S.E.O.
& 'Safe'
BackLink
Building

SEO & BackLink Building

S.E.O. is essentially a constantly evolving study of what factors the search engines take into account when they 'rank' you in their natural search listings.

Natural' search listings are the main lists of results that come up when you search for something. These do not include the paid listings. In the following screen-grab from a Google search - you can see the paid listings in the right column and in the yellow box at the top. The 'natural' listings are straight from Google's main index and show sites listed in the order of importance and relevance according to their algorithm.

GoogleSearch

Obviously, we want to be as high up the page(s) as possible. If we're the 7th listing on page 9 then we're hardly going to get prospects beating our door down!

No-one knows all the factors that Search Engines (SE's) use to determine your rank. The SE's really don't want anyone to know - so you can't manipulate or ‘game’ their system. So, over the years a complete industry has grown up around this; on the one side you have SE’s like Google deliberately filing technology patents in many different areas - causing mass confusion over which methods they use for ratings, and on the other side an SEO industry which uses empirical testing and measuring of various factors to determine which ones are the most important.

There are two sides to SEO: 'On-Page' factors & 'Off-Page' factors. There are also 'off-web' factors such as demographic and geographic information - but we have no control over this area.

'On-Page' SEO

On-Page SEO is all about changes you can make directly to a site to make it more Search Engine friendly. This is the easy part and involves correctly setting up internal-linking, using keyword-oriented page titles, using H1 & H2 header tags, seeding keywords at an appropriate density and in appropriate places, and to some degree, using meta-tags correctly. If all that is complete double-dutch to you, then don't worry - you're not alone!

The bottom-line though, is that while it is the easiest to control, it has the LEAST affect on your overall ranking. Many years ago, you used to be able to dupe the SE's with lots of on-page factors - but that's been completely closed down now. The only time that 'on-page' really becomes important is when you have taken care of 'off-page' and have some inbound 'backlinks' to create some interest. At that point, careful tweaking of on-page factors can yield some good results. That is not to say that the basic 'on-page' factors should be ignored at the outset - indeed it's very important that the basics are correct from the start.

ABC'Off-Page' SEO

Off-Page SEO is what's really important in the long term. Imagine it as a 'voting' system. If another site places a link to your site then that site has given you a vote of confidence. They're saying, "Look at them - they've got something interesting to say..."

The link to your site has two main parts - the actual URL or web address of the page they are pointing someone to, and the 'anchor text' or 'keyword phrase' that is highlighted for you to click. If the search engines see the line:

"Visit our site for the very best in blue fluffy widgets."

...then they see one 'vote' cast for that page on your site with a flag that 'blue fluffy widgets' is probably important to that page. Although you wouldn't see that the link points to 'www.fluffywidgets.com' (unless you hover over it with your mouse pointer - then it should show at the bottom of your browser window), you can see that the text 'blue fluffy widgets' is important and related to the site - because that is the anchor text. So... We now have one vote for the home page of www.fluffywidgets.com based on the 'blue fluffy widgets' phrase. i.e. one vote towards this site appearing higher up in the natural listings when we type "blue fluffy widgets" in the search box.

This always works like this - the anchor text and page pointed to are irrevocably tied together. You can't create a vote for a page without some highlighted anchor text - and that anchor text is what the SE's use to tell them what that page is about and what it should show up under when searched for. Read that again - because it's VERY important...

The anchor text controls which searches you would appear for.

Therefore, can you see why "Click HERE for more information" is next to useless for creating SEO value? In this example, we created a vote for the phrase 'Click HERE'. Who in their right mind would type in "click here" in the search box to find a site? No-one of course. That is why the anchor text is SO important. It signifies the keyword phrases that you want to rank for.

(And by the way, if you DO Google "Click Here"  you will always find the Adobe Reader download site at the top. Is that because Adobe want to rank for 'click here'? Of course not - it's just that so many sites have a 'Click HERE to download Adobe Reader' phrase on them, that they're number one for that phrase.)

In other words, the SE's use the anchor text phrase to cast a vote for a page.

And doesn't that make sense? Google wants to emulate what a real human being is looking for and would like to find. In a lot of ways it doesn't matter if your page is all about blue fluffy widgets, if all the anchor text phrases that point to you say 'yellow balloons', then 'yellow balloons' is what you'll rank for! That is the vote that is cast.

Now it's not quite as simple as that (of course...) because the SE's also use the page title and wording of the page being pointed at to correlate the results, plus a whole bunch of other factors as well (including how spread-out and relevant the sites are that are linking to you) - but the essence of this shows that the single most important factor in SEO is lots of backlinks from as many different sites as possible with the correct phrases used as anchor text.

