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Styling Your Copy for Search Engines AND Visitors
by Scott Buresh
Since all of the major search engines
use the words that appear on web pages as an important
factor in their ranking algorithms, it is important
to make sure that you let the search engines know
exactly what your pages are about. However, it is
just as important that you do so in a way that will
not compromise your marketing message or turn off
your visitors. To demonstrate how it is possible to
style your copy for search engines without diminishing
the visitor experience, it is perhaps easiest to create
a fictional example:
Borrowing from the Road Runner
cartoons, we'll call our company Acme,
and assume that our company is engaged in making widgets.
Let's also assume that we have gone to Wordtracker
and established that one of the prime keyphrases for
our site is "Widget Manufacturing"
(for more about keyphrase selection, please see our
past newsletter Selecting
and Evaluating Keyphrases).
Below is how the headline and first
few sentences of our current homepage read:
Acme, Inc.
Acme has been making custom widgets for over
a decade. Widgets have changed throughout the
years, but our commitment to quality and unprecedented
customer service has not. Every step of our
time-tested process, from instigation to implementation,
is geared toward your satisfaction. Producing
widgets is not just what we do- it's how we
live. It's the air we breathe. |
Please keep in mind that,
for the sake of brevity, we've only included the top
segment of the fictional page copy. Ideally, there
would be 200 words or more in total- enough to give
our visitors a compelling marketing message and enough
to feed the search engines with the content that they
crave.
First, let's consider the
headline text (and ignore the fact that we may have
an unhealthy widget obsession). Search engines consider
prominent words on pages to have more weight than
words that appear in copy alone, so it is beneficial
to use keyphrases in headline text (so called because
it resembles the headline of a newspaper story). Unfortunately,
our existing headline doesn't take advantage of our
keyphrase- it merely says "Acme, Inc." From
a pure search engine perspective, we may be tempted
to create a headline that simply reads "Widget
Manufacturing" (our keyphrase). This would
work fine for search engines, but what about our company
and our brand? Seeking a balance, we come up with
"Acme- Quality Widget Manufacturing".
Now we have something- a workable headline that includes
our keyphrase, describes our business, and should
please both search engines and visitors. Our updated
sample now reads:
Acme- Quality Widget
Manufacturing*
Acme has been making custom widgets for over
a decade. Widgets have changed throughout the
years, but our commitment to quality and unprecedented
customer service has not. Every step of our
time-tested process, from instigation to implementation,
is geared toward your satisfaction. Producing
widgets is not just what we do- it's how we
live. It's the air we breathe.
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* keyphrases shaded
red are for visual illustration purposes only.
This is better from a search engine
perspective, but the headline is merely the beginning.
Now we have to reinforce in our copy, to our visitors
AND to search engines, that we are experts in "widget
manufacturing". The problem, however, is that
our visitors are smarter than search engines. With
them, we could use any number of synonymous terms
in the copy and still get our message across ("widget
creation", "widget production", etc).
Search engines are not yet clever enough to understand
that these terms can essentially mean the same thing,
so we have to reinforce the relevance of our page
in exact terms.
Trying to achieve a balance
between visitor and search engine considerations,
we modify our above copy to include our keyphrase
in opportune places, so that the page now reads:
Acme- Quality Widget
Manufacturing
Acme has been engaged in custom widget
manufacturing for over a decade. Widgets
have changed throughout the years, but our commitment
to quality and unprecedented customer service
has not. Every step of our time-tested process,
from instigation to implementation, is geared
toward your satisfaction. Widget
manufacturing is not just what we do-
it's how we live. It's the air we breathe.
|
We would continue this process
for the rest of the copy on the page. Again, ideally
there would be 200 words or more in total.
The differences between the
original and new versions of this copy may be subtle,
but the differences in the search engine positions
between a site that uses these techniques and one
that does not is often substantial. It should be noted
that while it may be tempting to try to shoehorn keyphrases
into the site wherever possible, this defeats our
purpose. We may get more search engine traffic, but
our visitors will not be able to look past the disjointed,
unprofessional copy. Too many instances of the keyphrase
can also put us at risk of penalization from search
engines. The most important thing to remember when
styling body copy and headlines for search engines
is not to compromise the visitor experience.
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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