|
Search
Engine Optimization, Website Promotion,
Internet Marketing, SEO Company
Website Designers : Provide professional
web designing services in Flash, Photoshop,
DreamWeaver, Best SEO company, Internet
Marketing Company, Web development india,
website designing, web design company
Web Development Company : Professional
web and content development in ASP, .NET,
PHP, Cold Fusion and Perl... Call at +91-
9814201323 or MSN at anlilwebsolution@hotmail.com
India, UK, London, Singapore, Australia,
Europe, California, Ahmedabad
SEO Company : Best SEO Company, Internet
Marketing Solutions, Web Consultancy Company
Links Exchange : Free Links Exchange
Professional Web Design : Provide
professional web designing services in
Flash, Photoshop, DreamWeaver, Web design
company, website designing companies,
web designing companies
Web Design Company : Provide
professional web designing services in
Flash, Photoshop, DreamWeaver, Web design
company, website designing companies,
web designing companies
Offshore Outsourcing : Outsource Web
Design, Web Development Services, IT
outsourcing, It Services
Web Design India : offers web site
designing, programming, database
development, hosting, promotion, and domain
registration services.
Web Development India
:
provides Content management System,
Ecommerce Solutions, Virtual office,
Portal Development, web development company
india, usa, london, europe, canada, middle
east, austria, boston
Internet Marketing Company : Best SEO
Company, Internet Marketing Solutions, Web
Consultancy Company India
Content Management Solutions
: content management and portal
management software enables organizations to
rapidly build, manage and deploy Web
applications for the real-time ... content
management software systems, including real
estate, auto and news management systems,
free CGI Perl scripts, publishing ...
Web Designing Company : offers web site
designing, web designing company,
development, hosting, promotion in
india,
usa, london, europe, canada, middle east,
newyork, singapore, australia, france, spain,
germany, honk kong, austria, boston
Web Design Services : Professional web
design & development services
Search Warrant
by: John Saxon
Search Warrant
So, you've just paid £300 - £10,000 for a new web site to be designed
'registered your URL' and now it's sitting on the World Wide Web. All your
new stationery and Business Cards give the Web Site address quite clearly.
The designer assures you that it has been 'submitted' to all the 'Search
Engines' and, when you type in the address, there it is.
You've told your customers all about it and they visit it occasionally
... No-one else seems to find it. No new enquiries and the visitor counter
is moving slowly nowhere. Sound familiar?
What could have gone wrong? Was it all a waste of valuable marketing
resources? Is the Web a wasteland and has the 'dot.com' bubble really burst?
The simple answer is that nothing has gone wrong, all that remains to be
done is to 'market your site' effectively and the enquiries should come
flooding in.
So let's go back to good, old fashioned, Sales and Marketing basics -
AIDA - Attention, Interest, Desire, Action.
Unless you get the customers attention they won't even know your Web Site
exists and, if they don't know it exists, how can they find it among the 2.6
billion other Sites on the Web!!
Entrusting the 'selling' of your site to a Web Page designer is a little
like expecting a printer to distribute your brochures to your prospective
customers and waiting for the orders. The responsibility, therefore, is
yours and you, or a member of your marketing team, have to grit your teeth
and get on with it.
Interest, Desire and Action should emanate from the design and content of
your Web Page, however the first step, Getting Attention, has to be done
successfully before any of this can take place. This article focuses on this
vital first step
How to get Attention on the Net
To get attention on the World Wide Web you have to get your site listed
on the major search engines, and that means within the top 20 places,
otherwise your prospective customers will find a similar product, or
service, long before they reach you.
Imagine the Internet is like a giant Yellow Pages, with no index,
wherever it falls open is where your prospective customer starts to look. It
is therefore essential that your site is right at the top of the first page
they see.
80% of all traffic to a Web Site is through the major search engines and
'off-line' marketing activity currently accounts for only 2% of 'hits'. This
will probably continue into the future, so no amount of advertising will
bring the response that a search engine 'listing' will bring, particularly
if you are using the Internet to reach the International Market.
To achieve a high listing you, or someone in your team, have to
understand how search engines work and then adapt the web site to get their
attention. Alternatively you could pay a consultancy to achieve the same
results - however no-one will understand your customers the way you do
therefore the time and effort invested in developing net skills in house
would be worth it. In addition it would be more beneficial if the person
selected were from a Sales and Marketing background, who knows the products,
with a smattering of IT know how, than a 'techie' - After all, this is
marketing.
However, a mistake often arises from a simple misconception. The customer
you are targeting with the web site is not the end user - your product, or
service, and the design of the site, once they get there is supposed to do
this.
