Showing posts with label DIY SEO. Show all posts
Showing posts with label DIY SEO. Show all posts

Friday, April 18, 2008

Best Practices When Moving Your Site To A New Domain

Google Provides Best Practices Advice When Moving Your Site To A New Domain


Source: Webmaster Google Blog: Posted by Ríona MacNamara, Webmaster Tools Team

Planning on moving your site to a new domain? Lots of webmasters find this a scary process. How do you do it without hurting your site's performance in Google search results?

Your aim is to make the transition invisible and seamless to the user, and to make sure that Google knows that your new pages should get the same quality signals as the pages on your own site. When you're moving your site, pesky 404 (File Not Found) errors can harm the user experience and negatively impact your site's performance in Google search results.

Let's cover moving your site to a new domain (for instance, changing from www.example.com to www.example.org). This is different from moving to a new IP address; read this post for more information on that.

Here are the main points:

Test the move process by moving the contents of one directory or subdomain first. Then use a 301 Redirect to permanently redirect those pages on your old site to your new site. This tells Google and other search engines that your site has permanently moved.

Once this is complete, check to see that the pages on your new site are appearing in Google's search results. When you're satisfied that the move is working correctly, you can move your entire site. Don't do a blanket redirect directing all traffic from your old site to your new home page. This will avoid 404 errors, but it's not a good user experience. A page-to-page redirect (where each page on the old site gets redirected to the corresponding page on the new site) is more work, but gives your users a consistent and transparent experience. If there won't be a 1:1 match between pages on your old and new site, try to make sure that every page on your old site is at least redirected to a new page with similar content.

If you're changing your domain because of site rebranding or redesign, you might want to think about doing this in two phases: first, move your site; and second, launch your redesign. This manages the amount of change your users see at any stage in the process, and can make the process seem smoother. Keeping the variables to a minimum also makes it easier to troubleshoot unexpected behavior.

Check both external and internal links to pages on your site. Ideally, you should contact the webmaster of each site that links to yours and ask them to update the links to point to the page on your new domain. If this isn't practical, make sure that all pages with incoming links are redirected to your new site. You should also check internal links within your old site, and update them to point to your new domain. Once your content is in place on your new server, use a link checker like Xenu to make sure you don't have broken legacy links on your site. This is especially important if your original content included absolute links (like www.example.com/cooking/recipes/chocolatecake.html) instead of relative links (like .../recipes/chocolatecake.html).

To prevent confusion, it's best to make sure you retain control of your old site domain for at least 180 days.
Add your new site to your Webmaster Tools account, and verify your ownership of it. Then create and submit a Sitemap listing the URLs on your new site. This tells Google that your content is now available on your new site, and that we should go and crawl it.

Finally, keep both your new and old site verified in Webmaster Tools, and review crawl errors regularly to make sure that the 301s from the old site are working properly, and that the new site isn't showing unwanted 404 errors.

We'll admit it, moving is never easy - but these steps should help ensure that none of your good web reputation falls off the truck in the process.

Monday, April 14, 2008

Slow Loading Web Site Can Affect Rankings.


Slow Loading Web Site Can Affect Rankings. Test Your Web Site Load Speed

Did you know that if a page takes too long to load, it may not be spidered by the search engine robots. Try and ensure your pages load quickly.

How quickly? Consider how fast the major search engine pages load.
Are heavy graphics slowing your load speed? Try a test with http://www.optiview.com/

Wednesday, April 9, 2008

Google Sitelinks. How To Get Listed Under Google Sitelinks

How To Get Listed Under Google Sitelinks

Many webmasters wonder how they can make Google display additional Sitelinks for their websites. What exactly are Sitelinks, how can you get them and are they worth the effort?

What are Google Sitelinks?

Google Sitelinks are a collection of links that appears below the result of a website. These additional links link to main pages of the website. They are randomly and automatically chosen by Google's algorithm.

Sitelinks only appear for general search terms. You'll get Sitelinks if you search for "HP" but you won't get Sitelinks if you search for a term like "HP printer supplies". Sitelinks show up most often for searches on brand names.

Which links does Google use for the Sitelinks?

Google seems to use the first level links on a website for the Sitelinks. That means that all links that are not present on the homepage of your site won't be used as Sitelinks.

The links should be descriptive text links or image links with a descriptive IMG ALT attribute. JavaScript or Flash links are not considered for Sitelinks. Google uses 2 to 8 links for the Sitelinks of a website. Unfortunately, it's unclear how Google assigns the number of links to each website.

The text that is used for the Sitelinks can be the text that are used for the link (anchor text) on the homepage or the title of the linked page. It seems that Google prefers links that appear at the top of a web page.

How can you get Sitelinks for your website?

Unfortunately, there is nothing certain about Google's Sitelinks. The following factors seem to influence whether Google displays Sitelinks or not:

Your website must have a stable #1 ranking for the searched keyword. Other websites don't seem to get Sitelinks.

Your website must be at least 2 years old. It seems that younger websites don't get Sitelinks.

The number of searches and the number of clicks that your website gets for a certain keyword seem to be considered. Keywords that aren't searched often enough don't get Sitelinks. It also seems that your website has to get many clicks for the searched keyword.

