How to Do Search Engine Optimization (SEO) for an E-Commerce Site – with Rob Snell

In this video interview e-commerce expert Rob Snell explains how to prioritize the limited time you have to spend on search engine optimization (SEO) for an online store. The key, he says, is to identify your top converting keywords and pages and focus there. Instead of just looking at only traffic, Snell says, it’s important to identify the keywords and phrases that actually result in traffic AND conversions, that is, sales. Then identify which webpages are driving conversions from search engine traffic. You can determine which of your product pages are in the Google index by typing into the Google search box “site:yourdomainname.com” and Google will list all of your pages in their index. We found that of about 15000 products, our top 200 webpages were driving 80-90% of the revenue. So the focus needs to be on the pages that are driving your revenue. Analytics for a Yahoo! show you the revenue for your entry pages. Google Analytics can be configured to track revenue as well. Then on your homepage, use the top converting keywords to link to your top converting webpages. Rob Snell is author of Starting a Yahoo! Business for Dummies (2006) and can be reached at www.RobSnell.com. This interview was recorded at the Search Engine Strategies (SES) Conference in Chicago in October 2010.

60+ free ways to increase traffic?

Make Use Of Free WebSites To Promote Your Blog!
6. write related articles on WikiPedia with your blog url in it.
7. make a hubpage for your blog, with a little bit information about your blog.
8. make a wiki page for your blog.
9. make a squidoo lens or more with a link to your site.
10. sign up at 43things.com and write things related to your blog and what you want to accomplish.(you’d be surprise by the number of people, just reading other peoples list)
11.create a myspace page for your blog.
12. create a facebook page for your blog.
13. create a hi5 page for your blog.
14. join blogcatalog and do the same as with mybloglog.
15. use MyBlogLog to create a community around your blog. join other peoples community, so they do the same for you.
16. create an account with Technorati and with every new post, ping it.
17. post related how-to videos on you tube with your blog address on the bottom of the screen or at the end or beginning of the video.
18. use yahoo answers to answer questions related to your niche, leaving your link in the resource box. (believe it or not, 10% of my traffic comes from 20 minutes a week answering questions on yahoo answers)
19.create an account on stumbleupon, and stumble each and every article you write. (one of the best ways to drive traffic to your site for free)
20. join as many forums as possible, especially forums related to your niche

Take Advantage Of Free Tools And Plug-ins!
21. place a “digg it” button right after your post, to make it easy for your readers to digg your post.
22. use a comment notifying plug-in to let your readers know about new comments. believe it or not, most people read more of other peoples comment on your post, than your post itself.
23. use social bookmarking plug-ins to make it easy for your readers to submit your post to social bookmarking site
24. install “tell-a-friend” plug-in to make it easy for your readers to let others know about your post.
25. make use of “all in one SEO” plug-in to make your blog search engine friendly.
26. use a forum plug-in to create a forum for your blogs readers to talk and discuss related issues.
27. use a free keyword tool to find and use good ranking keywords in your niche.

28. use sites like vista print to make free business cards ($5 shipping for 250 free BC which is worth it) with your site url on it and pass it around.

29. make a free favicon to be easily found in your readers favorites file. (people like to find what they want fast. i myself sometimes give up finding a particular article or site in my huge favorite file, simply because i don’t want to spend 5 minuets to go through the whole list. a favicon is like big spot light focused on you between hundreds of other people!
30. use free press release services to gain visibility.
31. Use pingomatic to ping RSS aggregators.
32. use free advertising sources like craigslist and backpage to post ads about your articles or blog in related categories.

Other Bloggers Can Help Too!
33. talk about or if you can interview a trusted person in your niche
34. Leave comments on blogs in related niches or any niche for that matter.(don’t spam, leave genuine comment, as you would like others to do so for you)
35. make a banner ad for your blog and exchange with other interested bloggers.
36. use blogroll to link to other bloggers in your niche in exchange for a link to your blog on their blog roll.
37. ask other bloggers to write a review of your blog in exchange for a link to their site from your site.
38. dedicate a post about a top bloggers in your niche. it will catch their attention and they may link to you
39. whenever appropriate, link to other bloggers articles in your post. they will return the favor.
40. use your best articles to post on other peoples blog as a guest writer (it’ll gain you visibility and new audience)
41. another blogger to post on your blog as guest (while he enjoys some new readers, it will brings his readers to

Search Engine Optimization : Elements of an SEO Strategy

Of all the areas of Internet Marketing, Search Engine Optimization is the most misunderstood, and potentially the most important to your marketing efforts. There are millions upon millions of pages of web content out there — you can work hard, build a great site, and then be totally lost in the shuffle. SEO is important. It’s also a very complex process that requires patience, careful planning and a long-term approach.

