Wednesday, November 18, 2009
Don't Get Tricky.
Perhaps the most puzzling to me was the advice that the google .pdf gave on url's.
At one point it says, "Also, it can create easier, 'friendlier' URLs for those that want to link to your content. Visitors may be intimidated by extremely long and cryptic URLs that contain few recognizable words."
This seems funny to me as I have never found a url to be "unfirendly" or "cryptic". I suppose that linking up a really long url can be annoying simply because you have to make sure that you copy the entire url, but I can honestly say that I have never been offended or discouraged by a url with many numbers.
The two blog posts that I read were about google handing out penalties for using certain anchor tags. As i fought may way through the nerd jargon of this gem (http://www.wolf-howl.com/google/google-profiles-seo/) I had trouble extracting meaning. I think that this was partially a result of being unaware of google's seo methods. I think that he was bitching about bloggers accepting gifts in exchange for seo preference. This brings up a question of journalistic ethics. Being that bloggers are not beholden to a news agency (unless they are blogging for a news site) they enter an ethical gray area in whether it is ethical for them to accept gifts.
In the other blog that I read (http://www.seomoz.org/blog/widgetbait-gone-wild) the author discusses putting references to websites that were unrelated to the topic of the website in the anchor tags and such. This annoyed users to the point where they were complaining to google and his company got some bad press. This suggests that users will not look at a site simply because it comes up in a google search, and that if there is some trickery going on the user will have an adverse reaction to the company responsible. This is yet another reason why simplicity is best when trying to improve SEO. The best rule is to simplify the search for both the user and the search engine.
Tuesday, November 17, 2009
Optimizing in More Than One Way
A Web site could have the world’s best content, but it no one can find it, it’s useless. Search Engine Optimization is another way to draw users to your site and possibly get a return on all your hard work creating that content.
John Chow’s Web site is a great example of how search engine optimization, along with well-placed online ads can turn into a lucrative venture. Chow now makes $40,000 a month from the ads on his site. How does he get the money from the ads? Because people are led to his site through things like meta-tags, but also, because he provides useful searchable content (commentary that is sometimes corny, but hey- it worked for him!) that gives people advice on how to make money online themselves—content that is highly valuable.
I feel like many of the things that will rank your page higher, such as giving your pages descriptive titles, creating strong content, and organizing pages logically will also make your job maintaining the Web site easier. For example, this PR-Inside article recommends naming all your images with their real names and including a description in the alt tag. It seems obvious, but when building a site in a hurry, it could be easy to just post a picture without adding alt tags or naming it something descriptive. Organizing images and giving them alt descriptions not only makes the site more searchable, but causes the creators of the site to evaluate the worth of the images, in turn helping them make better decisions about what to place on the site.
Search engine optimization can also benefit from using social media to help promote your page. Besides keeping the image of an organization current and providing information in a number of places, it helps drive traffic to both the social media site and the Web site or a company.
According to this Larry Brauner’s Online Social Networking Blog, linking to social media not only drives new users to your Web site, but also increased the amount of links to and from your site, which also increases your page rank. Using social media as part of your Web presence is smart for a number of reasons.
SEO
SEO For Life!!!
I have chosen to develop a website for my Dad. He is a Veteran of the Vietnam War and he has written a book accounting for his experience as a Army Ranger. The book is an amazing read and one worthy of a web site dedicated to it. I think a tool such as DIYSEO would be an important investment for this project. Although I plan on utilizing keywords such as Vietnam, Army Rangers, etc., I also want to create some buzz using social networks such as Facebook and Twitter. I plan on creating a "Group" in Facebook to promote by dads book and I will also announce the website on Twitter.
Monday, November 16, 2009
S-E-Ohhhhhh....
Interestingly enough, I found the pdf by clicking the SECOND link after my Google search (before I realized it was on Blackboard..oops). At the top of the article was a link to the guide.
I really felt the following quote was the ultimate guiding principle of SEO:
“base your optimization decisions first and foremost on what's best for the visitors of your site.” This .pdf made a great point about not worrying so much how to get your site at the top of the search results, but make sure that the rare, odd, and even strange people who will want to come to your website for people with a vampire fetish can find your portal before sunrise, and not, say, aim to inundate general vampire enthusiasts with their sordid ways.
Using unique titles also seemed like a really easy, strong way to increase SEO - both by putting the name of the site and also describing the main content of each page. So easy it’s painful to think of sites not doing!
By providing quality content and unique content, you can easily translate the design into social media buzz. Bloggers will heap on the encomiums; you’ll soon have a facebook fan page (not sure the practicality of that, but to FB users they’ll see you have a following and can register on Google like personal accounts do). Depending on how often your content changes or what type of content/services you provide, a twitter account could work for you, gaining greater exposure.
The idea of metadata also seems really easy to do.
What’s fascinating, to me, is the idea of breaking out of the “sandbox” which Search Result No. 9 and SEO blogger Patrick Gavin (soon to launch a site called DIYSEO.com) talks about here. SEO seems to be about breaking out of dev databases and into the live search results. A process Gavin distills to “quality links + time” after observing that Google releases sites in batches into their live results from tracking databases. Perhaps for the depth of links and titles about SEO, the other results appearing before Gavin were for firms you could hire for SEO, not necessarily the good resources you'd like to read to learn more about it. Interestingly, Google also talks about things to watch out for when looking to do SEO and what some unethical people are doing out there here.
It seems that this notion - of increasing SEO - relates back to that principle of design that remains meaningful across media: keep it simple. Make the words clear, concise and write with an audience in mind - how will they use your site (hierarchy), what will they likely be looking for (simplicity in navigation and in the copy you use). Functionality!