The number of links that point to your website with the searched keyword as the anchor text seem to influence the creation of Sitelinks. Sitelinks only seem to appear for the main keywords of a website, not for all keywords for which a website is listed.

If your website meets these criteria Google might assign Sitelinks to your website for your most important keywords.

Sitelinks can be a nice addition for searches for general keywords but they usually won't appear for searches that consist of two to four words. These words are the most important keywords for website promotion and search engine optimization.

People who search for multiple word keywords are more likely to purchase goods or services than people using fewer words (source: Oneupweb Research).

Free SEO Tool To Check Web Site Customer Focus

Free SEO Tool To Check Web Site Customer Focus


How focused is your Web site to your customers' needs versus your needs?

Remember that your Web site should be built for your customer with words spoken just for your customer.

Visit the "We We Monitor" to see how customer focused your Web site copy really is.
http://www.futurenowinc.com/wewe.htm

4 Easy SEO Tips For Top Ranking Success

4 Easy SEO Tips For Top Ranking Success


Avoid the following things which can get you in trouble with search engines:

-Don't use hidden text or hidden links.
-Don't employ cloaking or lightning fast java redirects.
-Don't load up your pages with irrelevant words.
-Don't create multiple pages, subdomains, or domains with substantially duplicate content

Thursday, February 28, 2008

Peak Over The Shoulder of An SEO Guru...

Peak Over The Shoulder of An SEO Guru...


Learn The Insider Tips That We Use To
Dominate The Engines and Drive Massive Traffic For Clients.


"Search Engine Optimization Step By Step – We Reveal It All"
You’ve read the books, listened to the conference calls, read the reports and critiques on your site but you’ve never peaked over the shoulder of our Director of SEO and watched her work! Now you can.

For the first time ever we are doing a special exposé – a live Webinar where we reveal our SEO techniques.

You are truly getting an inside look at Bonnie's work. You'll not only watch her work, but you'll get play by play - as she explains optimization each step of the way. It'll be like sitting right there in her office. You may even hear her dog Lucy barking in the background.

Why are we letting you in and revealing our optimization process?
The truth is, we would love for you to hire us to handle your SEO but we know not everyone can afford it, and not everyone wants to outsource.

So, rather than not do any business with you at all, we realized it would benefit us (we are in business to make money after all) and more importantly YOU if we opened the door to Bonnie’s office and shared all of this vital information with you.

You might expect to pay a thousand dollars or more for this kind of personal, insider information. It’s definitely worth that and more! We are willing to offer this special Webinar one time only at the hugely discounted rated of $147 per person – but only for a limited time. Go here for full details: http://www.ecombuffet.com/Webinar/

So, how does your web page get selected to be the one we optimize during the Webinar?
Sign up for the Webinar today and we will select one person at random to be featured as the web page that gets optimized live on the Webinar.

This amazing opportunity at this low price is not something that comes along every day – in fact, I have never seen something like this offered at such a low price before. Act now before the price increases. This Friday, February 29, 2008 the price will go up to $247 – a full $100 more.

The date hasn’t been set for the Webinar yet, but it will be a Saturday. If you regiater for the event but are unable to attend live, it is OK – you will receive a copy of the live Webinar that you can watch any time, over and over again!

Sign up today for only $147 to watch a 10 year optimization expert at work. You’ll learn step by step everything she does to optimize a web page. http://www.ecombuffet.com/Webinar/

Monday, February 4, 2008

White Hat SEO - Black Hat SEO

White Hat SEO - Black Hat SEO


Search engine optimization methods are divided in two categories: black hat SEO and white hat SEO. Both methods can help you to get high rankings on search engines.

However, one method is likely to get your website banned on search engines and recent developments indicate that websites that use that method will be in trouble soon.

What is white hat SEO?

White hat SEO means that the webmaster doesn't try to trick search engines. White hat SEO means playing by the rules. Web pages that are created with white-hat SEO methods are beneficial to web surfers, search engines and webmasters.

What is black hat SEO?

Black hat SEO attempts to improve rankings in ways that are disapproved of by the search engines, or involve deception. These methods include cloaking, doorway pages, hidden text, etc.

Google and other search engines have made it clear that they penalize websites that use black hat SEO methods when they detect them.

Black-hat SEO methods seem to work. So why not use them?

Some black-hat SEO methods can lead to good results. There are quite a few webmasters who obtained high rankings for their web pages although they optimized them with methods that were not approved by Google and the other search engines.

You have probably also seen some web pages in the search results that looked strange or hardly related to what you've actually searched. So do black-hat SEO methods seem to work? Should you use them?

Nearly all black-hat SEO methods have been detected by search engines sooner or later. Javascript redirects or doorway pages used to work in the past but nowadays, these methods are usually the ticket to the land of banned websites.

While some cloaking methods continue to work at this time (if your competitors don't peach on you), it's likely that Google can detect them soon. The same is true for paid links. Some paid links can still not be detected by Google but it's only a matter of time until Google has the algorithms that can.

You might get in trouble even if you used black-hat methods years ago

The problem is that things that cannot be detected by Google now might be detected by Google tomorrow. And Google might also be able to find out what you did in the past.

A good example for a spam filter that also considers things that have been done in the past is the WikiScanner. WikiScanner can find manipulations that have been made in the past and it can also associate anonymous changes to the people and companies who made these "anonymous" changes.

