Posts Tagged ‘search engine marketing’

SEO for interactive copywriters – Part 3

Wednesday, July 29th, 2009

We have posted before about SEO for interactive copy writers and web designers, but this time we are talking about the things NOT to do for SEO Copy writing.

1. Don’t shove as many key phrases into the copy as humanly possible.

 Which pages land at the top is decided through a series of calculations far more complex than any simple ratio. When you overload copy with keyphrases you sacrifice quality and user experience. Don’t hack up sentences and stuff them un-naturally with search phrases

2. You have two audiences with SEO copywriting: the search engines and your site visitors. Balance between writing good, quality content that will keep your visitors interested, want to hare the information and keep coming back for more and keeping sure that your keyword densities are proper and pages are designed well for search engines rankings.

3. Don’t use keyphrases that don’t apply to the page. 

If you operate a site about web design, don’t try to force a search term about web development into the copy just because it pulls a lot of traffic. (A) Unless you sell, web development, it won’t be applicable. (B) Even if you manage to get the page ranked well for the phrase [web development], once the visitor clicks to your site and realizes you have nothing to do with web development, they will leave.

4. Don’t use misspellings and correct spellings on the same page.

 Sometimes we understand that misspellings will come up in search engine results but, it makes for a poor user experience for your visitors.

5. Don’t use keyphrases the exact same way every time.

 There are lots of ways to use keywords in copy, not just one. In order to sound natural, get creative with your keyphrase usage. One way is to break up phrases using punctuation or using conjugations of words. Since search engines don’t pay attention to basic punctuation marks, you can easily write something using the search term, while the punctuation such as periods and commas are omitted in the spider’s eyes.

6. Don’t use all types of search phrases for every situation.

 Long-tail keyphrases should be reserved for pages deeper in your website that get more specific than on the home page. Broader terms are typically best for a home page.

7. Don’t neglect ALT tags/image attributes.

These tags are the ones associated with images on your pages and they carry a good deal of weight especially if the image is used as a link. The ALT text counts the same as anchor text in a text-based link.

8. There’s a method to the SEO copywriting madness. The idea is not to get as many different keyphrases onto a page as possible. Rather than having 12 different search terms used only one time each, you should use two to four keyphrases (depending on the length of your copy) per page. The title, META tags, ALT tags, other coding elements and on-page copy need to support each other as far as keyphrase use goes. Your goal is to let the engines know that you have original, relevant content about a narrow topic.

 Pick two or three terms which are closely related and use them several times each along with mentioning them in your tags.

When your copy writing, web development and design follows these SEO guidelines, you’ll find your copy flows much better, is more natural-sounding and ranks higher.

web design and SEO

Monday, May 18th, 2009

Another SEO post… geared toward web designers who offer search engine optimization as one of their services.

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With almost every single web site that we design and develop, we have our clients asking about “Being found online”. Here’s our response… whell in the past people who built or created things like buildings, businesses, and stores used to say “…If you build it, They will come”. Now in the online space we say “If you build it they will come — if they can find you”. That’s where SEO comes into play! As a boutique web design firm in New York City, I stress a few things that will enable you to be found online in natural search engine searches (in order of importance) –

1. well written content with keywords and keyword density strategies in place

2. trusted, high quality inbound links

2.1. using social media, blogging, and social behaviors for linking strategies

3. links with good phrases to other internal pages within your site, and links to other external quality & related websites

4. title tags

5. meta descrition tags

6. alt attributes and tags

7. meta keywords

…And another thing we mention is that it takes time and it’s an ongoing process. Taking this SEO approach without buying high end links (such as Online Publicity, Article Marketing, Some Directory Submission, Social Media Marketing, Social Networking, etc…) SEO is an ongoing process that takes time to build the right way (onsite optimization and off site seo) and should not be rushed.

Then the question arises, how much will all this cost ? and I see offerings all over the web for 29.95 …

The cost to do it is :

1. creativity (how and where you form your linking and keyword strategies)

2. time (the time it takes to implement, test and refine)

First as a web designer , a web developer or digital strategiest or anyone selling and/or promoting these kinds of SEO services– test it out first! Refine your techniques and apply it. Many people know the strategies, which are all redialy available online… but there are few who actually know how to apply these principles to their web designs… and believe me once you start it’s a fulfilling task to see your web site climb the ranks in the search engines !