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Your Friend on the Web, Diana Ratliff

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Google

Cautions When Building Your Own Links

SEO is about backlinks to good contentAs you may know, a key factor in getting your site to rank well in the search engines is to have lots of links back (“backlinks”) to your site.

Which leads many people – including some clueless and/or unscrupulous “web designers” – to think that all they need is a TON of backlinks and they’ll beat their competitors to the #1 rank for their search terms.

It doesn’t work that way.

Talked to a prospect lately who’d been doing his own SEO and who’d achieved over 700 backlinks from 145 domains.  Sounds like a lot, doesn’t it?  He’d submitted his site to “like 1000” web directories, using his business name as the hyperlink text.

He’d invested quite a bit of time and effort and didn’t understand why his site didn’t rank higher.

IMPORTANT: To a large extent, being easy to find in Google IS a popularity contest, and good content is what makes you popular.  Being “popular” to the right people (sites) is critical.  The more competitive a search term is, the more important this becomes.  For example, ranking for “Columbia MO roof repair” is much easier than ranking for “weight loss” because fewer sites are competing for that term.

Here’s what was hurting him:

  • Those directory backlinks are considered low quality links – don’t do much for a site’s ranking at all.  They’re not coming from sites that are considered important by Google or the other search engines. Links from higher-ranking, more popular sites – especially those within his industry – would help enormously.
  • The anchor text was almost all the same.  Anchor text are the words that make up a hypertext link – they’re usually underlined or sometimes in another color.  (The words “Columbia MO roof repair” above are the anchor text in that link.) In the illustration to the right, all the words in blue are anchor text – when you click on them they lead to a different web page.  The search engines reward varied text; if you use your business name as anchor text everywhere online, you’re penalized with lower rankings.
  •  He wasn’t using social media at all – today, especially for national rankings or highly competitive terms, you need re-tweets, Facebook shares, et cetera.
  • Finally – he wasn’t adding new content to his site on a regular basis.  This is often done by using a blog or news section. Adding content gives the search engines a reason to come back to your site (to see what’s new) and it gives PEOPLE a reason to visit your site again – which is even more important!  Some of those people may link to your news or articles from their own sites.

What you need to remember from this is that it’s not just about the number of links.  It’s about their quality.  And the best way to get the attention of the search engines, and to attract backlinks, is to add quality content regularly.

Those Scary “Poor Google Rankings” Emails & Calls

Woman Scared  Because Website Does Not Rank in GoogleIf you’ve had a website for any length of time at all, you’ve probably gotten scary-sounding emails warning you that your site doesn’t rank in the search engines.

I got one just this morning:

We like your site, but we noticed that you are missing out on key web traffic due to where you show up on the search engines…

One of my clients got one yesterday that she forwarded to me:

Dear Business Owner:  I searched for (search term) and (business name) was nowhere to be found…  you’re buried in position number 11.  That means potential clients aren’t finding you. Whether by luck or skill, 7 of your competitors are enjoying the benefits of being on page 1. Simply put, they are getting ALL your business.

An attorney friend told me that someone from a well-known industry-related web design/SEO firm kept calling him to tell him his site didn’t rank for X, Y and Z search terms.

If you get an email or phone call like this, should you be worried?

[Read more…] about Those Scary “Poor Google Rankings” Emails & Calls

Paying Google Comment Left Me Speechless

Speechless after Google CommentThis comment left me speechless. Twice. (And that doesn’t happen often.)

A local business owner told me yesterday that he didn’t WANT his website to be #1 on Google’s search engine results page (SERP).

I was speechless for a few seconds… I’d never heard anyone say THAT before. I couldn’t imagine why he wouldn’t want that prime visibility – after all, the website at the very top gets more clicks than any other listing. That’s usually the goal!

So I asked why not, and he said:

“Because prospects will think I’m too expensive if I can afford to pay Google to be #1.”

I was speechless again. And asked him to tell more.

To make a long conversation short, evidently he – and he says, a lot of other business owners – think that you somehow PAY GOOGLE for high rankings. (By the way, this gentleman was very clear that he wasn’t talking about the Sponsored Ads – which you DO pay for – that appear at the top or right sides of the search results page.)

FOLKS – This IS is flat-out WRONG. You don’t pay Google anything at ALL for any ranking. Let me say that again in another way. You DO NOT have to pay Google (or Yahoo or Bing) anything at all to get found at the top of the search engine results when people look for your product or service online.

