Just Blogging

October 29, 2009

20 Ideas for creating traffic rich, search engine friendly pages

Filed under: Advertising — Tags: , , — admin @ 12:08 pm
junaid asked:


eas for creating traffic rich, search engine friendly pages

Sometimes questions will arise around the subject of gateway information pages or doorway pages. People have heard that “doorway pages” are BAD and some have stated that search engines “hate doorway pages”.

For clarification on these type of issues, let’s start by explaining some simple ground rules looking beyond the jargon and terminology.

Do  **** Doorway/Gateway Pages?

To answer this we’ll examine it in two steps.

Let’s understand:

1. What it is that the Search Engines “HATE”?

and then…

2. What type of pages the search engines “LOVE”?

With this approach it will help us gain some understanding of the criteria that is most important.

1. What the Search Engines HATE:

a) To put it simply, search engines despise low quality doorway pages that contain little or no useful content. A few years ago these type of low quality doorway pages were rampantly produced as a means to try and trick the search engines. Looking at it from the search engines point of view, why even publish a page if all it contains is a couple of lines of text and an “enter the store” link. Pages with VERY LITTLE VALUE to the reader, do not belong in a search engine’s index.

b) Search engines also despise any kind of duplication or use of mirror pages. Again, little or no content (often just garbled text or keyword rich paragraphs that have no real value) were reproduced over and over and cluttered up the search engines. These pages were supposedly going to bring great traffic but the bottom line is that they were and still are all labeled by engines as Spam.

c) Search engines **** any attempt made by Webmasters to manipulate pages optimized with content unrelated to the actual Web site. Some Webmasters were guilty of all types of trickery to try and attract clicks regardless of the site content.

Understanding these issues, clearly you could NEVER blame the search engines for their war on Spam and low value doorway pages which contained no useful content or information.

Next let’s talk about

2. What pages the Search Engines LOVE:

a) Search engines love pages that far “information rich” and contain useful, original content that will actually make valued reading to the online visitors.

b) Instead of doorway pages (or pages with no value or little useful content), the term “information rich” can be used to describe a page loaded with useful, quality information. Search engines love pages that are content rich and able to stand on it’s own merit. A quality information page is also part of the overall Web site allowing visitors to obtain more relevant and useful information having easy navigation through the Web site.

Instead of lightweight pages with no content, today’s pages need to contains high quality information, which is relevant to the online audience. The information rich page is 100% quality, put together with research, relevance, thought and care. No tricks are ever needed.

Next Question is….. What kind of information goes into creating an information rich high performance page?

Invariably this question often comes up when I am teaching one of our live hands-on workshops. People need to understand that this is wide open to all the discoveries you make while researching your target audiences behavior. How you can meet the audience’s needs exactly, is only limited to “your imagination” and the most effective way to present the information you know they are looking for, back too them. You want to give them what they “really want” as opposed to what you “think” they want and do this right up front.

The focus is on creating genuinely “useful content” for your ideal target audience of “potential customers” who happen to be already out there searching for you.

Not only is this what your visitors want, it’s also the key to success for search engine acceptance. You will never run in to trouble with search engines by offering lots of original, quality content that is interesting, useful and of high value, to your online readers.

In brief, key to success for attracting your target audience, is doing quality research on your target audiences searching behavior and learning to identify their needs and what they are searching for and then, giving them what it is that they really want.

Okay, so what kind of information might a information rich page really contain? That will depend on what “your research” reveals of course, but here are about 20 rough ideas just to get you started thinking in this fashion.

20 Ideas for High Performance Information Rich pages:

Your high performance, information rich pages might be any of the following (but not limited just to these either):

1. A Questions and Answers information rich FAQ page.

2. An introductory story related to the appropriate Web site theme (something that is compelling or educational on topic).

3. Interesting and original statistics which you have discovered through your research, are in high demand by your audience.

4. An interesting interview with someone (make it exclusive and original). People love to read about other peoples experiences and or opinions and views.

