Archive for the ‘SEO’ Category

Creative Thinking in your Innovative SEO/SEM Strategy.

Thursday, July 5th, 2007

By Gary E. Haffer, Director of Sales and Marketing

Below you’ll find potential elements of an ongoing SEO strategy for your site. Some items are going to be immediately applicable, and others may require some creative thinking to see them applied to your business. The challenging, and exciting, aspect of SEO is that is never becomes stagnant and we try to keep our noses in the blogs and server logs to stay current and innovative.

Some specific items to keep in mind in the SEO/SEM toolbox:

1) PRESS RELEASES: A minimum of one a month for a total of at least 12 a year. Ideally you’ll do one every month and target a different market each time. PRs drive direct traffic and via syndication have multiple SEO benefits, the foremost being one-way incoming links. SpiderSplat has a new resource who will increase our PR output capabilities.

2) NEWS & BLOG: Simply put, press releases re-purposed within ‘blog’ style content management system (CMS). The CMS can then be used to post newsworthy items supplementary to the proper PRs. CMS enables SM personnel to easily update content in this ‘News’ section. Frequently updated, original content is a cornerstone of successful SEO efforts. Write about, and link to sites with “in the news” pages. Those mentioned may link back to stories and blog posts which cover their developments.

3) SQUIDOO & OTHERS: The content/social networking sites are among several with SEO benefits via the production of incoming links. We already have content here which points back to numerous pages on our client websites.

4) DIGG & DEL.ICI.OUS & OTHERS: These news aggregation and networking sites continue to become popular, create communities and reveal benefits to SEO. All old and upcoming press releases will be submitted to these networks for more visibility and incoming links.

5) LINKBUILDING: As a very general term, link building is going to remain the key to SEO success for the foreseeable future, and SpiderSplat intends to stay on the bleeding edge of link baiting and development. Link building is time consuming and tedious, and ultimately we’re striving to pack more intelligence and creativity into our methods, as one can only go so far with directory submissions and press releases.

6) SOCIAL MEDIA: Social network visibility: MySpace, Squidoo, HubPages, Digg, Del.ici.ous, etc. In general terms, this is known as SMO, or Social Media Optimization. Original content for related products that will be perceived as objective resources and linked to by surfers without compensation or convincing. SpiderSplat writes original, product related articles for content and offer them up for syndication via an RSS feed or manually arrange content swaps with other webmasters.

The 5 Golden Rules of Search Engine Optimization

Thursday, July 5th, 2007

To say that SEO has changed by leaps and bounds over the last 5 years would be the understatement… of the last 5 years. What was once a measure of a onsite meta tags and coding dilligence, has now become a larger measure of offsite influences.

Through a focused combination of attention to both your code and your surrounding landscape you can better the chances of your domain being interpreted positively by search engines and in turn reach your target market effectively.

Dave’s 5 Golden Rules of SEO:

1. Optimize Your TITLE Tags: Titles must be unique to each and every page, whenever possible. They should contain your top keywords, in a variety of iterations, throughout your site and be especially targeted to the content of the given page in question.

2. URL Structure: If you don’t need to have fancy dynamic, alpha-numeric URLS, then don’t! Make your URLs SEO-Friendly by incorporating keywords, or automatically mimicking page titles via a readily available mod-rewrite script.

3. External, Incoming, One-Way Link Building: Currently one of the most effective ways in which to increase your rankings is by getting other sites to link back to yours. This can be done via superior original content, press releases, good old fashioned flesh-pressing and more. Get creative. Think of every incoming link as a vote to your site - because the search engines will! Link building is not easy, takes time and is never truly finished. Hang in there.

4. Keyword Density and Placement: Your pages should contain an average of 3-500 words of ASCII text, with multiple keywords and iterations sprinkled healthily throughout. The best rule of thumb when walking the line between density and SPAM is to remember: If the copy reads poorly to you, there’s a good change it will sound funny to the spiders as well. Use keywords and phrases in moderation.

5. Don’t Panic: SEOs do just that - they optimize. Ultimately, webmasters have very little control over how their site is viewed by the major search engines. One can do everything right, follow all of the best practices and still be invisible for their most desired words and phrases. Algorithms fluctutate, and SERPs change - constantly. Just because you’re buried today, or have lost ground for yourself or a client, doesn’t mean that all can’t change in a few days. Stay dilligent with the offsite SEO and make sure you haven’t done anything for which you may be penalized.

Where on the World Wide Web Can Your Site Go?

Thursday, July 5th, 2007

How Search Engine Optimization (SEO) can maximize the potential of your business

What it really takes to catapult your URL to the top ranks of all the search engines is a committed, fully dedicated, experienced, and specialized professional outfit armed with all the resources, tools, and technology available in today’s fast-paced internet marketplace. SpiderSplat Consulting’s team of IT professionals, copy-writers, and hands-on managers come to the table with a wide variety of services, programs, and human-to-human contact other firms can’t always guarantee their clients.

