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10 Steps To Higher Search Engine Positioning

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Dave Davies

Member info | Full bio

User since: October 10, 2004

Last login: January 07, 2008

Articles written: 5

There is perhaps no more level playing field in business than the Internet. It is this fact that has created millionaires from paupers. The amount of money that can be made depends of course on your industry and your products and/or services but to be sure, if it can be sold at all, it can be sold online.

While there are many methods out there for building a profitable website, from banner ads to email campaigns, by far the most cost effective over time has proven repeatedly to be search engine positioning. That major advantage search engine positioning has over other methods of producing revenue online is that once high rankings are attained and provided that the tactics used were ethical and that continued efforts are made to keep them, they can essentially hold and provide targeted traffic indefinitely. Your site will rise and your site may sometimes fall in the rankings but a solid and complete optimization of your site will insure that through algorithm changes you may fluctuate but you will not disappear.

I have been ranking websites highly on the Internet for quite a few years now and there are some essential rules that, if followed, will insure that over time your website does well and holds solid and profitable positions on the major search engines.

Here are the 10 steps to higher search engine positioning:

Step One - Choosing Keywords
You first must choose your keywords. This is perhaps the most important step of the process as incorrectly targeting phrases can result in traffic that is not interested in your product. There are three tools that I use virtually every day to help pick the most appropriate keywords:

  1. Overture's Search Term Suggestion Tool
  2. WordTracker
  3. A Brain

The last in the list is the most important. Look through the potential keyword phrases and think, "Who would be searching using that phrase?" If the answer is, "a student looking for information" then chances are it won't result in a sale. If the answer is "Someone who is looking specifically for a product I offer," then obviously this is a prime candidate as a targeted keyword phrase.

Step Two - Site Content
Even before I optimize websites I like to get a good deal of new content down in order to insure that I know exactly where I'm going and exactly what I need to do to get there. Creating some of the new content before starting the optimization process can be doubly helpful in that it can reveal potential additions to your website that you may not have considered (a forum or blog for example). If you already have a site, perhaps simply sit on your back deck, sip on a coffee and image what you would do if your whole site was lost and you had to start again (other than launch into a very colorful discussion with your hosting company).

Step Three - Site Structure
A solid site structure is very important. Creating a site that is easily spidered by the search engines yet attractive to visitors can be a daunting and yet entirely rewarding endeavor. To adequately structure your website you must "think like a spider" which is not as difficult as it may sound. A search engine spider reads your web page like you would read a book. It starts at the top left, reads across, and then moves down.

Priority must be given then, to what you place near the top of your page.

Step Four - Optimization
Once you have your keyword targets, your content created and your site structure established you must now move on to the most obvious step, the optimization of your content.

As noted above, a spider places importance on what it reads highest on the page and so beginning with a sentence that includes your targeted phrase only makes sense. That said, stuffing in keywords in hopes that it will add weight to your page generally doesn't work. The term "keyword density" refers to the percentage of your content that is made up of your targeted keywords. There are optimum densities according to many reputable SEO's though exactly what they are is debatable. Estimates seem to range anywhere from 4 or 5% to 10% to 12% (quite a gap isn't it).

Personally, when it comes to keyword density I prescribe to one rule: put your keywords in the content as much as you can while keeping it comfortably readable to a human visitor.

Some do it first, I do it last. Regardless of when you do it you must choose your heading. At the beginning of your content you have the opportunity to use the <h1> tag to specify the heading of your content. This tag is given extra weight and is also an indicator to the search engine of where your actual content starts. Make sure to use your keywords in the heading but don't shy away from also adding additional words (though not too many).

Step Five - Internal Linking
To insure that your website gets fully indexed you have to make sure that the spiders have an easy path through your website. Text links make the best choice as the anchor text (the actual words used to link to a specific page) add relevancy to that page for the words used to link to it. For example, if I ran a website on acne and had a treatments page I could link to it with an image, with text reading "Click for more information on how to treat this skin condition" or simply "Acne Treatments". When a search engine spider hits an image it has no idea what the image is and, while it will follow the link, it will not give any weight to the page it hits. If you use text that does not contain the keywords you are targeting you are essentially supplying the engine with the same lack of relevancy as with an image, but if you use the phrase "Acne Treatments" to link to your acne treatments page you are attaching relevancy to that page for those keywords.

There are two main ways to insure that your site gets well spidered AND that the relevancy is added. The first is to place text links on the bottom of your homepage to your main internal pages (not EVERY page, that just looks odd). The second is to create a sitemap to all your internal pages and link to it from your homepage. Both methods have advantages and disadvantages but that's a whole article unto itself.

Step Six - Human Testing
So now you have your site, it's optimized and you have your navigation in place. The next step is to put it past someone who has never seen your site (and preferably who won't know how much work you've put in and tell you it's great even if it's not).

