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In this article, We have included the seven topics
of the most frequently asked questions (FAQ) We have
been getting lately on search engine optimization. These
seven most often-asked questions are filled with important
information and what we recommend the most for achieving
the best overall results in efficient brand management
and increased return on investment (ROI).
Question number one:
Our marketing and sales department invested a lot
of resources in writing all the content for our web
site but we just can't seem to be ranking high enough
in the engines, while our competition is on top. Do
we have to re-write it all over again?
Nine times out of ten, I will answer no. In most cases
there are certainly some pages that can be altered or
slightly corrected for the right keywords & key
phrases instead of having to rewrite them all over.
This means adding targeted keywords and key phrases
into the existing body text and experience tells me
that it is mostly effective for pages with over 350
to 400 words written on them. Frequently Asked Questions
(FAQ pages similar to this one) and informational or
descriptive-type pages are good candidates for good
keyword and key phrase copy. Also, don't forget the
"about us" page, as it is also a good place
to add significant keywords and key phrases that will
rank high.
Maybe the only pages on your site you may have to
re-write are what I call the "crucial" pages,
both for conversion rates and positioning purposes.
Depending on exactly how they were constructed and edited,
I might recommend that they be altered in a way to significantly
increase the conversion rate on critical pages such
as your homepage, your main services or product pages
and finally your product complements or "accessory"
pages if you have any.
Question number two:
Is search engine optimization writing all we need
to rank well in Google and the other major engines?
The right answer to that is no. Search engine optimization
(SEO) and search engine marketing is a science as well
as an art. Additionally, it has to be an ongoing, continual
effort. Search engine writing constitutes about 65 percent
of your successful Internet marketing campaign. The
other 35 percent depends on your actual site structure,
quality inbound links, the keywords and key phrases
used in your site and, generally speaking, the programming
of the whole web site.
Always remember that if the search engines cannot
spider (crawl) your site, your company cannot benefit
from any improvements or modifications done to the site.
Technology-related problems which could be caused by
inefficient HTML coding, sites done using Flash technology
or sites that make heavy use of graphics but almost
no content must be carefully addressed before writing
begins.
Worthy of consideration are reciprocal link exchange
programs with other quality sites that are on topic
is another powerful complement to increase your Page
Rank and priority positioning in the major search engines.
Question number three:
I have been told that if we implement site tracking,
measuring and analysis, it would help us. Is that true
and if it is, how would it help us achieve better rankings?
Any effective search engine marketing campaign requires
search engine-friendly, third party results tracking.
Your company or business will instantly get the right
information as to how long visitors stay on each page
of your site, where they have been and where they are
going in terms of their surfing habits, and if they
are actual repeat visitors or customers. It is even
possible to track all this information through to an
eventual sale, effectively making your whole marketing
analysis a real closed-loop verifying system.
Question number four:
I have a pretty good idea of how my prospective
customers search to find the products and services that
my company offers, so why should I search my company's
keywords and key phrases?
Nobody should ever take chances with a search engine
marketing campaign. There are no real benefits to top
rankings if your prospects don't search upon that real
particular keyword or key phrase. A serious keyword
and key phrase research study effectively guarantees
that those actual keywords and key phrases your company
optimizes for are the actual real-life words your customers
really use to find web sites like yours.
Additionally, a good analysis of the right keywords
and key phrases used might in fact reveal further profit
center opportunities, which would equal more targeted
traffic and increased sales, hence a much improved ROI.
Why would your company be number One for just one keyword,
when you can achieve top rankings and positioning for
a much greater number of targeted terms used everyday?
Question number five:
Our company is already the best and the leading
expert in our industry. How can SEO and a search engine
marketing campaign improve our position in the search
engines?
Today, all search engines are "brand-unaware",
which means they have no idea and frankly don't care
how big your company actually is or if it is in fact
a leader in its own field. The only way search engines
will actually discover your web site and thus position
it well in the SERP's (Search Engine Results Pages)
is achieved through SEO and search engine marketing
efforts.
