Search Engine Strategies
Perhaps the most important -- and inexpensive -- strategy is
to rank high for your preferred words on the main search
engines in "organic" or "natural" searches
(as opposed to paid ads). Search engines send robot "spiders" to
index the content on your webpage, so let's begin with steps
to prepare your webpages for optimal indexing. The idea here
is not to trick the search engines, but to leave them abundant
clues as to what your webpage is about.
1. Write a Page Title. Write a descriptive title for each
page of 5 to 8 words. Remove as many "filler" words
from the title, such as "the," "and," etc.
This page title will appear hyperlinked on the search engines
when your page is found. Entice searchers to click on the title
by making it a bit provocative. Place this at the top of the
webpage between the <HEAD></HEAD> tags, in this
format: <TITLE>Web Marketing Checklist -- 32 Ways to
Promote Your Website</TITLE>. (It also shows on the blue
bar at the top of your web browser.)
Plan to use some descriptive keywords along with your business
name on your home page. If you specialize in silver bullets
and that's what people will be searching for, don't just use
your company name "Acme Ammunition, Inc." use "Silver
and Platinum Bullets -- Acme Ammunition, Inc." The words
people are most likely to search on should appear first in
the title (called "keyword prominence"). Remember,
this title is nearly your entire identity on the search engines.
The more people see that interests them in the blue hyperlinked
words on the search engine, the more likely they are to click
on the link.
2. Write a Description and Keyword META Tag. The description
should be a sentence or two describing the content of the webpage,
using the main keywords and keyphrases on this page. If you
include keywords that aren't used on the webpage, you could
hurt yourself. Place the Description META Tag at the top of
the webpage, between the <HEAD></HEAD> tags, in
this format: Some search engines include this description below
your hyperlinked title.
<META NAME="DESCRIPTION" CONTENT="Increase
visitor hits, attract traffic through submitting URLs, META
tags, news releases, banner ads, and reciprocal links">.
Your maximum number of characters should be about 255; just
be aware that only the first 60 or so are visible on Google,
though more may be indexed.
When I prepare a webpage, I write the article first, then
write a description of the content in that article in a sentence
or two, using each of the important keywords and keyphrases
included in the article. This goes into the description META
tag. Then for the keywords META tag, I strip out the common
words, leaving just the meaty words and phrases. The keywords
META tag is no longer used for ranking by Google, but it is
currently used by Yahoo, so I'm leaving it in. Who knows when
more search engines will consider it important again? Every
webpage in your site should have a title, and META description
tag.
3. Include Your Keywords in Header Tags H1, H2, H3. Search
engines consider words that appear in the page headline and
sub heads to be important to the page, so make sure your desired
keywords and phrases appear in one or two header tags. Don't
expect the search engine to parse your Cascading Style Sheet
(CSS) to figure out which are the headlines -- it won't. Instead,
use keywords in the H1, H2, and H3 tags to provide clues to
the search engine. (Note: Some designers no longer use the
H1, H2 tags. That's a mistake. Make sure your designer defines
these tags in the CSS rather than creating headline tags with
other names.)
4. Make Sure Your Keywords Are in the First Paragraph of Your
Body Text. Search engines expect that your first paragraph
will contain the important keywords for the document -- where
most people write an introduction to the content of the page.
You don't want to just artificially stuff keywords here, however.
More is not better. Google might expect a keyword density in
the entire body text area of maybe 1.5% to 2% for a word that
should rank high, so don't overdo it. Other places you might
consider including keywords would be in ALT tags and perhaps
COMMENT tags, though few search engines give these much if
any weight.
5. Use Keywords in Hyperlinks. Search engines are looking
for clues to the focus of your page. When they see words hyperlinked
in your body text, they consider these potentially important,
so hyperlink your important keywords and keyphrases. To emphasize
it even more, the webpage you are linking to could have a page
name with the keyword or keyphrase, such as blue-widget.htm
-- another clue for the search engine.