Combine such a spam scanner which a web page archive like Archive.org and you have an easy way to track the spam history of a web page.

Things that you have done in the past might backfire on you.

Don't use black-hat SEO methods. As technical possibilities evolve, it's very likely that these methods will be detected even if you don't use them anymore. It's better to use tools that focus on white-hat SEO methods.

Websites that continue to play by the rules will have an advantage in Google's search results.

Tuesday, December 18, 2007

How Google, Yahoo & MSN Pick Your Organic Listing Description

How Google, Yahoo & MSN Pick Your Organic Listing Description


Having high rankings on search engines is a great thing. However, it's also important that your web pages are displayed with an attractive description in the search results. If the description is not appealing to web surfers then they might not click the link.

How do Google, Yahoo and MSN/Live create the descriptions and snippets that are used in the search results?

How Google creates descriptions and snippets

Google seems to use the description from the meta description tag if you search for a page by its URL, or if the searched keywords do not appear within the found page.

If the found web page doesn't have a meta description tag then Google seems to use the sentence that contains the searched keyword as the description.

If a web page is listed in the Open Directory Project (DMOZ.org) then Google might also use the description that is used in the DMOZ directory.

How Yahoo creates descriptions and snippets

Yahoo seems to use only the first part of the meta description which is complemented by a text snippet from the searched page that contains the searched keyword.

If a web page doesn't have a meta description, Yahoo will use the description of the web page from Yahoo's directory (if the page is listed there).

If a web page has no meta description and is not listed in the Yahoo directory, then Yahoo will display sentences from the found web page that contain the searched keywords.

How MSN/Live creates descriptions and snippets

MSN/Live seems to use the first sentence that contains the searched keyword as the description. If the searched keyword does not appear on the page, MSN/Live seems to use the first sentence that appears on the page.

If available, MSN/Live will also use the DMOZ directory description in the results.

What does this mean for your web pages?

If you want to make sure that your web pages are listed with an appealing description in the search results, you should use meta descriptions on your web pages. If you don't want to use the description that is used in the Yahoo directory and on DMOZ.org you should use the corresponding tags that prevent search engines from using these descriptions.

Tuesday, December 11, 2007

SEO Secrets Revealed By Top Google Staff Video

SEO Secrets Revealed By Top Google Staff Video

From blogging to site content, links from other sites, sitemaps, Google webmaster tools, meta tags, Google base, indexing and more. This is a nice 10 minute video interview with Matt Cutts 'the Google guy'

Friday, November 16, 2007

SEO Tip: Getting Your Web Visitors To Buy or Call

SEO Tip: Getting Your Web Visitors To Buy or Call


Once you pages are ranking well, you may want to fine tune your "call to action"
so that once your vistor finds and reads your message, they follow through to meet the objective and actually take some kind of action.

Tips on improving your call to action:

If your "call to action" is to get the visitor to make a phone call, try describing the action you want them to take.

Example: Here's all you need to do to find out why your website is not performing well. Walk over to the phone and give us a call right now at 1-623-242-8437

Also try increasing the size of your Phone number and make it real easy to read. Sometimes little changes make a huge difference in response.

OnTheAvenues has been providing Search Engine Optimization services since 1998. http://ontheavenues-diy-seo.blogspot.com/ Bonnie Burns SEO Consultant

Monday, October 22, 2007

How To Optimize Your E-Commerce Site For Top Search Engine Rankings

How To Optimize Your E-Commerce Site For Top Search Engine Rankings


A very well explained and detailed article that is well worth the read. This is by Yaro Starak


People who run e-commerce sites - sites that are focused on making sales of a product - have a history of great difficulty when it comes to search engine optimization. We are told to build links to improve search engine rankings, yet why would a person link to a site that is essentially a glorified shopping cart?

One of the most common ways that e-commerce store owners have gone about an SEO campaign is to add a content component to their site, hoping to attract links for the content, which in turn will raise the overall ranking of the entire domain. Unfortunately this tactic tends to impact the ability of the e-commerce site to do what it is meant to do - make sales - because the addition of content creates a “mixed message”, confusing visitors and reducing conversion.

Search engine traffic can be the difference between success and failure for many e-commerce sites, and since it’s free traffic, there isn’t a single store owner out there who wouldn’t want to capture top rankings. Many millionaires are created because of their ability to optimize for product related search terms in Google, Yahoo and MSN, so what is the secret to their success?

In this article I’m going to demonstrate one technique, a fairly extensive technique - a secret weapon - that search engine optimizers use to help one main site dominate rankings for both top level keywords and long tail phrases. This is powerful stuff, so if you own an e-commerce store or any website that you want to rank number one for a specific term, it’s time to pay attention!


Note I can’t take full credit for the ideas in this article. Most of what I am about to present to you comes from education I’ve gained from expert sources, such as the team at StomperNet, who have an automated system for their members to work together to implement what I am about to teach you, and also various presentations I’ve watched on DVD and in articles I’ve read at blogs, websites and in ebooks.

This is my interpretation, simplification and summarizing of what other people are currently teaching and implementing online today to raise their search engine rankings. This is cutting edge stuff - you won’t find too many people revealing techniques like this because they don’t want their competitors taking advantage. I hope no one comes after me after revealing this to you .