A pioneer of the budding Search Engine Optimization industry, SpiderSplat’s unique approach is backed by a crew of highly skilled technicians with vast background, education, and training in novel approaches to internet marketing and Web-site promotion. They employ advanced software, strategies, and techniques that can give your company the on-line edge you need over your competitors.

Friendly person to person communication, deep resources, savvy networking capabilities, and a broad range of prices and options are just a few reasons SpiderSplat Consulting has continuously landed Fortune 500 and Fortune 1000 clients. SpiderSplat even offers basic packages for entrepreneurs and small business owners to get their new sites on the map. It can be extremely difficult to maximize the potential of your on-line business without partners who truly understand how it all works. SpiderSplat’s experts know how to analyze your existing capabilities and traffic and how to connect you with link exchanges and affiliate programs. They can also reconfigure your entire site to ensure keyword searches result in more top ten search engine hits. Competitively priced programs, performance based payment plans, and professional service can all provide customers of SpiderSplat a whole world of options to choose from. 

Start-up businesses with promising products or services can rely on SpiderSplat’s most basic packages to help boost site traffic. Even the most simple on-line marketing strategies and approaches employed by SpiderSplat consultants can mean the difference between success and failure in the exponentially growing on-line marketplace. For a new company it is especially important to start out strong, and the SpiderSplat team can get your company sprinting out of the gates with the right mix of technology, human intelligence, and proven step-by-step optimization services. SpiderSplat professionals have helped some of today’s most profitable and resilient companies move up to the head of the pack.

Even after they are established, successful clients can reap the rewards of SpiderSplat’s long list of available programs to improve existing marketing strategies. Premium services offered by SpiderSplat can help any company race past the competition and secure a spot at the top of the search engine food chain. SpiderSplat’s team always gets the job done right and stays focused on constant improvement.

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Using SEO to Effectively Market your Company

Thursday, July 5th, 2007

Hundreds of millions of Websites exist today. As far as domain names and new pages of content go, they’re off the charts as well. Statistics from August of 2001 listed 513.41 people on-line worldwide according to Alexa Internet Worldwide, there were 1.5 million sites born every day in 1998. Alexa also indicated that about half of all internet traffic that year was steered toward the top 900 sites available.

Gregory Gromov, in an on-line piece about the history of the World Wide Web, reported that internet traffic grew more than 100% in 2001. Gromov’s report (“Roads and Crossroads of Internet History” on http://www.netvalley.com/) also includes a staggering chart detailing the exponential growth of the net over the last thirty years. In 1969, when the internet was just a concept Al Gore was working on, there were just four hosts by Gromov’s count. By July of 2001 that number had grown to 126 million hosts. Gromov’s chart estimates that there were 30 million domains in 2001 and 28,200,000 Websites. Compare that to 1998 numbers of just 4,300,000 domains and 4,270,000 Websites.

Why? Is human knowledge expanding this quickly in the information age? Well, yes, and no. Human knowledge is of course expanding, but maybe not as quickly as the exchange of products and services for cold cash. E-commerce is skyrocketing along with the number of hosts, users, domains, and Websites. Trillions of dollars change hands over the internet in a calendar year these days. That’s nothing new, either. At Networld 98, industry analyst Nicholas Lippis announced that online commerce would generate USD1.5 trillion of US GDP by 2002.

With Broadband connections taking a serious role in so many American lives (Broadband use has already eclipsed 50% of the US on-line population), the access to human knowledge is expanding more than the actual knowledge itself. While service providers are the big winners in this marketplace of interconnected sites and search engines, garnering the lion’s share of on-line profits, new business sites are popping up every single day.

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Information is power for Search Engine Rankings

Thursday, July 5th, 2007

“Information is the currency of the internet. As a medium, the internet is brilliantly efficient at shifting information from the hands of those who have it into the hands of those who do not.” (Levitt & Dubner 2005 p.68)

What economist Steven Levitt and journalist Stephen Dubner are talking about here in their wildly popular book Freakonomics, is the empowerment of the consumer via the availability of information. Typically within specialized industries or disciplines there are experts and then there are the consumers who need the expert advice. The experts are considered such due to their experience and the information they’re privy to. With the advent of the internet, this imbalance of information or what economists call ‘information asymmetry’ is no longer so.