6. Make Your Navigation System Search Engine Friendly. Some
webmasters use frames, but frames can cause serious problems
with search engines. Even if search engines can find your content
pages, they could be missing the key navigation to help visitors
get to the rest of your site. JavaScript and Flash navigation
menus that appear when you hover are great for humans, but
search engines don't read JavaScript and Flash. Supplement
them with regular HTML links at the bottom of the page, ensuring
that a chain of hyperlinks exists that take a search engine
spider from your home page to every page in your site. A site
map with links to all your pages can help, too. If your site
isn't getting indexed fully, make sure you submit a Google
Sitemap following directions on Google's site (www.google.com/webmasters/sitemaps/login).
Greg Tarrant's Google Sitemap Generator and Editor (www.sitemapdoc.com)
is a free tool to build these. Be aware that some content management
systems and e-commerce catalogs produce dynamic, made-on-the-fly
webpages. You can sometimes recognize them by question marks
in the URLs followed by long strings of numbers or letters.
Overworked search engines sometimes stop at the question mark
and refuse to go farther. If you find the search engines aren't
indexing your interior pages, you might consider URL rewriting,
a site map, and targeted content pages (see below). Commercial
solutions include Bruce Clay's Dynamic Site Mapping (www.bruceclay.com/web_dsm.htm)
and YourAmigo.com's SpiderLinker (www.youramigo.com)
7. Develop Several Pages Focused on Particular Keywords. Search
Engine Optimization (SEO) specialists no longer recommend using
external doorway or gateway pages, since nearly duplicate webpages
might get you penalized. Rather, develop several webpages on
your site, each of which is focused on a different keyword
or keyphrase. For example, instead of listing all your services
on a single webpage, try developing a separate webpage for
each. These pages will rank higher for their keywords since
they contain targeted rather than general content. You can't
fully optimize all the webpages in your site, but these focused-content
webpages you'll want to spend lots of time tweaking to improve
their rank.
8. Submit Your Webpage URL to Search Engines. Next, submit
your homepage URL to the important Web search engines that
robotically index the Web. Look for a link on the search engine
for "Add Your URL." In the US, the most used search
engines are: Google, Yahoo, MSN, AOL Search, and Ask.com. Some
of these feed search content to the other main search engines
and portal sites. For Europe and other areas you'll want to
submit to regional search engines. It's a waste of money to
pay someone to submit your site to hundreds of search engines.
Avoid registering with FFA (Free For All pages) and other link
farms. They don't work well, bring you lots of spam e-mails,
and could cause you to be penalized by the search engines.
We'll talk about submitting to directories under "Linking
Strategies" below. If your page is already indexed by
a search engine, don't re-submit it unless you've made significant
changes; the search engine spider will come back and revisit
it soon anyway.
9. Fine-tune with Search Engine Optimization. Now fine-tune
your focused-content pages (described in point 7), and perhaps
your home page, by making minor adjustments to help them rank
high. Software such as WebPosition (www.wilsonweb.com/afd/webposition.htm)
allows you to check your current ranking and compare your webpages
against your top keyword competitors. I use it regularly. WebPosition's
Page Critic provides analysis of a search engine's preferred
statistics for each part of your webpage. You can do this yourself
with WebPosition. The best set of SEO tools by far is Bruce
Clay's SEOToolSet (www.wilsonweb.com/afd/clay_seotoolset.htm).
You can find links to hundreds of articles on search engine
strategies in our Research Room (www.wilsonweb.com/cat/cat.cfm?page=1&subcat=mp_Search).
If you want more detail, consider purchasing my inexpensive
book Dr. Wilson's Plain-Spoken Guide to Search Engine Optimization
(http://www.wilsonweb.com/ebooks/seo.htm). Many small and large
businesses outsource search engine positioning because of the
considerable time investment it requires. If you outline your
needs, I can point you the right direction to SEO firms I know
and trust (www.wilsonweb.com/recommendations/seo-services.htm).
10. Promote Your Local Business on the Internet. These days
many people search for local businesses on the Internet. To
make sure they find you include on every page of your website
the street address, zip code, phone number, and the five or
10 other local community place names your business serves.
If you can, include place names in the title tag, too. When
you seek links to your site (see below), a local business should
get links from local businesses with place names in the communities
you serve and complementary businesses in your industry nationwide.