Prior Study
Before this article is going to make sense to you, you need at least a rudimentary understanding of search engine optimization (SEO). I suggest if you have not read my two part series on the The Top 8 Search Engine Optimization Techniques you go do so now. The articles will introduce you to some basic SEO principles, including a discussion of on-page SEO (internal elements of your website) and off-page SEO (external elements - other websites).

Off-page SEO is generally considered more difficult because you have to manipulate elements that other people control. It centers around your ability to generate links pointing to your site and this article specifically deals with how e-commerce sites can build high quality incoming links to raise rankings.

Related Categories
One of the key determinants of high search engine rankings is not just the number and quality of the links pointing to your site, but also the theme - the neighborhood that these sites live in. When talking neighborhoods online it’s all about categorization and niches. Your ideal outcome is to have sites that are relatively well ranked in related categories link to your e-commerce site, but as stated previously, there are not many enticements for a person who owns a niche content site to link an e-commerce site unless they are financial (paid links and affiliate programs).

If SEO is to work, links should be natural. It’s well known Google frowns upon links purchased purely for SEO sake and in most cases affiliate links do not pass on pagerank because of the structure of the links (although some affiliate programs have figured out ways around this).

Your goal if you want to push your e-commerce site up in the rankings, is to obtain links from sites in your neighborhood using organic methods.

Build Your Neighborhood
Advanced search engine optimizers conduct a process known as clustering to attract neighborhood links. To put it simply, clustering is a process were you own the neighborhood, but the search engines don’t realize it.

To establish a cluster you first have to build category-specific content sites, each existing independently and “owned” by an entity not related to your e-commerce site. There can’t be any public linkage between your e-commerce site and the niche content sites. That means all public information - domain records, company records - anything that a search engine could get a hold of and then realize that your e-commerce is related to the niche site, thus reducing the SEO value of links between the sites.

Here’s an example. If your e-commerce site sells gym equipment, then you could build a series of niche sites focused on topics like how to build muscle, dieting, strength training, athletics, sports, competitive weight lifting and other similar sites. You can branch out into niches that are not quite as specific as my examples, as what is considered in your neighborhood is quite broad. Topics such as male hair loss, dating, gay communities and other demographically related niches work too, as long as the theme is generally congruent.

Remember, this is not specifically about attracting traffic to your e-commerce site from the niche sites. While click-through traffic from your niche site neighborhood is certainly an added advantage, your goal here is to build up quality niche sites and use these to send links to your e-commerce site.

One Way Links
It’s critical to note the importance of one way links. Reciprocal linking has long been a beginner SEO technique, but frankly it doesn’t work, especially if your end goal is to dominate top level keyword phrases. If you want to rank highly you have to attract one way links from authoritative content sites and that’s exactly what this technique is all about.

If you can’t convince others content sites to link to your e-commerce site then you have to create content sites yourself and send links from these sites to your e-commerce site.

Step One: Build Independent Content Sites

Clearly this is not a task that can be accomplished in a matter of days or even weeks. You can outsource the creation of your sites and the content for the sites and then upload them to the web, but that is only half the equation. Next you have to build the niche sites into authority sites by attracting links to each niche site (yes there is a lot of link building in this method!).

Step Two: Market Your Niche Sites
The next step in the process is to go to work using all the usual tools of the trade to build links to your niche sites. Since each site is built on a niche content model, it should be easier to attract links. People link to content, not products in a shopping cart (well in most cases anyway), hence this is why you go to all the trouble of building completely independent content sites.

Given today’s social media dominated world, I would recommend using blogs for the niche content sites, build them up over time and then use them as the linking power source for your e-commerce site.

To build links to your niche sites you can use some or all of the following techniques, and this is far from a comprehensive list of options:

Article marketing
Social bookmarking (digg, propeller, reddit, del.icio.us, etc)
Social networking (facebook, linkedin, myspace, squidoo, etc)
Blog posts and comments
Content seeding
Forum posts
Video marketing
Podcasting
Publicity

And all the usual linkbait techniques out there. Some techniques are easy and can be automated, some take more time but bring in higher quality links.

In my opinion if you are in a hurry or you are very busy, I’d complete this process using one, or a combination of, these three methods:

1. Hire a professional blogger to handle each niche site and have them build up the site over time using as many of the techniques he or she is capable of implementing. This can be a costly option, but you only have to deal with one person per niche site.

2. Purchase sites outright that already have authority - By far the quickest method and there are hundreds of bargains out there, so it’s probably the cheapest method too, especially because you are buying sites for links and not revenue. See these articles for advice on buying websites -

Buying and Selling Websites The Ed Dale Way
How To Buy A Website And Flip It For Profit
How I Generate $1675 Per Month Passive Income From Buying Websites

3. Outtask to individuals to perform each marketing technique - This method is more specialized as you have one person, usually a freelancer in a country were the cost of labor is cheaper, perform each task. You hire someone to write articles, one person to do article marketing, another to post in forums, etc. There are also outsourcing companies that will perform these roles for you for a fee.

It all depends what systems you are prepared to work with and how much time you want to spend managing everything. If your e-commerce site is significant in scope and a few number one rankings would mean hundreds of thousands or even millions of dollars in sales, then hiring a person to oversee the development of your cluster network is a smart idea.

