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Archive for September, 2010

Why You Can’t Promise A Number One Spot On A Search Engine

Wednesday, September 8th, 2010

In business you normally expect to get a guaranteed service for an agreed price, unfortunately is not as simple as that with SEO. So for this newsletter I want to give some reasons why no one can promise a number one spot, even though number one is the goal you are constantly aiming for.

In a nutshell the answer is this:

There Are Too Many Uncontrollables In Search Engine Optimisation

Here Are 2 Examples Of Things That I And No One Else Has Control Of:

1/ You Are Playing In An Ever-Changing Playing Field. Nothing Stays Still.

It is not just what you do to your website, but what others are doing to theirs. As you are constantly trying to improve your results, so are all the other websites around you.
Even the websites, who you have a relationship with and link to you, can affect your rankings. If they change their website, say by adding different content or doing something wrong, it can affect the link value back to your website and affect your rankings also. Many of my sites have thousands of links from hundreds of websites linking to me. If any of these change what they are doing, this could affect my rankings.

2/ We Have No Control Over Search Engine Algorithms

An algorithm is just an equation that calculates where certain websites should rank for certain search terms and is different for every search engine. No one knows exactly what the algorithms are, but we can have an educated guess of many of the factors through trial and error. These algorithms can be and are changed in a heartbeat, if that particular search engine decides it wants to refine its search results. There are no warnings; there is no notice of change, we have no control, we do not even have a legal right to be included in their rankings at all should we complain.

Search engines change these algorithms to suit the millions of pages of information added to the Internet everyday and to combat spamming techniques and improve results. Again this may not have a direct affect on your website, but it may affect the websites linking to you which may have an indirect affect, losing you rankings. (Or improving).

The good news is that the opposite is also true, for every website that loses ranking another must improve. So at every algorithm change there are losers and winners, but I would never guarantee which is which beforehand. What I do know is this. Quick win tactics never last through change. Only clean quality search engine optimisation techniques have the best chance of surviving change or improving though change.

There are many more examples but too much to write in one newsletter. Just remember this, if you want a guaranteed natural search engine place on Google then you must first own Google.

So if anyone guarantees you a top place then ask him or her. “Do YOU own Google?” and if the answer is no, you know what to do.

Some Search Engine Optimisation Advice To Get You Going.

You Must Know Your Search Terms

It is not about optimisation your website for you business name (unless it is a popular brand name), it is about optimising for the search terms that your potential customers are looking for. Before I even start making a website I research the search terms to ensure my page names are named after them.

Knowing what search terms are the most popular and ensuring your pages (notice I said pages not homepage of website) will give you the most traffic. Make sure they are optimised by writing unique quality content on that subject including those search terms within this content, this will give you the best start. Never copy and paste anything.

You should only write content on one page for a maximum of 3 search terms, 2 is better and 1 search term is ideal.

So if you have 30-search terms for your business that you know will bring in traffic, you need at least 10 pages (3 search terms each) but ideally 30 pages of content, i.e. 1 page of content per search term.

Big Mistakes For Search Engine Optimisation

You can see from the above that not many 6-page websites will now ever deliver a high amount of traffic for competitive search terms, yet most new websites consist of just that, 6 pages. For example: 1, home page, 2, about us page, 3, services or products page, 4, contact page, 5, privacy page and 6, sitemap.

So if this business has 30 search terms it wants to be high for, then it should have ideally 36 pages. The more search terms you learn and the more pages you write the more unique doorways you have to let your customers in. It is a bit like having several shops down a high street rather than just one all belonging to the same company.

Every day I see businesses asking for quotes for 6 page websites. Unless they have a separate marketing budget that will send visitors to their website through other marketing channels, they are wasting their money. Why have a website if it is never seen? What I find worse is so called professionals advising a client that is all they need. Of course there are always the clients who even after good professional advice will opt for a cheap option rather than the one that will give a return on their investment. A website is not just a website. It is a silent marketing machine that will deliver you customers and more profits if done correctly, but a waste of money if not.

How Do I Find My Search Terms?

You can buy software to find these search terms, (do a search on Google, no advertising products here) but you can also get a few free terms a day from wordtracker.com. You would multiply this figure by around 10 to get the full amount of searches over all the search engines.

That’s it for now.

SEO: The Answer To Future Marketing?

Wednesday, September 8th, 2010

I am classic car enthusiast and purely by accident I noticed a photograph in a recent classic car magazine (Practical Classics Feb. 2008), which showed the high street of my hometown (Stockton on Tees), back in 1965. The question of the photo was this, “spot the foreign car”. From about 100 cars shown on this photo, we were only able to find one car made outside of the UK, and in this case it was a Volkswagen Beetle.

It is a perfect example of how business has changed in the UK over the last 40 years or so. Who would have though back then, that 40 years later the picture would be totally different and we would be looking for the car built in the UK, or even worse, find the car that is owned by a UK company.

So What Has This To Do With SEO?

I find it astonishing to still find businesses that think the way they do business today will be the way they do business in the future. I am not saying the Internet would have saved the UK motor industry, but I am saying that back in 1965, the motor industry was probably as complacent as many businesses are today about what their customers would want from them in the future years.

Today you may not be interested in the Internet or being top of the search engines, but do you know whether this will be the deciding factor of your business success in the future?

Here Are Some Questions To Ask

Is it possible that all the widgets you sell may be bought abroad from a competitor and not from you, because your customers were able to find another supplier online?

Is it possible that all the widgets you sell may be bought nationally from a competitor and not from you, because your customers were able to find your competition online?