For more information, see my book How to Promote Your Local
Business on the Internet (www.wilsonweb.com/ebooks/local.htm).
Linking Strategies
Links to your site from other sites bring additional traffic.
But since Google and other major search engines consider
the number of incoming links to your website ("link
popularity") as an important factor in ranking, more
links will help you rank higher in the search engines, too.
Google has introduced a 10-point scale called PageRank (10
is the highest rank) to indicate the quantity and quality
of incoming links. All links, however, are not created equal.
Links from popular information hubs will help your site rank
higher than those from low traffic sites. You'll find links
to articles on linking strategies in our Research Room (www.wilsonweb.com/cat/cat.cfm?page=1&subcat=mp_Linking).
11. Submit Your Site to Key Directories, since a link from
a directory will help your ranking -- and get you traffic.
Be sure to list your site in the free Open Directory Project
(www.dmoz.com), overseen by overworked volunteer human editors.
This hierarchical directory provides content feeds to all the
major search engines. Plus it provides a link to your site
from an information hub that Google deems important. But don't
be impatient and resubmit or you'll go to the end of the queue.
Yahoo! Directory is another important directory to be listed
in, though their search results recently haven't been featuring
their own directory as prominently. Real humans will read (and
too often, pare down) your 200-character sentence, so be very
careful and follow their instructions (http://docs.yahoo.com/info/suggest/).
Hint: Use somewhat less than the maximum number of characters
allowable, so you don't have wordy text that will tempt the
Yahoo! editor to begin chopping. Business sites require a $299
annual recurring fee for Yahoo! Express to have your site considered
for inclusion within seven business days (http://docs.yahoo.com/info/suggest/busexpress.html).
Other directories to consider might be About.com and Business.com.
12. Submit Your Site to Industry Sites and Specialized Directories.
You may find some directories focused on particular industries,
such as education or finance. You probably belong to various
trade associations that feature member sites. Ask for a link.
Even if you have to pay something for a link, it may help boost
your PageRank. Beware of directories that solicit you for "upgraded
listings." Unless a directory is widely used in your field,
your premium ad won't help -- but the link itself will help
boost your PageRank and hence your search engine ranking. Marginal
directories come and go very quickly, making it hard to keep
up. Don't try to be exhaustive here.
13. Request Reciprocal Links. Find complementary websites
and request a reciprocal link to your site (especially to your
free service, if you offer one). Develop an out-of-the way
page where you put links to other sites -- so you don't send
people out the back door as fast as you bring them in the front
door. Your best results will be from sites that get a similar
amount of traffic to your site. High-traffic site webmasters
are too busy to answer your requests for a link and don't have
anything to gain. Look for smaller sites that may have linking
pages.
Check out Ken Evoy's free SiteSell Value Exchange. It (1)
registers your site as one that is willing to exchange links
with other sites that have a similar theme/topic content and
(2) searches for sites with similar topical content (http://sales.sitesell.com/value-exchange/).
Additionally, two automated link building software programs
stand out -- Zeus and Arelis. These search for complementary
sites, help you maintain a link directory, and manage reciprocal
links. However, use these programs to identify the complementary
sites, not to send impersonal automated e-mail spam to site
owners. When you locate sites, send a personal e-mail to the
administrative contact found in the Whois Directory (www.networksolutions.com/whois/).
If e-mail doesn't get a response, try a phone call. I've written
a brief e-book on Reciprocal Linking Tools outlining various
linking strategies and other software you can use to make the
task easier. (www.wilsonweb.com/ebooks/linkingtools.htm) One
warning: Be sure to only link to complementary sites, no matter
how often you are bombarded with requests to exchange links
with a mortgage site that has nothing to do with yours. One
way Google determines what your site is about is who you link
to and who links to you. It's not just links, but quality links
you seek.
14. Write Articles for Others to Use in their Newsletters.
You can dramatically increase your visibility when you write
articles in your area of expertise and distribute them to editors
as free content for their e-mail newsletters or their websites.
Just ask that a link to your website and a one-line description
of what you offer be included with the article. This is an
effective "viral" approach that can produce hundreds
of links to your site over time.
15. Begin a Business Blog. Want links to your site? Begin
a business blog on your website, hosted on your own domain.