5. It might be a page loaded with various product reviews with an emphasis on benefits of each in comparrison.

6. It could be a theme related feature article or story.

7. It could be a detailed tutorial loaded with valuable “How to” or “instructional” advice.

8. Your information page might even be a biography about someone’s life that people are looking for detail on. Of course it should relate to the topical interest of your site’s theme.

Recent eg. At the recent, sad passing of legendary screen icon Marlon Brando, just do a search for his bio and see all of the movie or film related sites that are no doubt getting additional exposure from Marlon’s fans who are looking to buy up some of his old classic films.

9. Your pages might something with a current events or newsworthy or hard news angle. Your audience is probably looking for interesting news if you take time to study what they are searching for.

10. Your information rich pages might want to contain detailed historical information that your audience is seeking.

11. There may be room for the use of information pages that use some humor or emotional content that is still of good value.

12. Would there be value to having a questionnaire which asks your audience a series of important questions. Remember that like real life, most Web based businesses are about building rapport and relationships.

13. You could build an index to a whole library of similarly themed topics and all though your articles would all be similar in theme, each individual information rich page would contain useful and diverse subject matter. Remember high value to your readers but all original (and no duplication in content).

14. What about an information rich page offering an entryway into a useful, interactive section like a message board perhaps detailing terms of use for the message board.

15. It might be a page containing an interesting advice column on your chosen theme. Just old fashioned “good reading” which offers your readers advice or solutions to their challenges.

16. Your information page might be a reference page loaded with interesting, inspirational or famous quotes quite popular with all types of personalities.

17. Your pages might contain a related territorial map (yes images can be used most effectively with text)

18. It might be a sales letter but remember the emphasis is on quality content and originality. Things like detailed product reviews or content that emphasized some value added layout.

19. It could be a community related page with important localized community information. Tremendous value for Web sites that are looking for region specific traffic.

20. It could be any of the above suggestions with a seasonal angle relating to Christmas, Halloween, Easter, or something else appropriate to the Web content within your main theme.



October 24, 2009

Importance of Page rank for website

Filed under: Internet Marketing — Tags: , — admin @ 7:22 pm
Shilpa Singh (Wilson) asked:


Importance of Page rank for website

Page Rank (often denoted by PR) is Google’s ranking software that calculates the relevance of a webpage with its content. Page Rank is a quantity (between 0 and 10) defined by Google that provides a rough estimate of the overall importance of a web page.

 

Page Rank is displayed as a green bar to the left of a webpage listing in the Google Directory, and also in the Google toolbar

The basic factor behind defining a page rank is the keywords

If your keywords are Rare and Unique, then Page Rank doesn’t matter. If your keywords are very Competitive, then Page Rank becomes very important

 

There are “over 200 SEO factors” that Google uses to rank pages in the Google search results (SERPs). There are certain google search engine optimization rules which effects the page rank they are

 

1. Positive ON-Page SEO Factors.

2. Negative ON-Page SEO Factors.

3. Positive OFF-Page SEO Factors.

4. Negative OFF-Page SEO Factors.

 

Some of these factors are listed below:

 POSITIVE ON-Page SEO Factors:

Keyword Keyword in URL: First word is best, second is second best, etc Keyword in domain name: Same as in page-name-with-hyphens Keyword in title tag: Title tag 10 - 60 characters, no special characters. Keyword in description meta tag: less than 200 chars. Google no longer “relies” upon this tag, but will often use it. Keyword in keyword meta tag: less than 10 words. Every word in this tag MUST appear somewhere in the body text. If not, it can be penalized for irrelevance. No single word should appear more than twice.

