Showing posts with label search engine optimization. Show all posts
Showing posts with label search engine optimization. Show all posts

Friday, January 4, 2013

Top five tips for improving the ranking of your website



Particularly in the current climate, not all business can afford to pay hundreds if not thousands of dollars to marketing or specialist SEO agencies to improve the ranking of their websites. 

However there are some simple steps businesses can take which will help drive your website up the search engines. 

1. Make sure all your products and services are described in depth.
Google's search engine works on a very simple question and answer model. You type in what you want and Google returns the websites that best match your search. Therefore your website needs to include all the names and various terms (keywords) that describe your products and services. Google also likes to see your products and services described and worded naturally, with lots of support information that relates to that content. 


2. Add new content regularly.
If you read the newspaper every day and it reported the same news stories week after week, you would never buy it. View your website in the same way. Generally speaking Google ranks websites that update their content regularly higher than those that do not. Why? Because Google wants to present 'current' content to its searchers. New content may include such things as better product or service descriptions, company news, market news, new clients, new projects, case studies, testimonials, guides, video, photo gallery, hints & tips, articles..I think you get the picture! 


3. Generate some inbound links to your website.
Why create inbound links? Because Google interprets this as somebody else endorsing the quality of your website, which is a big thumbs up. Getting a link from another website to yours can be easy, but unfortunately these tend to be the ones that don't carry any value. Links can generated from lots of websites, including suppliers, customers, industry associations, industry magazines, industry news, industry directories / portals, industry article and general directory and article. 

There are also many different ways to achieve the link. With a directory it might simply be a case of adding your company details, which is why they don't often carry any value. With suppliers you might want to write a press release on a recent project endorsing their products. With a customer you could write a press release celebrating your longstanding relationship. With industry sites you may wish to offer your services to blog and comment on certain topics. When you create a link within an article, where possible try to link from a keyword to the relevant page on your website. You may have to pay for some of your links, particularly in things like industry news websites or general news websites. If the website has a reasonably high page rank, then this is certainly worth considering. 

4.Create a blog.
As illustrated in point 2, Google gives credit to websites that update their content regularly. Create a blog on your website that enables you to add comments and news information on what's going on in your business on a regular basis. 


5.Create links within your website.
Google likes to see websites that are well structured and which help visitors navigate through the site effectively. Within the wording of your website, create links to other pages where people might wish to go for more information. If you are in an extremely competitive marketplace, deploying these tactics alone is unlikely to get your website to the top of page one for your target keywords. While the ranking of your website will certainly improve, if your aiming for the top of Google you may require the support of an SEO agency.

Special thanks to Northern Light Media in the UK for these helpful search engine optimization tips. For more information visit http://www.northernlightmediauk.com 

Sunday, November 11, 2012

Understanding Off-Page SEO



Off-Page SEO is about building online authority, digital reputation, and trust for your website. The quantity, quality, and relevance of the links that are attached to the website determine the quality of search result rankings.

When initiating a campaign to improve rankings for a leading brand, the focus was on off-page optimization and building authority for the site.  However, the existing authority was entirely dependent on the links that had already been established.  Enter "off page SEO".  The primary step to improve rankings and traffic was through the development of quality inbound links.

One must realize that off-page is more than link building. The way you diversify authority for your website, is through conversations people are having about brands, references they are making, and diversifying your link portfolio to establish your authority.

Link Building is the practice of building inbound links to create compelling authority around any item that is shared.

Compelling Content is the best way to optimize your website and other digital assets. Without compelling content it's hard to get a link building audience. The best way to earn relevant links from other sites to your site is through the development of compelling visuals, descriptive, and design, that excite others and are worth of being cross-promoted by other sites. As an example, something as simple as a chocolate chip cookie recipe or cupcakes are great items that can be used to promote food ingredients for the likes of Kraft and other major manufacturers. 

Co-Marketing is another opportunity for off-page SEO.  The effort of cross-promoting and marketing is a way of networking, and building relationships to create community.  When you can work with other companies to jointly market each other’s content, products, or services, you expand your reach and website authority. Co-marketing is similar to guest posting. A person has access to the other company’s networks, prospect, leads, or services, which ultimately increase reach. 

Social Media hasn't been on the radar as part of off-page SEO but it is now. The criteria around off page SEO is to build your reputation one step at a time and build community. The reputation created on social media is instant, and the authority established through various credentials can provide significant lift to your website authority in the eyes of Google and other major search engines. 

Public Relations or Public Affairs needs to be an integral part of your off-page SEO as well.  By having a well planned PR campaign that is optimized in such a way that it is easily shared can dramatically improve exposure. Positioning your communication as a message that needs to be shared as a fact or announcement is a powerful tool.  For example, if Kraft is expanding within the range of cookies, and adding more healthy cookies, it would really help to create sustainable messages around the sweet, and healthy benefits of the food, cookies.

In the above example, the quality of search result rankings would not be determined by the recipe of the food products that Kraft plans to promote, but by the publicity of social media efforts as others share recipes and tout health benefits. 

Using effective messaging an positioning can help to dramatically improve off-page SEO.  Whether you are creating original content that is easily shared or pushing messages via public relations, the more quality links you are able to generate to your site, the better!