Ask them to find specific information and see how long it takes. Ask someone else to just surf your site and watch which links they click and ask them why they chose those ones.

Most importantly, find out how the content reads to them. You've spent hours working through the content at this point and are probably not the least biased on its readers. Find out how it reads to someone who has no invested interest in the site and correct any issues they may bring up.

Step Seven - Submissions
I take a different philosophy than most when it cones to search engine submissions. I submit to directories (both general and topic-specific) and to a few topical search engines but for the most part I've found submitting to Google, Yahoo, MSN and the other major engines has proven to be a bit of a waste of time. The major search engines are spidering search engines, which means they will follow links to wherever they go. Simply having sites that are spidered by the major search engines linking to you will get your site found.

When I have spent time submitting my sites I have found they get picked up in about a week. When I have simply skipped this step and sought out reputable directories and other sites to get links from I have found that at least the homepage of the site gets indexed in as little as two days.

Neither will hurt your rankings but simply to make the best use of your time, seek our directories and other websites to get links from and leave the spiders to find you on their own.

Step Eight - Link Building
All of the major search engines give credit to sites that have quality links pointing to them. How many is enough depends on your industry and targeted phrases. Running a search on Google the reads "link:www.yourcompetition.com" will reveal approximately how many links a competitor has.

The first place to seek links is with general and topic-specific directories. After that you may want to move into reciprocal link building. Reciprocal link building is the exchange of links between two websites. Some webmasters will simply link to any website that links back to them. I highly recommend being more particular than that.

Find websites that you believe your site visitors would genuinely be interested in and you've probably found a good link partner. You want to find links from sites that are related to yours.

There are obviously many more methods to building links than directories and reciprocal link building. Again though, this is a whole article (or more) in itself.

Step Nine - Monitoring
Whether you use WebPosition Gold or just run searches manually by hand you will have to monitor the major search engines for your targeted phrases. Also, you will need to review your stats to see where your traffic is coming from and what search terms are being used to find you.

If a month passes and you don't see any changes then more work needs to be done. I'm certainly not stating that you should take a month off, a solid search engine positioning strategy involves constantly adding content, building links, and insuring that your visitors are getting the information they want to have and finding it as easily as possible.

Step Ten - Reward Yourself
So you've done it. It's taken many, many hours of work but your rankings are doing well. What you've created is a solid position that will stand the tests of time provided that you continually revisit the above noted steps and insure that your website is always one step ahead of your competition (who have noticed you climbing and succeeding as you would notice others climbing up around your ranking).

Now it's time to turn off your computer, take your partner out (you haven't had much time for them lately) and have a great week(end). You've got a lot of work to do to maintain and build on these rankings but the hardest part is over. Congratulations!

Dave Davies is the owner of Beanstalk Search Engine Positioning. He has been optimizing and ranking websites for over three years and has a solid history of success. Dave is available to answer any questions that you may have about your website and how to get it into the top positions on the major search engines.

The website should be updated

Submitted by alexzing on March 3, 2005 - 00:23.

Thank you. Your information is very useful and also I think that the problem with site content renewals also must be noted. The search engines will rank site more higher with frequent content renewals.

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good tips

Submitted by DaButcher on March 7, 2005 - 04:17.

I think theese tips are good, as I did not know of the H1 tags, specifying where content is.

I have been using the H2 tag, since it's better with my content, but I guess that I will have to redefine how H1 looks, through CSS and then use H1 instead.

Ps. One additional tip: If you have a dynamic image-script, like: path/to/script.php?gallery=28282 Google will not index that on image-search!

I have rebuilt the "searchfriendly urls" on evolt.org and combined this with an image-watermarking script I already had made.

So, now I can have urls like: http://www.yourdomain.tld/php_file/-_jpg/.jpg

IRL example: /members_pictures/p-282826_jpg/my%20car.jpg

For further information, look up the searchfriendly urls on evolt.org (this site).

I might publish my script, but I havent had the time to make the discriptions, etc. If someone is interested in helping me, I think then it's more likely it will be published opensource soon!

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most of these tips don`t work in real life today

Submitted by Pabloz on March 17, 2005 - 03:28.

As for me the most of these tips don`t work in real life today. SEO is very many-sided task and very important to bear in mind such things as a cleanness of your hosting from SE spam, don`t use any optimization tips and regular update website with fresh and unique information. It`s necessary also to submit website on Dmoz and other large directories and do not submit site directly on search engines.

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Test comment

Submitted by emkay on July 28, 2005 - 19:45.

This is a test comment.

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Another test comment

Submitted by jothetester on August 23, 2005 - 12:37.

Checking to see if I can edit/delete my own comments

Yes I can!

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Replying to my comment

Submitted by jothetester on August 23, 2005 - 12:44.

hehehe reply. Does it display as threaded?