The customer for the web site itself is the search engine and its
'buyers'
The 'buyers' fall into 2 categories Search Engine 'spiders' or 'robots'
who are totally logical, electronic and not very clever and Human reviewers
who are not so logical, know what they do, and don't, like and may be
influenced by a snappy description. Let's take each in turn
Search Engine Spiders
Spiders are computer programs that roam the World Wide Web ceaselessly,
travelling from page to page of every web site they visit remembering every
word on every page. They like pages that change and ignore pages that
haven't changed since the last time they were there.
They can only reach a Web site by one of two methods
1 By being told about it - this you can do by registering your site with
the search Engine and, eventually, it will send a spider out to visit it.
2 By visiting a Web Site from a link that has been established from
another Web Site that it knows about and regularly visits.
The First Rule, therefore, is to register your Web Site with all the
major search engines and to begin to develop reciprocal links with other
complimentary web sites. The more links you have coming in to your site the
more important it must be in the eyes of the spider!
What do the Spiders look for when they visit a site?
Contrary to popular belief, they do not all look for 'keywords' - for
instance the Excite, Lycos and Google spiders ignore keywords almost
altogether - no amount of conjuring with keywords will get your site to the
top 20 in these search engines. What will get your site higher in the
ratings is the of the site and the of the site. You can check out what the
and of the site are by selecting View, Source in the menu bar of your Web
Browser - this shows you what the spider, not the visitor, sees.
The Second Rule, therefore, is not to call your site by the name of the
company ( as most businesses do) unless your company name is so well known
that everyone will search for it, or the name of your company says what you
do quite clearly and unambiguously. No-one cares who you are, it's what you
do for them, that counts. If this sounds a little like 'selling the
benefits, not the features' it's meant to.
For example - imagine your company is called ABC Electronics and that you
manufacture electric vehicles in the UK. Then the of your site could be
'Electric Cars and Vehicles UK, ABC Electronics'
Anyone searching for electric cars and vehicles would find your site at
the top of the list, or very close. Whereas if the site were called 'ABC
Electronics Limited' it would come much lower in the Search Engine listings,
if at all, unless someone searched for 'ABC Electronics Limited' and, bear
in mind, the intention of the Internet is to reach a wider audience - if
they knew who you were, wouldn't they have already contacted you by other
means?
Therefore the single most important part of marketing your site is
getting the right. However the preceding sentence is written in invisible
ink and most businesses will continue to ignore this simple fact.
The Third Rule is to beware of 'frames' within your web site,
particularly the first page, since some of the spiders can only index what
is inside the top frame and not the links you would like it to in the main
frame.
If you need to use frames as a navigation tool then consider using a
'portal' , or 'doorway', page, or one without a frame, as the first, or
entry, page of your site. This, at least, should be identified by all the
relevant search engines. You would then link this page to the framed pages
on your main site. This may result in some of the Search engines only
listing one of the pages on your site, however that is a price you may have
to pay.
The Fourth Rule is to ensure that the of the site, in particular the
first paragraph of text on the page, contains some of the keywords and / or
phrases that your prospective customer will be searching for.
There are some technicalities to observe, such as repeating the keywords
within the between 3 and 7 times is optimum. Any more than that and the
spiders will penalise you and possibly ignore your site altogether, any less
than that and you are not taking full advantage of the spiders totally
logical process.
Avoid having repetitive text the same colour as the background in the
hope of fooling the spider - this is a myth and will result in the spider
banning you from the search engine!
So, for the Electronics Company example above. If the text was to the
effect 'Formed in 1985 ABC Electronics is based in Andover, Hampshire, close
to the M5, etc. etc.' the spider will not find the words Electric Cars and
Vehicles in the and therefore reduce your rating.
However if the said
'Electric Cars and Vehicles (as a headline) - Formed in 1985 ABC
Electronics is a world leader in the design and development of Electric Cars
and Vehicles for the Armed Forces, Electric Vehicles for the Ambulance
Service, etc, etc' the spider would find a high 'density' of keywords in the
and improve your sites' rating.
The Fifth Rule is to understand and develop the sites Tags.
Tags are not as important, to some search engines, as the and keyword
density of the , but they do include a variety of different items that some
search engines and all human reviewers may see which include , , etc. If you
employ a range of tactics it will increase your overall success.
This is now the place for on the site - these would be the words that
your prospective customers would search for through the search engine. In
doing this try to think the way the customer would think - in other words
sell benefits, solve problems, anticipate the questions they would be
asking. AltaVista and Mirago operate almost exclusively on and tend to
ignore .
List all your keywords on a word processing page then prioritise them.