Guest post from Karishma Sinha. An eye on consumers, and passionate about analytics and research tools that can make marketer stay educated about his or her creative instincts. I have worked in PepsiCo, and Quest International, managing product innovation for Snack products. In 2006, transitioned to the marketing services, and consulting world. Am a graduate from St.Xaviers, Mumbai, Master's from Symbiosis Pune, and a Full time MBA from Duke University, The Fuqua School of Business, North Carolina. 

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

How to Conduct Effective Keyword Research


One of the most important steps a small business owner should take when starting a search engine optimization (SEO) campaign is to make sure you are targeting the right keywords with your content, blogs and press releases.

The best way to do this (that’s also at no cost) is using the Google Adwords Keyword Tool. This tool was build to help advertisers doing Pay Per Click Advertising (PPC) through Google AdWords filter and pick more effective terms to place in PPC campaigns; and since PPC and SEO are often highly correlated, it is also a valuable tool for researching SEO keywords.

Google’s keyword tool let’s anyone with or without an AdWords account expand and filter relevant keywords quickly.

To start, type in 5-10 keywords and phrases that describe the product or service that you want to rank for:

If you are a local business, try adding the following modifiers before and after certain keywords:
     Zip code
     City
     State spelled out
     State abbreviation
     Country
     County
     Region
     City, State
     “in” city
     “local”

Once you have a solid list, type in the capcha and search.

At the top of the results you will find detail on each of the keywords that you typed in; below that Google will expand your list and provide up to 100 keyword ideas related to the terms entered. If you are just learning SEO some of these results may be surprising to you.




Next, click the “Local Monthly Searches” header to sort both lists by the average amount of times the term has been searched in your country or language.



Then scan the list for keywords keywords that:
     are highly relevant to your business
     contain a low to medium competition ranking
     have a sizable number of local monthly searches

The competition ranking is speaking to the competitiveness of the term as it relates to PPC advertising, but it can be generally related to SEO as well.



If you would like to save your favorite keywords, check them off and click the download drop down menu followed by the selected option.  This will let you save your checked keyword list in a variety of formats.

Keyword research works best if you do several of these types of searches, constantly washing the keyword list that you build on subsequent expansions.

Once done you can then either use the final list of 5-10 keywords as the ones you are going to target, or use an SEO-specific tool to check the SEO competition for related terms. SEOMoz (paid) and the SEO SERP plugin for Google Chrome are great options for this.

To learn more about how to build an SEO foundation, check out Grovo’s expert series with Zach Ciperski, VP, Coffee For Less, Director of SEO, Elite SEM.

In this video series Zach covers a variety of topics, including:
     A history of SEO
     Choosing the right keywords
     Onsite SEO optimizations
     Creating SEO friendly content
     Basic link building
     Social media SEO
     Video SEO
     User experience and SEO
     Mobile SEO

Special Thanks to Nick Narodny, Co-founder, SVP of Business Training for Grovo for sharing his expertise with the readers of the Marketing Blog!


See you at the top,
Mike Fleischner

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

Promoting Your Products with Search Engine Optimization

I’ve heard it time and again, “Paying for online marketing is killing my business.” Many of the small businesses I consult with, and even some of the larger ones continually complain about the cost of online marketing and advertising, especially when it comes to pay per click advertising.

Why is online advertising so painful?

Many small business owners do not have the resources needed to effectively manage online marketing or the experience to implement productive pay-per-click advertising campaigns. All too often the common result is an abundance of clicks and few if any sales. This happens because pay-per-click advertising can be very expensive and it’s only half of the equation.

Once you get the appropriate traffic to your website, you need to focus on converting that traffic into paying customers. Improving on-site conversions can be a full-time job, and in most major companies it is. Many website owners have little knowledge or interest in creating and testing dynamic content, continually reinventing the purchase decision process, or evaluating their website’s deficiencies. All they’ve succeeded in doing is spending a lot of money to drive people to an ineffective website. The result is a large expense and nothing to show for it.

Changing the equation.

Improving conversions on your website is important, make no mistake about it. However, if you can reduce the cost associated with driving traffic to your site, the equation can shift in your favor. Enter organic search. My feeling is that instead of spending money on pay-per-click advertising; invest that money in improving your organic search results.

To enhance your organic search results, start with the basics of on-page optimization and off-page optimization. For complete details, you can learn more in my SEO guide available at http://www.webmastersbookofsecrets.com. As a top-level primer, let me highlight some of the key factors for both areas of optimization.

On-page optimization factors.

When we talk about on-page optimization factors, we’re referring to the proper use of HTML to signal the search engines what your site is about and what keywords best define your offer. On-page optimization, when done correctly, provides a strong platform for enhancing your natural search results.

The most important on-page factors include meta tags, keyword placement, keyword density, and link text. By using the proper meta tags in the proper format, placing keywords in your content using the right styles, and optimal page placement, results in improved organic search results. When working on your website, make sure that all code is WC3 compliant and you’re using style sheets for formatting purposes. Placing java script or unnecessary code on your site can make it difficult for search engines to best understand your content.

Off-page optimization factors.

Factors like link popularity and page rank all have a significant impact on your natural search results. Coupled with the competitiveness of other websites seeking optimal placement for your keyword or keyword phrase can also add a layer of complexity.

A great place to start your off-page optimization effort is through link building. Find other websites who are willing to exchange links with you, place a one-way link on their site to yours, or perhaps provide a link to unique content or tools you offer. By getting other websites to point to your website, you are well on your way towards enhancing organic search results.