If someone disagrees with this, just analyse how many
small businesses achieve top rankings in powerful engines
such as Google, while their worldwide corporate competitors
or conglomerates are nowhere to be seen, even if you
go back to number 50 in the results. In such cases,
all these small businesses directly engaged in a serious
SEO program, while their big brand competitors relied
strictly on their offline branding and brand-awareness
or recognition for their online results. If brand management
is important for your overall marketing success, a strong
SEO program should be your very first priority.
Question number six:
Over 7 months ago I registered my domain name
and my site has now been online for 5 months and I just
can't seem to get into Google or any other major search
engine. I have tried to submit it at least 6 times to
Google, being always careful as you always say not to
re-submit too often, but is it normal that I'm still
not listed after more than 5 months?
No, it's not normal. The first thing you need to do
is to make sure that you have other sites that point
to yours. It is called reciprocal link exchanging and
you can read all about it.
The second thing you need to do is to visit the "Way
Back Machine". For those of you that don't know
what the Way Back Machine is, its a free website that
people can go and verify that there is not an "imposed
penalty" on any given domain name. For example,
the domain name you have bought 5 months ago, could
had a permanent ban on it from any search engine. If
the previous site owner abused that domain name with
techniques that are forbidden (such as invisible text
or similar ill-conceived ideas), it is possible that
your new domain name could have had what is called in
the industry as the "death penalty".
However, rest assured, all is not lost. Go to www.archive.org
and make the test. Just follow the simple easy-to-use
on-screen instructions and the way back machine will
go back in time a number of years and it will tell you
(and you will be able to see it on your screen) if in
fact that domain name was abused in the past.
If it was, all you have to do is write a friendly
email to Google and the other search engines of your
interest, carefully explaining that you are the new
registered owner and that you have rightfully bought
this new domain name, not ever knowing there could have
been any "death penalty" on it. Google will
verify that in fact you are the new and rightful owner
of that domain and will usually re-instate it in their
database on their next major monthly crawl, which, by
the way, seem to happen more often now since the month
of July 2006.
Question number seven:
Please help! My website has been banned! I cannot
find it anywhere in Google or even in AltaVista for
that matter. I've always been number 3 or 4 on the first
SERP of Google, but now I just cannot find my site anywhere!
What should I do?
Under normal circumstances, sites don't "fall
off a cliff" like yours seem to have. Is it possible
you may have done some "important experiments"
or installed some new or unproven technology on your
site recently? For any search engine to ban altogether
a whole website takes some serious actions on the part
of the Webmaster or the site owner. We have seen many
sites in the past (and still do) that get penalized
for a month or two. But, to get banned altogether seems
a bit exaggerated, although anything is possible.
Our first suggestion to you would be to write a friendly
email to Google explaining in detail what has happened
and telling them "everything" they need to
know, even if there "are" certain things you
have done which you know you shouldn't have. The great
people at Google are also humans just as the rest of
us and they know that sometimes, site owners will run
into trouble, either by lack of proper knowledge or,
as is sometimes the case, there could have been a few
violations or abuses in their Terms of Use policies.
We still get a lot of assignments for websites that
some of our "competitors" have, let's politely
say "abused", and these sites were penalized
for a month or two. Things like "invisible text"
(you'd think that after all these years they would know
better, but apparently not). The first thing we always
do in cases like that is: first we look for anything
that could have been in violation with any search engine,
and then we correct it with the right and accepted procedures,
and we always follow every step "by the book".
Once we have rectified and corrected all there was to
be corrected, normally, after a 30 to 60 day period,
these sites usually re-appear in the Google database
and all the others for that matter.
To help speed-up things a bit, once we are finished
with the "damage control" and once all "fires
are extinguished", we write a friendly email to
Google explaining them the before / after scenario and
tell them everything we know and normally, things get
fixed afterwards. It may take 3 to 4 weeks, sometimes
a bit more, but what is important is that the site gets
back in the index and it usually does on most times.
Always be frank and upfront when dealing with the major
search engines and you should do pretty well.
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