Ideally, if you want to appear in the natural SE listings for 'blue fluffy widgets' then you want a page that is entitled 'blue fluffy widgets', with a headline and sub head-lines that contain 'blue fluffy widgets' and it should also be mentioned a few times in the text on that page. Then you want lots of external site links that point to that specific page with the anchor text 'blue fluffy widgets'!

Enough with the 'blue fluffy widgets' now, but you get the idea...

Picking the keyword phrases that you want to rate for is an art in itself, (and we perform a lot of keyword research before we put any strategy into place,) but the bottom line is this:

What does a typical customer of yours type in the search box in order to find your product or service?

...The answers to this question ultimately supply your anchor text keywords!

...But these keyword phrases can't be just randomly chosen without thought, investigation and testing. It's so often the case that the phrase people expect is not what produces the most results. Human beings are odd creatures and we all have our own ideas of how to find what we want. One person looking for a good night's sleep might type in "Orthopaedic beds" or "New Mattress", whereas another person may type in "I can't sleep".

Would you really want to trust your marketing to vague ideas and feelings about what might be typed in? The importance of the investigation, testing and measuring of these phrases cannot be underestimated - they are absolutely key to the volume of enquiries and sales you can make via the web. An analogy could be drawn with a listing in the Yellow Pages. If you are a Plumber and you're listed under Stationary Providers, you won't get much business! 

Some Words Of Caution...

WarningDo not START with phrases that yield millions and millions of results

In the screen shot at the top of the page, you will see a search for 'Car Insurance' - which has 70.9 million results. Anyone can see that it's not wise to try and compete with 70 million other pages when you're just starting out!

But... If I typed in "Southampton Car Insurance" (assuming I was a car insurance provider in Southampton) - then there are only around 300,000 results. A big number still it seems - but actually quite a small number when it comes to web searches.

I would have a far better chance of getting ranked for that phrase quickly than I would for just 'car insurance'. In fact, if I wanted to rate for phrases like 'Car Insurance' it would probably take a long time and a very large budget, as I would be competing with the insurance giants! Not a wise choice at all - and actually not the best way to go about things either. In fact, using a place name as part of the search term (we call it geo-targeting,) is fast becoming one of the best ways to get some initial results.

Therefore, we're looking for phrases that yield less overall results - but quite accurately sum up what we do or the product/service we offer. In the industry, we call these 'long-tail' searches - as they contain multiple keywords. Depending on how competitive your market is, the phrases could be from 2 to 7 words long. Typically they will be 3 or 4 words long.

We normally recommend performing SEO on phrases that return less than half a million results at the start (in some cases, we may go with a higher count - particularly if the current page 1 results are not well SEO’d.) Then, as we build backlinks, we’ll automatically start to gain some ground on the bigger search phrases, and if we put in enough effort, we can go after those big phrases in 3-12 months time. This strategy is also far more targeted at the start - as we go after the high-converting phrases with 'commercial intent' - i.e. customers who are looking to purchase.

It's also useful and wise to build backlinks to individual sub-pages on your website, not just your home page. We call this 'deep-linking' - and Google in particular likes this. If you have a couple of category pages for example, which contain links to individual products, then it's worth driving appropriate search terms to those pages too. We don't just create backlinks to your home-page. Google and the other SE's are looking more and more at how individual pages on your site are listed and treated.

Conclusions...

Hopefully this will give you some insights into the concept of SEO and the value of building back-lnks. It's actually an incredibly complex and ever-changing art, as the Search Engines never keep the rules the same. The basics endure, but the strategies used are constantly evolving.

You need to work with a company that keeps up with the latest developments, but still sticks to tried and tested 'safe' methods. And that's where we come in!

As highly successful promoters of online businesses ourselves, we believe that SEO is the lead generation tool of choice. Where else can you get free targeted advertising and marketing? Everyone is moving on-line now. Gone are the days of Yellow Pages and business directories. If you want to find something now, you just type it into a Search Engine. It's the only future-proof form of marketing left.

Although PPC (Pay-Per-Click) is more immediate and is very useful in testing phrases, ultimately, it's SEO that will yield the longer term, lower cost results.

...Click HERE to check out our Article Link-Building service.

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What Is SEO & SEM ?

Search Engine Marketing is the generic term given to many kinds of Online & Web-based marketing.
Search Engine Optimisation
is the specialist area of getting your site to the top of Google, Bing & Yahoo's listings...
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Sales Oriented SEM...

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