Generating traffic to your site can be accomplished via online advertising, pay-per-click marketing, and organic search results. All too often, individuals believe that pay-per-click advertising is a quick way to Internet riches but quickly find out that the grass is always greener on the other side.

If you use SEM to promote your products, consider it to be only part of your overall marketing strategy. Invest your time in improving organic search results and the Internet marketing equation shifts in your favor. This method costs less and can drive significant traffic to your website resulting in a positive return on your time and marketing dollars.

Tuesday, October 30, 2007

SEO for the Small Business Owner

If your company generates less than $10 million dollars in a calendar year, you may be classified as a "small business". Regardless of your size, Search Engine Optimization is an important strategy for growing your business. In fact, as a small business owner, SEO is probably one of the most important marketing strategies you can use to improve traffic and sales through your website.

Can the small websites compete with the big guys?

I'm often asked by small business owners if they stand a chance against larger websites when it comes to organic search results. My response is that size doesn't matter. When it comes to improving natural search results, it's all about the keywords you choose and how competitive those keywords are.

What makes a keyword competitive?

One way to determine the competitiveness of a search term is to simply type that search term into Google and notice the number of webpages that contain that search term. This number appears in the upper right-hand corner of the search results page and appears as, "Results 1 - 10 of about 117,000,000 for [your search term here]."

The large number you see gives you an indication of how many websites contain the keyword term or phrase you're searching for. Not all of these sites would necessarily be competitors, but have been indexed by Google none-the-less. From my perspective, when this number is less than 3 or 4 million, the particular search term would not be all that competitive in and of itself.

Determining just how competitive the search term is.

There are a variety of methods to determine true keyword effectiveness (KEI, etc.). However, if you're just a regular person trying to figure out how difficult it will be to rank well for a particular keyword, consider the following. In addition to the number of sites that contain your keyword, how well optimized are the top 3 sites that appear on the search result. You can determine this by:

1. Visiting the site and determining the Google PR of the page. This information is available by downloading the Google toolbar and looking in your browser. You will see a green bar and ranking (ex: PR5), which tells you how Google ranks this page/website with regard to popularity. Any site with a Google PR6 or better is well established and will be difficult to outrank in the near term.

2. Visit Google and type, "link:www.competitorssite.com". Be sure to replace 'competitorssite' with the website name you are researching. Remember, this should be a website that appears on the Google search result for the keyword term or phrase you're reseraching. This will tell you how many sites are linking to this particular website. The larger the number the more difficult it will be to outrank.

3. Look at the website code. Simply visit the competitor's website and go to "View", "View Source". Look for the meta tags of "Title", "Description", and "Keywords". Are the meta tags at the very top of the page? Does the website also use h1, h2, and h3 tages? If so, they probably know something about SEO and have applied some on-page optimization techniques.

Using the above will give you a good sense of whether of not you can compete for given keywords. As you've figured out by now, a company's size is no indication of their level of experience in optimizing their own website. You'd be surprise of the type (and size) of companies that call me for SEO advice. Keep this in mind the next time you think that size matters!

Tuesday, October 9, 2007

The Webmaster's Book of Secrets is Here!

It's finally here! Announcing The Webmaster's Book of Secrets by me... Michael Fleischner.

Increasing search engine results is one of the most difficult yet rewarding aspects of online marketing. Ever since I began marketing on the Internet in 2000, I've been amazed by the ability of some marketers to understand and leverage the power of organic search results - driving tons of FREE traffic to their website(s). The challenge associated with improving search engine rankings is that there are a series of complex factors that can change your rankings each and every day.

However, there are some proven, "tried and true" methods that top Webmasters use on a regular basis to ensure that they are at the top of Google and other major search engines. From my perspective, optimizing for Google is the most important thing a Marketer can do for his business, website, or landing page. I've spent the last three years focused on Google and improving search engine results for my main website, MarketingScoop.com.

I have personally learned so much about SEO and Internet marketing that I've worked hard to compile EVERYTHING I've learned and used for top Google placements into an ebook that I'm sure you'll benefit from. The Webmaster's Book of Secrets reveals everything you need to know for reaching the #1 placement on Google - the world's largest search engine.

This guide provides a detailed explanation of both on-page and off-page optimization factors used by leading Webmaster's for improving search engine rankings. With top Google placements, your traffic will soar! Thanks to all who have contributed to this long-in-coming publication (ebook) as well as all those "SEO Master's" who have shared their personal secrets with me and have allowed me to reveal them here.

Wednesday, September 12, 2007

On Page Optimization - Making it Simple

Before you begin promoting your website, give some thought to the design and layout of your web pages. Whether you're building a website, landing page, or simply updating your site, be sure to follow some of the basics of good SEO. Here are a few ideas to consider.

1. Is your web page easy to read (by both search engine spiders and browsers)? Use common fonts, sizes, and layouts. Keep things simple. If users can't intuitively navigate your page, you're going to lose them. Write for your lowest common denominator and don't assume that everyone navigates the page as you do.

2. Is you code W3C compliant? The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) is the main international standards organization for the World Wide Web (W3). The consortium is headed by Sir Tim Berners-Lee, the primary author of the original URL, HTTP, and HTML specifications. Your code should meet these industry standards.

