Posts Tagged ‘SEO’

Plant the Seed, Then be Patient

Tuesday, August 31st, 2010

by Arthur Hart, President of Websites by Ideal

Farmers need to understand this method of operation. But in our society of instant gratification, we seldom have the patience to wait for the good word to spread.

When we put up a website, we’d like to have people immediately begin to visit it and start contacting us to do business. Just like growing a crop, these things take time.

First, the search engines have to find your website and index its content. Then they need to evaluate how important that content is to their users (the people searching for content like yours).

One of the ways Google evaluates the importance of your content is to examine how many times it is referenced from other websites. In other words, the good word about your website needs to spread among your peers. And again, these things take time.

Fortunately, there are some things you can and should do to help this process along. For help in getting your website found more frequently by qualified prospects, contact Websites by Ideal. We’ll help you make sure you’re doing the right things to promote your website for long term success.

Getting too impatient can lead to long term disaster; especially if you do things that annoy the search engines. They have been known to penalize websites for trying to fool them into skewing their search results to favor one website over another

Search Engine Scams

Thursday, August 19th, 2010

I have recently seen some awful text created for a website by a so called “search engine optimization company” that should have known better. They blatantly told the website owner, “Don’t worry about the writing, it’s written for the search engines, not people.”
In other words, they were trying to scam the search engines into sending more people to that website without any regard for the fact that they’d be turned off by the quality of what they found once they got there. This directly violates the first point of Google’s published Quality Guidelines which states:
“Make pages primarily for users, not for search engines. …”
Google has every right to, and has been known to penalize websites for violations of their Quality Guidelines.
At Websites by Ideal, we make it a policy to follow Google’s guidelines. We feel that it pays off in the long run to keep on the good side of the largest search engine company in the world that sends about 80% of the new traffic to websites around the world. It seems to us that search engine scams are very short sighted and can do nothing but harm in the long run.

Website Maintenance

Thursday, June 24th, 2010

Websites need to be maintained on a regular basis.

The reason for this is that websites go stale and when this happens, they lose much of their effectiveness and no longer give a favorable impression to their visitors. In order to maintain the appeal and effectiveness of your website in the eyes of your potential customers, you need to be adding fresh content on a regular basis.

Through regular maintenance, your website will always be an up-to-date picture of what’s going on in your organization. It’s pretty easy for visitors to your website to recognize when it has been neglected for a long time. Just imagine what they would think if they see a notice on your website about a meeting that already happened six months ago and nothing more recent than that!

Prospects looking for the products, services or information you provide want to know that you are still currently providing them and intend to go on doing so for the foreseeable future. In other words, they want to see a website that is evolving as your organization grows.

You should be aware that 80 percent of the new visitors to your website will be sent there by Google or one of the other search engines. More and more, people are using the World Wide Web to search for the products and services they need. Gone are the days when people reached for the Yellow Pages. Now they reach for their computer and fire up Google or their favorite search engine to find what they need or want.

The process of calling your website to the attention of the various search engines is called Search Engine Optimization (SEO). The better your website is optimized for the needs of search engines, the higher they will rank it and the more prominently they will display it when presenting search results to your prospects.

In order to maintain the interest of the search engines in your website, we highly recommend that you make some changes or additions to your website on a monthly or bi-monthly basis. New content, especially new pages, will keep the search engines coming back for more on a regular basis.

Search Engine Optimization

Tuesday, August 11th, 2009

by Arthur Hart
Websites by Ideal

516-382-0861

It doesn’t pay to try to fool search engines into giving your web pages a higher page ranking than they deserve. The purpose of the search engines is to provide their users with relevant and useful information. Therefore, your focus in getting better results from your website should be cooperating with the search engines. In other words, you should focus most of your attention on putting relevant and useful information on your website – the kind of information that the search engines would love to direct people to when they’re looking for it.

This being said, there are some ways of helping the search engines find out what information you have available so that they can properly index it and present it when they think it is relevant to what someone has asked them to find on the internet. It helps to visualize the activity of a search engine system as colony of little ants busily scurrying all over the internet looking for food to bring back to the main databases. The food they are looking for, as we indicated before, is information that might be relevant and useful to someone making a request for such information from the search engine.

So how do we help these busy little ants find the food we have for them on our website? One of the best ways is to use good descriptive page titles. A page title is a string of up to about 60 characters or so that the web browser will display at the top of the page. It’s easily missed by most people because it’s almost hidden out of sight at the very top of the screen – way above all those useful toolbars you’ve got installed. However, our little search engine ants pay particular attention to these titles as a good indication of what is to be found on the page. Knowing this, one should pay attention to using meaningful page titles. For example, if your website is about the care and feeding of gerbils, then the title of your photo gallery page should be “Gerbil Pictures” or “Pictures of Gerbils” rather than simply “Pictures” or “Photo Gallery.”

Our little ants aren’t intelligent enough to know that since your whole website is about gerbils, your photo gallery page is naturally going to contain pictures of gerbils! Each page is indexed individually and needs to offer as much help as possible as to its own content. A good way of indicating to our little ants what is on a page, even before they arrive to examine its content, is to have a meaningful name for the page. The same principle applies to naming pages as we saw in giving them meaningful page titles. For example, the page address “http://www.my-gerbil-website.com/gerbil-pictures.html” gives the search engines a lot more meaningful information than “http://www.mygerbilwebsite.com/gerbilpictures.html.” People have gotten into the habit of leaving the hyphens out of domain names and will usually opt for “mygerbilwebsite.com” instead of “my-gerbil-website.com” even though the later gives the search engines more information. The search engines treat the hyphens as blanks. Therefore, the individual words stand out for them in the first domain name. However, they aren’t quite up to figuring out where the blanks or hyphens should go in the second domain name.

If you know or can guess what word or phrase someone is likely to use when searching the web for information that you have on your website, then by all means use those words or phrases in the page content. Again, however, don’t overdo it by packing your pages with keyword phrases just to try to get the search engines to give your page an artificially high ranking. The search engines have caught on to this trick and if they think you’re trying to put one over on them, they can and will reduce your page ranking instead of increasing it. By the same token, keyword meta-tags in the internal page header, that were originally meant to be used to help search engines index the page properly, are virtually ignored these days. This came about because too many people abused the intent of these tags and just stuffed them full of the same keywords repeated over and over in an effort to fool the search engines.

In summary, the best practice is to work in concert with the purpose of the search engines, which is to provide relevant and useful information to the person using the internet. Steer clear of so-called “black hat” techniques such as “cloaking” which intentionally shows the search engines different content than will actually be displayed to the human users of your website. It all starts with creating or providing useful content and then helping the search engines find it easily so that it can be indexed and easily retrieved when it is relevant to a search engine user. The latest tricks and techniques for getting your pages to show up first will eventually be recognized and penalized by the search engines as they are counter to their purpose.

How to Get Better Search Results:
• Relevant Content, i.e.: remodeler, Bohemia
• Descriptive Page Titles
• Meaningful Names on a page
• Use hyphens – each word searchable
• Use keyword phrases in page content