SEO Articles Home > SEARCH ENGINE OPTIMIZATION > Tuning The Pages > Writing A Keyword-Rich Text Copy > Please Search Engines With Quality Copywriting
Please Search Engines With Quality Copywriting
by David Utter
Copywriting for search engine optimization can do more than
enhance one's placement; it can help reinforce a brand and overcome
negative comments made online about a company.
How did you become an effective SEO copywriter? Or did you find
someone in-house or outside to do that task? Write a few words about it
at WebProWorld.
When Chris Richardson from WebProNews attended the afternoon
session on Writing for Search Engines, he picked up a number of good
guidelines from the trio of speakers about crafting copy in a way to
make search engines happy right down to the machine code of their
algorithms.
SuccessWorks International president Heather Lloyd-Martin made note of three secrets to creating effective copy:
1. savvy keyphrase choices
2. longer text
3. smart writing strategy
Keyphrase research is critical here. Misspellings and poor
grammar damage the brand that displays them online. Promoting the SEO
copywriting plan means reinforcing the need for care when writing the
message.
By hitting in the area of approximately 250 words per page,
brands give themselves a better shot at making the search engines
happy. Pages in that range make it easier to include keyphrases while
managing the marketing message.
Importantly, a 250-word range provides more content for the
engines as well as the customer. People will not feel comfortable about
buying your product if you have little or no content on your page.
Content gives consumers a sense of security.
Those savvy keyphrase choices can't be made without research.
Once that research has been completed, place two to three keyphrases
targeted for each page, and include them three or four times each
within the copy. Don't let a page become a keyphrase-stuffed spam
presence; cut out some of the keyphrases.
In placing those keyphrases, integrate them throughout the
page copy, from top to bottom, and don't neglect the headlines and
sub-headlines. Their best use comes as a call-to-action, by
hyperlinking them to other content when possible.
Everyone knows how critical a page title is to SEO. It's also
the place where one makes a branding statement. The branding statement
doesn't necessarily need the company name, but it does need the main
keyphrases being targeted for each page.
Think of titles like a headline: they have to be compelling
and unique for each page. As a rule of thumb, titles should be a total
of about 50 to 75 characters, and that includes spaces.
Attendees then turned their attention to Jill Whalen,
owner of High Rankings. She also emphasized the importance of keywords
and phrases, and noted keyword phrase-rich content is a third of one's
SEO plan.
Those phrases need to be descriptive. Terms like "our team"
or "our service" should be replaced with "our search marketing firm" or
"our event planning service" as examples. Single words tend to be too
competitive, and advertisers should copywrite those into descriptive
phrases instead.
Graphics and Flash content looks great onscreen, but search
engines take a dim view of them. Alt tags aren't a viable replacement
for text content. When placing that text, Whalen recommended thinking
like a reporter while working keywords and phrases through the content
of a page.
Copywriters should be aware of the multiple spellings of some
worlds when creating copy, because users might search for "fork lift"
as well as "forklift" and both want to find the same piece of heavy
machinery. Target the spelling that is more commonly used and use that
phrase; don't use both versions on the same page.
"You are writing for customers BEFORE you are writing for the
engines... good copy is usually and already search engine friendly,"
Whalen said. "Good web writing can help bring extremely targeted
visitors, and then convert them into customers."
Our credits to the source/author of this article:
 |
Author: David Utter
David Utter is a staff writer for WebProNews covering technology and business. Email him
here.
This article is taken from the WebProNews website.
|
|
|
|