| The
lifeblood of any website/ecommerce business is traffic,
and every webmaster knows the best type of traffic is
natural, organic search engine traffic. There
are two very important reasons for this: (1) it is extremely
targeted, and (2) It is FREE! The hard part is
getting top ranking for your sites keywords... or is
it? The purpose of this article is to provide
a few simple, effective, and most important, search
engine friendly strategies to help boost your websites'
ranking and ultimately your traffic.
1.
We will start with the Meta Tags. I know
you have already heard of, and are probably currently
using meta tags on your site. This is great.
I just want to make sure you are using them effectively.
We will only go over 2 tags: the "title" tag,
and the "description" tag. We will not go over
the "keywords" tag, as the major search engines have
placed less and less weight on this one, and some would
argue this tag has no weight at all. I still use
this tag however, as I feel there is some merit and
no drawbacks to using this tag.
I have
found it effective to use similar text in the "title"
and "description" tags, and to place your keywords prominently
in these tags (near the beginning and more than once).
I have seen sites with "sitename.com", "New Page 1",
or "Welcome to my site" in the "title" tag, which really
does not help in their quest for higher rankings for
their particular keyword. Also, try not to use
words such as "and", "or", or "the" in these tags.
Important
note about your keywords.
Search
engines evaluate keyword prominence, keyword weight,
and keyword density when determining a site's ranking.
All three are calculated individually for the page,
the title tag, the description tag, as well as other
areas on a page. Keyword prominence means how
close the keyword is to the beginning of your page.
Keyword weight refers to how many times a particular
keyword or phrase can be found on the page. Keyword
density is the ratio of the keyword to the other words
on the page. You do not want the keyword weight
or density to be too high, as this can appear to the
search engine as "keyword stuffing" and most search
engines penalize sites that stuff their keywords.
2.
Place your navigational links (and JavaScript)
at the right or at the bottom, but not on the left,
of the page. When the search engines "read" your
site, they read from the top left to the bottom right.
Search engines place an emphasis on the first 100 words
or text on the site. You do not want these words
to be navigational links or Javascript. Ideally,
you want to have your heading tags with your keywords
in the beginning of your page. This being said,
placing your links/JavaScript on the right or bottom
of your page ensures the search engine spiders get to
the text first, giving more weight to what's important
on your page.
3.
Place alt tags on all of your images. Search
engine spiders cannot "read" pictures or images.
The only way a spider knows what an image is about is
by reading the alt tag. This is also another chance
to place more of your keywords in your HTML, improving
your page's keyword weight/density. Alt tags are
easy to make and they can make a big difference in your
sites keyword ranking. A simple alt tag looks
like this: alt="put your keyword phrase here."
Search engines separately calculate keyword prominence,
density, and weight in alt tags as well, so optimize
your tags.
4. Place
your keywords at the bottom of your page.
Just as search engines place more weight on the first
words of your page, they also do the same to the last
words. The general thinking is this, if your site
is about a certain subject, then the main points, or
keywords, should, appear at the beginning, be spread
throughout the page, and be prominent at the conclusion.
But if you have all of your navigational links and JavaScript
at the bottom, your relevant page text could end well
before the HTML does. An easy way to have your
keywords at the bottom of your page is to include them
in the copyright information. For example, if
you have a dog food website, you could have something
like this at the very bottom of the page: copyright
2005 yoursite.com
World's best dog food Search engines are not (as of
this writing), penalizing sites using this technique,
and it wouldn't really make much sense for them to do
so.
5. The Anchor Text of your links.
Anchor text is the actual linking text on a site.
It is what the user clicks on to navigate to that particular
site or page. If a search engine finds many links
to your site using the term "dog food", then the search
engine concludes your site is about "dog food".
This is overlooked quite often, but it seems to have
a very large impact on your search engine rankings for
a particular keyword. Your anchor text needs
to be the keyword or phrase you are trying to target.
Try to avoid anchor text such as "Click Here" or "yoursite.com"
Also, if you're running a reciprocal link campaign,
be sure to use variations of your text. If an
engine notices every link to your site is identical,
it could place less weight on these links or potentially
penalize your site. This is because search
engines generally give more weight to "naturally occurring"
links, and less to "reciprocal link exchange campaigns".
Using different, but relevant anchor text can dramatically
affect your targeted keyword rankings, by making your
links appear more natural. Effective SEO may seem
difficult at first, but as you have read above, little
tricks that require little or no programming knowledge,
can make a huge impact on your website's keyword ranking.
Noah Ulrich is webmaster of http://www.informativeresources.com/
His site maintains top rankings in all major search
engines, and has maintained an online presence since
2001. His site provides top quality resale rights, guaranteed
signups, and web traffic to businesses worldwide. |