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Microsites & Micropages

Thursday, May 13th, 2010

Earlier this week I met with a potential client who sold personalized gifts.  He’s got a really terrific product line, something that I’ve never seen anywhere else.  In fact, I’m probably going to get me a Tshirt next week, even if he doesn’t hire me.  It’s that cool.

During the meeting, he was telling me how he had control over each page footer, how he could build out each footer to be different, link to different pages, etc.  That’s cool, could help with his internal linking.

But then he started telling me how he could build different pages for slightly different terms, and them link them through the footer, thus creating an entire network of pages.  For instance: Mother’s Day
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Google Adds Brand Searches to SERPS

Friday, April 30th, 2010

There’s a new change out to the SERPs today which I really like.  When you’re searching for a generic product, say a dryer, you’ll now see that added to the SERP pages is a link to several related brands.

serp for dryers
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Searching the Lou

Monday, April 19th, 2010

Is St Louis and Saint Louis the same thing in the eyes of search engines? Should you care?

We’ve got a bit of a unique situation here.  Our fair city is one of the few that is searchable in many different ways – saint louis, st louis, stl and so on.  But does it really matter to you how people searching for local merchants?
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Fix Your Front End

Thursday, April 15th, 2010

Does it matter if your site uses the www. at the front of the domain?

Here’s a great SEO tip that nearly no business owner is aware of.

Did you know that a simple 4 lines of code can help your website move up the rankings?  Those lines can take any visitor that comes to your site by typing in domain.com and automatically forward them to www.domain.com.  Of course, domain is your website address.

But why would you care if they typed in the w’s or not?  Well, you might not care, but the search engines do.
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Page Two, Spiders and SEO Contracts

Wednesday, April 14th, 2010

What percentage of searchers go to page 2 of any Google result?

Sometimes I meet a business owner that has done a little research, changed a few things on his/her website, and is really proud of being on the second page of Google for one of their industry’s terms.  But how many Internet searchers actually go to the second page of a Google result?
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Business Owners and Google’s Algorithm

Tuesday, April 13th, 2010

How many different things does Google measure when deciding where to rank your website in their index?

Many business owners are surprised to find out that changing just a few things to their website can result in a decent raise in their overall site rankings.  What they may not realize, however, is that there are more than just a few things that Google measures when ranking their website against their competition.
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Google Just Increased My Revenue

Thursday, December 31st, 2009

News came out today that Google has officially removed the 7 pack for search queries related to SEO. Of course, these queries have a geolocator and used to feature seven companies related to the query. It still works for other industries, plumbing for example.

Some people in the SEO community are freaking out about it, but I’m all for it.

There are ways to ‘game’ the 7 pack, such as purchasing a UPS box close to the city center that you want to be featured for, etc.  Some say that doesn’t even work, but I’ve got several clients who think it is worth the $100 or so yearly investment.

Nonetheless, I think it’s great.  No longer will 6 incompetent SEOs be listed alongside my name.  Now they’ll have to work for it – showing that they can actually rank for the term that is what they do.  I started targeting St Louis SEO years ago, so I’ve got a nice advantage already.  I was showing up in the 7 pack as well as the organic results.

Some other industries seem to have been hit as well, including web design, ad agencies, web hosting and graphic designers.  Some of these have been confirmed, but others haven’t.  Do a few searches for IT-related industries and you’ll see which have been removed.

So thanks, Google, for removing 6 competitors from the SERP I’m targeting.   I appreciate it.

Don’t Stop at Two

Thursday, October 22nd, 2009

There are business owners that understand what SEO is, how it works, and how to use it to their advantage. These SMB owners are on the leading edge (and I still believe that is the case today – most biz owners have no clue about SEO’s potential impact on their business) and they are a little more willing to try new things. They love the idea that they can rank at the top of Google, Yahoo!, or Bing for their industry’s top phrase. They even understand the importance of the long tail, and ranking #1 consistently for hundreds or thousands of different keywords and phrases.

But I don’t think they understand this: You can decimate your competition for any search. Outranking them is one thing, but completely removing them from the first page of results is very possible.  Even better, you can do all of this without going gray/black hat – you’ve just got to be a bit creative.

number twoFace it – getting the top spot on a SERP is great.  And at times you’ll even get a second indented result, further tempting the searcher to click over to your website.  (This of course depends on a lot of things, including unique page titles, simliar content, etc).

But why stop at two of the top ten spots in a SERP?  Why not all ten?  Why not push your competition down to page two, where only an estimated 11% ever visit?  It’s possible, and I’m doing it right now for some clients.  They are totally dominating the entire first page of results in their industry.

Getting Started

There are a few things you’ll need (and hopefully you already have).  You’ll need a nice keyword list that you’ve either done yourself or paid an SEM to do for you.  You’ll also need access to your analytics so you can see what people are currently typing in to find you.

Armed with those two things, you should continue to build great content, but also start to branch out your link building with these phrases.  When asking for a link, anchor it with a keyphrase that you’d like to dominate for.  If possible, give the linker a little paragraph about yourself, that includes the same keyphrase.  Help them rank their page (that’s linking to you) for that keyword/phrase.

The same goes for sites like CraigsList and BackPage.  Build your ads in a way that these pages will rank highly for the term you’re targeting.  Visitors to these pages will still end up at your site.

Ranking Other Sites? Seriously?

Yes.  Think about this.  If every page on a SERP points to you, you are ruling that search. No matter which link the user clicks, they end up at your site. What’s not to love?

There is one thing – be careful of which sites you build links and content on.  If there’s heavy competition for something (particularly in the local market) then it may not help you to be ‘another link’ on an already crowded website.  Find those sites that cater to your niche and that have very little of your competitors listed.

Also – if you’ve got the money to run PPC, you’ve got yet another opportunity to get on that same SERP.  I’m not a PPC expert, but I’d bet having your URL mentioned multiple times on a page would increase the possibility of a click-through.

There’s more than just ranking high.  There’s ranking first.  And there’s ranking multiple times.  And there’s ranking all ten slots.  It’s possible, trust me.  Push your competition to page two, or three.  Why not?