Please read carefully and then share with
your friends.
Don't Buy Paid Links?
Read what Google says
about paid links...
From Google...
Google and most other search engines use links to
determine reputation. A site's ranking in Google search
results is partly based on analysis of those sites that
link to it. Link-based analysis is an extremely useful
way of measuring a site's value, and has greatly
improved the quality of web search. Both the quantity
and, more importantly, the quality of links count
towards this rating.
However, some SEOs and webmasters engage in the practice
of buying and selling links that pass PageRank,
disregarding the quality of the links, the sources, and
the long-term impact it will have on their sites. Buying
or selling links that pass PageRank is in violation of
Google's webmaster guidelines and can negatively impact
a site's ranking in search results.
Not all paid links violate our guidelines. Buying and
selling links is a normal part of the economy of the web
when done for advertising purposes, and not for
manipulation of search results. Links purchased for
advertising should be designated as such. This can be
done in several ways, such as:
* Adding a rel="nofollow" attribute to the <a> tag
* Redirecting the links to an intermediate page that is
blocked from search engines with a robots.txt file
Google works hard to ensure that it fully discounts
links intended to manipulate search engine results, such
excessive link exchanges and purchased links that pass
PageRank. If you see a site that is buying or selling
links that pass PageRank, let us know. We'll use your
information to improve our algorithmic detection of such
links.
Good Tips
Article from seomoz.rg
For
the last three months I have been hard at work learning
SEO by optimizing a local small business website. The
business is called Giggly Wiggly Preschool and is
located in the Seattle suburb Issaquah, Washington. This
Issaquah Preschool was the preschool I attended many
years ago, so I am happy I was given the chance to give
back to it. Optimizing for local search is a great way
to learn SEO because there is less competition and it is
easier to maintain a small and focused scope. It has
been a slow process but has taught me a lot. The
following is a checklist of all the tasks that have been
necessary for me to generate great results. My hope is
that this list can be used by inexperienced SEOs who are
looking to learn the trade. (As a bonus, I have included
checkboxes so you can print this and complete it in your
spare time.)
The Beginner's Checklist for Small Business SEO
Research
Before you do any SEO you need to research the part of
the web you will be trying to change. Many people
believe this is the most important step in the SEO
process. No skipping!
Complete the
The Beginner's Checklist for Learning SEO -
Completing all the tasks on this list will give you all
the skills necessary to complete this checklist.
Write down your goal - Why are you doing this?
Why do you want people to find your client's site? Is
simply viewing your client's site not enough? My goal
was “I want local parents to find my client's website
and be persuaded to register their children.”
Brainstorm and write down search queries - What
words might people type into the search engines to look
for your client's company? For my example, I came up
with “Issaquah Preschool,” “Issaquah
Daycare,” “Sammamish Preschool,” (a
neighboring suburb) “Preschool Summer Camp,”
and “Creative Preschool.” Your list should be
longer.
Research your chosen keywords - Sign up for
Google Adwords and learn how to use the provided
“keyword tool” and “ad text ideas” generator. Learn how
to use
Wordtracker (paid) and/or the
Keyword Difficulty tool (free).
Using what you learned from keyword research, record
what you believe to be the best keywords - For my
project, I used “Issaquah Preschool,” “Issaquah Early
Childhood,” “Preschool Summer Camp,” and about five
others.
Analyze the current Search Engine Results Pages (SERPs)
for your keywords - Who is ranking? What are
they doing effectively and ineffectively? Investigate
and get to know your competition.
Create a list of your competition - Use the
information from the previous step to create a list of
competitors. You will use this to figure out how other
sites were able to get into your targeted SERPs.
Use
Yahoo Site Explorer to find the sources of your
competitor's links - Record the sources of
links your competitors have and save them for later.
Search for your client's site - Use the
site command on Google, Live and Yahoo to see if your
client's site is indexed. Ex. “site:www.gigglywigglypreschool.com.”
If your client's site is not indexed, you need to figure
out what is preventing the search engines from crawling
it. Be sure to also search the title tags of your
client's most important pages to see where/if they rank.
Record your results.
Onsite
Sign up and verify with
Google Analytics,
Google Webmaster Tools, and
Live Search Webmaster Center - This is an
important step that will become necessary later.
Let Google Analytics run for two weeks before doing
any SEO - This allows analytics to collect data
and provides you with a baseline. I recommend you screen
capture the relevant pages so you can show your client
how your work has positively affected their site.
Evaluate the visual design of your client's site
- If the site drives people away, no amount of SEO
efforts will help. If the site looks terrible, find well
designed sites in your client's niche.
Check compatibility between browsers - Visit
your client's site using Mozilla Firefox 2.x and
Internet Explorer 6 and 7 and Safari 3.x. Remember to do
this on both a Mac and a PC. You want to make sure your
client's website renders correctly and won't drive away
users.
Create a new e-mail address specific to the site you
are working on - Use this address for all e-mails
pertaining to your project. This is especially important
for link building.
