What is SEO?
SEO is the process and practice of optimizing your
website so that it ranks well on search engine results pages. When
someone types a word or phrase into search engines (like Google) looking
for your product, you want to appear on the first or second page of
the search results.
0 SEO Techniques All Top Web Sites Should Use
This post focused
on elements relating to design, content and development. This time,
we?ll move onto the important issue of Search Engine Optimization
(SEO). SEO is such a hot topic these days. How do you get your web site
within the first page or two of the search engines? How do you
increase your Google page rank? There are companies who dedicate
themselves full time to doing SEO at a pretty penny. Something a lot of
people can?t necessarily afford to pay for or spend the time on.
However, there are some simple things you can do when building your
site that will help increase your chances of having good results. In no
particular order, below are 10 of these items?
1. Title Tag
Near the very top of a web site?s source code
you?ll find various meta tags ? the standard ones being the Title,
Description and Keyword tags. The title tag is technically not a meta
tag, though it is commonly associated with them. The title tag plays
such a large role in the indexing of your web site, that it is
considered the most important of the three. A page title is the first
thing a search engine will look at when determining just what the
particular page is about. It is also the first thing potential visitors
will see when looking at your search engine listing. It?s important to
include a keyword or two in the title tag ? but don?t go overboard ?
you don?t want to do what?s known as ?keyword stuffing? which does
nothing but make your web site look like spam. Most people will include
either the company name, or title of the particular page here, as
well.
2. Meta Tags
There are two primary meta tags in terms of SEO ?
the description and the keyword tag. It?s debatable whether the search
engines use the description tag as far as ranking your results. However
it is one of the more important tags because it is listed in your
search result ? it is what users read when your link comes up and what
makes them decide whether or not to click on your link. Be sure to
include a few relevant keywords in this tag, but don?t stuff it with
keywords either. The description tag should read like a sentence ? not a
keyword list. Due to ?keyword stuffing? many search engines now
completely disregard the keyword tag. It is no longer nearly as
important as it was years ago, however it doesn?t hurt to include them
in your source code. When creating your keyword list, you?ll want to
think of the specific terms people will type in when searching for a
site like yours. Just don?t go overboard ? too many duplicates are not a
good thing (as in ?web designer? ?web designers? ?custom web designer?
?html web designer? ?your state here web designer? ? you get the
idea). Those are all basically the same, so pick one or two variations
at the most and move onto the next keyword.
3. Proper Use of Heading Tags
This is a very important element
to consider when writing out your site copy. Use of heading tags helps
users, web browsers and search engines alike know where the major key
points of your copy are. Your main page title should use the h1 tag ?
this shows what your page is about. Use of additional tags, such as h2
and h3 are equally important by helping to break down your copy. For
one, you?ll see a visual break in the text. But as far as the search
engines are concerned, it will automatically know what your topics are
on a page. The various heading tags give a priority to the content and
help index your site properly.
4. Alt Attributes on Images
Putting alt attributes on your
images actually serves two purposes. In terms of SEO, putting a brief
yet descriptive alt attribute along with your image, places additional
relevant text to your source code that the search engines can see when
indexing your site. The more relevant text on your page the better
chance you have of achieving higher search engine rankings. In
addition, including image alt attributes help the visually impaired who
access web sites using a screen reader. They can?t see the image, but
with a descriptive alt attribute, they will be able to know what your
image is.
5. Title Attributes on Links
Including title attributes on links
is another important step that any good web site will have. That?s the
little ?tool tip? that pops up when you place your mouse over a link.
These are especially important for image links, but equally useful for
text links. As a note, you should use descriptive text for your links.
?Click here? doesn?t really tell a person ? or more importantly, the
search engines ? what the link is. At the very least put a title tag
that will explain that ?Click Here? really means ?Web Design Portfolio?
for example. Better yet ? make the main link text something like ?View
my web design portfolio? ? this will give some value to the link
showing that the resulting page is relevant to searches for
portfolio?s.
6. XML Sitemap
My last post referenced the sitemaps used by web
visitors to help them navigate through your site themselves. However,
there?s another version ? XML sitemaps ? that are used by the search
engines in order to index through your site, as well. This list of ALL
pages / posts / etc. of your site also includes information such as the
date the page was last modified, as well as a priority number of what
you feel the most important pages of your sites are. All elements that
help the search engines properly find and link to all content of your
site.