Professional search marketers absorb an excessive amount of daily data via blogs, campaign results, and traffic logs in an effort to stay up to speed with search engine performance changes and to stay ahead of the competition. However, the search marketer is constantly at a disadvantage since the search engine programmer is the only one with absolute knowledge pertaining to their search engine’s mechanics. In a strange twist, the internet, in all its grand execution of information deliverability can only shed a dim light on the full scope of search engine functionality. (more…)

Scraping The Bottom Of Google’s Barrel

Thursday, July 5th, 2007

What’s a search marketing professional to do when their vertical of choice becomes completely flooded? Or, more accurately, what’s a search engine marketing professional to do - period? When the low-hanging fruit is a fond memory, it’s time to break out the 24 foot extendable ladder.This article didn’t tell me anything I didn’t already know, but it’s a good shortcut for the newbie. In a nutshell, find the more obscure phrases that people use to find what you’re selling. When it comes to PPC, locating these “sweet spots” is what SEM firms spend hours doing every day across the globe. But how many people are building pages that are focused specifically on terms like “discount blue baby bedding”? The longer the keyword phrase, the less people are likely competing to optimize for it.

Yes, we all already knew this. But when applied to page creation as opposed to PPC - it got my brain working. Stay tuned for my brand new site: www.brightredrubberpickuptruckfloormats.com.

How Search Optimization (SEO) can help your website

Thursday, July 5th, 2007

Obtaining top rankings in the search engines has resulted in numerous methods and rules on accomplishing this task.

When one refers to SEO, one usually refers to natural or organic rankings.  There is another way in dealing with search and that is with Pay per Click (PPC).   PPC is less powerful as far as credibility with people surfing the Internet even though a larger number of companies use this because a PPC campaign can be up and running in just a matter of minutes generating results while organic rankings may take three to four months to generate any results and those results have no guarantee of lasting.

Natural or organic search engine optimization (SEO) has drawbacks as well as advantages. They are as follows:

Search Engine Volatility

Your ranking on any of the major search engines whether high or low can change at any time.  This is due to the fact that as a site gains high rankings for search engines such as Google, Yahoo, or MSN  today does not mean you can count on those same rankings next month, or next week for that matter. To achieve top ranking requires as much work and effort as does maintaining that ranking.

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Get your Website Ranked

Thursday, July 5th, 2007

According to Juniper Research, over 85% of all Internet surfers are directed by search engines and with over $300 billion worth of eCommerce in the year 2006, making it tempting for many companies to enter the online sector. Having an effective SEM Campaign is essential for getting listed among the top search engines today. Using the techniques described in this article will greatly improve the chances of your website getting listed on search engines.

A search engine is an online service that can aid a user in finding a web page that contains particular content the user is looking for. There are many different search engine services on the web. They are primarily distinguished from each other by the way they gather their information. Searching these engines only requires a small text command, and there are many ways to narrow down your searches. According to new research conducted by Jupiter Research, 62% of search engine users click on a search result within the first page of results, and a full 90% of users click on a result within the first three pages of search results. In this article, I will examine the techniques that can help to get your website rank well among the top search engines.

A Meta tag is a small piece html code used by a website to control what a search engine categorizes and stores the site as in their database. It basically tells the search engine what you want your page listed as. Search engines are used by millions of people around the world on a daily basis. They are the easiest and most user-friendly way to find content on the Internet. They provide an invaluable service to the Internet user by providing a huge database of websites that the user can quickly search through.
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The true value of paid links to SEO

Thursday, July 5th, 2007

Tim O’reilly recently wrote an article in his blog about paid links. Many people have commented about this article including Matt Cutts of Google. The gist of the article is how advertisers pay not only for the click throughs, but also for the Google Page Rank. I’ll leave aside the philosophical debate on if paid links are good or bad. The one thing that caught my attention was Matt’s comment about how Google does not trust certain sites when passing on link popularity. To quote Matt, ‘just because a site shows up for a “link:” command on Google does not mean that it passes PageRank, reputation, or anchortext’.Bottom line is that you have to be careful when buying links, why do you want a specific link? If it is for the potential click through or brand management in the field, go right a head. However, if the only reason for you buying that link is Page Rank and increased position in the search results, make sure you do your homework before paying for it.

Performance SEO - Don’t believe everything you read

Thursday, July 5th, 2007

Performance SEO recently sent out an online press release (info on file) claiming some revolutionary new pricing model. “trademarked pricing model consists of a standard 6 month agreement during which payments are broken out evenly. An optional maintenance program is then offered”. I have not looked into the trademark, but it does not seem to new to me.

Peaking my interest, I visited their website. The first thing I noticed was that their Google Page Rank is 0. A quick search on Google, show some 16 pages indexed, meaning the PR 0 was not due to a penalization. A domain whois check showed the domain was only registered in July (3 months ago) – yet the press release claims they have “28 years of combined experience”.

I then browsed through the site, to look at their pricing. They have a page labeled pricing and the whole press release goes on about their pricing model, so I thought I’d take a peak. The page has some text, a graph with representing their work, your results and your costs. At the bottom of a page there was a link to contact them. I understand that special jobs require custom quotes and contracts, but you’d think that after all the hype they would at least put in some basic prices so that one could compare them to the rest – silly me.

That’s three strikes in my book (brand new domain, no Page Rank and no prices where you would expect them). I hope they are not waiting for me to click the contact link at the bottom of that page to contact them, because they will just be waiting in vain.