Look at your HTML code and optimize all of the SEO
related tags - If you are unsure what these
are, reread the
Beginner's Guide to Search Engine Optimization. Here
are a few things to keep in mind:
- Primary objective
should be accomplished from the homepage
- Keyword in title
(unique for each page, include keywords)
- Keyword in h1 on each
page
- Keyword in text
- Optimize URL
architecture (www.website.com/birds/eagle
instead of www.website.com/allanimals/?type=bird&species=eagle).
Use 301 redirects if you rename pages
- Information
architecture - as few clicks as possible
- On relevant images
include keywords in alt tags in filenames
- No-follow appropriate
links
Decide if you need a meta description - Modern
search engines are great at scanning the text of
websites displacing applicable snippets based on user
queries. You need to decide if you want to rely on the
algorithm or create your own description. I suggest
making your own meta description for your homepage and
letting the engines figure out the rest. Remember the
purpose of making your description is to convince
potential customers to click on your link in the SERPs.
Make it convincing and use your keywords.
Add company address and phone number - Be sure
to do this on every page. The search engines are smart
enough to detect address and phone number formats. This
data is essential to local search. I recommend adding
the the following formatted data (example is for an
American company) to the footer of all of your client's
pages:
Company Name
1111 11th Pl NE
City, State Zip
(555) 555-5555
Add a robots.txt - This is important for a
couple reasons. First, it allows you to specify exactly
what pages major search engines can crawl. Second,
including a robots.txt makes tracking search engines
easier because they always download the file before
navigating your client's site. This characteristic
differentiates the SEs from normal human visitors.
Offsite
Add your client's business and website to the major
search engine's local listings - This is
paramount as local search is likely to drive the
majority of your traffic. These are the most important
places to submit:
-
Yahoo Local
-
Google Local
-
Live Local
- Ask City - UNVERIFIED.
I think the best way to do this is send an
e-mail to askcitybusiness@help.ask.com with
the subject line "Ask City Feedback -
Business" and include the business name,
full address, full phone number, URL,
business category, name, and e-mail address.
(Can anyone confirm this?)
-
CitySearch (data on this site feeds
Ask.com and Live)
-
Yelp (data on this site feeds Live and
Yahoo)
Add your client's website to industry specific
directories - To find the prevalent directories,
use the list of link sources you created earlier. Also,
you can try searching for “(your client's local city
name) business directory” and “(your client's industry)
directory.” For example, I would search “Issaquah
business directory” and “preschool directory.” Be sure
to record which directories you add your client's site
to and the usernames and passwords you use. You should
use the e-mail address you created earlier for directory
registrations. You should also make sure to use
different passwords for different logins. You should
always be thinking about maintaining your client's
security.
Try to get the links your competition already has
gotten - Use the list of link sources you generated
from Yahoo Site Explorer and try to acquire links from
those sources. This may be as simple as submitting a
form or as cumbersome as e-mailing webmasters to find
out their link addition policies. Always try to get your
keywords in your link anchor text.
Get more links - Scour the internet and find
other sites that might want to link to your client's
site (site:website.com "submit a link"). Remember the
importance of the source of your links and the anchor
text used. 100,000 links from spammy sites with bad
anchor text will help you less than a single link with
excellent keyword anchor text from a super authoritative
site. A good place to start is to use the
Juicy Link Finder. You should also consider your
local chamber of commerce, local networking groups, and
local complimentary businesses. Search engines like to
see local links pointing at locally targeted websites.
Decide if utilizing social media sites is
advantageous - Is your client in an industry that
could actively participate in social media? If so, be
sure not to be spammy and to only contribute quality and
appropriate content. It is much more expensive to fix a
ruined online reputation for a business than it is for a
standard user. You may also want to consider adding your
client's business to professional networks such as
Linkedin.
Create and submit sitemaps - Create a
sitemap. Then login into Google Webmaster Central
and Live Search Webmaster Tools and submit it.
Optimize your client's site from Google's side
- Login to Google Webmaster Tools and click on the tools
menu. You will want to set the correct geographical
target and preferred domain. In addition, you must also
decide if you want to enable image search. It may drive
you traffic but the traffic will unlikely be useful.
Track and Improve
Track progress - I recommend taking a monthly
screenshot of all of the following SERPs. A screenshot
is an easy way to gather a lot of information. The image
files contain data on when they were taken so they are
easy to organize. I recommend you do this for the
following:
- Ask Local SERP
- Ask Main SERP
- Google Local SERP
- Google Main SERP
- Google Webmaster Tools
- Live Maps SERP
- Live Local SERP
- Live Search Webmaster
Central
- Yahoo Local SERP
- Yahoo Main SERP
- Yahoo Site Explorer
Create and maintain a
spreadsheet of your rankings - This gives you a
resource to prove to your client that your work is
necessary. Be sure to keep it updated monthly so that
you are always aware of how you rank.
Continue to make changes, build links, and record
your results - This step will never be
completed. You should strive to become number one on all
your SERPs and get so far ahead that none of your
competitors will be able to compete.
If you are an experienced SEO, feel free to share your
opinions and expertise in the comments. This post is
very much a work in progress. Also, as always, feel free
to e-mail me or send me a private message if you have
any suggestions on how I can make my posts more useful.
(Contact details are available in my profile.)