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Reply to reply

Submitted by jothetester on August 23, 2005 - 12:46.

No, but I can't edit comments that have been replied to.

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Very interesting tips

Submitted by teo on September 14, 2005 - 14:11.

Thank you. I think these tips are very good and the information is very useful for all persons who want to optimize their own site and not only. By the way, I descovered from 2 month ago an application as WPG, but with many more feature and with a low price: advanced web ranking. I am very satisfy of it. It gathers data from more than 250-300 search engine and I am use it at work on windows and at home on linux. Also I can send reports to my customers by email. You can see more details at advanced web ranking . com. Very nice trips, one more time. BTW, you are right about Human Testing. I did like that and after they watched my site, they told me a lot of things that I didn't see it. Thank you very much, Teo

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ranking

Submitted by optimizehosting on September 22, 2005 - 05:43.

i would considering writing articles to increase rankings as and excellent seo tip. I use this techique to promote my site for search engine ranking, and i am getting tons of traffic

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yes they do

Submitted by thespina on September 25, 2005 - 12:36.

the tips provided here do work in real life. Each tip provided, plus the many others, increase your page rank in a slight way, you can not expect an instant increase in your page rank by changing one thing. Firstly, google will only spider your page say every 6-8 weeks, sometimes sooner, sometimes later. The algorithms used by google and other search engines are becoming smarter, and thus require changes and more research. Dmoz is a very important directory to help with SEO and google acts highly on site register through this open source directory.

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Differentiating plurals

Submitted by cianuro on December 11, 2006 - 12:03.

It should be noted that Overture keyword tracker is incredibly skewed and inaccurate and should only be used as a general indicator of searches. Wordtracker tracks plurals (As apposed to Overture not distinguishing). Since this article was published, there are a few new and more accurate keyword tools. Search Engine Marketing Ireland we use a combination of wordtracker, keyword intelligence, keyword curious and nichewatch.

Internal linking is still a very important factor and correctly structured internal linking can increase relevancy for an internal page.The key factor in Search Engine Ranking, is still, as you may notice, strong inbound link building.

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I would say that submitting

Submitted by Heironymous on March 31, 2007 - 02:57.

I would say that submitting to search engines and directories is fruitless. Most directories don't count for anything anymore, and the search engines will find your site as long as links point to them, whether you submit them or not. Proper internal linking, however is still very important. I created my Washington DC fine art photography site with a pyramidal link structure...the top level gets the most internal links while the deepest pages receive the fewest. ---Andrew Washington DC Photography

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nice article

Submitted by EngrTun on April 12, 2007 - 00:38.

One of the best SEO articles I read. Though I already know most of the things described above, but the way they are presented is quite good. A must read for an SEO newbie.

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can include this

Submitted by sica on May 31, 2007 - 11:00.

Can also try KeywordSpy.com

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Search Engine Positioning

Submitted by SEO Consultant on June 2, 2007 - 10:15.

A successful search engine positioning campaign starts not with the engines, but with your own site and with the site's users (i.e. your customers). There is not a lot of point attempting to seed the engines with links to your site unless you are clear about the services that you offer and who those services are aimed at.

Once you are clear about who your site is for and what it offers, you are in a position to start. Before embarking on any marketing campaign, online or otherwise, you should have a clear idea of what you hope to achieve. It may be to increase traffic to your site, to receive more inquiries from site visitors, or to increase the value of new orders.

A well-chosen keywords are the pivotal part of any search engine positioning campaign. The aim is to accurately anticipate the search phrases likely to be used by potential users of your site. You also need to sketch out a map of your site, with pages categorized into sections. Each page should be given a title that reflects the search terms that you are targeting for that page. This map can act as the basis for your site.

You can create navigation links that minimize the number of clicks required to get from one page of a site to another. For sites of, say, a hundred pages or so, it should be easy to ensure that no page is more than two clicks away from any other.

Before submitting your site to any directories, you should be satisfied that the TITLE and DESCRIPTION of your home page reflect your most important search terms and that they convey the right impression of your site.
This should be the text that is submitted (if you've already submitted a different description to Yahoo, it is very unlikely that you will be able to persuade them to change your listing).

You can also join online forums/blogs where you get a chance to interact with other seo experts around the globe.

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SEO positioning

Submitted by Heironymous on June 25, 2007 - 03:24.

"You can create navigation links that minimize the number of clicks required to get from one page of a site to another. For sites of, say, a hundred pages or so, it should be easy to ensure that no page is more than two clicks away from any other." I would agree with this, however it's not easy at all when you have a large amount of content to organize. On my site I have the New York City photos organized into subcategories because the sheer volume of photos demands it. Pushing content into thematic subcategories allows you to target more search terms, but also means you have to get deep links into your content as that content won't get crawled very often is harder to get any good ranking on those pages.

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