword phrase carefully - this step is crucial. You need to pick a search term that relates to your website. (It’s best to focus on just one phrase at first, and then once you’ve perfected that go on to others.) Target this for your home page, if at all possible, not some obscure page on your site. The more specific you can be, the better--in other words, it’s much easier to get results for “holistic health magazine” than it is for “holistic health” or simply “holistic.” The more specific your search term is, the easier it will be for you to achieve results. You also want to choose a phrase that people actually use in search engines--if you make it too obscure your website might be listed first for that search term, but if no one types in this term then it doesn’t matter! Not sure what people are looking for? The free tool at the link below will show you how many people looked up your proposed search term: http://www.digitalpoint.com/tools/suggestion/
Sometimes a small change can make a big difference: you might discover that 10,000 people looked up the phrase “natural diet program” but only 500 people looked up “holistic diet program.” You want to choose a search term that’s popular and that relates directly to your website, while being as specific as possible.
2) Make sure you have good content on your home page (or the page you’re choosing to optimize for the search engines). The keyword phrase you decided on in step one should appear several times. (Not a ridiculous amount of times, or it will be considered spamming by the search engines.) If you have a “splash page” on your website--in other words, if your home or “index” page is just a pretty graphic that says “welcome” or enter”--get rid of it! Splash pages will really hinder your search engine results.
Here is another tip relating to content: don’t use graphics instead of text! It’s not worth it, because the search engines can’t read it. Function wins over style in this case. Make sure all of your key content appears on your web pages as text. (It can be colored or bold or italic, large or small, just not converted to an image.) As a matter of fact, if your search term is in bold or larger text, the search engines like that, because it shows emphasis.
3) Give your web pages good titles that include your search term. You must know how to access the html code for your web pages to do this, but it’s not hard. There are actually three key items of html code that you need to pay attention to for each page: the Title name (most important), the Description, and the Key Words. Different search engines give these things different importance, so best to do them all correctly. The title line should be short (no more than 5 words) and don’t include any uneccesary words like “the.” Make sure what you say is what they get: in other words, don’t try to cheat with a catchy title that does not relate to the content of the web page. For the key words, list 10 to 12 words, and include variations (e.g. health, healthy, healing).
4) Get your website linked with other sites that relate to your search term-- preferably those sites that already have a good search engine ranking. The number of websites that link to you is called your “popularity” and this can affect your website’s standing with the search engines quite a bit. Want to know how popular your website is? Go to http://www.linkpopularity.com/ for a free tool to see how many websites link to you.
Here’s what you do to accomplish step 4: do a search for your search term. (I recommend using Google.com as it’s the most popular search engine by far.) Then check out all the websites that come up in the first two or three pages of results. Put a link to them from your website, and then send them an email telling them you did this and requesting a reciprocal link back to your website. They won’t all answer you, but if you keep at it you will eventually build up a good list of websites that link to you. This is the time consuming part, by it’s worth it. Keep a running list so you know who you’ve contacted and who has responded.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)