
Are
You Losing the Search Engine Game?
Home > Promote > Search
Engines > Positioning
by
Bob McElwain
Many
wannabe and newbie webmasters tend to view search engines as their salvation.
While certainly important, they can not generate the traffic some hope for. Other
marketing methods must be employed as well.
One
problem that wasn't as much a factor a year or two ago lies in the move of off-line
businesses to the Web. Many come aboard with ample resources. They are prepared
to spend dollars in significant chunks. Many hire professionals to obtain good
search engine rankings.
Can You
Beat The Pros?
Face it. You are
maintaining a site and growing a business. You need to devote ninety percent of
your day to marketing. This doesn't leave much time for mastering the intricacies
of search engine positioning. It's likely the pros are going to beat you every
time.
With each passing day it is
more difficult to obtain top positions with a given keyword. Competition continues
to increase for any phrase selected. And more and more professionals continue
to climb on board with no end in sight.
That
Elusive #1 Position
The dream
of being #1 is only that: A dream.
Suppose
you do get a page to #1 with a given keyword on a particular search engine. How
long will it remain there? Not long, if the keyword is of interest to others.
Why? Because lots of people are looking
for the top spot, including the pros. Your page will be analyzed in detail until
a way is found to beat it. At some point, other submissions will out rank yours,
and you will begin to lose ground.
Forget
it. There are far more important things to do than worry about getting or maintaining
a #1 position.
So I Should Forget
Search Engines?
No. Just forget
about being #1, or even in the top ten. There are not enough hours in the day
to make search engine positioning a high priority. The better plan is to devote
what time is available to building pages designed to rank well. Submit them. Then
move on to more important things.
To
put this another way, be content with any page that ranks in the top 20 on a couple
of search engines. And realize that no page will rank as well on all of them.
Further, accept the fact that many pages will not rank anywhere near the top.
You can win the search engine game,
but only if you accept the above or a similar view as victory.
So
How Do I Do That?
First, write
your pages for your visitors, not the search engines. Only when content is ready
for your visitors, should you even consider search engines.
Then
consider each relative to your keyword list. You may find a couple that will rank
pretty well with a given keyword just as written. Fine. Edit the title, description
and keyword tags to emphasize this keyword. Maybe try to work it into the copy
a couple more times. But do nothing that disturbs the flow of the message to your
visitor.
What If That's Not Enough?
Build entry pages, often called gateway
or doorway pages. While there are many approaches to this task, I prefer the following
because it leads to pages that can be freely submitted without risk of them being
labeled spam. It goes like this.
Look
at your keyword list and select one you can use repeatedly while covering a topic
of interest to your visitors. The idea is to build great content, so repeated
use of the word must not detract. Be guided (but not driven) by the following.
> The content of the Title tag is
likely to be the title used in a search engine listing. Thus it is mandatory that
it be a headline that draws readers into your description. While holding firmly
to this objective, use the keyword as close to the beginning of the title as possible.
> The content of the Description tag
is likely to be what the search engines will use in the listing. Here the objective
is to assure the searcher clicks to your site. This is pure advertising copy:
it must compel the searcher to click the link. Again, while holding firmly to
the goal, use the keyword as close to the beginning of the statement as possible.
Use it a second time only if it makes sense to do so.
>
Include the keyword and variations in the Keyword tag as a suggestion to the spiders
of what to expect on the page.
> In
the body of the page, use the keyword in an H1 tag at the top of the page, and
in subheadings as possible. Again, position the keyword as close as possible to
the beginning of each statement. But remember your visitors will read this content.
Avoid awkward statements created in hopes of making spiders happy.
>
Within the content, use the keyword as often as you can without detracting from
readability. Again, as close to the beginning of paragraphs as possible. And in
the last line on the page. Recommendations vary, but I get good results when the
keyword is 2% to 3% of the copy. Some recommend as high as 10%, but I find that
at this density, the value to visitors is lost.
So
Now What?
Submit the page and
get on with business. If it places well, great. If it does not, and you can spare
the time, create another page.
At
some point, however, let it be. Get on with other marketing efforts. In the end,
tools such as advertising will provide far more targeted traffic than the search
engines can deliver.