What do you think will be the order that people will type in keywords to
search for your service or product? Remember, try to think like your
customers think, so, for instance, if you produce massage oil is it possible
that they will type in sports injury (or injuries)? What does your product
do, or solve, not just what is it.
The next step is to pluralise your key words, as in the example above if
someone typed in sports injury and your keyword was injuries they would miss
you. If you make orange, oranges then searching on either word will find
you.
Consider putting in mis-spelt keywords if those words are commonly mis-spelt
or mistyped for instance 'servcie'. This is to ensure that people who mis
spell or mis type can also find you.
However, a word of warning, the market leader in a particular product
range is very low in the ratings on most search engines because their
designer mis-spelt a keyword in the design of the web site. If you're not
sure whether or not this is true go to www.google.com and search for 'veleting'
or the word Barnaley (for Barnsley) - It's amazing what some people do
Also, it may be useful to include a ridiculous such as 'agriptanch', why?
Because when you need to find out if your site is registered with a based
search engine you simply search on 'agriptanch' and if your site is
registered up it comes. If not you may have to re-register it.
The next step is to take a calculated gamble and opt for one of the
following methods of using the keywords:
Target vs. Blanket
This is deciding whether or not to use a series of keywords that will
cover everything anyone could possibly type in when looking for your product
or service, or taking the gamble and knowing what he or she will type in and
just put that as a keyword or phrase.
So, for example, if you dealt with a specific subject such as Sea Fishing
then you may use just that phrase knowing that the majority of people who
were searching for you would type that in as their query.
Target will bring you higher on a search engine listing but you have to
be certain that people will search for exactly that word, or phrase.
Blanket covers a larger list of key words you will therefore be listed in
more categories but lower on the listings for each, since the density is
lower.
You are allowed approximately 200 per page, of course, if you choose to
target the prospective customer you may only use 2 or 3 of these.
Nevertheless the correct format for is word, comma, space e.g. "cleaning,
upholstery, upholstery cleaning, etc"
The Sixth rule is possibly the most misunderstood rule of all : Spiders
cannot follow graphically embedded links. This means that when your web page
designer has put all those buttons and GIFS and animations on the page, if
there are no text links to other pages then the search engine will only see
one page. This means that if you have a 100 page web site, as far as the
search engines are concerned you have given them a book with all the pages
stuck together, unless they are linked in a way that the spiders can follow.
There are very simple bits of coding that can be placed in the source code
of each page to ensure the spiders access all pages.
There are other, more sophisticated ways to attract the attention of the
spiders, such as the development and publishing of separate 'portal' pages,
each directed back to your index page. However, by adapting the information
above and applying it to your companies web site you will start to see a
rapid increase in visitors and a promotion to the upper echelons of the
'Spider' based Search engines.
Human Reviewers
These are people who are either employed by the search engine company or
are volunteer editors. They control what appears where in the King of all
search engines, Yahoo, and in the human edited directory known as Open
Directory. In order to attract their attention you need to develop snappy,
factual, compulsive sales copy for the and the element of the web site.
Although these appear in the tags and are therefore unseen by the normal
viewer, they are also the words that are used when registering with the
Human edited Search Engines. they are the words that will entice them to
review and, hopefully, categorise your site.
Restrict the to 150 characters, including spaces, it does not require
keywords, but make it appealing to a human being since they probably see
hundreds of sites per day. avoid phrases like 'simply the best', 'the only
web site to visit'. Just like the editor of a newspaper, or magazine they
are looking for interesting, quality, information for their clients who are
the end users, the people who are ceaselessly searching the Internet for
exactly the type of service, or product, you provide.
Finally
Whatever you invest in web site development is wasted money unless you
are willing to 'market the site' to the Internet 'buyers'. With 2.605
Billion Web Sites out there (yes it has increased by 5,000,000 since you
started to read this article) it's a little like throwing a pin on the
floor, in a house, in London, and expecting someone to find it - without
giving them the address.
Go back to basics in sales and marketing - identify the buyer, study the
buyer, understand buyer behaviour and then make it easy for them to buy. And
remember, if you have a 10 page web site that's 10 opportunities they have
to 'buy' since each can have it's own , , and .
Ensure that you get the Attention of the Search Engine Buyers, work with
your marketing department on developing a Site that Interests the end user,
builds their Desire to buy your service, or product, and deliver a
compelling call to Action that produces e - success for your on-line
business.
About The Author
John Saxon is a Companion of the Institute of Sales and Marketing
Management and a Director of Fastlink Solutions Limited and Site-Pro
Limited. He has had a number of articles published in different mediums
including the internet and the ISMM Magazine. His web sites may be
visited at
http://www.fastlinksolutions.co.uk and
http://www.site-pro.co.uk |
<<Back
|