My inbox this week provided glaring examples of three all too common
rookie search engine marketing mistakes. What you could call three
deadly search engine marketing sins. Starting with
===> Inadequate Keyword Research
Hey! If you’re going to spend hours developing a web site, isn’t it
smart to invest some time to insure you’re focusing on the most traffic
laden keywords?
Especially when typically the plural form of a keyword phrase generates
way more traffic than the singular form. For example "dog dishes"
rather than "dog dish".
Yet just this week I was asked to look at a site that had focused on
the singular form. Evidently the owner hadn’t bothered to do any
digging to make sure that was their best keyword move.
Look, you’ll never know for sure unless you research it. Besides, you
can access Wordtracker, the tool of choice for what? a measly $7 a day.
Even better here’s a quick and dirty way to get the most out of that day.
Search for your target keyword in Google.
Visit the top ranking sites. Use the "View Source" feature of Internet
Explorer to check out the keyword meta tag of each site. You're looking
for a site listing lots of keywords there. Do this with each of the top
listings or until you find one stuffed to the gills with keywords.
Ah-ha! There’s your starting point for your list of likely keyword
phrases.
Repeat with a couple of other sites and you’ll soon have a long list of
candidates to check out in Wordtracker.
Enhance your list further using this tool:
http://www.promoteindia.com/keywordtool-beta.htm.
It will give you more keyword ideas from Google and Overture.
Now you’re ready for Wordtracker.
Once you’ve compiled your Wordtracker results, you could simply sort by KEI
and then by searches per day.
That gives you the strongest keywords with the most searches. (And yes,
I realize KEI assumes all search engine listings are of equal value.
But I did say this was "quick and dirty" didn't I? However if you want
another approach that improves on KEI there’s a spreadsheet
available at
http://www.seo-works.com/seo-resources/keyword-effectiveness-rank.html)
Anyway, once you're sorted your keywords in some way to highlight the
most profitable, simply take the top 25 on the list and create content
for those first. No, not every one will be a natural born traffic
magnet. But enough of them will be to get the ball rolling.
Repeat with the next 25. Don’t stop until you have at least 100 pages of
hot content.
Remember, two or three word keyword phrases are usually your best bets.
And I really like keyword phrases that are actually several keyword
phrases in one. For example "irish setter dog dishes" gives "irish
setter", "irish setter dog", "dog", "dog dishes", "setter dog dishes".
===> Site Bloat
Twice this week I was asked to look at sites that would have let me
read War and Peace while waiting for them to come up. And no visitor is
going to have a copy of that handy.
To avoid losing any precious visitors lose the huge graphics. One of
the sites had a graphic 501K in size! No wonder it took nearly two
minutes to load up on a 56K modem.
Then too lose the Flash - unless you have a very good reason for using it.
Even then lose the Flash.
If you’re wondering how your site's download time measures up test it here:
http://www.netmechanic.com/toolbox/html-code.htm/
It won’t cost anything to find out. But a slow loading site can cost
you plenty. Because as the Net Mechanics follow up reports says, it's a
good idea to keep your page load times under about 12 seconds on a 28.8
modem. Otherwise your visitors will be wearing out the back button
trying to escape.
===> Too Few Links
Did you know links can account for up to 80% of your success with
Google? Yet someone else complained to me about how much work it took
to get them.
Well doh! Ever think that maybe that’s why (in part) Google assigns so
much value to links? Because you can’t quite as easily game links as
you can on page content? Meaning you actually have to work to get
links. Both by having link worthy content and by actively seeking them
out on a regular basis.
It’s a given that most niches require you have a healthy collection of
links to be competitive. Yet if you’re lucky enough to be in a niche
that doesn’t, but you do, then you can easily dominate those rankings.
Anyway in a nutshell you can easily avoid these three search engine
sins. Do your keyword homework. Keep your pages on a strict diet. And
don't forget link up with as many other quality sites as you can.
Do all that and you’re well on your way to search engine success.
Ignore this advice and you’re, well you know, your Google goose is
probably cooked. Leaving you perpetually stuck in Google purgatory.
Resource Box:
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John Gergye shares more ideas like this in his just updated
eBook "Traffic
From Google in 35 Days". Find out more
here: http://www.traffic-test-tube.com/j/tfg35cl.shtml
Or test your search engine IQ by taking his seo
quiz
http://www.traffic-test-tube.com/search-engine-quiz.shtml
and get the free special report "Coming Out On Top".
3 Deadly Search Engine Marketing Sins
Category: Search Engine Info