3. Meta tags. Do you have them? Are they in place? Are they written correctly? Meta tags are important for a whole host of reasons. Not the least of which is that search engines rely on them to better understand the content of your web page. Make sure they are in properly in place

4. Use of h1 tags. The header tags of h1, h2, and h3 are key to search engine optimization. Using these tags lets the search engine know that the content you're using is important. Place you keyword(s) between these tags when possible.

5. On-page keyword placement. Use your keywords in appropriate places on your web page. I would argue that keyword density really isn't all that important anymore. More important is you placement relative to other text on the page. Specifically, be sure to place your keyword within the first 25 and last 25 words of text on you web page. Lastly, bold, italicize and underline your keyword at least once on the page you're optimization.

Follow these basic on-page optimization techniques to improve overall search engine rankings. As with and SEO effort, multiple components must be executed well in order to see dramatic results in your search engine result placements. Begin with a strong foundation (on-page optimization). This allows for your seo efforts to generate very tangible results.

Wednesday, August 29, 2007

The Importance of Link Text

Just recently someone asked me, "What's the most important thing you need to know about SEO"? That's a great question and one I will answer in this post. Before doing so, let me say that there are search engine optimization guru's out there who can better speak to the more technical and often esoteric aspects of SEO.

In fact yesterday I was viewing some interviews online with some of these folks and they were talking about the GooglePlex and associated algorithms. Way too complicated for me. Again, that's why I created this blog - to share my SEO success with ordinary people (like me!) who want to improve their search engine results.

Okay, so back to the topic at hand. What is the most important thing you need to know about SEO? My answer would be link text What is link text? According to Wikipedia, link text is something that gives the web site user relevant descriptive or contextual information about the content of the link's destination. The link text (also referred to as anchor text) may or may not be related to the actual text of the URL of the link. For example, a hyperlink to the main Marketing Blog page might take this form: replace "[" with "<"


[a href="http://marketing expert.blogspot.com">The Marketing Blog[/a]"

The anchor text in this example is The Marketing Blog; the complex URL http://marketing-expert.blogspot.com displays on the web page as The Marketing Blog, contributing to a clean, easy to read text or document.

Now the answer to our original question... the reason that I consider anchor text to be the most important SEO element is because the anchor text of inbound links is what improves your Google search engine results (among other things of course). I have found in my own SEO efforts that the more links pointing to my site, using my keywords in the anchor text, the better my website does on search engine result placements.

A couple of things to keep in mind. As important as link text is you must continue to focus on on page optimization (metatags, etc.) and off-page optimization (link text, submissions, etc.). If you manage your optimization factors AND focus on building links to your website the right way, you'll see a dramatic improvement in your search results!

Michael Fleischner, Search Engine Optimization Specialist

Wednesday, August 15, 2007

Page Rank or SEO - Which Is More Important?

Whether you believe in SEO or Page Rank and wonder which is more important, your thinking is irrelevant. You are wasting your time in wondering what is the correct answer to that question, since even if you knew it, there is little you could do to use that information.

Why do I say that? Because SEO, or search engine optimization, is a way of designing your website, and placing content in it, to satisfy search engine algorithms. Search engines are so sophisticated today that if you achieve that, then you will also satisfy visitors to your website. If you satisfy visitors to your website, then they will stay on the page they landed on and read it. They will then click to read other pages on your website and might even make a purchase.

Sure, some will leave right away, but if the search engines feel that your content is good enough for a high placement in their indices for the search term, or keyword, that your visitor used to get to your web page, then it is more likely that you will achieve a relatively high stick rate of people to your site than a lower one.

Now, consider if you thought Google PageRank more important (and PageRank is correct, not Page Rank). You would then spend more of your time trying to get links back to your website than you would properly optimizing your site and filling it with good content. If you were successful in that difficult job, then Google, and possibly other search engines, would líst you a bit higher in their indices, not because their spiders thought your site was relevant to the search term used by the potential visitors, but because other websites thought so.

You will then get visitors to your website, and the page they land on would have to be relevant to the search term they used or they will immediately leave. If it is relevant, they will stay, perhaps visit other web pages and perhaps make a purchase.

So what is the difference? You get basically the same end result. How can you tell which is the more important. There is one simple way to do this, and one that I have used more than once. Design two websites round the same keyword. Make the keyword the name of the website and then apply classical theoretical SEO to one site, including some of the extra special tips that can make the difference between success and failure – in fact that DO make that difference

Now apply only minimal SEO to the other and make sure you have exactly the same content on each, but rewritten to avoid duplicate content or that would negate the test. However, with the second site, you must generate as many links back to your website as possible, using non-reciprocal links where possible, but reciprocal links where necessary. There are a few ways in which you can generate lots of one-way links to selected pages on your site, and you should make that your home page for the purposes of this test.

Wait 4 weeks then check Google, Yahoo and MSN for the position of each of your home pages. You will find that your first website will generally be listed higher for the keyword that both sites are built round. Check again about 3 months later, and you will likely find that website 2 will feature higher as the links start to take effect, but then the first site will overtake it as it generates its own links naturally. Basically, what this proves to me is that it is essential to optimize your website for search engines in the classical way, but that for best results you must also have a good level of links back to your website. There are simple, ways to achieve both, but that would be the topic of another article. However, in the end, if you apply both, then you will achieve best results. I know that there are exceptions to this, and I have highlighted them in some of my ebooks, but generally that is the case.

So, the answer to the question: SEO or Page Rank, is that neither is the more important. They are both equally important, but it is possible to do one better than the other and then you would be tempted to say that your way was best. But you would be wrong!