7. Relevant Content
Having content relevant to your main page or
site topic is perhaps the most important SEO aspect of a page. You can
put all the keywords you want in the meta tags and alt image tags, etc
? but if the actual readable text on the page is not relevant to the
target keywords, it ends up basically being a futile attempt. While it
is important to include as many keywords in your page copy as possible,
it is equally as important for it to read well and make sense. I?m
sure we?ve all seen keyword stuffed pages written by SEO companies that
honestly don?t make much sense from the reader?s point of view. When
creating your site copy, just write naturally, explaining whatever
information you?re discussing. The key is to make it relevant, and to
have it make sense to the reader. Even if you trick the search engines
into thinking your page is great ? when a potential customer arrives at
the site and can?t make heads or tails of your information and it just
feels spammy to them ? you can bet they?ll be clicking on the next web
site within a matter of seconds.
8. Link Building
We?ve probably all heard of Google Page Rank ?
it seems to be every web site owner?s dream to have as high a page rank
as possible. While the algorithm for determining page rank encompasses
many elements, and is constantly changing, one item is the number of
links pointing to your web site. Now, you?ll want to steer clear of
link farms and other spammy attempts at getting links to your site.
However there are many reputable and niche directory sites that you can
use to submit your web site, or specific blog articles to. With
genuine content ? especially if you have a blog ? you?ll be able to
generate links with other web sites and blogs, as well. It?s somewhat
of a give and take, in that if you link out to other sites, you?ll find
sites linking back to you ? and hopefully see your page rank going up,
as well!
9. Social Media
Although technically not SEO, Social Media is
such a growing factor in getting your web site noticed, that it?s an
important element to include in your plan. Social media ranges from
social networks like Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn ? to social
bookmarking sites such as Delicious, Digg, StumbleUpon and many more.
There is a lot of relationship building involved, but as you build your
own networks and build quality content on your web site or blog,
you?ll see traffic to your web site increasing, as well. As with any
relationship, it is a give and take. Don?t just expect to join a site
like Twitter for the pure sake of pushing your content. That just won?t
fly ? your true intentions will stick out like a sore thumb and do
nothing but turn people off. Even if you are on the site purely for
networking reasons, the key is to make friends. Help out members of
your network if they ask for a ?retweet? or Digg, give helpful advice
if asked, etc. You?ll see the same in return. If you write a great post
and have built meaningful relationships with peers in your niche,
you?ll often find that friends will submit your posts and give you
votes on the social bookmarking sites. The more votes you receive, the
more likely your post is to be noticed by others and shared around,
often resulting in additional link backs from other blogs, etc.
10. A Few SEO Don?ts ? Flash and Splash
Along with any list of
Do?s come the Don?ts. As far as SEO is concerned, two of these items
are splash pages (often consisting of a flash animation) and all flash
web sites. Yes, flash is pretty! Full flash web sites can actually be
amazing to look at ? their own bit of interactive artwork. But
unfortunately the search engines don?t get along well with Flash.
Although there is talk of possible advancement in this area, for the
most part the search engines cannot read Flash. All that great content
that you wrote for your site will not be seen by the search engines if
it?s embedded into a Flash web site. As far as the search engines are
concerned, your all flash web site might as well be invisible. And if
the search engines can?t see your site content, a good chunk of
potential customers will miss out on what you have to offer, too.
Equally as ?pointless? are splash pages. Once very popular, the splash
page should no longer be an important feature of any site. While splash
pages used to serve as an introduction into a web site (often with a
flash animation), it is no longer seen as helpful, and often times
might actually annoy visitors. For one ? it?s an extra click to get
into your content. Worse is when you don?t give a ?skip intro? option
or set of links into your main site content ? because you?re
essentially forcing your visitors to sit through the full animation. If
you?re lucky, this will only annoy them? if not ? they?ll just leave
without giving your main web site a shot. And without an html link
pointing into your site, the search engines have no way to continue
either (unless you made use of a sitemap.xml file ? but still?) A good
alternative to both issues is to make use of a flash header. There?s no
problem to include a flash animation at the top of your main site, or
as a feature within the content area, etc. Because this is an addition
to your web site, as opposed to a full separate element.
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