Archive for the ‘Forums’ Category

Don’t Build Links To Your Web Pages

Tuesday, January 20th, 2009

On-Site SEOThere is no point in building links to your web pages unless you have already done your on site SEO first. In a very popular previous post we did we discussed the difference between an SEO personality and a Link Builder’s personality. An SEO typically focuses on optimizing the content ON the web site. (aka On Site SEO). That is what we are going to talk about today; best practices for On Site SEO.

Google describes SEO this way: Search engine optimization is often about making small modifications to parts of your web site. When viewed individually, these changes might seem like incremental improvements, but when combined with other optimizations, they could have a noticeable impact on your site’s user experience and performance in organic search results.

You are most likely familiar with many of the topics below, but they are essential ingredients for any web page. However, you may not be making the most out of them and we recommend a refresher from time to anyway to keep you on track. When optimizing your site you have to walk the fine line between what’s best for the humans visiting your site and what’s best for the search engine spiders because they both see the site very different. Lets jump in to it and get going!
 

Best Practices For On Site SEO

Create unique, accurate page meta titles: This may seem pretty straightforward but ask yourself seriously… Did you or your webmaster come up with a "standard" title tag containing a few specific keywords and just copy paste that on every page of the site? That’s very common.You should try to use specific titles that are unique to the content and that contain the keywords for THAT PAGE ONLY. Also remember, with most search engines the title tag is what will show in the search results.
 
The description meta tag: should be a sentence or two describing the content on the page and like the title tag should be unique. Depending on the size of your site you may need to think this through a bit. You may want to start a spreadsheet (like Excel or Google Docs) List each page of your site, then a title column, description column, and keywords column and PLAN your SEO. Be sure it’s all unique. If your site has hundreds or even thousands of pages you may have to generate the tags dynamically but it’s still doable.
 
Use SEO friendly URL’s: You may be thinking the URL is what it is.  No way… like most parts of the site the URL structure can be controlled as well and needs to be optimized. Which do you think is better for your visitors; this URL: http://www.mysite.com/?cat=18&item=15 or this URL: http://www.mysite.com/very-popular-widget/red-widget Get it? If someone Googles popular red widget which will be found faster? Avoid long URL’s where possible and always try to use keywords in URL’s. Establish a naming convention and stick with it. You may want to add the page names to your spreadsheet I mentioned above as well to keep them straight and unique.
 
Create a simple and descriptive directory structure: this pretty much ties in with what I said above.  http://www.mysite.com/widgets/red-widgets/red-widget-1.html works much nicer than http://www.mysite.com/w/rw/1.html.  This stuff isn’t rocket science!
 
Keyword Tags: When you write a meta keywords list, start by scanning your page. Make a list of the most important terms you see on the page. Then read through the list. Pick the 5 to 10  terms that most accurately describe the content of the page. Keep your list of keywords or keyword phrases down to 5- 10 unique words or phrases, separate the words or phrases using a comma, do not repeat words or phrases and put your most important word or phrases at the beginning of your list.
 
Site Navigation: You need to make it as easy as possible for your visitors to navigate your site but also for the search engines to do the same. The fewer clicks the better. I heard a good analogy recently regarding this topic. When you go to the mall do you walk in the door at the far end of the mall and navigate though different stores and departments finally ending up where you want to be or do you walk in the door closest to the store or product you are after and take the most direct route there?  Set up your web site the same way. The faster your visitor can find what they want the better and the easier it is for search engines to index your content.  When possible try to use text links and stay away from Javascript, Flash and Images based navigation. Use breadcrumb navigation where possible (row of links at the top or bottom of the page showing the link hierarchy.)
 
Put an HTML and XML site map on your site: The HTML site map is for your visitors and the XML site map is for the search engines.  Here is a great tool to help you generate a site map for your site.
 
Have a useful 404 (page not found) page on your site: Don’t be afraid to customize this page. You want your visitors to find what they were looking for right? So make it easy for them. Your 404 page should be written in friendly non technical language and should give your visitor several options to help them find what they need including additional links, the site map and possibly a search box.
 