If you’re just getting started with:

  • Selecting an SEO firm

  • Trying to start a search engine campaign on your own

  • Reviewing your current SEO efforts

…read on. This article should provide you with a high-level review of the SEO process, dispel a few SEO myths, and help you understand legitimate optimization strategies.

What is Search Engine Optimization?

Search Engine Optimization, or SEO, defies easy definition. But here’s a short version:

Search Engine Optimization
Using keyword analysis and other legitimate practices to gain the highest possible search engine and directory rankings, under a given key phrase, for a given URL.

Every SEO professional in the world just cringed, so I’ll break this definition down a bit and hopefully prevent a hail of angry e-mails:

Keyword Analysis is the process of mining keyword search data to find the best balance between the keywords you need and the best potential search niche. More on this later.

Search Engine means an automated search engine. ‘Search Engines’ include Google, AlltheWeb.com, Yahoo (powered by Google plus their own directory information), AOL Search, Ask Jeeves and MSN Search. A search engine obtains its results from ‘spiders’ or ‘bots’ — small programs that come to your web site read it in much the same way you would: By reading the content on a page, and then moving from page to page via links. A directory, on the other hand, is built at least in part by human beings reading sites and other information and deciding where each site fits into the directory structure. Yahoo’s directory area and Open Directory are both examples of directories.

Ranking is the numeric rank reflecting your position in the results list when someone performs a search on a particular set of keywords.

Highest Possible means getting as close to number one as you can. Sometimes you just can’t get that number one spot. Maybe someone else has a 400-page web site solely dedicated to the key phrase for which you’re attempting to optimize. Or maybe they’re paying a fortune in advertising. That’s life, sometimes…

Key Phrase is the keyword or set of keywords someone types into the little ‘search’ field in Google or Alta Vista or any other search engine.

A URL is the address of one page on your site. Most search engines display keyword search results and provide a link directly to the page most relevant to those results, rather than your home page. It’s very, very important to keep that in mind when you build and optimize your site.

Legitimate Practices is a pet peeve of mine. A true search engine optimization campaign will not use practices such as page or content cloaking, redirects, or lists of links (so-called ‘link farms’) but relies on good coding practices, well-written content, steady link popularity work and site features that will be every bit as valuable for site visitors as for search engine ranking. Anything less is a short-term fix that will likely reduce your rankings more often than increase them.

So, the long version of the definition would be:

Search Engine Optimization
Using keyword analysis, good coding practices, well-written copy, link popularity analysis and careful site organization to move a web page as close to the number one search results position as possible for a given key phrase, in both search engines and directories.

Hey, that’s not so bad after all. But how do you get started? First, you separate reality from myth…

SEO Urban Legends

There are quite a few SEO myths out there. Here are my favorites:

The Keywords META Tag Matters. Mostly wrong. Only Inktomi pays any attention to the keywords meta tag. You should do something basic, but don’t bother putting in keywords that aren’t supported by your page content.

Search Engines can read Flash, images and video. Sorry, and Ford isn’t selling a flying car yet, either. Search engines can read one thing: Text. Anything else, while perfectly legitimate as a design tool, will not help your ranking. And relying too heavily on Flash or images may reduce your site’s visibility. Google is one partial exception — they can read some links in Flash, but still have very limited ability to read Flash content.

Mirroring my site in multiple locations will improve ranking. Actually, just the opposite. Duplication of content will generally have no effect or, worse, reduce your ranking in major search engines. Most search engines now have rules against this form of ‘spam’ and may reduce your ranking or ban your site altogether.

‘Doorway’ pages improve ranking. Pages that have lots of keywords but then quickly redirect to the main site will not help you in major search engines, such as Google. And, if someone catches you and reports you to Google or the other search engine, you may be banned altogether. A ‘landing’ or ‘bridge’ page, though, that’s designed to be as useful for users as for search engines, and does not redirect the user, can help by providing keyword-rich content that’s genuinely worthwhile.