Here’s how the structure takes shape after you implement step two (note the circles represent only a small sample of the link building techniques you should apply):

Build A Massive Neighborhood
Now you have the basic structure of the cluster neighborhood method for optimizing a website. The next step is to go work and replicate this process many hundred or even thousand times over. If you want to dominate the search engines in a competitive industry - and most product categories are very competitive and will become more competitive over time - then your cluster network of sites must be extensive.

If your e-commerce site has many thousands of one way links from niche content sites perceived by search engines to be sites of quality, then it will be hard for the competition to beat you. Top level keyword phrases can bring to your e-commerce site thousands of daily visitors and despite the obvious work involved in establishing so many niche sites, the benefits are obvious.

Remember too that this is not a technically challenging venture, you simply need content and marketing. Automated processes can be set up to implement content creation and marketing for you and if you manage a serious online business, this is a process that you should expect will become mandatory for success online.

Opportunities For Entrepreneurs
The techniques in this article represent an opportunity for any budding entrepreneur who would like to help e-commerce businesses conduct SEO. Every step of the cluster site building process could be completed by an outsourcing service or business.

You can build niche sites for companies and/or conduct online marketing for the niche sites, delivering a comprehensive search engine optimization service. Combine niche-site creation with savvy link baiting methods and you have the formula for an industry leading search marketing firm - of course, that’s easier said than done!

One thing is clear, simply attracting links to one site may not be enough in the future if you want to dominate search results. Companies will go to work building huge networks of content sites that exist purely as anchors to help raise the profile of a few key income generating sites.

This does represent a fantastic opportunity for people who own niche sites as they may become the target of buyouts regardless of whether their sites are profitable or even revenue producing.

That is good news for all you niche bloggers out there - even if you don’t make big money today, you might pocket some nice cash when a company comes knocking at your door to buy your site just for the links and authority you have, further cementing the small business reality I discussed in one of my very early blog articles - You may never make real money until you sell your business!


Source: Yaro Starak

SEO QA Checklist & 20 Hard Core SEO Tips

SEO QA Checklist


1. For dynamic pages does each page type have a unique Title, Meta Description and Meta Keywords tag formula?

2. For static pages does each page have a unique Title, Meta Description and Meta Keywords tag?

3. Inspect your robots.txt file and make sure that only URLs that you don't want the search engines to see are listed. Examples of pages you probably don't want indexed include login, email to a friend, printer friendly pages, most footer pages, etc. If you see "Disallow: /", this means you are blocking all robots from crawling the entire site. This is not good.

4. Run a report of all dynamic page types that have a "noindex" tag and confirm that only page types that you don't want the search engines to see have this tag.

5. Test all URL redirects. Make sure the following redirects are in place
a. Non-www version of every URL 301s to www version (or vice-versa)
b. URLs that end in / 301 to version that has no / (or vice-versa)
c. All mixed case URLs 301 to lowercase versions
d. Test version subdomains (e.g. alpha.site.com) either 301 to root domain or else are password protected.

6. Make sure any URLs that are being eliminated 301 to the new version of the URL or if there is no new version that they 301 redirect to the root domain or a related directory on the site.

7. If you are using a sitemaps xml file to update Google, Yahoo & MSN sitemaps has the xml file been updated to reflect the new changes?

8. Run a crawler against your site such as Linkscan to make sure that your pages are not delivering error codes and to see if there are any chain redirects (e.g. 301 to 301 to 301). Avoid chain redirects if possible.

9. Create a list of items that have changed that could affect SEO to help quickly diagnose any issues that may result from the new release. Typical items include:
a. Addition of or reduction of links on a page
b. Rewritten page copy and meta information
c. Addition of new pages
d. Eliminated URLs
e. Redirected URLs

20 Hard Core SEO Tips

1. Redesign your Web site once or twice a year.

2. Add 5 pages of content to your site every week.

3. Change the titles on your least successful pages twice a year.

4. Use one good keyword in your url.

5. Do not stuff your title tag with keywords.

6. Find 3 SEO forums that accept site review requests and write 20 reviews in each forum before you ever ask a question.

7. Create your own SEO book by collecting your favorite SEO forum and blog posts, newsletter articles, and tech tips in a .PDF file that you review once a month.

8. Create a new SEO book once each year, replacing the one you just created in the previous step.

9. Optimize your best performing page for the exact mirror of your targeted keyword expression (turn an ABCD page into a DCBA page).

10. Find 5 low-traffic blogs or forums that are consistently active and support them through comments, links, and referrals WITHOUT being self-promotional.

11. Write 10 blocks of ad copy (no more than 25 words each) every week. Place them on the Web where they won't offend anyone.

12. Write 1 full-page announcement about your Web site each week. Post it some place where it won't offend anyone.

13. Get a text editor like Wordpad (the fewer frills the better) and use it to code one of your Web pages from scratch.

14. Learn how to write Who, What, Where, When, and Why in 4 paragraphs or less.

15. Create a 1-page listing of 20 UNKNOWN Web sites you wish you had created. Post that page on your site.

16. Create a forum signature that does not promote your Web site. Put it into every forum profile you have created.

17. Design a 5-10 page Web site about a community project or charitable activity. Promote that site to number 1. Now repeat the process without changing or building more links for your first site.

