This
is where your website promotion campaign
begins -- keyword selection. Learning
how to research and identify search terms
correctly will bring your site those most
wanted visitors. How do you find out what
keywords people are using to find your
site? You can find this information in
your log files. If you are unfamiliar
with how to access your log files, ask
your hosting service for more information.
Most hosting services provide log file
access along with a log file reader program
that will generate a report listing your
site's activity -- including a record
of keywords that visitors are using to
find your site.
Along
with the keywords visitors are currently
using to find your site, begin to brain-storm
and list as many words and word phrases
that you can think of that apply to
your site and the business market you
wish to target. The idea is to develop
a list of keyword phrases, not single
word search terms. Single word search
terms are too competitive and your site
will have little chance of getting a
first page listing for a single keyword.
Selecting
keyword search terms for your site may
at first appear to be a straight-forward
task of gathering terms you feel describe
your business market. However there
are two important considerations to
keep in mind: First of all the search
term must be a term people are actually
using to search on and secondly the
search term will convert better if it
is highly targeted. Keep in mind that
visitors will often find your site using
terms that are at first less than obvious.
For example if I sell real estate in
New York an obvious term for my site
might be New York real estate; a less
obvious but highly profitable term for
my site is luxury condos in Manhattan
since in this case I specialize in selling
luxury Manhattan condominiums. Both
terms fit my business market -- however
one term is targeted to my niche market
-- and thus highly convertible (from
site visitor to customer).
After
you have compiled your list of potential
keywords that describe your products
and/or services, it is now time to do
additional research to determine how
many searches per day (if any) are completed
for your search terms. The best places
to do your research are Overture, Google
and Wordtracker.
Once you have determined the key words
you wish to use, the next step is to
incorporate them into your site. Writing
for the search engines is a bit different
than writing for a specific target customer
or marketing campaign. Along with providing
relevant high quality content to your
site visitors and compelling them to
purchase your product, you must also
be conscious of how the search engines
will evaluate your site. The position
of your key words on a page and how
you use the key words within the page
are very important for obtaining the
best listings on the search engines.
Your
web site should focus on developing
an overall theme based on your main
keyword phrase or phrases and contain
a minimum of 10 - 20 pages. Start your
optimization efforts with your home
page including your keyword phrase at
the very beginning of your body text
(or body tag) for this page. Develop
the remaining content on the page based
on this key phrase but also try to use
related key terms throughout the page
if possible. Each optimized page at
your site should contain between 200
- 500 words and should incorporate your
key word phrase approximately 3 - 5
times within the body text. Be aware
that repeating your key word phrase
too many times will not only sound awkward
and unprofessional to your site visitors,
but may also be considered spam by the
search engines causing your page to
receive a lower ranking.