About This Blog

Regularly referred to in the media as "Australia's Richard Branson", Pete Wililams is a serial entrepreneur, author, internet marketer and ego maniac. This blog is where he shares his rants and raves on all things business, marketing & publicity - in particular, how to successfully mix internet marketing & business...

Sign Up

Join The Preneur Marketing Inner Circle and receive really cool & secret stuff.

Name
Email

Archive: SEO

How Search Engines Operate…

Today is the second post in a short introductory series on Search Engine Optimisation (SEO) for Small Business… and before we start I would like to credit Randfish over at SEOmoz for the foundation of this post. He has been writing a similar series on SEO, which was the inspiration for this series focused more towards traditional bricks ‘n’ mortar businesses who are just starting out online.

bart_blackboard.jpg To first understand how to make the most of SEO (Search Engine Optimization) for your business, you need to understand exactly how it is that search engines go about their business.

In the English-speaking world, the major search engines include Google, Yahoo!, MSN, and Ask.com (which includes AskJeeves).

Typically speaking, search engines perform two functions.

  • They “crawl” the web and create an index (database) of the billions of documents (web-pages) that are available online - this includes your business’ website.
  • They use this index to provide useful answers to questions that users ask of them, most often in the form of a list of relevant web sites after someone searches on a particular phrase or term; such as “plumbers in melbourne”

Let’s look at each of these.

Crawling and Indexing

Search engines don’t just head out across the expanse of the web at random. Instead, they proceed along methodical lines. Most every webpage you’ve ever been to on the internet contains at least one or more hyperlinks to other website pages or files. This sharing of links, in theory, serves as a network connecting all of the pages that exist on the internet. By using these links, the software that search engines use to scour the web (known as “crawlers” or “spiders”) can reach the billions of documents available on the web through any given starting point.

Randfish explains it brilliantly using the analogy of a city bus or subway route. While the main points of interest are the various stops and cities along the route (think of these as the web sites and files), the streets connecting them (the hyperlinks) are critical and of no less importance.

So if you don’t have any hyperlinks (on other webpages) that point to your business’ website then the search engine spiders will never be able to find your website and place its pages in the index. It is this web structure (hence: world wide web) that the search engines crawl through, making these stops, where their next task is to take a look at the code that makes the pages and store the relevant sections of code in their database for retrieval…

Retrieval and Rankings

When most people go to search for something on the internet, say looking for someone to fix the leak in the bathroom… they submit a query at a search engine, by typing in the phrase/term they are looking for (plumber melbourne), and in return they get a list of relevant web pages.

To do this, the search engine looks through its massive collection of documents, and performs a two-step process. First, they return results which are likely to have some relation to what the user was looking for. Secondly, and this is important, they determine the order, or “rank” in which these pages are displayed to the user.

To make this determination, the search engine judges two aspects of your businesses page: relevance and importance.

Relevance is a very complex matter that we’ll be discussing throughout this guide. Suffice to say, relevance is no longer simply a matter of having the right words (plumber & Melbourne) in the text of your webpage. SEO goes far beyond that and incorporates a great number of factors.. but as a starting point; the only way the search engines can determine what your business (website) is about, is by reading the words of test on your sites pages. So if you are a plumber, make sure you incorporate words such as plumbing, plumber, leak, toilet etc etc in your copy.

Importance, from the search engine’s perspective, has to do with how popular your site is… and just like in high school where the most popular people had the most friends… the more links you have pointing to your site, the higher your importance, and the higher your rank in any given search.

If you’ve used a search engine before, you likely know this, but the more relevant and important a page is thought to be, the closer to the top of the search engine results list it can be found. How many times have you even bothered navigating to the second page of a results list to find what you’re looking for? …Exactly….

Of course, these two factors are determined by machines, so there’s a lot of room for error. But rather than see this as a negative thing, we should look at how we can capitalize upon it. In other words, if we figure out just how search engines go about determining how important and relevant your page is, we can make sure that they award us high rankings.

In the next post we will be going further into the actual look and feel of a Search Engines Results Page and how that all works… stay tuned..