18. Find a niche directory you have never heard of before that you feel is honestly listing unique, useful Web sites. Promote that niche directory through links and comments on your own sites until you see improvement in its Compete, Quantcast

19. Find a friend or relative who has no clue about Web sites and persuade him or her to create a Web site. You must restrain yourself and ONLY give advice on how to build and promote the site.

20. Define a metric that uses from three to five factors OTHER THAN Google PageRank, Alexa Rankings, Compete Rankings, Quantcast Rankings, and backlink counts. Use this metric to track five to ten sites you don't control for six months.

Thursday, October 18, 2007

Why Hidden Text On A Website Is A Problem?

Why is hidden text a problem?


Are you sure that your website is free of hidden text? There are many ways to create hidden text unintentionally. By checking your web pages, you make sure that you won't be penalized for something you did not intend to do.

Why is hidden text a problem?

Google doesn't like hidden text and hidden links at all. Here's the official text from Google's guidelines:

Hiding text or links in your content can cause your site to be perceived as untrustworthy since it presents information to search engines differently than to visitors. [...]

Hidden links are links that are intended to be crawled by Googlebot, but are unreadable to humans. [...]

If your site is perceived to contain hidden text and links that are deceptive in intent, your site may be removed from the Google index, and will not appear in search results pages.

How can you hide text on your web pages?

There are many methods that allow you to hide text on your web pages:

using white text on a white background
including text behind an image
using CSS to hide text
setting the font size to 0 or a negative value
If you wittingly use some of these methods on your web pages, you should make sure that you remove them as soon as possible.

Are you sure that you don't use hidden text unintentionally?

There are a few legitimate reasons to hide text on a web page. For example, you could use CSS to replace a text link with a more pretty graphical button.

Many content management systems (CMS) use the CSS display:none technique to create drop-down menus or other expandable web page elements. Although these elements are not designed to mislead web surfers, search engines might interpret the hidden texts as a spamming attempt.

Another way to create hidden text is to provide enhancements for visually impaired people. If a lot of text on your website can only be seen by screen reader software and not by regular web surfers then some search engines might misinterpret this as spamming.

How can Google discover hidden text on your web pages?

It's relatively easy for Google to find out if your website contains hidden text. However, it's difficult to find out whether a page uses hidden text for legitimate reasons or not.

Google's spam filters might be applied to your website if the following happens:

The hidden content contains keywords that are unrelated to the rest of your content.

The hidden text contains too many keywords. If a large part of your web page content is hidden, your website might look suspicious.

You overuse "legitimate" ways to hide text on your web pages. This might flag your site for a human review.

One of your competitors reports your site to Google because he detected spam techniques on your site.

Google won't ban your site if you use hidden text in a way that appears to be legitimate. They try to detect intent. Don't try to cheat search engines. If you use ethical search engine optimization methods then you don't risk getting banned from the search results.

Tuesday, October 16, 2007

What You Can Do To Get High Rankings On Google If You Have A Brand New Website

What You Can Do To Get High Rankings On Google If You Have A Brand New Website

It's easier to get high rankings on Google with older websites than it is with new websites. Why is this so and what can you do to get high rankings on Google if you have a brand new website?

Why is it easier to get high rankings with older websites?

Brand new domain names are often used by spammers to make a quick buck. These spammers buy hundreds of domains, fill them with automatically created scraper content and hope to make some money with the ads that appear on these sites.

In addition, some webmasters use new domains to test new search engine spamming techniques.

As it is difficult for Google to find out whether a new domain can be trusted or not, Google invented a set of filters that downranks new websites until Google thinks that they can be trusted.

What can you do to overcome Google's filters for new websites?

It's very difficult to get high rankings before Google trusts your website. For that reason, do things that make your website trustworthy:

Start with the right keywords

It's not possible to get a top 10 ranking for highly competitive general search term such as "cars" for a new website. However, it is possible to get high rankings for terms such as "used car dealer atlanta".

It's not just easier to get high rankings for more specific search terms, these terms are also much more likely to convert to sales. Take some time to find the right keywords for your site.

Get links to your website

It is not possible to get high rankings on Google without good incoming links. Try to get as many links from related websites as possible. If the right websites link to your site then Google will trust your website more quickly.

Optimize your web pages

While more links to your website greatly increase your chance of getting high search engine rankings, you must also tell search engines for which search terms you want to have high rankings. Optimize the content of your web pages to make sure that Google lists your website for the right search terms.

Search engines should be able to parse the content of your web pages easily. Consider this when creating a new website from scratch.

Wait

A website that has been online for several years is much less likely to game Google's ranking algorithms than newer sites. For that reason, your Google rankings will also increase just by waiting (given that you followed the steps 1 to 3).

If you do it correctly, getting high search engine rankings for brand new websites is possible. It's important that you do the right things in the right order.

Monday, October 15, 2007

SEO Tip: Using H1, H2 and H3 HTML Codes

Using H1, H2 and H3 HTML Codes


Is your website using H1, H2 and H3 HTML codes for the main heading and the sub-headings?

If not, you are missing out on one of the major techniques that will help drive your site to higher rankings.

Don't take your website designer's word for it, go to your Home page and hit Ctrl+U and you can view the source code for the page.

Scroll down the page until you get to the headings and subheadings and see if they are enclosed within H1 tags for the main heading and within h2 Subhead and so on using H2 and H3 for all of the subheads.

