The Six Most Important SEO Tasks
With all the Search Engine Optimization hype out there, and all
the conflicting information, some simplification is needed! It boils down to a simple rule:
If you can afford to pay for it, you don't need to be reading
this. If you need to be reading this, you can do all of the most important things
yourself.
The six things here are the ones that make the most difference for
the least amount of effort.
1. Create a site with good text
content. This is the NUMBER ONE search engine strategy.
Without good text, no matter what else you do, your site will fail. If you
have to pay for something, pay for help with this. Search engines
see text. They do not see images. If you create a site with a huge graphic on the home page, no meta tags,
and no text, and just an image that says "click here", the search engine will have no way of knowing what
your page is about! An image with text on it is NOT
text. The search engine can only read text that was typed in
directly on the page (or pasted in, etc). So make sure you have text on the page that tells what the page is
there for.
What NOT to do: Do not use "hidden text". Make the text part of the
page, or the search engine will be able to tell that it is hidden, and you can be penalized for
that.
2. Use keywords in your text. Keywords are words that people think of to look for
your site. If your site has a topic that people may refer to with several different sets of terms, then you
need to use each one on the page in some way. A well written page will naturally use common terms anyway, so
don't obsess about it. Just explain well, and it will be good enough!
What NOT to do: Do not pack the page with keywords! Do not misuse them
in an unnatural way. Do not use words that have nothing to do with your site either. Either tactic can hurt
you with the search engines, and drive off customers. Just write well, and you won't have to worry about it
much!
3. Use Alt Tags for images. Look this up in a book on HTML, or look up in your
HTML editor program, since there is usually a simple way to put in an alt tag. An Alt tag is a specially coded bit of text that tells the browser to show that text if the
image is not displayed. Alt tags can also help people with
visual impairment to navigate a site better. A good alt tag will provide a concise description of the image,
or the text on the image. Alt tags are also not a miracle fix, they are simply an easy thing to do to fine
tune your site.
What NOT to do: Do not use Alt tags that are too long. Do not use Alt tags
that are misleading either, and do not pack them with keyword lists.
4. Put in Meta Tags. Meta Tags are bits of code that are seen by the search engine and
browser, but not by the site viewer. They can do a lot of things, but the two that we are concerned about are
the Description and Keywords tags. A good site description will be informative, but not too long. It will
describe key features using keywords. The keyword tag will contain words that tell the search engine what
your site is about. Use good variety in your keywords.
A search engine looks for text in your site. It also looks
at metatags. If there are no metatags, it uses part of the text in your site for the description - this can
have unpredictable results! But even if you DO have metatags, some search engines quote parts of the text.
And search engines will not pay much attention to keywords if they do not correlate with the site content.
Don't worry about hiring a pro to analyze them, it won't be worth it if you have good
content.
Most HTML programs have a simple way to insert Description
and Keywords - sometimes under Document or Page Properties, sometimes under its own heading of Meta Tags. Put
a comma between each keyword.
What NOT to do: Do not use keywords that are not appropriate for your
site. Keep your description to the point and do not be misleading with it. Do not use a metatag generator
that creates 10 different kinds of metatags - some of those will introduce errors into your site. Just worry
about the Description and Keywords.
5. Use a title. This is also code behind the scenes that does not show in
the page - it is the page title that shows in the top of the window of the browser. A shortcut for a site is
to use a general title for the whole site., but a page title that reflects the actual page contents can be
helpful. At the very least, you want one that names your site or business. Keep them short and to the point
though. Use some keywords in the title, but keep them relevant and concise.
What NOT to do: Do not leave the title as "untitled". That helps no one. And
do not name the page inaccurately, or use a title that is more than a few words or a short phrase. A title
that is too long or too crammed with keywords can get your site penalized, and there isn't room to show it
all anyway.
6. Get inbound links. Inbound links are links on other people's sites that lead
back to your site. Many search engines now keep track of how many other people think your site is worth
linking to, and they consider that in how they rank your site. So exchange links, post to directories, and
ask everyone you know to put a link on their site for you.
What NOT to do: Do not create seven other sites and link your site in to
them in the hopes of fooling the search engines into thinking your site is big. It won't work, because the
age of the site also matters. Linking it into an existing sites helps, but that won't propel it to instant
fame either. Do not buy "instant links", where someone promises to put your links on X number of sites
overnight, those types of services do not work and will get you banned from the search engines. Be careful
what kind of traffic exchanges you participate in, some do not help rank or sales either one - who cares if
you get tons of traffic if it does not help you sell anything? And watch out for popups... if your site has
to have popups to get traffic, or your site appears on popups, you'll annoy your guests. When I talk about
inbound links, that kind of traffic "generator" is not what I mean. I mean permanent links on other people's
reputable sites. Stay away from Free Classifieds, or Free For All link sites, they get you lots of spam and
no marketing advantage, but they CAN hurt your site. Each inbound link is a drop in a bucket. You need to
aggressively pursue legitimate links, and not get sidetracked by hype.
Stick to the simple tasks that make a big difference when
you are doing Search Engine Optimization. The tactics above are solid, and proven. They aren't going to
change any time soon, and they are not based on tricks which will only hurt your site or cause you to have to
re-write your site coding if the rules change.
Written by Laura Wheeler Owner, Firelight Web
Studio http://www.firelightwebstudio.com Ask us about getting the website you need to help your business
succeed, at a price you can afford!
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