Search Engine Optimization: 12 Essential Tips
Search engine improvements are resulting in a huge increase in the number of pages that show up for a query so it’s more important than ever to know how to keep your site at the top of the list. E-Commerce Guide found a search engine optimization expert to help by, well, doing a search.
If you type “search engine optimization” in to Google, you’ll get more than 55 million results. Hundreds of SEO firms compete aggressively to be ranked highly for this term. After all, if you run a top SEO company, yours should rank highly for ’search engine optimization,’ right? Bruce Clay’s SEO firm, Bruce Clay, Inc., ranks No. 2. (The only result above him is SubmitExpress, which offers a free submission service.)
Some industry watchers say that Clay, who’s been doing SEO since 1996, invented the term ’search engine optimization.’ Whether or not that’s true, Clay, whose SEO seminars are as popular as rock concerts, is a master of the subject. But even he admits he doesn’t know everything. Search engines don’t reveal exactly how they rank sites; Google in particular is famously secretive about its algorithm.
It has become common practice among some SEO experts to dismiss the meta keyword tags. Since so many site owners have spammed using the tags (by stuffing their meta tags with attention-getting but irrelevant keywords) search engines have learned to ignore them, some experts say.
Many Internet merchants buy store-building programs that give them templates to assemble their pages. But some of these programs handle page titles and tags in a cookie-cutter fashion (or, the merchant doesn’t know how to edit the pages.) Consequently, “E-commerce sites are generally recognized as being search engine unfriendly,” Clay says.
Some merchants, knowing that using popular keywords in body copy boosts search engine ranking, cram these top keywords into their text. Like the electronics site that boasts, “Our iPod helps you download iPod music fast to your iPod — your iPod will have more music than your friend’s iPod.”But the engines have learned to filter for overuse, so this technique gets you nowhere — and alienates potential buyers. Similarly, merchants put “hidden” words on their pages, like using red font in a red box — it’s not visible to users but the spiders pick it up. Again, engines filter this out.
“Make sure you have sufficient content to compete with the people that show up in the search engine results,” Clay says. This means posting lots of articles and other helpful information — links, “how-to” pieces, and detailed, unique content that’s available nowhere else.
The engines know that expert sites link only to worthwhile sites, so they’ll increase your ranking considerably if you’re linked to by a recognized “hub” site in your field. There are many ways to gather these links. “If I’m a realtor, I can get inbound links from the Chamber of Commerce if I go out and speak for free.”
Because it’s common knowledge that the more links to your site, the higher it ranks, millions of obscure sites have furiously e-mailed other obscure sites to trade links. But the engines have caught on and now tend to discount these reciprocal links. These reciprocal links might draw some traffic — and they are indeed useful for this — but they won’t help ranking.
Some merchants, wanting to retain all their traffic, create few links to related top sites. But this strategy backfires. “If you don’t say, ‘hey, I know an expert when I see one,’ you’re not much of an expert yourself,” Clay says. “If you don’t link out to anybody, it’s the kiss of death.”
Use Your Keywords in Your Interior Links
Create the links on your site using the keywords you want to be found for. “Don’t link from Page A to Page B using ‘click here,’” Clays says. (Unless you want to be found for the term ‘click here.’) If you want to be found for “Men’s shoes” build links that incorporate the term “Men’s shoes.”
If your pages load slowly - through no fault of your own, but merely because your Web host is overloaded - it hurts your search ranking. Make sure you host with a company that provides rapid load times.
Google’s guideline page for Webmasters is considered the bible of the search engine optimization industry. No hype, no “gray hat” techniques, just helpful hints by the search engine that rules the world. Read it and change your site accordingly.
Placing a site map on your site makes the search engines happy with you. “A site map ensures that none of the content on your site is orphaned” Clay says. ‘Orphaned’ pages are pages that have no link path from your home page. With orphaned pages, “you’re assumed to be doing something deceptive.”
Merchants can hire an SEO expert to improve their site, but it’s invaluable that the merchants themselves know the basic principles of SEO. Read and study, examine what other sites are doing, talk with as many experts as possible. First, this will allow you to do some or all of the work yourself, saving a great deal of money, and also, you’ll be able to know if they’re getting your money’s worth from your SEO expert.
James Maguire is a regular contributor to ECommerce-Guide.com.
