Posts Tagged ‘SEO Campaign’

Google PageRank Is Vital: Fact Or Fiction?

June 11th, 2009

Fact: High Google PageRank does not directly guarantee good search engine placement.  Although PageRank does factor into the SEO equation, page relevance, good quality content and links are the essential factors of a well balanced SEO campaign. For example, I’ve seen relatively new websites with no PageRank perform better in the search engine rankings than websites with a supposed PageRank of 4.

For the SEO geeks like me, the discussion and speculation can be seen as nothing more than inside baseball. Many SEO firms tout that increasing a site’s PageRank is the end-all and be-all to search engine optimization, but in my experience this is not the case.  Leading people this way I guess makes SEO more mystical and easier to sell, but it takes the focus away from the fundamentals of a good SEO campaign. In my opinion, having been inside the game for more than 10 years, placing a high emphasis on creating a high PageRank just for the sake of doing so really amounts to nothing.

Why? Because:

1. PageRank can be falsified with clever redirection techniques.  I have seen domains for sale with a PageRank of 6 only to find out that the PageRank was actually a 0.  How do I know that?  I was the purchaser of such a domain.
2. PageRank can be manipulated by those who overuse no-follow tags within a website. Google is rewriting its algorithm to address such abuses.
3. As soon as you think you have it figured out, Google without notice changes the parameters of the playing field and the rules of the game.
4. Focusing on just one aspect of your SEO campaign can actually make your site look unnatural. I have seen Google time and time again give websites “a haircut” (lopping off PageRank numbers) after a PageRank update.
5. It can take four to five months for a Google PageRank to update, so it really isn’t a good measure of the quality of your current SEO campaign.
6. It pits your site against the Google algorithm.  I caution and tell clients all the time that they are not competing with Google to get PageRank, but instead are competing with their rivals. SEO efforts should focus on outpacing your competitors on a keyword-by-keyword basis.  For example, I have seen certain SEO strategies work well for one keyword and not work so well for others.

So your best course of action is to focus on the fundamentals of SEO. I have learned that if you focus on the fundamentals of your search engine placement, then your Google PageRank will increase over time naturally.

These fundamentals include:

1. Well written content that’s written for your audience and centered on your keyword market focus
2. Congruent meta information, which is in alignment with your written content
3. External, contextual and editorial links to pages throughout your site
4. Balanced internal link flow within the website
5. Increased exposure and brand identity through every Internet marketing means possible, including but not limited to blogging, article submissions, video, press releases, etc.

To put it another way, a well optimized website arises when the market focuses of your content, meta tag information, external and internal links are in alignment with one another. Then and only then do you have an optimized website. If you make these element your focus, and not simply PageRank, then a quality PageRank will follow.

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Special thanks to Bruce Westbrook for editing this blog post.

Does your Blog Suck? 6 Ways to Make your Blog Un-Suck A.S.A.P.

April 10th, 2009

Many companies and organizations struggle when it comes to adequately marketing and supporting their company blog. Either they don’t have the time, they lack the will or the creativity as to what should be written on it. The ‘Era of Blogging’ has been alive and active for sometime and if you aren’t blogging regularly, networking with other bloggers, sharing your ideas with the blogosphere, then you truly are missing an opportunity to market and control the message of your business online. Hopefully, some of the ideas presented here as well as on this blog will help motivate you and your organization to write regularly on you blog and create a dialogue with your clients moving forward.

1.    Focus what you’re writing about — Sure, there’s lots going on in your life. You have a cat that you love very much, and you want to play with it all the time. Your job is crazy and your co-workers are crazy. You have boy/girl troubles. You enjoy reading mystery novels. You play the flute. While any one of these areas of interest can make for a compelling blog, if you over-diversify, you’ll fail to attract a consistent audience. This isn’t to say that you need to limit your blog to a particular subject (e.g. My Vegan Diet Attempt). Your web blog could be a humorous recounting of what goes on at your work every day or how your cat’s kidney stone diagnosis has progressed. What you write about doesn’t really matter — it’s the tone and the theme that needs to be one of a piece.

2.    Update, update, update! — This step is vital to the success of your blog and ties into my opening statement. The web is a content-hungry beast. It always needs more. Sure, your regular readers want to see updates, but the search engine spiders will be just as anxious to see your latest postings. A freshly revised and updated blog will not only get more links and interest from other web users over time, but also it will compile larger more relevant archives, which will demonstrate to the search engines that your site is for real.

3.    Employ a clean interface — Yes, you may want to grab some money on the side by putting up banner ads, Chikita ads and the like. You may also want to throw in some videos and links to other blogs and forums and spaces for you to twitter. But the more you gunk up your blog interface, the harder it will be for your blog’s fans to find essential information. Focus on your one tonal and thematic main task first, and then slowly integrate other features down the line.

4.    Interact with your readers — Take questions, do interviews, respond to comments, e-mail with your biggest fans, link to other blogs that support you, and ask your readers to subscribe.

5.    Patience, my friend — You may be the most genius blogger to come along since Nikki Finke, but you’re not going to be an overnight success, most likely, even if you’re a celebrity or a politician. Build your audience over time by focusing your mission, adding content, and following the other advice we’ve given above.

6.    Experiment with SEO and PPC tactics — Obviously, one of the reasons you’re blogging is because you want to make money writing about something that interests you. However, don’t put the cart before the horse. Build your SEO campaign on the back of a solid, content-rich site — not the other way around.