From the obvious to the "Hey-I-never-thought-of-that-great-idea-before",
here are 10 of the top 52 tips on how to optimize your website
for its turbo-charge rocket ride up the search engine rankings.
- Deep linking. Make sure
you have links coming in to as many pages as possible.
What does it tell a search engine when other web sites
are linking to different pages on your site? That you
obviously have lots of worthwhile content. What does it
tell a search engine that all your links are coming in
to the home page? That you have a shallow site of little
value, or that your links were generated by automation
rather than by the value of your site.
- Become a foreigner. Canada
and the UK have many directories for websites of companies
based in those countries. Can you get a business address
in one of those countries?
- Newsletters. Offer articles
to ezine publishers that archive their ezines. The links
stay live often for many years in their archives.
- First come, first served.
If you must have image links in your navigation bar, include
also text links. However, make sure the text links show
up first in the source code, because search engine robots
will follow the first link they find to any particular
page. They won't follow additional links to the same page.
NOTE: This tip helped
me move a website from 8-9 on Google for a very competitive
term, up to 3-5 for that term.
- Multiple domains. If you
have several topics that could each support their own
website, it might be worth having multiple domains. Why?
First, search engines usually list only one page per domain
for any given search, and you might warrant two. Second,
directories usually accept only home pages, so you can
get more directory listings this way. Why not a site dedicated
to gumbo pudding pops?
- Article exchanges. You've
heard of link exchanges, useless as they generally are.
Article exchanges are like link exchanges, only much more
useful. You publish someone else's article on the history
of pudding pops with a link back to their site. They publish
your article on the top ten pudding pop flavors in Viet
Nam, with a link back to your site. You both have content.
You both get high quality links. (More on high quality
links in other tips.)
- Be bold. Use the tags
around some of your keywords on each page. Do NOT use
them everywhere the keyword appears. Once or twice is
plenty.
- Titles for links. Links
can get titles, too. Not only does this help visually
impaired surfers know where you are sending them, but
some search engines figure this into their relevancy for
a page.
- Not anchor text. Don't
overdo the anchor text. You don't want all your inbound
links looking the same, because that looks like automation
– something Google frowns upon. Use your URL sometimes,
your company name other times, "Gumbo Pudding Pop"
occasionally, "Get gumbo pudding pops" as well,
"Gumbo-flavored pudding pops" some other times,
etc.
- Site map. A big site needs
a site map, which should be linked to from every page
on the site. This will help the search engine robots find
every page with just two clicks. A small site needs a
site map, too. It's called the navigation bar.
There you have it: 10 of the 52 Top SEO Tips, a free tip
sheet that comes with Don't Get Banned By the Search Engines:
http://www.thehappyguy.com/SEO.html
There is a lot more to search engine optimization, and
there are always more details when looking at an individual
site. But these tips should help any website significantly
improve its rankings.
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