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Your Search Engine Optimization Strategy: Make Love, Not War
by Scott Buresh
When
it comes to search engine optimization strategy, there are basically
two camps – those who view search engines as adversaries to be
conquered at any cost and those who regard search engines as partners
in their online marketing efforts. Long-time readers of my articles
probably already have a good idea of which camp I fall into; however, I
believe both approaches can be effective optimization methods.
Adversarial Optimization Methods
Service
providers who have this “adversarial” philosophy will tell their
prospects that the formulation of a search engine optimization strategy
is much like a high-stakes game of chess. It’s an “us vs. them,”
“winner-take-all,” and “every man for himself” mentality. It’s also
rooted largely in technology – under this philosophy, success is
defined as unraveling the latest search engine algorithm to find new
optimization methods and exploiting its technical aspects for immediate
benefit.
The
underlying premise of this search engine optimization strategy is that
you must use optimization methods that trick the search engines into
showing a website predominantly in the results since the site isn’t
currently offering attributes that the search engines consider
valuable. The primary benefits of this approach are that it doesn’t
require much work on the part of the client and that results can be
realized more rapidly. These qualities both stem from the fact that
there isn’t a large amount of additional content needed, nor are there
many wholesale changes to make to the website when using such
optimization methods.
While
this is not the methodology that I recommend, it is a valid – albeit
potentially volatile – search engine optimization strategy.
Partnership Optimization Methods
Those
who view search engines as partners have a very different search engine
optimization strategy. These service providers embrace the idea that
the attributes and optimization methods that give a website high
rankings in search engines are, by and large, the same ones that make
the site more valuable to website visitors and potential customers.
This
theory makes sense. Every search engine needs to return results that
their users find to be the most relevant and useful. If search engine
R&D people operated in a vacuum, they would probably find their
market share rapidly diminished while they lamented about how “people
are stupid”. This means that each of the major search engines spend
endless research dollars to determine exactly what it is that search
engine users find valuable, and each has a high stake in the results of
the research. No search engine marketing or web design firm has the
resources or motivation to conduct studies of this magnitude. It is,
therefore, highly advantageous to use the findings of these studies,
deduced from common algorithm traits of multiple search engines, to
improve your search engine optimization strategy and website.
I
consistently hear from companies who are puzzled as to why their
expensive, cutting-edge website is perpetually outranked by a site of
perceived inferior quality – “our website is better than theirs” or “we
are a much bigger company” are common remarks. Beauty is, as always, in
the eye of the beholder. The sites that consistently rank highly are
almost always using optimization methods that offer something of value
to people who entered the search query. Search engines care as much
about the size of a company or how much it spent on its website about
as much as they care about what you had for breakfast this morning (I
had blueberry muffins, but Google hasn’t called to ask).
The
advantages to the “partnership” search engine optimization strategy are
numerous. Rather than chase the ever-changing technical attributes that
can get you short-term results, you instead use optimization methods
that leverage your company’s knowledge of your industry to create
something useful for the searcher. You can improve your website and
offer the information and products that prospects are seeking, even if
those prospects are in the earliest stages of the buying cycle. In
general, you will not have to watch your rankings swing wildly based
upon new spam filters and algorithm shifts, and thus will enjoy a
higher level of predictability when it comes to your website (although
with search engines, there are never any guarantees). Since you aren’t
constantly forced to re-address your site’s search engine optimization
methods, you’ll have more time to focus on other online marketing areas
that need attention, such as the website’s conversion rate, an
e-newsletter, or online PR.
Conclusion
It’s
a fact that websites rise and fall in the rankings all the time. The
only real constant is that the sites of TRUE value, the ones that offer
something relevant and important to the searcher, are generally always
near the top – even after the latest algorithm shift has sent the
“adversarial” crowd into a frenzy of activity as they attempt to
reformulate their search engine optimization strategy.
While
it may take a little extra effort, I like to think of the relationship
with search engines as a “partnership” in a real sense. We use
optimization methods that apply the attributes search engines have
deemed to be valuable to a website, which improves both the website and
the website’s search engine rankings. The search engines, in turn, send
highly-targeted visitors who have shown an interest in your industry,
products, or services. Sure, it may seem that we get more out of the
deal, but the engines don’t complain. They haven’t even acknowledged
our partnership.
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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