Posts Tagged ‘SEO’

Is your website content stale?

09.20.09

When you surf the web, do you go to sites that haven’t made an update since 2003? Of course not. Why would you? You can read outdated information in the encyclopedia. You go to the internet to get the latest and greatest. And you keep going back to your favorite sites over and over again because they keep giving you something new and shiny to look at.

Site visitors get bored very easily. They lose attention quickly. Show them an “Under Construction” page featuring a cartoon man with a hard hat once, and guess what? Most likely, they’ll never see that ridiculous character hammer his last nail into that site’s design. People don’t have time to check your website constantly, only to find that the people in charge of updates have very loosely defined “Coming Soon!” to mean anything between now and Christmas 2012.

Now that I’ve convinced you to make regular updates, you are thinking to yourself, what if I have nothing new to say? Unless your business or organization is the most stagnant group of boring people in the entire world, I’m sure you can come up with something! Here is a list of ideas to get you started.

Products and Services
Has your company grown its product or service line? Don’t overlook this opportunity to not only update your services page, but also your home page. Treat the new item as an announcement. “Whachamacallits, now available at ABC Company!”

News
If your organization is ever featured in the news (on TV, in your local or community papers or their related websites) you must link to the media source’s website, and, with permission, you can host the PDF or text version of the print article right on your site. If linking out to a media site, check every so often to make sure they haven’t archived or deleted the article you are linking to.

Client Testimonials
Did you just finish a project for a particularly happy client? Ask them to tell you in 100 words or less about their experience working with you. With their permission to publish it on your site, slap that quote on the homepage, and then link to your services page that includes the type of work you completed for them, or to a portfolio page that gives more details about that specific project.

Employees
Hire someone new recently? Has one of your employees celebrated an anniversary of service with your company? Make it an announcement on your homepage with a link to a more detailed bio page about that worker. Feature an outstanding member of your team once a month or however often suits you. Combine a client testimonial that mentions a particular employee, and then feature that person.

Blog
Are you an expert in your industry? If you’re not, you probably know enough to fake it (you must know more than some people, anyhow). Start a blog on your website. Focus on topics of interest to your site visitors, not just areas that you like to talk about. Update your blog as often as is reasonably realistic for you. Set an expectation for your readers so they know when they will find new content here. Feature recent blog entries on your homepage.

As a general rule, make sure your website content is at least as fresh as the oldest contents of your refrigerator.

Have an idea for this blog? Send it to us!

Now you have a website—who’s going to find it?

02.11.09

Now that you have your website, you must feel really accomplished, right? Your job is far from over! So far, you, your six officemates and your mother make up the list of visitors who have spent time on your new web endeavor.

Where there is a logo, there is a URL

So how can you get your new URL out there? Let’s begin with the obvious. Anything that has your company logo on it should also have the website. This includes business cards, letterhead, fax cover sheets, advertisements, annual reports, company brochures and more. Don’t forget your email signature and other electronic forms of communication. (And you better be using your new @company.com email address and not companyname@yahoo.com!)

Make it friendly for users and search engines

Those were easy. But what else can you do to make your company’s web presence known? For starters, let’s hope your site was built by a professional designer, with content that was written for the web. If everyone has done their jobs right, the pages of your site should be adequately filled with search engine-friendly copy that includes keywords for which your customers will be searching, as well as appropriate HTML tags that show search engines the hierarchy of your content (for example, a headline is more important and more deserving of SEO juice than the copy beneath it).

But let me be clear: being adequately filled with keywords does not mean that 98 percent of the words on your site are buzz phrases of your industry repeated over and over again. And implementing HTML to appropriately improve your search engine optimization does not mean using image alt tags to hide 1,200 keywords that didn’t fit into the copy. These seedy practices are frowned upon by the search engines and will ultimately hurt your ranking with them. Play by the rules, and no one will get hurt (and hopefully, somone, i.e. YOU, will get to the top of Google!).

Besides keeping your site’s content relevant and fresh (remember, your website is always a work in progress; never stop updating, adding and refreshing!), you can also up your SEO ranks by having other sites link to yours. Is there an organization that oversees your industry? Are you a member of an affiliated association? Are there other businesses that are not in competition with yours, but whose services are related? These are all perfect opportunities to ask others to link to your website. When it makes sense, you can link to theirs as well, perhaps from a “Resources” page that your site’s visitors will find helpful. As always, be sure to keep it real; exchange links only with genuine and reliable businesses and organizations. Stay away from link farms and other linking schemes that the search engines reject.

If you can’t get it for free, there is no shame in paying for it

If you still can’t manage to reach an acceptable ranking in Google (and it doesn’t happen overnight, so be patient), there’s always pay-per-click. PPC advertising is a paid program that will bring your website to the results pages of internet searchers, but instead of appearing in the organic search area, your link will be seen in a small ad in the sponsored link section, usually at the top of the page and along the right column.

Don’t have much money in your web marketing budget? The beauty of Google Adwords and other PPC options is that you choose how much you want to spend, and you never go over that amount. Placement in the sponsored area is based on how much you bid for the keyword being searched, and your site’s natural relevance to that keyword. So it’s still important to build content-rich pages on your site.

Face it, you have to join Facebook

Finally, one of the best ways to get your website seen is through good old-fashioned networking. But the networking of today is not the networking of a few short years ago. Social networking websites such as Facebook, Linkedin, and Twitter, are easy avenues through which you can build a base of customers or leads, connect with hundreds of people interested in your services (who know others who are potentially interested too!), and spread  your business message in a viral environment. Create a business profile in one or more of these Web 2.0 neighborhoods, and manage it often.

If you’re not quite ready to jump into social networking quite yet, you can always leave it to your site visitors. Feature a “share this” button on your website, which allows visitors to share a link to your website via their Facebook or Twitter page. It’s like putting all the work in the hands of customers who already love your products. Hover over the green share button at the top of this page, and you can try it!