Firms promising to get me #1 rankings in 10,000 search engines for $99.95 can help. I alternate between tooth-grinding and hysterical laughter when I see these ads. First, there aren’t 10,000 search engines. Actually, there are probably 10-20 you should really worry about. Getting listed in the other thousand or so is largely a waste of time. Second, no one can guarantee any ranking in any search engine for a specific keyword. Period. And finally, the price is less than half the cost to get an express submission in a single directory (Yahoo). Chances are anyone trying to get you to spend the $99.95 is operating a ‘link farm’ where they list dozens, or hundreds, of sites. While they won’t hurt your ranking, they won’t help, either. To learn more about how to choose an SEO firm, check out Google’s article: http://www.google.com/intl/mr/webmasters/seo.html.

Firms charging me more money and guaranteeing a #1 ranking on Google can help. This is the latest SEO scam. I can get you a number one ranking on Google, too, as long as I get to pick the keyword or can get you ranked under a fairly unique company name. But no one, and I mean no one can guarantee a #1 rank under a specific keyword. Even Google says so.

Forget the myths — if an offer seems too good to be true, it is. The truth is that search engines are now almost savvy enough to read your pages like a human being would, so anything that will drive away a typical site visitor will also probably reduce your ranking. Things that will increase your search engine ranking include:

  • Well-written content

  • Good, clean HTML code

  • Useful, relevant TITLE tags

  • Useful, relevant DESCRIPTION tags

  • Relevant, appropriate links from other web sites

There are some basic steps that, well executed, will do more to increase your page rank than an ocean of snake oil.

The SEO Campaign Process

A typical SEO campaign starts with keyword analysis, and then emphasizes insuring your site doesn’t impede search engine bots and follows up with ongoing link and traffic analysis. If you like pretty pictures, here’s one:

search engine optimization process diagram
 What’s a Bot?
A ‘bot’ is a program used by a search engine to read the content of your site into a directory. I mentioned this briefly in ‘What is Search Engine Optimization?’ above. Keep up, now….

Step 1: Keyword Analysis. Ah, keywords. If you say the right word enough times on your site, you’ll get that coveted #1 spot, right? Wrong. Choosing the right keywords starts with you making a list of the keywords or phrases under which you’d like to be found, and typically ends up somewhere completely different. Typically, selecting the best keywords is a four-step process:

  1. List the keywords and phrases under which you’d like to be found.

  2. Find out whether anyone searches on those keywords, and whether they’re searching for relevant items.

  3. Find out how many other sites are struggling for rankings under those keywords.

  4. Pick keywords with the same meaning but a better search-to-competition ratio.

Maybe I want to rank #1 under ‘Search Engine Optimization’. Guess what? There are 686,000 other URLs in Google trying for that spot. Hmmm. But wait! Under ‘Seattle Search Engine Optimization’ there are only 19,000. So, I targeted that key phrase, instead. And guess what? We got a #3 ranking.

Don’t forget about relevance, either. If you want a high ranking under ‘tires’, you’re going to have your work cut out for you. And in the end you’ll likely end up getting found for ‘bicycle tires’, ‘automobile tires’, ‘spare tires’ and who knows what else. Is it worth it? Sometimes yes, sometimes no. But you have to do your homework to find out.

Data Mining and Keywords
If you’re doing a campaign for a large site, you may end up testing and comparing thousands of keywords and phrases. Having a good data-mining tool (even Excel will do) on hand is important when you’re doing keyword analysis. We use S-Plus, by Insightful Software. It’s saved our lives, and clicker fingers, several times.

There are several tools that help you research the number of searches and competitors for keywords. Wordtracker (http://www.wordtracker.com) is a good one — don’t depend on their results from Overture, though, unless you’re specifically preparing an Overture campaign. Metacrawler’s MetaSpy tool is worth a look, too. Ideally, look at results from a few different sources.

Keyword analysis is the hardest part of a campaign, in number-crunching terms. It requires a lot of work and may not tell you what you want to hear. But in my experience it’s critical to a successful campaign.