Those rankings are determined by RELEVANCE. Google’s job is to give people what they’re looking for. If they (their search algorithm) thinks a particular page on YOUR SITE is the best, most relevant match for what that person typed in, that page will rank #1.

That’s it.

Now convincing Google that YOUR site is the most relevant one – which is called SEO (or search engine optimization) – is something you might well hire someone like me to do for you. But you do not pay Google itself, nor does a SEO expert pay Google directly.

Got it?

Huge Google changes affect rankings – MUST READ info!

Google is now rolling out a huge change in the way it presents search results. Called “Places Search” or “Google Integrated”, it especially affects businesses who rely on local search traffic – which probably means YOU.

Google has, in a sense, combined the map-based Google Local/Places listings – part of what’s often referred to as “Local Search” – with the organic/natural results. They’re also incorporating more reviews into the results they display. So now the Map that used to appear (for some searches) in the middle, below the Sponsored Links, is now on the right. And the listings that were next to the map are now combined with the natural search engine results listings, in the middle of the page.

Here’s an example, from SearchEngineLand.com:

Google Place Search Results Sample

These changes are not yet consistent, especially when you search in different browsers (Firefox, Internet Explorer, Google Chrome). And search engine experts are all “abuzz” about this, as they try to figure out what’s going on and what it means for their clients.

A brief summary of what national experts are saying:

* Local results (e.g. “dentist columbia mo” or “columbia mo restaurants”) are now highlighted, more obvious on the page than general search results.

* If you were relying on your Places page (Map listing) and didn’t have a website, you may be in trouble. With Google now combining the local and organic listings, businesses that do well with BOTH are more likely to rank high.

* Conversely, if you didn’t rank #1 in the Map but ranked well organically, you may now leap back up to the top – I’ve seen that happen with at least one clients’ site I’ve checked today.

* Fleshing out your Google Place Page is more important – because Google is pulling data from it and enhancing the search results they display.

* Adwords Ads – at least the top ones – are easier to see, making them more important. Google seems to be making an effort to get small business owners to advertise using Adwords, which also means that it will get more competitive (costly) too.  So you need to know what you’re doing if you use Adwords, or work with someone who does.

* You may get less clicks directly to your website, because there are a lot more things to click on in the search results. (Sites like Yelp or Citysearch, for example.) Those third-party sites that show reviews are more important and visible.

* Directory-type sites, such as ServiceMagic and SuperPages, are less prominently ranked.

Bottom line, as far as I can tell SO FAR, this is what it means to YOU – your site needs to rank well in the search engines AND have a well optimized local “Places” listing.

It used to be that there were two separate algorithms Google used – one for traditional search (relevance-based) and one for local/Maps search (geography-based.) Google specifically says that this is no longer the case. It sounds, then, like traditional SEO factors will more heavily influence who shows up for local search queries… and Google will then apply the local data to create the search results.

For many Columbia business owners, this can be a game-changer as far as their online marketing goes. Please share this with to your colleagues – members of your networking group – fellow business owners – Chamber members, et cetera.

And yes, I DO SEO – so if you need help, or need someone who says on top of all this to manage your search engine presence, please contact me.

Diana

Here are some of the sites I visited, if you want to learn more:

http://blumenthals.com/blog/2010/10/27/what-are-the-implications-of-the-new-integrated-local-search-results/
http://www.smallbusinesssem.com/5-quick-impacts-of-googles-new-local-search-results/3757/
http://searchengineland.com/new-place-search-shows-googles-commitment-to-local-53990
http://www.searchengineguide.com/miriam-ellis/new-integrated-google-local-a-game-chang.php

What is a #1 Google Ranking Worth?

In my April 24th “Web Wise” column I explained how much difference a minor boost in your search engine rankings can make.   I said:

“If you want to maximize the profit from your website your goal should be to rank not only on Page 1, but at position No. 1. That’s because the number of people who click on the link to your website grows exponentially the higher you rank.

You might rank third on Google for a keyword. If you can get to the No. 1 position, then you can expect to quadruple traffic for that keyword.”

It’s one thing to read that – it’s something altogether to SEE it.  So in this blog post I want to link to a major source for much of my data, since they have some cool illustrations, one of which is included here:

If you’re at all interested in SEO – in Google Adwords – in how Google works – this is an excellent, informative, and lengthy post… http://training.seobook.com/google-ranking-value

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