The 11 Deadly Sins of Search Engine Optimization
By Jeff Palmer
Openvision
(Common mistakes and misconceptions
about search optimization and marketing)
There is so much misinformation floating through the internet regarding
search engine marketing and optimization that it’s important to
shed some light on a few common errors and misconceptions.
The following list highlights some of the most critical
issues involved in determining the success or failure of a web site’s
search engine optimization and marketing strategies.
1. Lack of "Search Friendly" Content.
Every week I review web sites with no real search engine
indexable content. Web pages composed mostly of graphics, flash and
other bells and whistle are commonly over-looked by the search engines.
Search engines determine what content is of value per web page based
on the text used on that page.
A truly optimized site should contain at least 200 words
of keyword-dense text. There is some debate among experts on exactly
how many words should be used, but generally 200 words will suffice.
As a point of reference this paragraph contains about 200 words.
It is equally important for text content to contain
keywords that match the page titles. For example, a site selling peanut
butter owned by a company called "ACME Foods" might have a
title of "Acme Foods, Inc. Wholesale Food Products".
We have to consider how many people are likely to search
for the term "Acme Foods, Inc. Wholesale Food Products" it
is much more likely that people will search for the term "peanut
butter". Knowing this, we can say with confidence that it would
be a wiser choice to title a page, "Peanut Butter, ACME Foods"
and the page content should reflect this same keyword strategy.
2. Insufficient Link Popularity.
Search engines make every attempt to qualify the results
which are displayed in search results. One of the ways that they do
this is by tracking the number and quality of the incoming links to
a web site. A site with a large number of incoming links from quality
sites is given a higher ranking in search results. This is an important
consideration that is sometimes over-looked by those attempting to market
web sites.
Services that promise to link your site to thousands
of other sites are far from productive; in fact they can sometimes do
more harm than good. Most search engines these days consider services
like this to be spam, so called "link farming" and often give
sites with these types of links a low ranking or drop them all-together
from the search results.
Incoming links to a site that compliment it and are
relevant to the site contents are golden and can greatly boost a site's
ranking. Google's page ranking system is a good example. A site with
a page rank of 1 if given a link from a site with a page rank of 8 can
see its page rank boost to 4!
Link popularity is one of the most time consuming and
difficult aspects of search engine optimization. It's no wonder that
many of the search engines give so much importance to this web site
measurement.
3. Lack of Keyword Research And Updates
So, you have a web site. Do you know what pages in your
web site are generating the most interest? Do you know what terms people
are searching for that result in them finding your site? Probably not.
Let’s use the peanut butter analogy again. You
own a web site that sells peanut butter. You spend some money on paid
search advertising, logically; you assume that the key phrase "peanut
butter" is a prime candidate to target. What happens? Usually one
of two things.
One, the term peanut butter is such a popular search
term that thirty million other web sites are competing for the same
key phrase. Two, the term peanut butter is so unpopular that it’s
unlikely that it's searched for more than once in this lifetime.
Proper keyword research can solve these problems. Let’s
say for the sake of argument that keyword research is performed and
that it is determined that a significant number of people are searching
for "organic peanut butter". It just so happens that our peanut
butter company manufactures a whole line of organic, all natural peanut
butter. We have discovered a niche.
The right amount of people searching for the specific
product that we want to sell. It's the perfect match. So, what must
be done to capitalize on our findings? First we optimize our web pages
for our target keyword, we change the title, and the content so that
they include the term "organic peanut butter", then we scrap
all of the paid search advertising that wasn't working and focus on
targeting our "organic peanut butter" market.
The point is, successful search engine marketing relies
on constant research and updates the internet is fluid and evolving.
What works today might not work tomorrow, we have to be able to identify
strengths and weaknesses in our internet marketing campaigns and must
be prepared to research, update and adapt.
4. Designing First, Optimizing Later
I have seen this mistake repeated hundreds of times.
Even experienced web designers fail to consider the results of design
decisions on search optimization until it’s too late. What is
the point of spending thousands of dollars for a well "designed"
web site if nobody ever sees it? Consult a search engine specialist
early in the design process. Even if your web site marketing strategy
relies heavily on paid search advertising a consultation with a professional
optimization expert may expose flaws in your site's layout. Points in
the flow of information that tend to cause users to lose interest or
become confused may become apparent, better to address these issues
early on.
5. Relying Too Heavily On Paid Search Advertising
This is a mistake made by Fortune 500 companies and
small businesses alike. The fact is that most businesses, small and
large aren't getting it right.
The rationale is that since search advertising can be
purchased it isn't necessary to focus on search optimization techniques.
On the surface this might make some sense, you can buy certain keyword
phrases that people are searching for, so why bother optimizing your
site for the search engines?
For a company with a huge internet advertising budget
this means spending huge amounts of money to drive traffic to their
sites, when, if their site had been properly optimized from the beginning,
these costs might be half as much for the same amount of viewers. For
many smaller businesses trying to compete in the internet marketplace
simply becomes overwhelming.
While paid search advertising is a highly effective
means of targeting an audience, organic search optimization greatly
increases the chances of success for any web site. Make sure that the
site you are advertising is one that people can find easily without
the assistance of a paid search campaign.
6. Not Supporting the Conversion Process
A few weeks ago my wife decided that she wanted to buy
some Australian made baby clothes that we can't find here in the states.