If not, it may be considered spam. Google purportedly no longer uses this tag, but others do. Keyword density in body text:5- 20% - (all keywords/ total words) Individual keyword density: 1 - 6% - (each keyword/ total words) Keyword in H1, H2 and H3: Use Hx font style tags appropriately Keyword font size: “Strong is treated the same as bold, italic is treated the same as emphasis”. Keyword in alt text: Should describe graphic - Do NOT fill with spam Keyword in links to site pages (anchor text): Links out anchor text use keyword NAVIGATION - INTERNAL LINKS Link should contain keywords. Use hyphenated filenames, but not long ones - two or three hyphens only. Check that all Internal links are valid or not. NAVIGATION - OUTGOING LINKS External link: Link only to good sites Validate all links periodically Less than 100 links out total Avoid “Link Churn” Outgoing link Anchor Text : Should be on topic, descriptive OTHER ON-Page Factors Smaller files are preferred, Try not to exceed 100K page size Use Hyphens in URL Freshness of Pages: Changes over time, Newer the better - Google likes fresh pages. Freshness of Links: Excellent for high-trust sites, May not be so good for newer, low-trust sites Frequency of Updates: Frequent updates are equal to frequent spidering that generates newer cache. URL length: Keep it minimized - use somewhat less than the 2,000 characters allowed by IE - less than 100 is good, less is even better OTHER ON-SITE Factors Site Age:  Old is the best Site Size - Google likes big sites Age of page vs. age of site: Newer pages on an older site will get faster recognition

 

Negative ON-Page SEO Google Ranking Factors

 

Text represented graphically is invisible to search engines. Too high keyword repetition (keyword stuffing) may get you the Over Optimization Penalty. Redirect through refresh metatags:  Don’t immediately send your visitor to another page other than the one he/ she clicked on, using meta refresh. Keyword dilution: Targeting too many unrelated keywords on a page, which would detract from theming, and reduce the importance of your REALLY important keywords.  Flash page : Most SE spiders can’t read Flash content Provide an HTML alternative, or experience lower SERP positioning. Use of frames should be avoided as SE has problems with frames. Excessive JavaScript should not be used. Invisible text Google advises against this. Gateway, doorway page Google advises against this. Duplicate content Google advises against this HTML code violations Google advises against this

 

 

POSITIVE OFF-Page SEO Google Ranking Factors

Incoming links :

Based on the Number and Quality of links to you Google link reporting continues to display just a SMALL fraction of your actual backlinks, and they are NOT just greater than PR4 - they are mixed. Incoming links from high-ranking pages are better. Site Age - Old shows stability. Site Directory - Tree Structure. Complete - keywords in anchor text. PAGE METRICS - USER BEHAVIOR: Page traffic: trend of number of visitors. CTR: how often is the page clicked on. Time spent on page: Relatively long time, indicates relevance hit. If your website pages are bookmarked by user it is good for you. SITE METRICS- USER BEHAVIOR Site traffic: number of visitors are more its better. Time spent on domain: relatively long time indicates relevance hit. DOMAIN OWNER BEHAVIOR : Domain Registration Time: Register for 5 years, Google knows you are serious, register for 1 year, is it a throw-away domain?

 

NEGATIVE OFF-Page SEO Google Ranking Factors

Traffic Buying is not suggested Old links are valued, new links are not. Zero links to you: You MUST have at least 1 (one) incoming link (back link) from some website somewhere, that Google is aware of, to REMAIN in the index. Google hates link-buying, because it corrupts their PR model in the worst way possible. Please check all these points before creating links:

1. Does your page have links it really doesn’t merit?

2. Did you get tons of links in a short time period?

3. Do you have links from high-PR, unrelated sites? Cloaking (practice of presenting different content or URLs to users and search engines.) should be avoided as Serving up different results based on user agent may cause your site to be perceived as deceptive and removed from the Google index. Links from bad neighborhoods: Google says that incoming links from bad sites can’t hurt you, because you can’t control them.

 

 

So we can say that the page rank is the function of page,

Strong on page gives better page rank and strong off page is added advantage If off page is very strong and on page is bad then page rank will be very poor If on page is strong and off page is poor, then PR will not be that badly affected

 



Powered by WordPress