Step 2: Search Engine Readiness. Almost every web site we review has one or more problems that will prevent search engine bots from properly reading all content. Typical showstoppers include:

  • An all-Flash or all-images home page

  • A home page that automatically redirects to another page

  • Pop-up ads (does anyone really read these things?)

  • A site full of pages with fewer than 400 words on a page

  • Broken links

  • Navigation that is generated by JavaScript

  • No TITLE or DESCRIPTION tags

A major step in any SEO campaign is making sure that the site will present the friendliest profile to search engines. Happily, the investment in optimizing will also pay off in a faster, more universally compatible site.

Step 3. Content and Site Preparation. You’ve done your research: You know which keywords match your message, and your site’s HTML code is one big search engine welcome mat. Now it’s time to make sure that your site contains those keywords. This is where I most often see folks get confused — should you rewrite your web content to emphasize keywords? Yes, but with extreme caution. Should you make small, appropriate changes? Yes. Here are my guidelines for content preparation.

  • Don’t write for keywords (much). This almost always leads to stilted, hard-to-read prose. Writing keyword-rich content that really works for users is an art form. Be careful.

  • Do a little careful editing. If you use the word ‘car’ but ‘auto’ is the keyword you need, chances are you can do a few replacements without marring your carefully crafted copy.

  • Spend time on the titles and description tags. Make sure every page in your site has a unique, relevant TITLE and DESCRIPTION tag.

  • Never use an automatic page generator. Tools like WebPosition Gold offer to generate optimized pages for you. Don’t. They tend to hurt your ranking as much as help, and they generate ugly, ugly pages.

  • Write more stuff. More content is almost always better. If your site is just missing a specific keyword or phrase, but you think it’s important, then your potential customers probably do too. By adding a few more pages, or a white paper, or some other content focusing on those absent keywords, you’ll likely help visitors and improve your keyword ranking at the same time. And, the more text-rich your site is, the better the odds that you’ll catch longer, stranger but really important key phrases that you can’t anticipate.

Step 4. Link Analysis. Quite a few major search engines (Google, most importantly) weigh your ‘link popularity’ when ranking your site. A more accurate term, though, is ‘link analysis’, because these engines don’t just count up the number of links to your site. They look for links near and containing relevant text. So a page full of links, one of which happens to be yours, won’t help very much. But a link from a related site, near a short paragraph that contains relevant keywords, will probably give you a boost. Having keywords in the link itself is even better. A quick example:

http://www.portentinteractive.com doesn’t help much.

For search engine optimization, visit http://www.portentinteractive.com is much better.

For search engine optimization, visit Portent Interactive where ‘search engine optimization’ is the link to Portent, is the absolute best case.

There are a few ways to build your link popularity:

  • Contact sites that relate to yours and request a link exchange. This works really well, but obviously takes a long time.

  • Syndicate your content. If you can provide an easy way for interested webmasters to link directly to relevant stories on your site, you provide an instant link popularity boost, and get your message out to boot.

  • Start an affiliate program. If you sell a product, consider setting up an affiliate sales program.

Google’s ‘One Site, One Vote’ Rule
Google awards a lot less weight to a link to your site if that link is on a page with lots of other links. That’s why so-called ‘link farming’ doesn’t work. Ideally, you want a link to your site from a page that includes relevant content and not that many other outgoing links.

Step 5. Submit your site. Many search engines, Google included, allow you to submit your site for free. Generally you can submit your home page and let the search engine crawl the rest of your site. Some directories and engines offer paid ‘express’ services, and some, like Teoma, require that you pay for URL submission. Which engines you choose depends on your budget and campaign.

Step 6. Review, Revise, and Keep Going. Think you’re done? Wrong — search engine optimization is an ongoing project. At least once per month, review your rankings, site traffic reports and link popularity and tweak your site as necessary. The tools you need to measure results are:

  • Site traffic reports. Any web hosting company should provide you with a web site traffic report, and almost all of the reporting tools in use today provide a ‘referrals from search engines’ section. Take a look at this section for a good measure of campaign results.

  • Link counts. Use the link: command on Google (see above) to determine your link popularity.

  • Your keyword list. Search on the relevant search engines to see if your ranking has improved.