Write good quality content: In today’s competitive SEO environment CONTENT plays a huge role in your SEO. Avoid text in images, visitors can’t copy and paste it and search engines don’t see it. Constantly work to add fresh unique content to your web site. One well written unique piece of content can get you more traffic then you ever dreamed. Put some time in to it!
 
Understand the importance of Anchor text.: Anchor text is the words you choose to turn in to a link. This is the anchor text Anchor text describes where the link is going and should always be as keyword rich as possible. If you sell red widgets you want links that refer to red widgets both onsite and offsite pointing to the red widget content. Above all try to stay away from crazy link formatting. If it’s a link, make sure it looks like a link!
 
Use Heading Tags: Best practices for page optimization call for the title of the page (not the META title) but the actual visible title of the page to be an <h1>Title Of The Page</h1> tag. Use H2 tags to refer to sub content but use them sparingly! Use CSS to style the H1 and H2 tags if you don’t like the color or size they default to.
 
Optimize your web site images: Write alt text that describes the image. Don’t put the same keywords on every image and keep the alt text short. If it’s too long it can be considered spammy.
 
Be aware of and use the “rel=nofollow” attribute for links: This tells the search engines not to follow that link. Insert this where you do not want to pass link juice or your sites authority value. A good general rule of thumb is if you are not sure of the quality or reputation of where the link is going to “no follow” it.
 
If you follow these best practices your web site will be ready to build links to it so get to work and be sure to read all the great link building blog posts we have written in the past.
 
If you are considering hiring an SEO link building company here are some questions you should ask them to help narrow your decision on which company to hire:
 
  • Can you show me examples of your previous work and share some success stories?
  • Do you follow the Google Webmaster Guidelines?
  • Do you offer any online marketing services or advice to complement your organic search business?
  • What kind of results do you expect to see, and in what timeframe? How do you measure your success?
  • What’s your experience in my industry?
  • What’s your experience in my country/city?
  • What’s your experience developing international sites?
  • What are your most important SEO techniques?
  • How long have you been in business?
  • How can I expect to communicate with you? Will you share with me all the changes you make to my site, and provide detailed information about your recommendations and the reasoning behind them?
I hope you found this information useful and we would appreciate any comments or feedback below!
 
 

Link Building Campaigns That Work

Saturday, January 19th, 2008

You may have tried link building campaigns in the past and been disappointed in the results. Perhaps you got barely a blip in the major search engines or you saw your rank rise only to fall a few months later. Whatever the reasons for your disappointment, it’s a good bet that the main reason you were disappointed in the results is that whatever link building tactics you used or paid for lacked two important qualities: balance and consistency.

The Importance of Balance in Link Building

Some people advocate the importance of content-rich websites, others focus on blogs and still others will insist that directories are the most important link building campaign features. The truth is never as simple as some people try to make it. It can seem like blogs are the place to link one month, and then be out of fashion just a few months later, with forums replacing them as the Holy Grail for link building.

The truth is, all of the many places you can link to and from (with the exception of unsavory linking sites that are tantamount to spam) are important to provide you a balance of coverage in your link building campaigns. Search engines are constantly changing, growing and evolving. They become more complex, develop new algorithms and morph so that you can’t ever keep up with how they are weighing the relative importance of any one kind of link, so you shouldn’t even try.

The solution is to balance your link building strategies for the greatest possible coverage over a multitude of formats. If you do this, you’ll find that you are always hitting on multiple cylinders. Although you might not be getting great results from every single link strategy, you’ll be getting pretty good ranking from several of them. It’s like playing a good point spread – coverage is key.