NOTE: Wikipedia was number one, and I resent that and also plan to protest by not using anything from it in the writing of this post.
SECOND NOTE: I feel as if this is surprisingly un-witty and entertaining. For that I apologize.
Ways to Promote Your Site
Your base audience or customers should be not only your best friends, but also those who have similar interests. Even some of your closest friends or relatives might check up on what you are doing, but if they aren’t interested in that topic, they probably won’t return. So fish out those who don’t want to be involved and find those people who are genuinely interested in the topic. That’s hard to do, but that’s where the social networking comes into play. With avenues to reach thousands of people, your site will catch the eye of a couple of people along the way.
Here are two sites with solid tips: http://webnet77.com/webstuff/tips.html
http://www.doshdosh.com/ways-to-get-more-weekend-traffic-for-your-website/
From the reading Jeff gave us and also these articles, I learned that the best ways to optimize your search engine is to be simple. Your page descriptions and your page headers should tell exactly what the page is about, but in a very simple way. The search engines should never be confused when looking at your page. The fastest way to get to the top of a google search is to use common language, but words that accurately describe what makes your site different or unique.
In my own experience, I’ve always put emphasis on using the social networking sites to spread knowledge of what I am doing. I feel it is the easiest way; whenever someone goes on and sees a link you’ve put up for a site, they will often click on it to visit. Obviously, once there the content has to be something they enjoy and needs to be presented in a professional manner. All of that comes from practice and experience.
Ultimately, you want your web site to stand out for it’s content, not for it’s wording. A search engine appreciates being able to quickly find out what makes you site special. While visitors will want content that suits what they like, nothing is worse business than having a poorly run or constructed web page.
SEO is just the First Step
So much of this can be done by the writers. Any good writer should be able to summarize the purpose of their piece in a paragraph or two with little effort. Put this up in the head section of the page's code and you've got a kick-ass description meta tag. The same goes with page titles. The key is to be precise and straightforward. These are just old skills applied in new ways.
While this file focuses largely on improving a website, it does briefly mention promoting that kick-ass site. This is where the article I found on Facebook Marketing could be helpful. The part I found most useful is at the end where it mentions how important it is to allow your Fans to share content from your page. This is not so much user-generated content, a concept over which everyone s going gaga these days, as it is user-generated advertising. The benefit of this approach is it is essentially free but does not affect the quality of your product.
Of course, this is much easier for a small company than for a large one. Once your site has either thousands or millions of pages it might be useful to employ the services of an SEO firm. Some engage in real-life human interaction while others utilize software. One newer company getting some buzz is an Israeli company called RankAbove.
As an aside, I find it funny that the two links in this post on SEO have absolutely horrendous urls. Isn't it ironic? Don't ya think?
Searching for Optimal SEO
The King of the search engine, or soon-to-be empire otherwise known as Google, provides a lengthy instructional guide about how to title, tag, and structure websites so as to direct traffic toward them. Focus, clarity, transparency and easy access are of utmost importance. "Breadcrumb navigation," for example, is a row of internal links at the bottom of a page that allows users to quickly navigate back and forth within a site. This is one mechanism that can prevent a website from becoming a labrynth of no return.
Blogger Adam Singer of "The Future Buzz" emphasizes the importance of fluency in SEO functionality to successful social media marketting. He believes that even with all the buzz about social media, digital marketting hasn't changed all that much. There are just more people to be connected, and that requires the proper technology. He argues that discussing marketting and PR without first tackling SEO is putting the cart before the horse.
Patrick Gavin, in his Search Optimization Engine blog, describes a new kind of SEO he and a group of technologists have developed for small businesses. "DIYSEO" allows businesses with smaller budgets to gain "better exposure in organic search." The search engine is in fact a kind of marketting device in and of itself, as it will determine how many people are directed toward a website and, thus, create future clientele.
Sunday, November 15, 2009
Here we go SEO
Saturday, November 14, 2009
SEO and such
I'm not sure if I'm the only one that didn't realize that Web site coding itself can influence where your Web site comes up in a search. According to the pdf, just by putting in a decent title and meta tag for each of the pages on your site, you can get a big boost toward the front of a search. I didn't realize this. I think I'd just assumed that people had to pay google or something if they wanted their site to pop up more, which would leave poor designers like us relegated to the 35th page of the search results or something like that...which just wouldn't be very rewarding at all.
Based on the description in the pdf, it seems like a pretty simple process…just give a decent description of what’s on the page and put a few good keywords in the title, picturing what your visitors might be searching for so that they stumble on your site. Because of its simplicity, I was surprised to find a huge number of firms and companies with the sole purpose of assisting others with working on their SEO and getting more hits. One of these companies is Search Engine Optimization Inc. and after reading their description and doing a little browsing, I still can’t figure out for the life of me why they’d be worth the money when it seemed like SEO was a pretty straightforward and simple process, all in all.
I then found the blog. From a guy who argued that hiring one of these outside groups is completely pointless for some companies and could be a huge help for others. He cites a recent poll that showed companies were focusing more and more on blogging as a source of getting their name out there, with social networking sites falling in as only the fourth most common means of communication for these companies, which surprised me.
I’m curious to try out this SEO thing and see where the Web sites we design end up showing up on Google after searching for them in a few ways J I wonder how easy it would be to get a No. 1 search result? You’d probably have to search word-for-word for you meta tag or title? It’s nice to know how this type of stuff works now.
Does anyone out there see a reason I’m not seeing as to why a company would feel the need to hire an entirely different company to boost their results up the list, when it seems like something that would be pretty easy to do on your own just by reading up on something like this pdf we read?
Here are the Web pages I looked at:
www.toprankblog.com/2009/10/the-truth-about-seo/