If you did find what was the best, you couldn't use that information since search engines rules are transitory but good honest content and classical SEO have always prevailed, as has a good number of links that others follow to reach your website.


About The Author
Peter is an expert on audio-visual file formats and codecs and more information on p2p file sharing software can be obtained from his websites LegalAndFree.com and Online-Free-Movies.com where options are presented and the ethics discussed.

Saturday, March 10, 2007

How to Increase Your SERP on Major Search Engines

Last week we had a quiz on SEO from Brad Callen. This guy is the master of SEO and his lessons invaluable. I used Brad's techniques to help me reach the top of search engines (especially Google) for my key words and keyword phrases - marketing expert, internet marketing expert, marketing service providers, free marketing articles, marketing blog directory, etc. To find out how, click here.

Here are the answers to last week's quiz...

1. Your website sells Green Widgets - what is the best Title tag for your main page?

a. Get Green Widgets, Buy Green Widgets, Green Widgets, Green Widget.
b. We have Cheap Green Widgets with great prices and selection.
c. Buy Green Widgets | Discount Widgets.
d. Home | Greenwidgets.com

A Title tag must be descriptive, brief and keyword rich. This immediately rules out the first two options for this question, which were either too full of keywords or too long without any targeted keywords. Writing a Title tag is not an exact science - however, keep your keyword terms limited to 2 or 3 in the Title tag, and I always like to separate them with "|".


2. Your site map has more than 100 links to your pages. Do you:

a. Create a hierarchy of links, and split up the site map into multiple pages.
b. Keep adding new links, no problem.
c. Add a second page to your site map and add new links to that.
d. Stop adding links to your site map completely.

Because search engines are hesitant to give any specific guidelines on how to optimize our websites, any small detail becomes very important. As far as sitemaps are concerned, this is an issue where it pays to listen to the search engines, especially since with large content sites well-designed sitemaps are a sure bet that your site will be quickly indexed.

Google's Webmaster Guidelines clearly state that you should limit your sitemaps to less than 100 links per page, and that it is better to use a hierarchy that signifies the site structure and the importance of these pages. It is good advice to follow, especially when a search engine says that "look, this helps us index your site better".


3. How many words should you consider writing in a page of pure content (such as an article, a blog post or a product review)?

a. 100-200
b. 500-800
c. 200-400
d. 800+


While there is no set length of pages that works best in search engines (ecommerce stores have little content and still rank high, while many pages ranking high have 1000+ words as a minimum), but if you are going towards publishing quality content (either through blogs or articles), then the 500 to 800 word count is a good range for the following reasons:

  • Gives you enough room to discuss one focused topic in detail.
  • Forces you to keep it interesting and relevant.
  • More content = better contextual advertising - this limit gives you targeted ads for your article quite easily (whereas a small word count may result in generic, site-specific ads).
  • Since you cannot cover more than one main idea in such a short range, you must create separate content pages for different ideas - giving you more opportunities to create fresh content (remember to always "drill down" in your content writing and differentiate multiple aspects of the same topic).

4. What is the optimum keyword density you should aim for?

a. 2%-5%.
b. Keep the content normal, but stuff the page with hidden text in alt tags, meta tags and "white-on-white" text to maximize keyword density.
c. As much as possible, while keeping the content human-readable.
d. Forget keyword density - search engines pay very little attention to it any more. Just focus on writing content that people will want to link to.


Keyword density has been abused since before Google came out with their PageRank algorithm in 1998. Keeping that in mind, search engines do not pay much attention to pure keyword density. What they do pay attention to is relevant on-page factors such as page structure, navigation, title tags and advanced topics such as term weight and c-indices. However, all this pales in comparison to the off-page factors (linking strategy), especially in Google. Yahoo seems to give more weight than Google to on-page factors, but even then keyword density is not very high on the list.


5. What should you put inside meta tags?

a. Put your full keyword list in the meta keywords tag, and put your most important keywords in the meta description tag.
b. Ignore the meta tags - search engines don't use them.
c. Write a short description of your website in the meta description tag, and put your most important keywords in the meta keywords tag.
d. Put your most important keywords in the meta keywords tag and don't use a meta description tag.

Meta tags, like keyword density, are easily abused and misused. Because of this, search engines are very wary of trusting any information put in them. However since meta tags are essentially describing what the page is about, you should use them to briefly describe each page. Note that sometimes your meta description might be used to describe your site in search engine results, and that any heavy optimization of these tags may trip the spam filters in search engines. Use them, but lightly, and don't depend on them as they have limited use.


6. For optimization purposes, how should you use images on your site?

a. Use the alt tag to accurately describe the each image, and include descriptive content around each image.
b. Put your most important keyword in an alt tags followed by the word "graphic".
c. Just use them wherever it is necessary from an aesthetic perspective, without regard for alt tags because they aren't really that important.
d. Use alt tags to "hide" your full keyword list so you can increase your page's keyword density.

At the very least, images should contain alt tags with one or two keywords describing that image, and you should try surrounding that image with relevant text. If the image is not used in context (i.e. it is not part of a content page or an article), you should add a couple of lines below the image describing it. In essence, what you would do if you were caring for people whose browsers disabled images and those who wanted some details about the images.