So being the internet savvy father to be, I decided to have a look on
the internet for the particular brand she was interested in.
I surf to a search engine and type in the brand name.
A few seconds later I'm greeted with a list of web sites that supposedly
have what I'm looking for. I click on the first site in the list. I
find myself at the site of a clothing importer based out of California.
There are links to several categories of clothing, none of which seem
to have anything to do with babies, eventually after a lot of searching
I find a link on the children's clothing page for infant garments. The
infant garments page has a few images of clothing but not the brand
I'm looking for.
I look to see if there is way to search for clothing
by brand name. There isn't. I look to see if there is a list somewhere
on the site of brand names carried by this distributor. There isn't.
I look to see if there is a toll free number to call. There isn't. The
internet optimization part of my brain is boiling by this point, so
to add insult to injury I go back to the children's garments section
of the site. I click on a link to purchase a bright green jacket. I’m
confronted with a page that is requiring me to fill in a bunch of personal
details.
Ok, so I fill in the details and click submit. Now I
find myself back at the bright green jacket page. Apparently now I'm
qualified to purchase something. I click the "check out" button.
The web page goes blank. I know that this is the result of bad programming.
I know what's going to happen next. "Error 404 page not found".
Has this type of thing happened to you? If you have
ever tried to purchase something on the internet, I'm sure it has. This
is an illustration of a web site that is well ranked in the search engines
but has not taken the time to create a site that is designed for its
users.
I was forced to hunt through the web site to try and
find what I was looking for. The flow of information was counter-intuitive.
There was no online support. All-in-all the whole site was a joke. I
would be surprised to learn that the site in question made any sales
at all, ever.
There were several points in this online experience
that I felt like giving up. In the industry this is known as "abandonment",
This is a critical point in what is known as the "conversion process",
the act of turning web site viewers into online purchasers. This is
an issue that should never be underestimated.
In fact it is the number one factor that determines
a web site's success or failure. A web site with a million dollar marketing
budget and millions of visitors will not succeed unless it serves to
understand its user’s needs and anticipate its viewer’s
questions.
7. Graphics Used For Text Links.
Web designers often use graphics to represent a link
in a web site. There are many reasons for this choice. Unfortunately
for web designers, the major internet browsers display web pages in
different ways. Since fonts display differently on individual computers
and in different browsers, it is a much simpler proposition for designers
to create graphic links than it is to attempt to create cross-browser
text links. The downside to this work-around is that search engines
have no idea if a graphic link relates to a specific web page or a link
to download the latest Britney Spears MP3. For search engines to understand
what a link is truly representing, they need to find words in plain,
good old fashioned text. If a web site must use graphics for navigation
it is important to include a set of plain text links somewhere on the
web page, usually at the bottom of the page.
8. Use of Frames.
Search engines have a hard time indexing sites that
are created in frames. Framed sites use several html files to display
one page. Search engines are often confused by the frames method of
creating web sites, usually only indexing the first html file within
the framPages that aren't indexed will never show up in search engine
results. Also, many people that use the internet regularly for research
and purchases, so called "power users", tend to avoid sites
built with frames, especially those sites which require the user to
scroll content in separate frames. Simply put, frames are bad.
9. Splash Pages.
Entry pages that instruct the user to "Enter",
usually decorated with a large graphic or a flash animation. The index
page of a web site is the one that search engines read first. More often
than not the only readable content on this type of page is a link that
says, "skip intro" Splash pages lack indexable content, usually
contain no links and often contain a "redirect" to the real
home page. Search engines do not like redirects, they want the real
thing. Avoid splash pages unless you aren't serious about being found
by search engines.
10. Submitting To 10,000 Search Engines
I sometimes have a difficult time believing that these
services are still making money, more importantly that people still
think that they work. The fact is that a handful of search engines account
for about 90% of all the web traffic generated and the rest comes from
people typing in a web site's URL indirectly into their browser's address
bar. The amount of viewers generated from these Mega-Search Submittal
services is so negligible that it's hardly worth consideration. Don't
waste your time or your money.
11. Not Clearly Defining Action Points
Another mistake that is repeated quite is often is the
failure to clearly define what the objectives of a web site are. What
are the main goals of a site? Who will the primary audience be? What
actions are desired of the site’s visitors? If these questions
aren’t answered prior to designing a site they will reflect a
poor user experience in the final result.
Action points or calls to action are a terminology handed
down from the traditional marketing world. They serve to define a desired
action and are often supported by persuasive sales copy. Though the
basic concepts are the same as traditional marketing, calls to action
can take many different forms on the internet. Often they appear as
links or as part of a shopping cart.
The nature of a web site determines its type of action
point. The most important thing to consider is that without them, viewers
have little or no idea what the purpose of your site is.
Imagine an infomercial running a half hour long advertisement
on television, yet the commentator says nothing during the whole ad,
just stands there holding a cardboard box, you are left trying to guess
what’s inside, the advertisement offers no explanations or means
of contacting the company involved. Pointless isn’t it?
This is exactly what a web site without clearly defined
points of action accomplishes; nothing. It’s an exercise in futility.
Jeff Palmer is a search engine
optimization specialist and senior interactive designer for Openvision
an Internet marketing company located in Hilton Head Island South Carolina.
http://www.openvision.com/