Archive for the ‘SEO’ Category
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Getting the basics of search engine optimisation right for any website is essential for anyone involved in marketing or running a website. Fortunately nowadays Google are a lot more open and engaging about what they consider good practices for websites. We definitely don’t have to second guess our SEO as much as we used to.
What I’ve listed below is just a starting point and is my summary of what Google are advising us makes a good search engine optimised website.
Make UNIQUE page titles! If you have duplications in your page titles Google will assume you are duplicating the content of you’re website. Which is not good…
The format I use generally is:
[Main keyword of page] | [Secondary keywords] | [Website or company name]
As on Cycles UK’s website:
Mountain bikes | Shop for bikes online or in store | Cycles UK
Google ‘might’ use these so it’s definitely worth making sure they are in place. No need to repeat your keywords or do lists of keywords. Just show useful information about the page it relates to. As with titles, make sure they are all unique and relevant… Easy.
With URLs it’s always best to use keywords, not numbers. A good structure would be:
http://www.cyclesuk.com/mountain-bikes/full-suspension
Not
http://www.cyclesuk.com/108/447920
At Cycles UK I’ve realised we don’t quite do this as good as it could be so ‘improve URL structure’ has gone on my to-do list!
A good tip is the use of a dash (-). Rather than ‘/mountainbikes’ or ‘/mountain_bikes’, use the dash ‘/mountain-bikes’ instead. When Google crawls your URL it will split words up however you present them but other search engines may not be so advanced. The general standard for splitting these words up is a dash although if your URLs don’t use them it’s not worth changing. I think it’s easier to read as well.
The basics here is always have text html links somewhere on the page. If you have to have a menu made from images, repeat the menu in the footer as pure text. Breadcrumbs are also very useful both for the user and for search engines to crawl.
The content of a website is the most important element. It’s essential not to get bogged down in SEO by trying to work out keyword density and potentially making a page unreadable for the sake of getting higher up the search engines. If you’re writing about about a specific subject, the search engines will be able to pick up on what is relevant on the page as long as you’re not tackling too many subjects per page. Just stick to the subject of the page and be useful and relevant.
Using keywords in your anchor text (the text a user click on) is a great way of letting the search engines know the relevance of a link. So steer clear of writing your anchor text with terms like ‘click here’ and ‘read more’. Instead go for descriptive keywords. If your linking to mountain bikes then instead of:
For more information about our mountain bikes click here
Go for something more like:
Find out more about our range of mountain bikes
The html Heading tags (<h1> <h2> <h3> etc…) have a great deal of importance for SEO in determining the subject and relevance of a page for the search engines.
<h1> most important. For example: <h1>Bicycles</h1>
Then <h2>. For example: <h2>Mountain bikes</h2>
Then <h3>. For example: <h3>Hardtail mountain bikes</h3>
And so on…
Personally I think you should try and only have one <h1> tag per page for maximum relevance although in practice I find this rarely happens. It certainly doesn’t on our CyclesUK website (something else on my to-do list!). What often happens is that due to CCS styling, menu headers are set as <h1> tags which means you lose relevance.
Google’s Search Engine Optimization Starter Guide is a must read. Even if you’re experienced in SEO, it’s worth reminding yourself of the SEO best practices within it’s pages.
Tags: Anchor text, Heading tags, Meta tags, Page titles, SEO basics, SEO tips, URL structure
Posted in SEO | No Comments »
Real time search is here. Today Google announced search results you can now see in real time…
What does ‘real time’ mean?
As the world is tweeting, updating a Facebook status, submitting a wiki, news article, blogging etc on the web, you can have it right there and relevant to your search as it happens. This is hugely significant for the way users use Google and how the marketeers will sell on it…
What does this mean for search engine marketing?
Up to now it’s been difficult for online marketeers to justify spending too much time on social media to promote a business. Facebook and Twitter have found it hard to monitise their sites as users really aren’t looking to make a purchase. They’re socialising.
Now real time search is fully integrated into the main Google search engine results pages (SERPs), people searching for products will get real time social network search results well as the business listings, adwords ads and organic results.
Any links you include in your Twitter updates for example, are fully click-able in the SERPs which is great for anyone with something to say (or sell).
As it stands most of the updates you get are Twitter based (and blog and news articles) but Facebook and Myspace are on board and will be live soon.
What does this mean for search engine optimisation?
What I think this means for SEO is that all our hard efforts to make web pages relevant and SEO friendly have taken another blow as they could in all possibility be below the fold even if it ranks well.
I did a search for ‘climate change’ and the first organic and non timely or social networked result is the BBC, way down the page after three adwords ads, the latest news results and the real time search results. Obviously it depends on what your search is but it’s worth thinking about how this evolution in search affects the industry nonetheless…
Tags: Google, real time search, search results, Social media, Twitter
Posted in Google, SEM, SEO, Social media | 1 Comment »