7. Which style tag is preferred by the W3C for emphasizing important text?

a. b
b. strong
c. heavy
d. bold

This is one most people trip out on. The [b] tag is commonly used for style purposes (to make text go bold), and this was inadvertently carried over in SEO circles when people wanted to emphasize certain sections of their content. However, the W3C standards advocate that one must use the [strong] tag to emphasize important words in your content. As for the[b] tag, W3C standards classify it as a styling tag and actually want you to use CSS to style your content, but that's a separate issue.

So if you're using [b] tags to emphasize important parts of your content, stop! Use [strong] tags for keywords and key terms, and keep the [b] tag for visual emphasis only.

Link Building

8. What types of websites are most trusted by search engines (authority sites)?

a. High PR websites.
b. .edu and .gov websites.
c. Low PR websites with lots of backlinks.
d. Medium to High PR websites with lots of backlinks from other high ranking websites.
e. Both b and d

Authority sites are like gold on the Internet - a link from them is better than several links from small, unknown sites. Search engines use different criteria to establish the trustworthiness of a site, but common elements include those websites that are official (reduced chance of spamming and greater chance of accurate information) sites such as .edu and .gov sites (not .org, as this extension has been spammed and abused already) and those websites that receive a large number of links from other high ranking and trusted sites.

Getting links from these sites is tough, but definitely a great investment.


9. Which of these sites will provide the most valuable link?
a. A PR 7 website.
b. A PR 5 site closely related to your niche with strong backlinks from .edu and .gov (trusted) domains.
c. A website with hundreds of pages of duplicate content that is banned in the search engines.
d. A PR 6 website loosely related to your niche but with few 'trusted' backlinks.

For a site to be valuable as a backlink, it has to fulfill the following characteristics:

  • It must be trusted by the search engines - that is, it must have backlinks of its own from trusted sites.
  • It must be closely related to your niche - the closer, the better. So if you're running a soccer store, a tech site may not be the ideal backlink but a sports site reviewing soccer products is definitely worth going after.
  • It should be a clean site - without any penalties.


10. Suppose that you were offered the following 4 choices as a link - which one would be the most valuable?

a. An optimized contextual link (a link as part of a page's content with proper anchor text) from a closely related PR 5 site's main page content.
b. A link on the links page of an unrelated PR 7 site - shared with 50 other links (and their two line descriptions).
c. A link on the links page of closely related PR 6 site - shared with 20 other links.
d. A PR 6 link from a directory page with 10 other links only.


The best links are those that are contextual and contain optimized anchor text - such an in-text link to SEO Elite from a blog post of a leading SEO blog (e.g. seomoz or webguerrilla). Note that a similar link from a totally unrelated site such as a real estate portal will not carry the same value.

While directory pages and link pages carry value, these are not as important as contextual links, mainly because contextual links are harder to spam.

11. If you were building links for greenwidgets.com, what would be your strategy in choosing anchor text?

a. Buy high PR links from closely related sites that offer traffic as well as link wealth.
b. Use organic marketing tactics to encourage natural link growth using your site's content.
c. Submit articles to article directories and link to your site's inner pages in those articles to build 'deep' links.
d. All of the above.

This one was fairly straightforward - when building links, you should pursue opportunities on all fronts. Don't ignore developing your site's content and focus all your attention on buying links! Instead, balance your link building efforts and divide equal time for each of these activities.


12. Which of these four is the most important in assessing a link?

a. The anchor text.
b. The PR of the page you're getting the links from.
c. The number of outgoing links on the link page.
d. The title tag of the link page.

All four factors are important, but apart from anchor text, the other three are also dependent on other factors that may or may not exist in your favor. For example, the PR of the page you're getting links from is meaningless if the website is in a totally different niche than yours. Similarly, the title tag of the link page may be just [home], but if the link is contextual and if the anchor text is optimized, it's still a valuable link (where as the reverse - good title tag, bad anchor text - will not be true.

The number of outgoing links is only to be concerned about because it might show the search engine that you are situated on a link list page, which they may or may not penalize the link for. However, a good content page (like on a blog) may contain 30+ outgoing links - yet with optimized anchor text and placed in proper context, the link is suddenly very valuable.


13. How many links should you get for your site in the first 6 months (on average)?

a. 50-70 links a month.
b. 100+ links a month.
c. As many quality links as you can.
d. 25-40 a month.


While the Google Sandbox is not a myth (nor is it as strictly defined as some people might say it is), there are no penalties for building too many links. In fact, the 'pace' at which you build your links only becomes suspicious if it is unnatural - for example, if you suddenly get 100+ links to your website in 2 weeks that are from a link network (assuming this link network can be detected by the search engine) and you have made little or no addition to your site content, this would constitute as suspicious, unnatural link building.

On the other hand, if you're continually adding content and getting deep links (through article submissions as well as through your link building efforts), you may get 300+ links in a week (like seomoz did for its ranking factors list) and the search engine will recognize these as natural - and something viral like this can even propel your site out of the Sandbox.

General SEO

14. What does PageRank technically measure?

a. The linking power carried by a particular link.
b. How many external, inbound links point to a particular page.
c. The number and quality of the links pointing to a particular page.
d. Your ranking position in the search engines.

PageRank is not link popularity (number of inbound links) or link weight (the linking power carried by a particular page) - in fact, it is a combination of both as well as several different factors.

However, your search engine rankings are not determined exclusively via PageRank - hundreds of other factors, including relevancy of links, anchor text and other off-page and on-page factors come into play as well. PageRank is just a measure, and as a measure its value has been steadily declining - something claimed by Google as well.