A good link building campaign with optimal coverage will include all of these:
• Directories with real editors. Well-known directories that are always updating and actually review the links are a hot destination for many industries.
• Forums. Links to your site from various forums provide dynamic attention for you – forums are the equivalent of the water cooler – the site where the latest and most interesting topics come up. Be present at the virtual water cooler and you’ll be talked about – and linked to.
• Article directories. Submit relevant, informative articles to directories to easily multiply your links. These article directories are used by others to provide content for everything from newsletters to special reports – if your content is good, you’ll quickly become a recognized expert.
• Reciprocal links. Provide links to sites that compliment what you are offering and ask that they link to you. Similar sites that aren’t direct competitors are powerful link partners.
• Contextual links in blogs and reviews. Another instance of the power of the people – reviewers drive people to sites because they are recognized as experts, so try and get reviewed and be sure a link to your site is included. Some people won’t even know they need you until they read a great blog about you –and then they will hot-foot it to your site for more information.

If you use a good mix of link building techniques, you’ll be balancing your exposure over all of the many kinds of linking that the major search engines use so that you’re always noticed without the risk of falling down in the ranks because one particular link strategy is out of favor.

Why Consistency is Key

Many individuals start out in overdrive when they start a linking campaign. They submit to dozens of industry directories, pack their website and article directories with great content, get noticed on blogs and in reviews, set up links on complimentary sites and enjoy the fruits of their labor – top rankings.

Then something happens; they find that they just don’t have the time to continue writing articles, they stop visiting blogs because they are overwhelmed with new customers….and they stop building links or slow down considerably. Unfortunately, they discover that they are now dropping in the search engine rankings and they can’t understand it. After all, nothing’s changed, right?

Actually, that’s precisely the point – nothing is changing. If you stop actively creating links and building a following, you will fall in the rankings because your competitors are actively building links, adding content and quietly passing you in popularity. The search engines are dynamic, so you can’t afford not being dynamic yourself – you have to consistently build on what you started in order to stay ahead of the pack. It’s a long-term commitment that you have to make if you don’t want to lose in the long run.

The perfect link building campaign is a combination of balance and consistency. If you continue to spread your links out over many venues and keep the content and information flowing every month, you’ll be successful in building a valuable network of links that will send you to the top of the pages.

[tags] link building, link popularity, directories, article marketing, contextual links, forums [/tags]

Various Link Building Techniques

Friday, October 26th, 2007

Link Building is considered to be one of the most effective SEO techniques. If you haven’t done any link building yet, you should consider doing some right now or contact a SEO company that offer Link building services.

Just a quick note about how search engines work first. For a search query entered into the search engine, the algorithm uses rules to identify the most relevant pages, based on the page’s text content and its context (which can be indicated by links from other pages and sites). So essentially inbound links act as a vote to your website.

There are different ways of doing link building but not all are good so you have to be very careful. Below are the link building practices that are considered to be among the best.

Link Directories.
Although link directories are not as effective as they used to be, many can still be considered quality links such as DMOZ and Jayde and are very cost effective.  But not all directories are created equal. There are very few directories left on the web that are still worth submitting to, so don’t put much time or money into it.

Link Exchange
Link exchange with the wrong sort of site can be bad for your website and get you banned from Google so be careful with this strategy. If you use link exchanges, you have to be very selective.

Article and News Submission
The good thing about good article sites or news sites is that their article pages often rank highly and send highly qualified traffic, so as well as getting inbound links from them you will often have qualified traffic click through to your site. So writing an article and submitting it to this kind of website is recommended.

Link Baiting
Link baiting is where the quality of your content is useful or entertaining enough that people will want to link to it, thus improving your number of inbound links and your position in the search engine results pages. It can be done through your website’s content as well as through your blog.

Forums and Blogs
Most forums allow members to leave signature links or personal profile links. If you make quality contributions some people will follow these links and visit your site, link to your site, and/or buy your products. You can also post comments in blogs with a link back to your website.  Some forums us "no follow" so your link may only provide the benefit of traffic to your site.

To conclude remember that Inbound links (one-way text links) using good anchor text are your goal from an SEO perspective. It is much better to have 10 inbound links from related topic sites with a PR of zero, than 100 inbound links from unrelated, PR6 sites. And think long-term when building links, as it takes time to achieve real benefits.

[tags] link building, inbound links, SEO, link exchange, forums, blogs, search engine, link building services [/tags]

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