SEO
Expert Guide - Sitewide Optimization (part 4/10)
By David
Viney
In
parts 1 and 2 you learnt how to develop your online business proposition
and how to generate a list of key word ingredients for your site
optimization activity. You were also introduced to our mythical
Doug (who sells antique doors, door handles, knockers, door bells
or pulls and fitting services) in Windsor in the UK.
Now
it is time to start your optimization activities and I am going
to start with a hard message. If you already have a site and this
is the first time you have seriously looked at SEO, then I would
recommend starting again from scratch! Build a new site from the
top-down and - when you are done - migrate across from your old
site to the new. Don't worry about losing custom or links from
other sites - there are ways to avoid that I will show you in
the (final) part 10.
(a)
Domain name Optimization
A newsflash for
you. By far the most effective way to optimize keywords is to
have them in the full URL for your page. The highest value part
of that URL is the domain name itself.
I
know what you are thinking. All the good domain names have gone
by now. Well, you might be surpised (as you will soon see with
Doug). Your second concern might be that you would prefer to use
your business name as your URL. We will deal with both these concerns
(in reverse order).
Try
typing "search" into Google and you might expect to see Google
put themselves first in the results, or Yahoo. It is search.com
that ranks highest however! I rest my case. Domain names matter
(whatever nonsense you might read on SEO forums).
Try
http://www.laserpointers.co.uk
and see what you find. If you dig about a bit, you'll find that
the company behind this site (and several others) is Blue Sky
Marketing.
At
http://www.blueskymarketing.co.uk
you will find their company website, but guess which of the two
sites gets a top five ranking at Google UK for a search on "laser
pointers"?
The
bottom line is that (after you have done every other piece of
optimization right) your domain name selection is perhaps the
only area where you can further differentiate yourself from your
competitors. As such, it may be your only realisatic chance (in
this every more mature market) to achieve a top 10 ranking for
some of your key search terms and - believe me - the traffic (and
business) impact this has is literally amazing.
Now
for the "all the good domain names have gone" issue. Doug makes
a visit (as should you) to the excellent Keyword
Domain Name Search Tool and, although plurals are out (pity),
he finds the following two options are both still available for
his top-selling product and biggest possible traffic draw:
http://www.antiquedoorknocker.com;
and
http://www.antique-door-knocker.com
If
you use your top three keywords as a combination, you too are
likely to find a decent available domain (unless you are operating
in a highly competitive area like real estate).
So
which of these two should Doug choose? To hyphenate domain name
or not? There is more disagreement on this amongst web masters
than almost any other issue in SEO. In practice, this means that
there is evidence supporting both options.. and, as such, you
choice isn't critical. However, on balance (and without boring
you with the details), I would suggest you do hyphenate in the
domain name if you have a choice (if only to help with your page
titles; more on this later).
(b)
URL name Optimization
You'll remember
I suggested a separate page for each product, service or key piece
of information. Well, I would also have a seperate directory for
each product or service category (limiting the directory name
to two, hyphenated key words). As such, Doug settles on three
directories, covering his three main categories:
http://www.antique-door-knocker.com/door-hardware/
http://www.antique-door-knocker.com/antique-doors/
http://www.antique-door-knocker.com/door-fitting/
I
wouldn't go down to sub-dirctories below this unless you have
a particularly large number of products in your catalogue (and
therefore recognisable sub-categories). Too many key words will
reduce the overall density of any one word within the whole URL.
(c)
File extension Optimization
For your (page)
file name, I would use up to three key words, again hyphenated.
For the file extension I would always opt for static .html file
extensions where possible. Dynamiclly generated file extensions
(that include "?" or "%" in the query string) have been shown
to confuse search engines.
Extending
Doug's example, he comes up with 45 different pages under hardware,
of which the following five are examples:
../door-hardware/brass-door-knobs.html
../door-hardware/iron-door-knobs.html
../door-hardware/door-bell-pulls.html
../door-hardware/door-bell-chimes.html
../door-hardware/brass-door-knockers.html
In
some cases, he has duplicate products on different pages. For
example, everything on the door chimes page also appears on the
door pull page. Doug disdcovered during his key word analysis
phase that Americans tended to search on chimes, whilst brits
used pulls. Thus he needs both covered at this level.
(d)
Navigation, Internal Links and Site Map Optimization
It may be a shock
to some (particularly those who focus on Page Rank too much),
but your home - or "index" - page has very little SEO value. A
well ranking root index page is the exception rather than the
rule. My advice is to treat the homepage as a pretty site map
- pretty becuase it should impress human directory reviewers and
a site map so that it directs search engine robots quickly to
your sub content.
For
opimizing the site map, imagine a droopy banana sat at the top
of your page (drooping down the left hand side). This banana zone
is where both human eyeballs and search engines will look most.
Make sure your links use key words only for anchor text and link
directly to your second and third levels. A truncated example
version (for Doug) would sit in the top left corner of his home
page - and look like this:
-
Door
Hardwares
-
Brass
Door Knobs
-
Iron
Door Knobs
-
Door
Bell Pulls
-
Door
Bell Chimes
-
Brass
Door Knockers
-
Antique
Doors
-
Edwardian
Doors
-
Victorian
Doors
-
Door
Fitting
-
Surrey
Door Fitters
-
Middlesex
Door Fitters
More value is
ascribed to internal links (with good anchor text) than many people
seem to realize. I am often surprised at how many people spend
ages trying to secure inbound links from other sites (more on
this later) but have no decent, keyword-rich navigation within
their own site (where, after all, everything is under their own
control).
Search
engines uses the anchor text on inbound links to determine the
relevance of the target page. In fact Google even has a special
operator: ‘allinanchor:keyword’, which picks up text only from
within the anchor text of indexed pages. Try comparing any straight
search in Google with it's allinanchor equivalent. For example,
"swimming pools" versus "allinanchor:swimming pools".
You'll
probably notice that the top-ranked straight search site is invariably
the top-ranked allinanchor site (whilst others further down the
list may vary substantially). Don't neglect to focus on this area
in your SEO strategy!
Next
we turn our attention to page optmization...
Navigate
the guide
Previous : SEO
Expert Guide - Keyword Analysis (part 3/10)
Next:
SEO
Expert Guide - Page Optimization (part 5/10)
About the author:
David
Viney (david@viney.com) is
the author of the Intranet Portal Guide; 31 pages of advice, tools
and downloads covering the period before, during and after an
Intranet Portal implementation.
Read
the guide at http://www.viney.com/DFV/intranet_portal_guide
or the Intranet Watch Blog at http://www.viney.com/intranet_watch.
Article
Source: http://EzineArticles.com/