If you offer excellent content and regular industry comment,
people are likely to link to it, increasing your site's PageRank.
Learn more about business blogs in our Research Room. (www.wilsonweb.com/cat/cat.cfm?page=1&querytype=category&subcat=ms_Blogs).
If you have a blog on a third-party blog site, occasionally
find reasons to talk about and link to your own domain.
16. Issue News Releases. Find newsworthy events and send news
releases to print and Web periodicals in your industry. The
links to your site in online news databases may remain for
years and have some clout with link popularity. However, opening
or redesigning a website is seldom newsworthy these days. You
may want to use a Web news release service such as PR Web (http://wilsonweb.prwebdirect.com).
Placing your website URL in online copies of your press release
may increase link popularity some. More info on PR is available
in our Research Room. (www.wilsonweb.com/cat/cat.cfm?page=1&subcat=mp_PR)
Issuing press releases is a traditional promotional strategy,
but there are other traditional approaches that can help you
as well.
Traditional Strategies
Just because "old media" strategies aren't on the
Internet doesn't mean they aren't effective. A mixed media
approach can be very effective.
17. Include Your URL on Stationery, Cards, and Literature.
This is a no-brainer that is sometimes overlooked. Make sure
that all reprints of cards, stationery, brochures, and literature
contain your company's URL. And see that your printer gets
the URL syntax correct. In print, I recommend leaving off the
http:// part and including only the www.domain.com portion.
18. Promote using traditional media. Don't discontinue print
advertising that you've found effective. But be sure to include
your URL in any display or classified ads you purchase in trade
journals, newspapers, yellow pages, etc. View your website
as an information adjunct to the ad. Use a two-step approach:
(1) capture readers' attention with the ad, (2) then refer
them to a URL where they can obtain more information and perhaps
place an order. Look carefully at small display or classified
ads in the back of narrowly-targeted magazines or trade periodicals.
Sometimes these ads are more targeted, more effective, and
less expensive than online advertising. Consider other traditional
media to drive people to your site, such as direct mail, classifieds,
post cards, etc. TV can be used to promote websites, especially
in a local market.
19. Develop a Free Service. It's boring to invite people, "Come
to our site and learn about our business." It's quite
another to say "Use the free kitchen remodeling calculator
available exclusively on our site." Make no mistake, it's
expensive in time and energy to develop free resources, such
as our Research Room (www.wilsonweb.com/cat/), but it is very
rewarding in increased traffic to your site. Make sure that
your free service is closely related to what you are selling
so the visitors you attract will be good prospects for your
business. Give visitors multiple opportunities and links to
cross over to the sales part of your site.
E-Mail Strategies
Don't neglect e-mail as an important way to bring people to
your website. Just don't spam. That is, don't send bulk unsolicited
e-mails without permission to people with whom you have no
relationship. You can find lots to details and tips in my
book The E-Mail Marketing Handbook (www.wilsonweb.com/ebooks/handbook.htm).
20. Install a "Signature" in your E-Mail Program
to help potential customers get in touch with you. Most e-mail
programs such as AOL, Netscape, and Outlook allow you to designate
a "signature" to appear at the end of each message
you send. Limit it to 6 to 8 lines: Company name, address,
phone number, URL, e-mail address, and a one-phrase description
of your unique business offering. Look for examples on e-mail
messages sent to you.
21. Publish an E-Mail Newsletter. While it's a big commitment
in time, publishing a monthly e-mail newsletter ("ezine")
is one of the very best ways to keep in touch with your prospects,
generate trust, develop brand awareness, and build future business.
It also helps you collect e-mail addresses from those who visit
your site but aren't yet ready to make a purchase. Ask for
an e-mail address and first name so you can personalize the
newsletter. You can distribute your newsletter using listservers
such as:
Constant Contact (www.wilsonweb.com/afd/roving.htm)
Got Marketing Campaigner (www.wilsonweb.com/afd/gotmarketing.htm)
AWeber (www.wilsonweb.com/afd/aweber.htm)
Topica Email Publisher (www.wilsonweb.com/afd/topica.htm)
Gammadyne Mailer (www.wilsonweb.com/afd/gammadyne.htm)
If you're just getting started you can use a free advertising-supported
newsletter from Yahoo! Groups (www.yahoogroups.com). See articles
on newsletter marketing in our Research Room (www.wilsonweb.com/cat/cat.cfm?page=1&subcat=me_Newsletter).