The Take-Away: Now, I was a shocked as Lynne Spears was on Dec 18 , when I learnt that they don’t teach these basics at university… One of the graphic designer team at Infiniti, who was taught web design as part of her uni course, was amazed to learn this stuff…
After a university design course and a huge HECs bill… it’s a travisty on the Uni system (and a whole other blog post) that she thought that the result on the web were non-manipulable, that the search engine knew of every single page online, and displayed the results in real-time.
So the take-away here is; to pick up the phone an interrogate your web designers to ensure they are taking SEO into consideration when designing your site… because there is a good chance they aren’t…and that’s costing your business $$$

Technorati Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

SEO Guide For Small Business…

Today is the first post in a short introductory series on Search Engine Optimisation (SEO) for Small Business, and why you need to be learning as much about SEO as the Spears family should be learning about contraception… Enjoy.

Google Like many small business owners, you may not have even heard of SEO before. And yet, it is one of the most critical things that you need to understand if you want your website to stand out from the crowd and actually generate positive results for your business.

Just What is SEO?

SEO refers to “Search Engine Optimization”. And basically, it involves making very subtle changes to your website so that it becomes more attractive to the programs running the net’s most popular search engines - Google, MCN, Yahoo etc etc.

If you’re not convinced that this should matter to you, take note that the majority of all web traffic is generated by just a few major search engines: Yahoo!, MSN, Google, and AskJeeves.

When was the last time you went to the yellow pages to find a business instead of Google? Exactly.

If these search engines can’t locate your site, then your site cannot be put into their databases. If you aren’t in their databases, you can’t turn up during a search.

In other words, you will never reach those people who are out there, actively looking for your product and services.

This isn’t just a matter of generating random traffic; it’s about ensuring that those people who are in the market to buy your products already will be able to find your site when they come looking for it. If your website is not getting listed on the first page of the Serach Engines Result Pages (SERPs) your business simply doens’t exist online…

So How Exactly Does SEO Work?

Search engines are constantly looking for ways to improve upon their services; they want to go deeper into the web and return better results to their users… That’s their business - to return (display)the most approprite sites on the internet for the ’search term’ entered by the user.

However, it’s ultimately computer software that is conducting these searches, not a human being. As such, they’re prone to error, as I’m sure you all know by now. The good news is that these programs search for sites in a very predictable and methodical fashion. If you know how they conduct their searches, you can make the changes to your site that you need to (often, just a tweaked word here or there!) to take you from the bottom of the search pile to the top!

Why wouldn’t you want to be part of this?

In this blog series, we’re going to cover SEO at a high-level. But before we get into all that, you need to ask yourself if SEO is what you’re looking for… Why did you build your website in the first place? Was it to satisfy your ego and burn money on a slick-looking interactive brochure that nobody is ever going to read? I doubt it, but if so, then you can probably achieve that goal quite nicely without bothering any further with SEO. However, maybe your aim was to generate new leads for your business? If so, then SEO is one of the most effective means to that end in your entire arsenal.

Are we on the same page here? Have I convinced you that you NEED SEO if you want to take your business anywhere in this day and age?

If make sure you check back here in the next couple of days to read the next installment which will cover: How The Search Engines Operate… How the Search Engines Rank Your Site… and much more.

If you want to skip ahead and jump right in I highly recommend the ebook by Aaron Wall, intelligently named The SEO Book. It really does cover everything you need to know to increase your websites position in the search engines… Click here to buy now.

Technorati Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

The Importance of Web 1.0

web20logos.jpgOK, so we’ve all heard the endless talk of Web 2.0…Twitter this… and Facebook that.

And, yeah I couldn’t agree more that there are some HUGE benefits in the Web 2.0 world, especially with the launch of Facebooks PPC program and the demise of email usage…

BUT the importance of considering 1.0 on the web can never be overlooked.

So what do I mean when I say 1.0 ? Well, I’m not talking about the “static web” (as opposed to the viral and interactive world of Web 2.0)… but the importance of considering the concept of Version 1.0 when developing your website(s).

See, most people go about launching a site the wrong way… They wait until the contact form actually works, or they wait until the new logo is redesigned, and as surprising as it may be, I’ve even heard people put off the launch of an ecommerce site because the shopping cart didn’t work (Read on… I do have a coherent point, trust me)

But, before I do go on and make sense of my above point I want to take a sideways step and discuss the WHY of a website.

Just like any form of advertising or marketing, before you take any action you must have a clear goal or outcome for it. There are a number of reasons why you would launch a website, maybe it’s so you can point customers to a interactive brochure, or maybe it’s stroke the ego of the owners with a jazzy flash-filled website.. or if you are a smart entrepreneur it’s to create a new lead generation source.

So, I am going to assume here that you are the latter, a smart, forward thinking marketer, with your websites sole purpose being to generate new leads for your business- be it online or off.

