| Home |
| Whats New? |
| Dewed's Blog |
| Links |
| Search |
| FAQs |
| Forums |
| Downloads |
| Latest Freelance Jobs |
| Archives |
| FIle Archives |
| Freelance resources |
| Web Icons |
|
Assorted scripts
(1) |
|
DewNewPHPLinks
(9) |
| DNPL admin search add on |
|
| 2.1 patch |
|
| Captcha add-on for DewNewPHPLinks 2.0 |
|
| DewNewPHPLinks 2.1.0.1 |
|
| Mozilla Firefox Bookmark Importer |
| Keyword research |
|
|
Let's face it. The internet is BIG ! Creating a brand new site and filling it with high quality content, great products or offering awesome services is comparatively easy when it comes to getting your site noticed. Here are a few tips you can use to help your site stand out in the crowd, of course they all take time and effort to do correctly. After all, nothing is truly free. ![]() Give your website a solid foundation
Getting noticed.Getting noticed as far as the internet is concerned basically boils down to getting at or near the top of search results in today's most popular search engines. Google is by far the most widely used search engine, so ranking well there should be your top priority. So what does Google use to determine when your site appears in the top position? and what terms should you be optimizing your site for ?
Do your homework!I've seen a lot of start up sites where so much time and effort was put into making it look cool, getting the DHTML menus doing their spiffy eye candy stuff. Nice metallic or gel looking buttons. Thats all well & good, but pretty pointless if no one sees it. When building a house you don't choose the color of the paint first, you design a solid foundation. Your website should be no different. The foundation of your website is comprised of words, but not just any words. You want to ensure your site in sprinkled with all the various terms someone might use to find what you are offering. There are various ways to determine what words you should be focusing on, but they all start with a pen and paper. Write down all the terms you can think of that relate to the topic of your site. Got a nice list of 20 or so terms ? Good. On to the next step.
What terms to focus one.Recently some great tools have become available to help you see the trends of various search terms. Of course you'll want to target the most popular terms in your field, but keep in mind, your competitors will be targeting the exact same terms, and if they;ve been at it a while, and use a decent accountant, they can likely afford to use pay per click advertising, so, you should probably not stress on the likely unobtainable. Instead focus on the low hanging fruit, the less commonly used terms that still generate a sufficient amount of search engine traffic.
Let's say your site sells camping equipment. Lets use Google trends to to research that term.. Visit http://www.google.com/trends and enter "camping equipment" First you'll likely notice this is a seasonal term, it peaks roughly in the middle of every year. Keep that in mind. While it is a good term if you are in that business, December and January are certain to be slow months for you unless you also target some more "timeless" terms. So what are some other terms for "camping equipment" ? Camping gear comes to mind. How does that compare ? Enter both terms, separated by a comma "camping equipment, camping gear" You'll see "camping gear" is used a bit less than "equipment" but still gets quite a few searches. Lets try adding a third term "camping supplies" , again, we'll just seperate the terms with a comma "camping equipment, camping gear, camping supplies". Ok, so it's even a bit less popular than camping gear was, but combined, these two terms outperform the most popular term. They are the uppermost low hanging fruit, albeit rather generalized, they can form the basis of your site's foundation. So what else does your site offer?
Another handy tool for keyword research can be found at http://www.spyfu.com SpyFu has a bit different perspective, but reports similar trends like Google trends does. It also shows a lot of information regarding how fiercely the keyword term is competed for. Remember the big boys have you out gunned when it comes to advertising dollars. You might be able to steal some of their traffic for a short time with a large enough advertising budget, but presumably you'd like to spend as little as possible and have a sustainable business model, so again..reach for the low hanging fruit. The main indicator of how coveted a keyword is how much advertisers are willing to pay for a click. Entering the the term "whitewater" into SpyFu, I see they've shelled out anywhere from $0.80 to $3.17 Wow! They've apparently found the term "whitewater" is a pretty good term and has a high likelihood of generating a sale. Darn, whitewater, although not a highly used search term is just too coveted. We wont remove it from our list, but we should certainly look for alternatives that are not so expensive to compete against. How about "cookout" Ok, this is a bit more in the ballpark. Advertisers paid $0.34 to $0.81 per click on that keyword. Obviously it is a decent converting keyword, else the bids would be even lower, but seeing the top amount below a dollar tells me, some of that traffic is obtainable. With these two tools, you should be able to come up with 8 to 12 terms that.. The next step, sprinkling your keywords about and throughout your site, but I'm afraid that'll have to wait. It's a beautiful day for a trip to the river, Regards, ps. If you stubmled across this article actually looking for camping gear or whitewater rafting supplies, check out River Connection, they've got some great stuff! |
|||
| < Prev |
|---|
|