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Addressing the Search Term
by Scott Buresh
It is fairly common knowledge that
the words that appear on web pages are one factor
in the way that those pages are ranked in individual
search engines. This means, of course, that a page
that contains a search term one or more times has
a better chance of ranking highly than a page that
does not include the search term. However, while more
and more sites begin to include search terms in their
web page copy in order to rank higher in web searches,
high search engine rankings are really only a part
of the equation. Another large part is whether each
of your pages is directly addressing the searcher's
topic of interest (deduced from the search term).
The
Shoehorn Approach
When a site is already built and established, many
search engine optimization experts or individuals
trying their luck at SEO will employ a "shoehorn"
approach. This can be less costly and usually involves
fewer alterations to an existing site than a comprehensive
approach, but has a primary drawback. It is perhaps
easiest to explain by giving a fictional example.
Acme Widgets
Drawing from the RoadRunner cartoons, let's talk about
a fictional company called Acme Widgets. Our company
is a widget manufacturer, and we currently have a
small brochureware site.
Working in a Keyphrase
One of the keyphrases we want to target is "custom
widget manufacturing", since we have looked at
Wordtracker and discovered that a large number of
our potential prospects are typing this phrase (it's
doubtful anyone searches for this fictitious example,
but let's pretend that many do). Since we want to
make minimal changes to the site, we are taking the
shoehorn approach, which means that we are going to
try to work this search term into an existing page.
We take a look at the "About Acme" page
of our site (a page that describes our company and
our philosophy), and realize that we could probably
work the phrase "custom widget manufacturing"
into the copy a few times without too many changes.
This will help us to achieve better rankings for the
search term- so everyone is happy, right? Well, not
exactly.
Limitation of the Shoehorn
Approach
The problem with this scenario is that while we may
have added some helpful ingredients for our search
engine rankings, we haven't really added much helpful
information for our visitors. In other words, they
may find our "about" page when typing in
the search term "custom widget manufacturing",
but the existing page copy doesn't really address
this phrase specifically- it just gives them blanket
information about our company that happens to contain
the term. Many searchers (perhaps even most) may quickly
decide to look elsewhere, because we have not adequately
addressed the search term.
The
Comprehensive Approach
Although it takes more effort, a comprehensive approach
can greatly increase your likelihood of keeping the
interest of your visitors and eventually getting them
to take the action on your site that you desire.
Creating a New Page
Using the same scenario, we look at the Wordtracker
numbers for the search term "custom widget manufacturing"
and realize that this term is of interest to many
of our potential customers. Rather than asking "Where
in the world can we fit this search term into our
existing site?" we ask "Why in the world
do we not have a page of our site devoted to this
popular topic?" We then go on to create a new
page for our site, built in to the main navigation,
which directly addresses the topic of custom widget
manufacturing- how we design custom widgets, our proprietary
custom widget manufacturing process, and why we are
better than everyone else at dealing with custom widgets.
Now, when a visitor finds our page on a search for
the term "custom widget manufacturing",
they are finding information that is much more likely
to address their interest, and we have a visitor who
is much more likely to read what we have to say (and
again, hopefully take the action that we desire).
Repeating the Process
Continuing our comprehensive approach, we may find
many other popular and specific search terms that
command pages of their own (i.e. "plastic widgets"
or "rotating widgets", where we talk about
our approach to each of these specialized items).
The main idea is that we use software such as Wordtracker
to identify the interests of our potential prospects,
and then we devote pages of our site (always built
in to the navigation) to telling our prospects about
our experience and expertise in the topics that interest
them.
Conclusion
A comprehensive approach is not necessarily visibly
better than a shoehorn approach in terms of sheer
search engine positions- the two approaches may yield
similar ranking results. However, a comprehensive
approach will almost always yield better results when
it comes to the time each search engine visitor spends
on your site, and, more importantly, the overall sales
that originate from your site. And bottom line revenue,
rather than high positions alone, is what search engine
marketing is really all about.
Our credits to the source/author of this article:
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Author: Scott Buresh
Scott Buresh is the CEO of Medium Blue Search Engine Marketing.
He has contributed content to many publications including Building Your Business with Google For Dummies (Wiley, 2004), MarketingProfs, ZDNet, SEO Today, WebProNews, DarwinMag, SiteProNews, ISEDB.com, and Search Engine Guide. Medium Blue,an Atlanta search engine optimization company
, serves local and national clients, including Boston Scientific, DuPont, and Georgia-Pacific. To receive internet marketing articles and search engine news in your email box each month, register for Medium Blue’s newsletter, Out of the Blue.
This article is taken from the Medium blue website.
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