Subscribe to our free e-mail newsletter -- Web Marketing Today®,
published to 107,000+ confirmed opt-in subscribers worldwide.
Just to encourage you to take this step, I'm including three
free e-books that you can download and read: The Web Marketing
Checklist: 32 Ways to Promote Your Website, 12 Website Design
Decisions Your Business Will Need to Make, and Making & Marketing
E-Books, each worth $12 -- just for subscribing. No catch.
First Last
E-mail
Country (2-letter abbreviation)
Preferred Format Plain text HTML
We respect your privacy and never sell or rent our subscriber
lists. Subscribing will not result in more spam! I guarantee
it!
22. Send Offers to Your Visitors and Customers. Your own list
of customers and site visitors who have given you permission
to contact them will be your most productive list. Send offers,
coupon specials, product updates, etc. Personalizing the subject
line and the message may increase the results. You'll find
scores of articles on general e-mail marketing in our Research
Room (www.wilsonweb.com/cat/cat.cfm?page=1&subcat=me_Email-Gen).
23. Rent targeted e-mail lists. We abhor "spam," bulk
untargeted, unsolicited e-mail, and you'll pay a very stiff
price in a ruined reputation and cancelled services if you
yield to temptation here. But the direct marketing industry
has developed targeted e-mail lists you can rent -- lists consisting
of people who have agreed to receive commercial e-mail messages.
These lists cost $40 to $400 per thousand or 4¢ to 40¢ per
name. Do a smaller test first to determine the quality of the
list. Your best bet is to find an e-mail list broker to help
you with this project -- you'll save money and get experienced
help for no additional cost. You'll find many articles on opt-in
e-mail marketing in our Research Room (www.wilsonweb.com/cat/cat.cfm?page=1&subcat=me_Opt-in).
Miscellaneous Strategies
24. Promote Your Site in Online Forums and Blogs. The Internet
offers thousands of very targeted e-mail based discussion
lists, online forums, blogs, and Usenet news groups made
up of people with very specialized interests. Use Google
Groups to find appropriate sources (groups.google.com). Don't
bother with news groups consisting of pure "spam." Instead,
find groups where a serious dialog is taking place. Don't
use aggressive marketing and overtly plug your product or
service. Rather, add to the discussion in a helpful way and
let the "signature" at the end of your e-mail message
do your marketing for you. People will gradually get to know
and trust you, visit your site, and do business with you.
You can learn more from articles in our Research Room (www.wilsonweb.com/cat/cat.cfm?page=1&subcat=mm_Newsgroups).
25. Announce a Contest. People like getting something free.
If you publicize a contest or drawing available on your site,
you'll generate more traffic than normal. Make sure your sweepstakes
rules are legal in all states and countries you are targeting.
Prizes should be designed to attract individuals who fit a
demographic profile describing your best customers. See dozens
of articles on contests and incentives in our Research Room
(www.wilsonweb.com/cat/cat.cfm?page=1&subcat=ma_Incentives).
26. Ask Visitors to Bookmark Your Site. It seems so simple,
but make sure you ask visitors to bookmark your site or save
it in their Favorites list. (www.wilsonweb.com/wmta/bookmark.htm)
Why don't you bookmark the article you're reading right now?
You know you'll want to find it again soon.
27. Exchange Ads with Complementary Businesses. Banner exchange
programs don't work well these days. But consider exchanging
e-mail newsletter ads with complementary businesses to reach
new audiences. Just be sure that your partners are careful
where they get their mailing list or you could be in trouble
with the CAN-SPAM Act.