15. What does the term "Sandbox" describe in reference to Google's SERPs?

a. The ranking factors affecting all new websites that are targeting highly competitive keywords before targeting less competitive keywords.
b. Google's system for penalizing sites exhibiting an overly-optimizing back-link structure.
c. Google's penalty for building too many links too quickly.
d. Google's play area for their staff during lunch break.


The Sandbox is a series of filters applied to all new websites as they try to rank for their select search terms on Google. It does not penalize websites for building too many links too quickly (as explained in a previous question), although these filters do affect websites that are seemingly too well-optimised than their niche competitors.

The best path to avoid the Sandbox (or to get out if you're stuck) is to keep building natural links through your content and focus on your rankings in MSN and Yahoo. If you're ranking highly in those search engines and are constantly building contextual links, you'll be able to get out of the Sandbox within an year.

Note: If you start with a keyword phrase that isn't very competitive and is "less known", you WILL bypass the "sandbox" and should rank well pretty quickly. Once you build credibility and authority/age, you can start to take on the bigger keywords.


16. What is the best way for websites with very little content (like ecommerce stores) rank highly for competitive product terms?

a. They have a lot of natural links (one-way, contextual) with optimal anchor text from a wide variety of websites.
b. Their pages are stuffed with keywords and "white text".
c. They use content-generating software to spam the search engines and attain false rankings.
d. They pay a lot of money to get high PR links.


This comes under the whole content vs. links debate: which is more important? Search engines value both, thus the only way to rank well if you have less of one of them is to have more of the other.

In the context of ecommerce stores, they face stiff competition from other stores that buy high PR links to artificially inflate their rankings. The best way to beat them is to go for contextual, one-way links from trusted websites - this is harder and takes more time, but the benefits include first page rankings on SERPs.


17. Which of these will NOT get your site penalized in Google?

a. Thousands of automatically-generated pages built only for the search engines.
b. Building quality links at a steady pace.
c. Scraping (stealing) content from other websites.
d. Getting links from websites that Google considers to be from a 'bad' link neighborhood.

Using content-generating software that creates pages only for search engines is a common spam tactic, and search engines have, in the past couple of years, rapidly caught on to this approach and will penalize it severely. Similarly, stealing content from other sites is not that hard to detect (they measure the similarity of content and match it with which page was indexed first).

Links from a website that is already penalized by Google can get your website penalized - this is not a guarantee, but if your website is getting several links from banned sites AND there is any spam-like activity on your website (like stuffing keywords into your meta keywords tag, or overoptimised title tags), then you may get penalized as well.


18. Which of these five methods will NOT give you an accurate estimate of the search demand in a niche?

a. Overture search term figures
b. WordTracker.com numbers
c. Nichebot.com
d. Statcounter.com


Overture and WordTracker report numbers based on an analysis of a subset of search engine data. Nichebot provides data from the above two services, while Statcounter is used to monitor site traffic.


19. When designing the site structure of a website, which of the following statements is NOT a good idea?

a. Make a site map that points to each page on the site.
b. Attempt to make all pages accessible from the home page by at most 3 clicks.
c. Link all of your inner pages to all of your other websites.
d. Create a category structure that goes from broad to narrow.

Site-wide links should be reserved for the important internal pages of your own website (such as the home page, the contact page and main category pages). This way, you will be transferring maximum link weight back to the key pages of your website so that they can rank higher. BY linking all pages on 1 of your websites, to your other website, the search engines will quickly see that you are trying to manipulate their results and will more than likely penalize you accordingly.

20. Which is the best method of getting traffic to your site?

a. Pay-per-click ads.
b. Pay for high PR links so that you get a PR yourself, which will help boost your own search engine rankings.
c. Submit your website to search engines and popular directories, and focus on creating content.
d. Create quality content that people in your niche would want to link to, and then promote that content through article syndication, blogs and forums.
e. All of the above.


Traffic building methods, like link building, should never be restricted to one form of traffic (because when that dries up, you'll be caught with your proverbial pants down). If you sell products, then PPC ads are a great tool for driving targeted traffic. On the other hand, paying for "traffic" links on related websites will do wonders as well. In addition, search engine traffic procured through link building and creating quality content will assure that you have a steady stream of free traffic to rely upon.


Saturday, March 3, 2007

So You Think You're an SEO Expert? Let's See How Good You Really Are!

This quiz from Brad Callen will determine whether or not you know your SEO.
I thought I know my stuff but have admit that I didn't score 100. Just goes to show, as much as you think you know there's always more to learn... Enjoy!

On-Page Optimization

1. Your website sells Green Widgets - what is the best Title tag for your main page?

a. Get Green Widgets, Buy Green Widgets, Green Widgets, Green Widget
b. We have Cheap Green Widgets with great prices and selection
c. Buy Green Widgets | Discount Widgets
d. Home | Greenwidgets.com

2. Your site map has more than 100 links to your pages. Do you:

a. Create a hierarchy of links, and split up the site map into multiple pages.
b. Keep adding new links, no problem.
c. Add a second page to your site map and add new links to that.
d. Stop adding links to your site map completely.