While you are at on the page, go back to near the top of the pageand hunt for your Title tag and make sure the words included within the has your important keywords
and phrase in it and nothing else.

Note that your Title tag and your main headline on your page are not the same thing.

Do this quick inspection and then take corrective action if necessary and you be on the road to a high search engine ranking.

Of course, you will need keywords and keyword phrases on your page and you will need incoming links with keywords in the anchor text to get the highest ranking, but take one step at at time.
OnTheAvenues has been providing Search Engine Optimization services since 1998. http://ontheavenues-diy-seo.blogspot.com/ Bonnie Burns SEO Consultant

Wednesday, October 10, 2007

What is Latent Semantic Indexing or LSI?

What is Latent Semantic Indexing or LSI?

The term "latent" means "hidden" or "concealed."
The term "Semantic" means "interconnected system."
The term "index" as a verb means "order."

Roughly translated, LSI is a "hidden interconnected system order" that is being used in search engines to deliver a measure of "artificial intelligence" to the search engines. With LSI influences in Google, search engines are beginning to understand a whole lot more about the "context" of a message.

Not only must we remember the importance of writing excellent, high value content into our Web site, but we also need to understand that it is all based on what a search engine "knows" about a specific topic based on its overall collected data.

One easy way to find out what words a search engine "thinks" are connected to your important keywords, is to use Wordtrackers "Full Search Function" in the members area of Wordtracker.
http://www.wordtracker.com/moreinfo.html

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OnTheAvenues has been providing Search Engine Optimization services since 1998. http://ontheavenues-diy-seo.blogspot.com/ Bonnie Burns SEO Consultant

Thursday, September 27, 2007

Increase Your Sales by Creating a Trustworthy Website

Increase Your Sales by Creating a Trustworthy Website

Even if you have high search engine rankings, people still might not buy from you. The reason for that is that your website might not be trustworthy. Of course, you may need a professional web design to create trust.

In addition, there are a few other things that are necessary to convince your website visitors that they should do business with you:

1. Show your visitors who you are

It's amazing how many Internet businesses don't list their postal addresses. Do they have something to hide?

If your customers don't know who you are and where you live they might refrain from doing business with you. Show your visitors that you have nothing to hide.

2. Show your visitors how you're different

Why should someone buy from you and not from your competitors? Is there anything that distinguishes you from the rest?

Show your website visitors how you're different and why they should use your products or services instead of your competitors'.

3. Show your awards and testimonials from satisfied customers

Web surfers don't like risk. If other people used your products and services before then it's less risky for new customers to try them. Your website visitors want to be reassured that you're a serious business.

If your company or your product has received awards then show them to your visitors. If your current customers have something positive to say about your products or services, list these testimonials on your website.

Show your visitors how other people benefited from your products and services and what other people say about you.

4. Show your guarantees

As mentioned above, web surfers don't like risks. That's why guarantees will help you to sell more.

Show your visitors that you're 100% sure that your product or service really delivers. Give strong guarantees so that your visitors can only win if they try your products.

It's important to have a trustworthy website if you want to sell something on the Internet. Show your visitors that your business is real and that they can trust you by using the tips above.


Incoming Links for High Search Engine Rankings

Getting Incoming Links for High Search Engine Rankings

Incoming links are one of the most important factors for high search engine rankings. If your website doesn't have enough incoming links then it's very difficult to get high rankings for a competitive search term.

It's important that you get the right kind of links. If you have 20 good incoming links then you'll get better rankings than with 100 bad incoming links.

So what makes a good incoming link? There are several points that can make a link better than other links:

1. The link should use the keyword in the anchor text

If you want to get high rankings for a search term like "buy brown shoes" then the links to your website should use exactly that text. The text that is used to link to your site (the "anchor text") influences the words for which your website will get high rankings.

Make sure that the texts that are used to link to your website contain words for which you want to get high rankings on search engines.

2. The link should be from a relevant page

Links from related web pages usually work better than links from unrelated pages. Links from unrelated pages won't hurt your rankings but Google likes links from websites that are related to yours better. That means not a link on a page that has nothing but links of other sites.


3. The link should go to a relevant page on your site

While it's okay to get links to your home page it is better to get links to the page that is most relevant to the chosen anchor text. If the link text is "buy brown shoes" then you should make sure that the link goes to a page that deals with brown shoes.

If the link text matches the content of the linked pages then it's more likely that your web page is really relevant to that term and it's more likely that you'll get high rankings for that search term.

In addition, you increase the user experience. If a surfer clicks on a "buy brown shoes" link it's much more likely that he'll buy on your site if he gets the correct page.

4. It's good if the link is from an authority site

Links from pages with high authority will help to increase the TrustRank of your website. Links from websites with high PageRank have a positive effect on the rankings of your own site.

Unfortunately, the Google PageRank that is displayed in the green bar in Google's toolbar is not the PageRank that Google uses for its ranking algorithm. The PageRank displayed in the toolbar is outdated, often wrong and more a gimmick than a real help (details can be found here and here). You'll often find websites with low PageRank that rank higher than pages with high PageRank in the search results.

Don't trust the green pixels and use common sense. If a website is well known and if the site has good search engine rankings then it's likely that it is also an authority website.

