How
To Optimize Your Webpages
If
you are using your content to draw the attention of search engines
you will find many different opinions on how to best optimize your
web pages.
Outlined
here are some simple techniques that will do well with any content
page and especially well with keywords that are not being commonly
used by other sites. If you can locate keywords related to your website
that are not being currently focused on by bigger sites you may find
your pages easily placing high in the natural search engine results.
1.
First add your keyword or phrase in the <title> tag.
2.
Next add the words or phrase in the <meta keyword> tag as well
as a short descriptive line in the <meta description> tag.
Do
not become overly repetitive or advertising with your wording, although
using words that incite curiosity is fine since they may appear as
the description used for your listing.
3.
When writing your headline be sure to use the keyword or phrase and
place it in Header 1 tags which will appear as <h1> and </h1>
on either end of your title.
4.
Try to use the word or phrase several times in the first few hundred
words that appear on your webpage.
If
your site has columns, be sure to count the first column as your starting
point as the search engines will read left to right just like you
do - down the first column before moving to the next.
5.
Make use of the keywords or phrases by integrating them into your
content as naturally as possible.
It
may be possible for the search engines to determine if a word is not
fitting into proper grammar usage and is only being used for optimization.
In
the same regard you should be cautious about over using the word or
phrase which may also 'tip off' the search engines.
Whether
these tactics work for you is greatly determined by the quality of
the research used to select keywords or phrases as well as other factors,
known and unknown, which the search engines apply to determine your
position in the listings.
Optimizing
several pages with different keywords can allow you to test this out.
Words or phrases that have high competition may be less likely to
make it to the top, but if the competition didn't do their homework
(especially if you're working in a niche area) you may be very surprised
by the results.
A
Quick Note for Pay Per Click Users
As
promised at the outset, here is a simple guide for getting started
with PPC advertising. You should find it to be complimentary to your
overall marketing program and a good start to finding traffic while
you continue to build your natural search engine placement with the
methods outlined earlier.
Research
Your Keywords
Don't
waste your money bidding on words or phrases that will attract the
wrong audience or too broad of an audience or you will quickly go
through your advertising budget with very little results.
Use
programs like the one found at www.Wordtracker.com that can assist
you in creating a list of keywords and phrases that will relate to
your topic. You can also easily find out which words have large amounts
of competition as well as the current bids for those words.
When
you have made your keyword and phrases list, develop a simple ad that
is both clear and descriptive. Use proven advertising copy words like
"how to¡", "learn", "save",
"free" and "easy" in your description. Create
curiosity while still providing enough specific information that you
will not attract under qualified traffic.
Use
each keyword or phrase you are bidding on in its own description rather
than giving the same ad copy to every word. Test your campaigns and
keep to a budget.
Figure
out how many customers you need to make a sale and based on that figure
you can work out how much you are willing to spend to attract customers
through pay per click advertising.
If
your product sells on average for $20 and it takes 100 visitors to
make a sale you can afford to spend 20 cents per visitor to make a
sale. Obviously you would want to spend less in order to make a profit,
so by bidding 10 cents per word or phrase you would spend $10 to make
a $20 sale.
Don't
forget, pay per click is only one piece of your marketing strategy,
so while you may spend more using pay per click when you first start,
eventually your content and hyperlinks will attract free visitors
which will offset the cost per sale ratio.
Make
use of content to its fullest potential. Respect your readers and
writers by presenting accurate, relevant content in a way that truly
informs or entertains. Learn more about your chosen topic or share
your knowledge with others by communicating with CONTENT!
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