  • Your brain. You have to interpret what you see, and decide whether changes are warranted. There’s no hard and fast rule for this, and no magic formula. Sorry about that…

So now you’ll get instant results, right? Well, not quite…

A Word About Expectations

Search engine optimization can take time. Even Google only refreshes its entire index once a month, so don’t expect instant results.

If your first registration run doesn’t generate increased rankings within a month or two, don’t panic. Look at your site traffic and search on the keywords you chose. Make sure that the search engine you’re checking actually includes your site, too — most likely the bots just haven’t gotten around to ‘crawling’ your site.

Still stumped? Find a professional. Sure, we cost money. But you may have missed something about your site that’s preventing a good keyword rank, and a second set of eyes can help.

A Solid Marketing Strategy

Obviously, Search Engine Optimization is a big job. But nothing can send more traffic to your site, for lower per-click cost. If you follow the basic steps, and keep at it, you will definitely get results. What’s really, really important is to make sure you don’t award too much weight to one step (such as link popularity) at the expense of the others. A well-rounded campaign will provide solid, long-term results.

What about pay per click?
Pay-per-click services, such as Overture and Google Adwords, are very different animals. If you’ve done your keyword analysis you’re halfway there, but there are other tasks. I’ve not talked about them in this article because, well, they need an article of their own. Check back soon…

Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/seo-articles/search-engine-optimization-elements-of-an-seo-strategy-638016.html

How to Get to the TOP of GOOGLE FAST (more traffic) part 1

Software used in this video: www.ambidupdate.com Learn what it REALLY takes to get your website to the TOP of Google. Make sure to watch ALL 3 PARTS! Use it for free at www.ambidupdate.com

What’s actually in a search engine optimization tool box?

Congratulations!  As a business owner you have chosen to establish a presence on the World Wide Web and you have just made public your site!  Excited about your new found global presence, you check your site stats every day.  Each day gets a little more disappointing as every day you see that you have only one or two visitors and a single order.  Wait is that your mom’s address?  We all love our moms but this is not what you had in mind when you started your on-line presence!  It is at this point that most on-line businesses wane and eventually disappear!  There is a fix for this and it is called in the developer world Search Engine Optimization (SEO) tools.

Not complicated, a <A HREF=”http://www.lytico.com“>search engine optimization tool</A> is a device used to improve the volume of traffic to your website.  Consider it a tool that markets your site through the use of a backdoor which links to the ever important search engine ranking.  Your search engine ranking is the single most important end result that you need for your site.  A single SEO tool is not necessarily enough to make a difference but through the combined use of several options you will find yourself as a serious contender in today’s on-line marketplace.

SEO tool sets are becoming more available to the common user and thanks to quality developers, require less development skill and more creativity.  As you develop your arsenal of tools designed to make your site stand out above the rest, do not count these out.  Tools such as duplicate page checkers, back links, keyword density checkers are all valuable players, and like the pawns of a chess game, should be used to push your business forward in order to check mate the competition and open the virtual doors to your new customer base.

Duplicate page checkers allow you to compare your page to others with similar content.  In this case, use the competition to gain an edge.  A page that is too different may get lost in the bandwidth and forgotten by a consumer.  A collective presence is not, in this case, a bad idea and will only gain you further exposure.  Be sure, however to compare your search engine ranking.  A similar page does that ranks low is not necessarily a good thing.  Find a page that ranks in the top five and develop your page to align with theirs.  You will find that customer base expand rapidly!  Effective back links and other tools such as <A HREF=”http://www.lytico.com“>keyword density checkers</A> are additional tools you can look for from your provider.

In the end, be sure to combine these search engine optimization tools in order to compete!  Invest your time in understanding these and what they can do for you and find yourself winning customers and improving your business!

Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/seo-articles/whats-actually-in-a-search-engine-optimization-tool-box-1736447.html

Sneak Peak of SEOPressor V4.0 the Ultimate WordPress SEO Tool

Secrets Behind the WordPress Optimization Product SEOPressor Unleashed. SEOPressor has raised a lot of questions about how it works since its release earlier this month. Daniel Tan, the developer, now unleashes the secrets about how his product almost always manages to bring websites of any niche to the number 1 position on Google. See the review at www.expertreviews.com

Social Bookmarking + Social Networking = Instant Traffic

www.socialdominator.com Sign up and watch live as I take a make a brand new website grab dozens of search engine listings, tons of traffic & make a website profitable in just days. I’ll use social networking, social bookmarking, automated software tools, seo tricks and stand search engine optimization. These marketing tactics can work for anyone. You don’t need to spend a fortune on Google AdWords or make thousands of sites to squeak income out of Google AdWords. Sign up and Watch live www.socialdominator.com

Expiring & Expired Domain Search – Find Traffic and PR Domain Names Easily

Find domain names with traffic, Pagerank, Backlinks, AlexaRank, DMOZ listing and much more. RegisterCompass.com check any expiring, expired and auction domain and provide you a powerfull and flexible database to get your valuable domain quickly and easily.

Services Given By A Search Engine Optimization Company

Search engine optimization company helps to optimize the websites of other companies. These companies help the non-brand companies to project themselves as brands and the branded companies to increase their brand-value. The main motive of hiring a search engine optimization company is to increase visibility of one’s website, increasing the website’s visibility to the netizens and consequently enhance customer conversion.

What is Search Engine Optimization?
This is the process involved in increasing the ranking of your website in various search engines (namely, Google, Yahoo, Bing, and many more). The unpaid search results of different search engines are known as “organic” search results. Search Engine Optimization companies opt various methods to bring the target website up in this organic search result.

The main objective of bringing up the client website in organic search result is to get more visitors to the site. As the total number of visitors to the website increases, the propensity of viewer conversion to customer increases.

The various kinds of organic searches targeted by the Search Engine Optimization companies involve video search, image search, topic-specific search, local search, vertical search or industry-specific search and many more. Thus, the web-presence and visibility of the website increases through SEO or Search Engine Optimization.

What are the Different SEO Services Given by Search Engine Optimization Companies?
SEO service given by a search engine optimization company includes:

1. Complete analysis of the website.
2. Checking up of the content regarding some technical aspects (keyword-density, keyword prominence, uniqueness of the page, and many more).
3. Analysis of the competitor’s activity in the targeted key phrases (for both global as well as demography-specific searches).
4. Analysis of back-links or incoming links of the concerned website.
5. Research of key-phrases, as per the specifications of the client.
6. Setting up the analytics tool (such as Google Analytics) as well as the webmaster tool (search engine specific) for the client website.
7. Rewriting the meta-tags (key phrases, Title, Description) as per the requirements of SE optimization.
8. Creation of site-map page for the website and the XML sitemap for submission purpose (in Google and Yahoo submission).
9. Reworking on the internal links for upgraded navigation of viewers throughout the website and also for increased conversion.
10. Fixation of the broken-links for proper optimization of the website.
11. Installation of blog in the website.
12. Creation of RSS feed and subsequent submission.
13. HTML and CSS validation, optimization of codes and corresponding fixation of errors.
14. Canonicalization issue of the website urls.
15. A reputed search engine optimization company helps in content creation and and SEO copy-writing for optimizing web-presence of the website.
16. Writing articles for submission purpose and then submitting them manually in the most Seo-friendly way.
17. Submission of the website in different directories for enhancing the index-ability of the website by targeted SEs.  
18. Advertisement creation in different classifieds like Craiglist and many more.
19. Promotion of the website through social media and various target forums.
20. Building up of quality links for the website in all possible ways (Two-Ways or Reciprocal, Three-Ways and N-number of linking ways).

A good search engine optimization company gives all the above listed seo service to its clients.

I’m making an adult website – how do I handle the “Adult content warning”?

My site will actually offer no content, basically it’s going to be a sex site list. Many ads placed on my website will have explicit photos. My question is – Is placing at the top of my page “This page contains links to adult-oriented sites. If you are under 18 years of age, are offended by such material, or if it is illegal to view adult material in your community,
please leave now. This site is not acting in any way to send you this information; you are choosing to receive it. Continuing means that you understand and accept
responsibility for your own actions, thus releasing the creators of this Web page from all liability. We strongly support parental controls on the Internet.” Enough?

Right below the warning you might see a man orgasm on a woman’s face?

If I use a Entire page for a warning, as some traffic might not bother to click. Further what’s to prevent search engines from listing a webpage on my site after the warnign page. I have labeled the site with www.ICRA.org


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