Using Content For Great Search Engine Rankings
If you're getting ready to put together a new website or redo an
old one, you should know it's all about your content today.
Search engine rankings aren't about your great images or your
sexy product; instead, they're all about what you have written
on your page. Search engine rankings are created through a
text-based algorithm that collects information about inbound
links to your page, content freshness, site longevity, and
pertinent text to your keyword.
Pertinent text often means that it needs to be
keyword-optimized. There are some things you can do to ensure
your page content works well for both the search engines and for
the real people who will visit and hopefully buy stuff from your
site.
1. Content first, then images. Search engines don't see images
at all. They do see text. There are two things you can do with
images to make them more search engine friendly: first, name
your image file something with your keyword in it or descriptive
of the image, not picture3.jpg; and second, fill out the
alternate text for your image with something that describes the
image and fits in with your page content, preferably with at
least one keyword mention.
2. Keep content centred on your page subject. If you focus on
the topic at hand, you both keep your readers involved and you
ensure that your keyword will crop up naturally throughout the
article.
3. Use, don't overuse, keywords. Judicious use of keywords keeps
your page from getting marked as spam, yet ensures the search
engines will pick it up and list it in an appropriate keyword
search. For the most part, an appropriate ratio of keywords in
your article is about 5%, focusing on having keywords showing up
in titles and subtitles.
4. Write in natural English about your subject. The
sophisticated algorithms search engines use today can identify
the awkward English created by content generation programs and
will drop those sites to the bottom of the listings. Besides,
your site visitors will appreciate understanding what you're
talking about.
5. Use headings and bulleted points. Bullet points are an old
and venerable way to lay web content out cleanly so that
browsers can hone in on the best information as quickly as
possible. Headings are valuable for the same reason, and also
have special attention paid to them by the spiders, as mentioned
above. Make sure you always use the H1-6 heading tags used in
HTML.
6. Write for readers, not search engines. If your content is
good and focuses around your keyword, the optimization generally
happens by itself. Good content draws links from others to your
page, and it also keeps customers coming back.
7. Update your text frequently. Search engines today love fresh
content with good keyword placement, and so do your customers.
With constantly-updated text, search engines know you're not
running a static site, and you will be able to watch your site
rise slowly in the search engine rankings.
8. Use articles within your site; lots of content at your site
raises your placement. It also brings back customers and
encourages other websites to link to yours, raising your search
engine rankings.