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About Search Engine
Positioning
About why your Web site doesn’t get noticed by the
Search Engines
About successful Internet Marketing Strategies
About Mastering Search Engine Placement
To understand
why search engine positioning is important you must first understand the
concept of a search engine. There are over 5 billion documents on the
World Wide Web today. You use search engines such as MSN, Google, or Alta
Vista to help sift through this gigantic collection of documents to find
the specific information you need.
An Internet surfer will likely take one of 3 routes
your Web site:
- The Internet surfer types the entire URL into
the command line of their browser. This option requires that your URL
is well known. (And the URL should also be easy to spell!)
- The Internet surfer clicks on an advertisement
or link that sends him to your Web site.
- The Internet surfer locates you by typing certain
keywords or your company name into a search engine.
Internet surfers typically go to their favorite search
engine, type in words that pertain to what they are looking for, and wait
for the search engine to return its results in a list format. This is
easy and effective. To give you an example: go ahead and search for "Chinese
restaurants" on Google. The search will return thousands of Web sites!
No Internet surfer will scroll through thousands
or even millions of results. Instead, they are going to pick from the
links that are closer to the top of the search. So it would stand to reason
that the Web sites that will do well on search engines are those that
rank in the top 30 for the keyword phrases that have been selected for
their site.
Search engine optimization is the way to go if you
are looking to INCREASE TARGETED TRAFFIC to your site while complementing
and improving your more traditional marketing and advertising efforts.
Search engines work better for promoting your site for a number of reasons.
A top search engine ranking often translates into
hundreds of new qualified visitors each month. It is reasonable to anticipate
a steady stream of qualified traffic when your Web site achieves continuous
top rankings on multiple search engines.
When an Internet surfer types a keyword into a search
engine, they have already identified the product or service they need
more information about. The search reflects a definite level of interest
by a potential buyer.
Search engines are the most important tools for locating
companies and their products on the Internet. Over half of all Internet
users search the Web every day, and searching is the second most popular
Internet activity. (Email is # 1!)
While having a quality website with a good design
and good content is key, it is not enough to get your site noticed by
a search engine. There are many factors that can hurt your site's search
engine placement. This week's newsletter will look at some reasons your
site might not be listed in the search engines.
Server Down
Search engines don't notify you before they visit your site; they simply
send the spider. If your server goes down or your web host is providing
you with unreliable service this can have an impact on whether your site
gets spidered or not. Imagine if the search engine spider came while you
were experiencing downtime. Your web host should be able to provide you
with information on their server downtime.
Dynamic Content
A trend in e-commerce today is to use programs like Cold Fusion to generate
dynamic pages. These pages are generated based on a database containing
information pertinent to the visitor's particular interests. Webmasters
love these types of pages because they don't have to maintain them. The
pages appear only in the visitor's browser and then vanish when the visitor
is done with them. Sounds nifty doesn't it? The catch is that most search
engine robots can only index static pages. If you want to generate traffic
for your site make sure you have pages the robots can read.
Spamming Web Hosts
Another possible problem could be your IP address. You may share a web
host and IP address with sites known for spamming. There are some search
engines that block sites hosted by free website providers because of spam
problems. If your web host also accepts adult-oriented web sites this
can cause problems for you as well since Adult sites tend to be the worst
spam offenders. If your web host provides hosting for adults sites their
IP may be blocked, preventing your site from getting placement. Your web
hosting company should be able to tell you if they host adult sites or
not.
Splash Pages
While splash pages can be very nice and aesthetically pleasing to the
eye, they are not very helpful when trying to place your site with search
engines. Because splash pages are heavy with graphics but light on content
they are difficult for search engines to spider. Search engine spiders
are looking for links and content to evaluate. If your homepage is a splash
page with no content you are basically telling the search engines that
there is nothing to see on your site.
Frames
Search engines don't really know what to make
of frames. If your site uses frames it is a likely cause of you not getting
placed. Search engine spiders can only see top-level frame code. Unless
you include links inside your NOFRAMES tag the spider will leave your
site without indexing it.
