The Basics of SEO
Search Engine Optimization (SEO) - the basics
( How to improve your Search Engine Rankings )
Most people think of search engine optimization
to improve their search engine rankings as being such a skilled task
that, without putting a great deal of time and effort into it, it is
simply beyond their capabilities. Wrong! Yes, improving search engine rankings in competitive topic areas does require a good deal of knowledge and expertise and search engine optimization
experts are needed, but most websites aren't in very competitive areas.
Many of them can achieve top rankings by applying just the search engine optimization basics - which can be learned in less than 30 minutes.
This article lays out the basics of search engine optimization. It can be well worthwhile trying them before paying an expert as, oftentimes, the basics are all that's needed.
NOTE: the SEO copywriting method
(a.k.a. search engine optimization copywriting) applies these basics to
a site's existing pages. It doesn't go into more advanced search engine optimization techniques that require more knowledge and expertise.
What is Search Engine Optimization?
Search engine optimization
is the process of achieving top rankings in the search engines for a
website's most relevant search terms. The most relevant search terms
are the phrases that people are most likely to type into a search
engine when looking for what the website has to offer. These are the
search terms that it is essential to rank highly for, and these are the
search terms that search engine optimization targets.
The first step is to choose the most suitable search terms for your
site. Then allocate one or two of them to each suitable page within the
site. One search term per page is preferable, but two per page is not
so bad. Sometimes it is useful to split a largish page, that covers
several closely related topics or several aspects of a topic, into two
or more smaller pages so that a different search term can be targeted
on each of them. Matching search terms to a page's content is
essential.
NOTE: smaller pages are better than larger
ones because it is easier to target a search term when there is less
text on the page to dilute the focus.
Search Engine Optimization - the basics
Link structure within the site
An obvious, but sometimes overlooked, aspect of search engine optimization
is to make sure that search engine spiders can actually find (crawl)
all of the site's pages. If they can't find them, they sure as hell
won't get spidered and indexed, and no amount of search engine optimization on them will help.
Some points to note
- Spiders
can't see links that are accomplished by Javascript so, as far as
search engines are concerned, they don't exist. Don't use them if you
want spiders to follow your links.
- Google won't
spider any URL that looks like it has a Session ID in it, so URLs with
longish numbers in them must be avoided. These are usually dynamic
URLs.
- Make sure that all pages link to at least one
other page. Links to pages that don't link out are called "dangling
links", and the reason to avoid them can be found here.
- It
is good to structure the internal links so that targeted search terms
are reinforced. E.g. organize the links so that a topic's sub-topic
pages link to the topic page with the right link text (see below), and
vice-versa.
Off-page elements
Link text
<a href="url">some link text</a>
This is one of the two most important elements for good rankings. The
link text can be on pages within the site or on other sites' pages.
Either way, it is important. The target page's main search term should
be included in the link text. When possible, don't use identical link
text for every link that links to a page, but do include the target
page's main search term in the link text.
Google attributes link text to the target page - as actually being on
the target page, and it treats it's pseudo-presence as being an
important element of the target page. Links carry even more weight if
the text around them is concerned with the target page's topic and
search term(s).
On-page elements
The Title tag
<title>some title words</title>
This is second of the two most important elements for good rankings.
Make sure that the page's search term is contained in this tag, and
place it as near to the front as is reasonable, whilst ensuring that it
reads well. There's nothing wrong with placing the search term up front
on its own, followed by a period; e.g. "Pagerank. Google's PageRank and
how to make the most of it". The target search term is, of course,
"PageRank". Obviously each page's Title tag should be different to the
Title tags on the site's other pages.
The Description tag
<meta name="description" content="a nice description">
Some search engines, such as Google, don't display the Description like
they used to do but, even so, it should still be included in each page
for those engines that do, and for the odd times when even Google
displays it. Write an appealing description for the page and
incorporate the page's search term into it at least once and,
preferably, twice. Place one instance of it at the start or as near to
the start as is reasonably possible.
The Keywords tag
<meta name="keywords" content="some keywords">
The words in the Keywords tag were never treated as keywords by the
search engines; they were treated as text on the page. The tag isn't as
effective as it used to be but there is no reason to leave it out. So
put plenty of relevant keywords into the tag and include the search
term once at the front, and a second time further along the line. There
is no need to seperate keywords and keyphrases with commas, as is often
done, since the engines ignore commas.
The H tag
<Hn>some heading words</Hn>
"n" is a number from 1 to 6; the biggest heading size being 1. H tags
are given more weight than ordinary text and, the bigger the H size,
the more weight it receives. So include the target search term in H
tags at least once on the page, and two or three times if possible.
Also, place the first H tag as near to the top of the page as possible.
Bold text
Bold text is given more weight than ordinary text but not as much as H
tags. As much as is reasonable, enclose the search term in bold tags
when it appears on the page.
Text
Use the search term as often as you can on the page whilst not
detracting from the page's readability. Make sure that you use the term
once or twice very early
in the page's body text and as often as possible throughout. Reword
small parts, and even add sentences, to make sure that the search term
is well represented in the text.
In all probability, each word in
the search term will be found on the page seperate from the search term
itself. This is good. In fact, if they are not there on their own, add
a few of them through the page.
Alt text
<img src="url" alt="some alt text which is displayed on mouseover">
Include the search term in the alt text of all images on the page. Keep
in mind that some systems such as Braille readers and speach
synthesisers use the alt text, so you might want to make them usable
whilst including the search term.
Summary
- Select your main search terms.
- Allocate each search term to a suitable existing page. Split some pages if necessary.
- Organize the internal linkages and link text to suit the target search terms and their pages.
- If possible, organize links from other sites to suit the target search terms and their pages.
- Organize all the on-page elements to suit each page's target search term.
- Sit back and watch your rankings improve!
Thanks to http://www.webworkshop.net for this article.
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