If this is the case, the first thing your website needs is new traffic (visitors) and there are essentially two ways you can get this.
1. Use some form of Pay-Per-Click advertising, like Google Adwords to drive traffic to your site from the search engines; or
2. Get on the first page of Google for free - That is use search engine optimisation techniques to get high rankings on the SERPs and get visitors at NO COST.

Now, not to get into a huge discussion on internet marketing here, but again I am going to assume you are highly intelligent, an educated marketer (read: regular reader of this blog) and want to take over the world,so you will want to employ both of the above tactics because if you are not of the front page of Google you don’t exist online PERIOD.

One of the biggest keys to achieving success with point 2, search engine optimisation, is the length of time Google (and the other search engines) have known about your domain (website) and the time they’ve had to read and index your pages content.

So back to my original point… If you enlist a website designer to create your new website, or if you go it yourself, there will be a decent amount of time between the time you register your domain and the time when you get the site live online - upto 6 months in some cases.

That’s 6 long & valuable months of lost, wasted, abandoned and squanded time.

So my point is this…. when you consider the SEO aspect of your web presence, and how important it is… It makes absolute sense to get some content online as quickly as possible, so you can use that time to court some of Google’s love.

The beauty of the web is that you can launch a site, before anyone has to see it… Let me say that another way - It is a GOOD thing to launch a site early, before any human sees it.

It’s with this logic that I say, uploading and making an e-commerce site live even when it’s shopping cart doesn’t work makes logical and commercial sense. The Google bots will spider the pages and get them listed in the index whether the shopping cart is active or not - All you are going to launching a version 1.0 of the site.

Guy Kawasaki was on the money when he said at a MDRT conference “Version 1.0 never means you have to say sorry”.

Most people I have worked with who are launching a website have all the content written before any design work is contracted, so the first mandate you should be giving your developers is to create a series of basic HTML pages with nothing but title, h1 and internal href tags throughout the content, for the search engine spiders to crawl, read and index.

Implementing this technique will see you well on the way to a good front page listing on Google, Yahoo and other search engines before your fully fledged web 2.0 style site is launched.

Also, if you are one of those domain hoarders or squatters, who own a bunch of URLs for potential future use, you should be employing this technique too… The longer the relationship a domain (URL) has with Google the quicker you will get listed for other keyword phrases you may wish to target in the future. This is the secret.. it doesn’t matter what phrase you target initially, getting listed for a completely new phrase will be quicker if you have a history then if you don’t.

Technorati Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Search Engine Marketing Search Engine!

Are you wondering how to get on the first page of Google, stuck on the validity of a particular META tag or need clarification on Adwords phrase matches?

Well look no further, just enter a search term below to search an exclusive list of the top 260+ Search Engine Marketing blogs, as chosen by Lee Odden of TopRank Online Marketing:

The Search Engine Marketing Search Engine Explained…

Well firstly we must thank two men - Blogologist Alister Cameron for developing the application, and Lee Odden for releasing his OPML file of top Search Marketing Blogs.

…While thinking through how that list would be most valuable, Alister enlisted the help of Google, and created the Search Engine Marketing Search Engine! (Insert imaginary sounds of drumroll and orchestral fanfare here. - Alisters request)

What sites does SEM Search include in its search results?

That’s Lee Odden’s decision, and his alone - the search list is based on his TopRank Online Marketing OPML file.

Here is a snapshot of some of the 400+ sites though:
Analytics Talk - Justin Cutroni of EpikOne writes about the array of Google products, including analytics, he works with.
Blue Hat SEO - Eli writes about some cool advanced SEO tactics.
Dosh Dosh - This is one of my favourite blogs… Maki, a Political Science and Philosophy student in Toronto Canada, writes about making money online and along with that comes posts about professional blogging, affiliate marketing, get-paid-to programs, advertising networks and social media monetization.
Google Analytics Blog - Official blog for Google Analytics with tips and resources from the GA team.
Hitwise Intelligence - The HitWise team posts tasty insights about search trends.
InsideGoogle - Nathan Weinberg’s long time blog about Google and the search industry.
Matt Cutts - Google’s famous engineer and search spam fighter dispels wisdom, insight and squashes SEO myths.

Technorati Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

TWITTERUPDATES

    Paddle Pop LionGreatest Hamburger EVER.Twitter / Pete Williams: The Cocktail of Motivation:...30DC Melb Meetupphoto.jpgMy Book is Famous !!!!The ultimate iPhone6a00d83451b64669e200e553a7e1f48833-450wi.jpeg