Time
You may have to wait months for a spider to
visit your site. Additionally, just because you get spidered doesn't mean
you get immediately listed. There is a holding period from a few days
to several weeks before their database is updated. Keep in mind that in
addition to the new sites being submitted and the old sites being resubmitted
each day, there is also a huge backlog of sites waiting to be spidered
as well.
Affiliate Programs
An affiliates program pays a commission for incoming traffic that leads
to sales. One of the most well known affiliate programs was introduced
by Amazon.com in 1996. Amazon.com pioneered the affiliate program model,
paying commissions when Amazon banners, buttons and links placed on their
sites resulted in sales. Their program currently has over 500,000 affiliate
associates. Every time an affiliate sends Amazon a customer from their
site the affiliate earns up to 15% of each sale.
Viral Marketing
Viral marketing describes any strategy that encourages individuals to
pass on a marketing message to others. Tell-A-Friend promotions aren't
new, but they have become more powerful on the Internet because e-mail
makes it so easy to pass the word along. One of the early leaders of viral
Internet marketing was Blue Mountain Arts. This company provides electronic
greeting cards people can e-mail to friends and family. To pick up the
card the recipients are required to visit the Blue Mountain site. While
there, visitors are encouraged to send their own greeting cards. Thus
the electronic greeting card spreads like a virus as the new visitors
send multiple cards. Viral marketing like this can be a highly effective
method for bringing traffic to your site if you can provide something
of value that will entice visitors to pass your message along.
Building Customer
Loyalty
Fostering customer loyalty is another strategy successfully used by major
Web sites. The travel site Expedia, recipient of a Customer Loyalty Awards
from Brand Keys Research, is an example of a site that has been praised
for its customer loyalty efforts.
Expedia works to increase customer loyalty by providing personalized services
for its customers. The Web site provides traveler tools such as a currency
converter, driving directions, and the current status of airports and
flights. They also offer e-mails based on the customer's preferences and
purchases. Weekly updates are sent through their Fare Tracker service
detailing current ticket prices to the three destination cities chosen
by the member. A few days prior to departure customers begin receiving
emails that are specific to their travel plans. They receive links to
weather reports, schedules of entertainment events, and locations where
they can purchase tickets to specific venues. These highly targeted emails
along with the user friendly services on the site have helped Expedia
to build customer loyalty.
With changing business models for search engines
and an ever increasing number of Web sites on the Internet, Webmaster
submission techniques are no longer adequate for getting search engine
placement. Today's newsletter will focus on the importance of employing
a complete placement strategy with the right professional search engine
optimization firm.
Submitting Ain't What
it Used to Be
It used to be that having your Webmaster periodically submit your site
was enough to get placement on the major search engines. The Web Position
Gold software widely used by Webmasters to submit sites worked amazingly
well. The success of Web Position Gold made it a high profile target for
search engines who saw its success as direct competition for a limited
pool of profit. The search engines attempted to counteract that success
by devising strategies to undercut Web Position Gold's effectiveness.
As a result, Webmasters using the manual submission process or Web Position
Gold are no longer able to obtain good placement results.
Are Search Engines
Our Friends?
In today's competitive Internet marketplace, submission alone just isn't
enough. The search engines are strapped for cash and many have set up
senseless toll gates for submission. Search engines like Google actually
rank a site lower if it is submitted rather than if it is found by their
spider. This, coupled with the exponentially growing number of Web sites
in the search engine databases, is making it more and more difficult to
get good placement.
Search engine placement today has moved from simple
submission by the Webmaster to the highly technical methods. Since Webmaster
submission is no longer enough, it is important to find the right search
engine optimization firm to guide your placement efforts.
Make no mistake; search engines view optimization
tools like Web Position Gold as the enemy because they are competing for
the same dollar volume. Listening to the search engine's rhetoric presents
distorted views. Pundits who trumpet the search engine party line fail
to realize the adversarial position the search engines have taken against
search engine optimization. Search engines view ranking criteria as a
proprietary secret and protect it fiercely. They are quick to give disinformation
to those who blindly listen to their rhetoric. The days are gone when
you could listen to the search engines or rely on a part time search engine
specialist simply submitting your site.
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