5. The link must not have a nofollow attribute

The nofollow attribute tells search engines that they should not follow a link. Links with that attribute don't help your search engine rankings.

Unfortunately, you have to check the HTML code of your link partners to find out if they use a nofollow attribute to link to your site.

Further information on how to get high quality links can be found in our free link building eBook. If you build links to your website as explained in the eBook, your website will get the best possible rankings on Google and other search engines.

Friday, September 14, 2007

Google and Duplicate Content

Google and Duplicate Content

From: Google Webmaster Central Blog

Deftly dealing with duplicate content

Also Must Read: Google and Dupicate Content Used By URLS

At the recent Search Engine Strategies conference in freezing Chicago, many of us Googlers were asked questions about duplicate content. We recognize that there are many nuances and a bit of confusion on the topic, so we'd like to help set the record straight.

What is duplicate content?
Duplicate content generally refers to substantive blocks of content within or across domains that either completely match other content or are appreciably similar. Most of the time when we see this, it's unintentional or at least not malicious in origin: forums that generate both regular and stripped-down mobile-targeted pages, store items shown (and -- worse yet -- linked) via multiple distinct URLs, and so on. In some cases, content is duplicated across domains in an attempt to manipulate search engine rankings or garner more traffic via popular or long-tail queries.

What isn't duplicate content?
Though we do offer a handy translation utility, our algorithms won't view the same article written in English and Spanish as duplicate content. Similarly, you shouldn't worry about occasional snippets (quotes and otherwise) being flagged as duplicate content.

Why does Google care about duplicate content?
Our users typically want to see a diverse cross-section of unique content when they do searches. In contrast, they're understandably annoyed when they see substantially the same content within a set of search results. Also, webmasters become sad when we show a complex URL (example.com/contentredir?value=shorty-george〈=en) instead of the pretty URL they prefer (example.com/en/shorty-george.htm).

What does Google do about it?
During our crawling and when serving search results, we try hard to index and show pages with distinct information. This filtering means, for instance, that if your site has articles in "regular" and "printer" versions and neither set is blocked in robots.txt or via a noindex meta tag, we'll choose one version to list. In the rare cases in which we perceive that duplicate content may be shown with intent to manipulate our rankings and deceive our users, we'll also make appropriate adjustments in the indexing and ranking of the sites involved. However, we prefer to focus on filtering rather than ranking adjustments ... so in the vast majority of cases, the worst thing that'll befall webmasters is to see the "less desired" version of a page shown in our index.

How can Webmasters proactively address duplicate content issues?

Block appropriately: Rather than letting our algorithms determine the "best" version of a document, you may wish to help guide us to your preferred version. For instance, if you don't want us to index the printer versions of your site's articles, disallow those directories or make use of regular expressions in your robots.txt file.

Use 301s: If you have restructured your site, use 301 redirects ("RedirectPermanent") in your .htaccess file to smartly redirect users, the Googlebot, and other spiders.

Be consistent: Endeavor to keep your internal linking consistent; don't link to /page/ and /page and /page/index.htm.
Use TLDs: To help us serve the most appropriate version of a document, use top level domains whenever possible to handle country-specific content. We're more likely to know that .de indicates Germany-focused content, for instance, than /de or de.example.com.

Syndicate carefully: If you syndicate your content on other sites, make sure they include a link back to the original article on each syndicated article. Even with that, note that we'll always show the (unblocked) version we think is most appropriate for users in each given search, which may or may not be the version you'd prefer.

Use the preferred domain feature of webmaster tools: If other sites link to yours using both the www and non-www version of your URLs, you can let us know which way you prefer your site to be indexed.

Minimize boilerplate repetition: For instance, instead of including lengthy copyright text on the bottom of every page, include a very brief summary and then link to a page with more details.

Avoid publishing stubs: Users don't like seeing "empty" pages, so avoid placeholders where possible. This means not publishing (or at least blocking) pages with zero reviews, no real estate listings, etc., so users (and bots) aren't subjected to a zillion instances of "Below you'll find a superb list of all the great rental opportunities in [insert cityname]..." with no actual listings.

Understand your CMS: Make sure you're familiar with how content is displayed on your Web site, particularly if it includes a blog, a forum, or related system that often shows the same content in multiple formats.

Don't worry be happy: Don't fret too much about sites that scrape (misappropriate and republish) your content. Though annoying, it's highly unlikely that such sites can negatively impact your site's presence in Google. If you do spot a case that's particularly frustrating, you are welcome to file a DMCA request to claim ownership of the content and have us deal with the rogue site.

OnTheAvenues has been providing Search Engine Optimization services since 1998. http://ontheavenues-diy-seo.blogspot.com/ Bonnie Burns SEO Consultant

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Monday, September 10, 2007

SEO Tip: Google's Keyword Research Tool

Google's Keyword Research Tool


Did you know that you can use Google's keyword research tool which suggests keywords "related" to the term/phrase you enter. Also it shows you relative search volume by month and comparatively.

Give it a try here. It's free and no account is required to use it:
https://adwords.google.com/select/KeywordToolExternal

With Site Related Keywords, the tool tells you what AdSense thinks your site is about and then related keywords.

OnTheAvenues has been providing Search Engine Optimization services since 1998. http://ontheavenues-diy-seo.blogspot.com/ Bonnie Burns SEO Consultant