28. Devise Viral Marketing Promotion Techniques. So-called
viral marketing uses the communication networks (and preferably
the resources) of your site visitors or customers to spread
the word about your site exponentially. Word-of-mouth, PR,
creating "buzz," and network marketing are offline
models. #14 above, "Write Articles for Others to Use in
their Newsletters," is a viral approach. The classic example
is the free e-mail service, hotmail.com, that includes a tagline
about their service at the end of every message sent out, so
friends tell friends, who tell friends. You can learn more
in my short e-book Demystifying Viral Marketing. You can find
articles on viral marketing in our Research Room (www.wilsonweb.com/cat/cat.cfm?page=1&subcat=mm_Viral).
Paid Advertising Strategies
None of the approaches described above is "free," since
each takes time and energy. But if you want to grow your business
more rapidly, there comes a point when you need to pay for
increased traffic. Advertising is sold in one of three ways:
(1) traditional CPM (cost per thousand views), (2) pay per
click (PPC), and (3) pay per action, otherwise known as an
affiliate program or lead generation program. Do some small
tests first to determine response. Then calculate your return
on investment (ROI) before spending large amounts. Here are
some methods:
29. Buy a Text Ad in an E-Mail Newsletter. Some of the best
buys are small text ads in e-mail newsletters targeted at audiences
likely to be interested in your products or services. Many
small publishers aren't sophisticated about advertising and
offer attractive rates. For example, we offer low-priced 2-Line
Ads in Web Marketing Today each week (www.wilsonweb.com/ads/2-line-ad.htm).
Banner ads get such a low click-through rate (0.2%) these days
that I don't recommend paying much for them. Banner ads typically
cost about 50¢ to $1 per thousand page views.
30. Begin an Affiliate Program. Essentially, a retailer's
affiliate program pays a commission to other sites whose links
to the retailer result in an actual sale. The goal is to build
a network of affiliates who have a financial stake in promoting
your site. If you're a merchant you, need to (1) determine
the commission you are willing to pay (consider it your advertising
cost), (2) select a company to set up the technical details
of your program, and (3) promote your program to get the right
kind of affiliates who will link to your site. Consider affiliate
management software. More info in our Research Room (www.wilsonweb.com/cat/cat.cfm?page=1&subcat=em_Associate).
You can see current software reviewed in my book Report on
Affiliate Marketing Software 2005 (www.wilsonweb.com/ebooks/affilisoft.htm)
31. Purchase Pay Per Click (PPC) ads with Yahoo Search Marketing
(formerly Overture) (www.wilsonweb.com/afd/overture.htm) and
Google AdWords (https://adwords.google.com/select/). The top
ads appear as featured links to the right of "natural" search
engine results for your keywords. Your ranking is determined
by how much you've bid for a particular search word compared
to other businesses. This can be a cost-effective way to get
targeted traffic, since you only pay when someone actually
clicks on the link. An excellent e-book on PPC strategies is
Andrew Goodman's 21 Ways to Maximize Profits on Google AdWords
(www.wilsonweb.com/afd/pagezero.htm). More information on PPC
ads can be found in our Research Room (www.wilsonweb.com/cat/cat.cfm?page=1&subcat=mp_PPC).
Pay Per Click advertising can be quite cost-effective when
you learn how to use it. Yahoo Search Marketing even offers
some free credit to get you started. (www.wilsonweb.com/afd/overture.htm).
You can learn about software to administer such programs in
my Report on PPC Bid Management Software (www.wilsonweb.com/ebooks/bidmgt.htm).
32. List Your Products with Shopping Comparison Bots and Auction
Sites. Shopping bots compare your products and prices to others.
Google's Froogle (www.froogle.com) is free, so be sure to list
your products there. A Froogle listing also helps your product
page's ranking on Google. Some work on a PPC basis: mySimon
(www.mysimon.com), BizRate (www.bizrate.com), PriceGrabber
(www.pricegrabber.com), and Shopping.com (www.shopping.com).
Others expect a commission on the sale and sometimes a listing
fee, especially sales systems that host the merchant. These
include eBay (www.ebay.com), Yahoo! Shopping Auctions (http://auctions.shopping.yahoo.com),
Amazon zShops, Marketplace, and Auctions (http://zshops.amazon.com),
and Yahoo! Shopping (http://shopping.yahoo.com). You pay to
acquire first-time customers, but hopefully you can sell to
them a second, third, and fourth time, too.
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