3. How many words should you consider writing in a page of pure content (such as an article, a blog post or a product review)?

a. 100-200
b. 500-800
c. 200-400
d. 800+

4. What is the optimum keyword density you should aim for?

a. 2%-5%.
b. Keep the content normal, but stuff the page with hidden text in alt tags, meta tags and "white-on-white" text to maximize keyword density.
c. As much as possible, while keeping the content human-readable.
d. Forget keyword density - search engines pay very little attention to it any more. Just focus on writing content that people will want to link to.

5. What should you put inside meta tags?

a. Put your full keyword list in the meta keywords tag, and put your most important keywords in the meta description tag.
b. Ignore the meta tags - search engines don't use them.
c. Write a short description of your website in the meta description tag, and put your most important keywords in the meta keywords tag.
d. Put your most important keywords in the meta keywords tag and don't use a meta description tag.

6. How should you use images on your site?

a. Use the alt tag to accurately describe the each image, and include descriptive content around each image.
b. Put your most important keyword in an alt tags followed by the word "graphic".
c. Just use them wherever it is necessary from an aesthetic perspective, without regard for alt tags because they aren't really that important.
d. Use alt tags to "hide" your full keyword list so you can increase your page's keyword density.

7. Which style tag is preferred by the W3C for emphasizing important text? replace "[" with "<"

a. [b]

b. [strong]

c. [heavy]

d. [bold]


Link Building

8. What types of websites are most trusted by search engines (authority sites)?

a. High PR websites
b. .edu and .gov websites
c. Low PR websites with lots of backlinks
d. Medium to High PR websites with lots of backlinks from other high ranking websites
e. Both b and d

9. Which of these sites will provide the most valuable link?

a. A PR 7 website
b. A PR 5 site closely related to your niche with strong backlinks from .edu and .gov (trusted) domains
c. A website with hundreds of pages of duplicate content that is banned in the search engines
d. A PR 6 website loosely related to your niche but with few 'trusted' backlinks

10. Suppose that you were offered the following 4 choices as a link - which one would be the most valuable?

a. An optimized contextual link (a link as part of a page's content with proper anchor text) from a closely related PR 5 site's main page content
b. A link on the links page of an unrelated PR 7 site - shared with 50 other links (and their two line descriptions)
c. A link on the links page of closely related PR 6 site - shared with 20 other links
d. A PR 6 link from a directory page with 10 other links only

11. If you were building links for greenwidgets.com, what would be your strategy in choosing anchor text?

a. Buy high PR links from closely related sites that offer traffic as well as link wealth
b. Use organic marketing tactics to encourage natural link growth using your site's content
c. Submit articles to article directories and link to your site's inner pages in those articles to build 'deep' links
d. All of the above

12. Which of these four is the most important in assessing a link?

a. The anchor text
b. The PR of the page you're getting the links from
c. The number of outgoing links on the link page
d. The title tag of the link page

13. How many links should you get for your site in the first 6 months (on average)?

a. 50-70 links a month
b. 100+ links a month
c. As many quality links as you can
d. 25-40 a month

General SEO

14. What does PageRank technically measure?

a. The linking power carried by one particular link
b. How many external, inbound links point to a particular page
c. The number and quality of the links pointing to a particular page
d. Your ranking position in the search engines

15. What does the term "Sandbox" describe in reference to Google's SERPs?

a. The ranking factors affecting all new websites that are targeting highly competitive keywords before targeting less competitive keywords
b. Google's system for penalizing sites exhibiting an overly-optimizing back-link structure
c. Google's penalty for building too many links too quickly
d. Google's play area for their staff during lunch break

16. What is the best way for websites with very little content (like ecommerce stores) rank highly for competitive product terms?

a. They have a lot of natural links (one-way, contextual) with optimal anchor text from a wide variety of websites
b. Their pages are stuffed with keywords and "white text"
c. They use content-generating software to spam the search engines and attain false rankings
d. They pay a lot of money to get high PR links

17. Which of these will NOT get your site penalized in Google?

a. Thousands of automatically-generated pages built only for the search engines
b. Building quality links at a steady pace
c. Scraping (stealing) content from other websites
d. Getting links from websites that Google considers to be from a 'bad' link neighborhood

18. Which of these five methods will not give you an accurate estimate of the search demand in a niche?

a. Overture search term figures
b. WordTracker.com numbers
c. Nichebot.com
d. Statcounter.com
e. Google Suggest

19. When designing the site structure of a website, which of the following statements is NOT a good idea?

a. Make a site map that points to each page on the site
b. Attempt to make all pages accessible from the home page by at most 3 clicks
c. Link all of your inner pages to all of your other websites
d. Create a category structure that goes from broad to narrow

20. Which is the best method of getting traffic to your site?

a. Pay-per-click ads
b. Pay for high PR links so that you get a PR yourself, which will help boost your own search engine rankings
c. Submit your website to search engines and popular directories, and focus on creating content
d. Create quality content that people in your niche would want to link to, and then promote that content through article syndication, blogs and forums
e. All of the above

Ok, now that you've answered all the 20 questions, compare your answers to the answer sheet below. This was a fairly basic quiz, so if you get less than 10 right, you should seriously consider reviewing the material in this newsletter. However, if you got more than 15 right, congratulations - you've got the basics right. Make sure that you apply these principles to your websites as well, otherwise you wont see good rankings.

Answers Key:

1. c
2. a
3. b
4. d
5. c
6. a
7. b
8. e
9. b
10. a
11. d
12. a
13. c
14. c
15. a
16. a
17. b
18. d
19. c
20. e