|
What is the single most
important thing you can do to insure the success of your website?
Choose
the right keywords.
Why is that, with all
of the highly effective search engine strategies that we can employ? It's
rather simple. If you don't choose the right keywords, all of your other
strategies won't help you at all, because those strategies build on top of
choosing the right keywords.
Let's look at it from
the point of a view of a searcher. A searcher visits one of the major
engines looking for your goods or services. He types in what he considers to
be the most important topic, or keyword, for his search. Up come the
results, ten per page.
If you haven't taken time
to choose the most effective keyword phrases, you may have done something
like use the name of your company as your main keyword. If your company has
significant name recognition, like Sony, that's fine. But, if your company
is like the vast majority of companies on the Net, optimizing the page for
the name of your company has just cost you some business.
Choose
the most effective keyword phrase for your page!
How on earth do you
choose your important keyword phrases? First off, don 't depend on yourself
to choose the right keywords. Your searchers are probably not finding you
the same way that you'd think they'd find you. Instead, ask your customers
or someone outside of your business what they would type in the search
window when looking for your site.
Optimize each page separately.
When working with
search engines, consider the focus of each page separately, because the
engines do. So, if you want top ranked pages, create content-rich
information pages that center on one or two topics only, and use those
fine-tuned topics as your keywords for that page.
Don't try to optimize
a single page for every keyword that's important to your business. It just
won't work. Instead, create separate content-rich pages and utilize your
other keywords in that manner, and bring additional traffic into your site.
Let's
look at some tips on how to choose keywords.
Stay away
from general keywords.
Take your keyword
ideas and fine tune them based on each page of your website. While it's
tempting to choose very general keywords, like "computers," don't do it for
a number of reasons.
First off, the
competition will be fierce. And, more and more searchers are realizing that
they can finetune their searches and cut out never-ending search results by
searching for phrases rather than single keywords.
Also, research has
shown that when a searcher wants to purchase something, he conducts
extremely finetuned searches to find it. In other words, if he's searching
for a DVD title by a particular actor, he'll search for the exact title or
under the name of the actor, rather than simply "DVD."
So, while having a web
page that ranks extremely well for a very general keyword seems like the
ideal situation, keep in mind that you may get more traffic, but you won't
necessarily get more sales.
Consider your individual goods or services.
Some excellent keyword
choices are the names of your individual goods and services. For example, if
you're a professional writer, create pages that advertise your services,
such as "ghost writing" or "technical writing." Creating a page for the very
general keyword, "writing," actually may not get you the business you want.
By the same token,
don't use trademarked terms for your competitors in your tags. Trademark
lawsuits are springing up faster than blemishes on a teenager's face, and
you certainly don't want, or need, to find yourself in the middle of one.
Take a
general keyword and add a specific word to it.
If you can only think
of very general keywords, start with a list of those keywords, and then add
specific words to each one. For example, if you 're an artist, take the
general keyword of "art" and add a specific word or two to it, based on your
particular business. So, your keyword phrases may be "art lessons for
children" or "modern art."
Consider regional keywords.
Does your business
cater to a particular region? If you have a restaurant in New Orleans, for
example, your keyword phrase should contain the name of the city or state.
Different terminology?
Do people from other
regions use different terminology when searching for your keyword phrase? If
so, utilize that terminology in your tags or on your page, or create a
separate page. For example, in the South, people call "shopping carts" that
you find in grocery stores "buggies."
What
keywords are your competitors using?
Search for your
competitors' sites and see what keywords they're using. Do NOT copy their
tags or anything else. Simply review their pages to see if they might be
using a keyword phrase that could be helpful to you.
Once
you've determined your keyword phrases, don't stop there!
As mentioned earlier,
just because you think that a keyword phrase is perfect for your
page, doesn't mean that it is.
The bottom line here
is, we're after traffic to our sites. Even more to the point, we're after
paying customers! So, if our keyword phrase is so fine tuned that no one is
using it, it will do us no good, even if we have a #1 ranking for it.
On the other hand, if
our keyword phrase is too general, we may get traffic, but we might not get
paying customers.
In
Closing
If you spend time
choosing the best keywords for your web pages, it will add up to traffic and
sales for your online business!
This article was
written by Robin Nobles, Director of Training at the Academy of Web
Specialists. Over the past few years, she has trained over 900 people in her
online and onsite courses in search engine positioning strategies. Visit
this website to learn more:
http://www.academywebspecialists.com/
|