Darren Hildreth
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Thursday, February 12, 2009
A web site is a location on the internet comprised of multiple web pages. The pages link together creating the site. Web pages (hereafter "pages") should be specific, providing mass to a web site.
Well written pages (and tools) give true value to the web site. In the end, well written pages will convert looky-lou users into clients and draw search engines as they demonstrate good SEO practices. A well written page will have a focus. We see sites all the time that have two dozen topics on the home page and then another dozen on each page thereafter. Pages like these are confusing to users and to search engines. When writing a page the author should first choose a great page title (thesis) about one topic. Add that title to the top of the page and then write about it, and it only. A home page is a little different. It is OK to lay out the scope of the site with A FEW topics. It should contain the thesis of your site. Each page thereafter should have the narrow thesis in the title and describe that topic in its content. They should all relate in one way or another to the main site thesis.
Wednesday, February 4, 2009
Having the right domain name is very important. A domain name is the name of your web site. For example, "Yahoo" is the domain name in www.yahoo.com and "ebay" is the domain name for www.ebay.com. Search engines give a lot of weight to web sites with the right keywords in them. In fact, some web sites have a hold on a top search engine spot simply because their domain name has the right words. Granted, in competitive markets the domain name is only a small factor in the overall SEO game. Some site owners pay huge amounts of money to companies specialized in making a site popular.
Search engines prefer authority sites. Over time, an authority site is given significant preference over any other sites.
To learn more about choosing your domain name, visit us "SEO and Domain Name Importance"
Thursday, January 8, 2009
Some internet gurus blog for a living. In some cases, it's their full time job and they work lax hours and they make a lot of money.
For most, we won't dedicate that amount of time.
However, most professionals who have something to promote or sell can benefit greatly from frequent blog posts. In experiments, we've learned that professionals who blog 3 times a week for 45-60 minutes increase their web site visibility significantly.
On my las vegas real estate web site I tried all sorts of things to promote it. I'd get the traffic to grow some but I didn't see the real traffic growth until I joined several online communities. Even then, I didn't see much change until I used the communities to blog and publish public content.
Within several months of blogging in a couple of communities, spending roughly 45 minutes a day, I saw my search engine rank begin to rise quickly. I also saw leads begin to flow in.
We have since run other experiments on other topics and web sites and found similar results. The key is to find a community that allows you to publish public content and network with others. It's also important that the community architecture is friendly to search engine optimization (SEO).
ProSPOTLIGHT is a community that provides the right tools and the right search engine visibility.
Monday, January 5, 2009
SEO stands for search engine optimization. It is the technical ways of saying, "get good search engine results." SEO is a science the every web geek tries to master. It is the reason that many of us use well designed web tools. SEO drives people to our web sites, which may be an online brochure, application, or some other web presentation. Optimization makes the text on pages stand out to engines so a site surfaces to the top.
There are two key concepts to web site SEO as far as search engines are concerned: popularity and relevance. Imagine your just wrote a book. It becomes very popular and well cited and becomes a best selling novel. Distributors make the most money by selling books people want to read. So, they advertise those books at the top of their lists and in the front shelves. Your web site is the same. Google, Yahoo, MSN, etc. want sites that are cited on other sites and they want the site's content to be relevant to what the searcher is looking for.
Relevance: write great quality content for your users. Figure out what key words you want to use in each page and write about that topic. Don't have less than 4 solid paragraphs with at least 2 descriptive sentences each. Engines crave content. They don't care about design (your users do but we'll talk about that later) and will likely discard most images, flash, and other fancy stuff. They want words to chew on. A few well written pages is much better than many with a couple of sentences each. Some site designers will get pages out there just so engines can see them with the intent to flesh out the pages later. That is OK as long as the "later" doesn't take too long. Poor pages can penalize a good site. We'll get into search engine timing later too.
Popularity: get others to link to you. If Ghandi recommends a book many people read it. If President Hinckley recommends a book many people read it. If the Pope recommends a book many people read it. Search engines are built to judge how many people are recommending other web sites and they know how popular the site doing the recommending is. The key is to get as many high ranked and relevant web sites to link to you as possible.
We will talk much more about SEO as we go. It is a very important topic in your web site's success.