Is it possible that the your UK market size of your sector will be not be big enough in the future to sustain your business; so would you need to sell abroad?

Is it possible that your customers will no longer need to buy locally and will shop around nationally or internationally to find the best deal for them?

Those who look to how they intend to take the their business forward rather than trying to keep what they have got are likely to be the long term winners.

Here Is The Bad News! A website By Itself Is No Longer Enough.

You can switch a website on, but you cannot switch good Search Engine results on. There is a natural timeline to all sectors to get to the first page and some, even now can take months if not years to get there. If it was that easy, we would all be in Barbados now on the beach.

SEO takes a lot of hard work by someone or a company that knows what it is doing and is prepared to tell you the truth about SEO and not false promises.

So what will the future years bring to you?

Another SEO Tip

After you have researched your keywords or search terms, make sure you name your pages names after them. For example if you sell purple elephants, then name your page “purple-elephants.htm” etc.

Most websites consist of a page that is named services or products. This is too generic and does nothing to help the search engine find out what you site is about, in order to rank it correctly.

That is it folks See you later

So What Is SEO (Search Engine Optimisation)

Wednesday, September 8th, 2010

It is often easy to forget that others not in the same business just don’t get the lingo, “Just what does SEO mean?” and whilst I often get passionate about SEO, I sometimes forget there are many that have yet to discover what this essential Internet marketing profession is all about and why it is becoming the most important profession for online businesses.

SEO is short for Search Engine Optimisation although the Americans spell it Optimization and it is used to ensure your website is shown high on the search engine results.

So What Is A Search Engine?

The three main search engines are Google, Yahoo and Live (was known as MSN). These act like online directories. First you visit their homepage, where you will find a search box, you enter what you are searching for into this box, press “go” or enter and so this search engine will show you the 10 most relevant results for that search term.
As search engines become more complicated and cleverer, the chances of anyone needing to go to the second page for their desired results is becoming less and less. It is estimated that up to 90% of all Internet users will use a search engine to find what they are looking for., very few of them go beyond the first page of results, if you are not there, your website may never be found.

Search Engine Optimisation is the skill of giving the search engines what they want for a search, so they will show your website hopefully on the first page of their results, so you get the visitor and you get the business. A SEO professional knows what these search engines need to deliver the credibility and to ensure good results. An amateur looks for quick wins.

Lets give you an example

I am a part owner of an internet business that is currently number one Google UK for the search term “Car Parts” and “Used Car Parts”, this position means our business gets 4500 unique visitors a day which deliver up to 1400 leads for our customers every day. Compare this to 12 months ago, during the development of the site, where we were at position 30 and only delivered 70 visitors a day and 10 leads for our customers every day. To use paid advertising on Google would cost us around 50p a click, which is over £2000 a day to get the same amount of visitors. Had we not made SEO a priority to our business and understood how many people would search for our services, we just would not be in business now.

Search Engine Optimisation Is Constantly Changing

Millions of pages are added to the Internet every day, so in order to deal with the increasing size, how the search engines deal with the results change constantly. Many SEO practises that were popular 12 months ago are now out of date and some that were popular 24 months ago could now get your site banned and removed from a search engine.

There Are No Quick Wins

Every type of spam technique or quick win solution has been found out and a filter applied to take care of it. So never believe anyone who says he knows a quick way of delivering results. There is a natural timeline to every website, try to speed this process up and the opposite occurs. A filter is applied and your SEO campaign goes backwards until you re-do everything.

Why Is SEO Different To Web Design?

Good web design does include SEO, such as how well all the pages link together etc. But most web designers are in fact Graphic Artists who’s objective is to make your website as visually appealing as possible. Having lots of graphics, moving graphics and little text may look good, but does nothing to help the search engines discover what your website is about. Search engines cannot read images. The Internet is littered with fantastic looking websites that are never found and there are also basic looking, text rich websites that have made businesses and their owners millions. In my training seminars, I compare this to a 1000ft billboard full of colour photos placed in the desert or a 10ft board written in black and white situated in Piccadilly Circus. Which on would make more money for you?
I would take the Piccadilly Circus every time, plenty of traffic, plenty of money spending customers.
Bye For Now

Programming Solutions For Web Designers And Media Companies

Wednesday, September 1st, 2010

In the 21st century those who use the internet expect more than a few words and a few pictures and so the role of a web designer has moved away from an online colour catalogue to websites that actually are part of the business model and deliver solutions to help the user and business.

Common basic example of this is the ability to take orders online using shopping carts, automated email responses, online contact forms, reviews and database applications that allow multiple examples of images or pages.

Web Design Versus Programming

To the average person in the street, there is no difference to these two disciplines, but those in the business know there is a real difference between what requires a programmer and web design. Web design businesses are now, more and more being approached to deliver programming solutions not aware that the process is different to web design and so web design and media companies are being forced to employ programmers to deliver these larger projects, often being taken away from the artistic part of the business they set their enterprise up for.

Outsource Your Programming: A Solution For You

A solution to this is to employ a programmer that you can trust and talk through the project as and when you need one. We can offer that service to web designers and media businesses, who can attain a quote from ourselves to the programming work and apply that to the design work you will do after the programming is completed.

Let us do what we are good at and you stick to what you are good at could be the right solution to allow your enterprise to quote for projects you would normally avoid or need to employ full time for. This means

  • No Holiday Pay
  • No NI payments
  • Employ only when needed
  • You can focus on what you are good at
  • Have confidence of the quality of work
  • Take on work you would not normally be able to
  • Take on extra work at busy times
  • Of course even if you do employ a programmer, often the balance between programming time and design time may mean one employee waiting for another.