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We
all know that the lion’s share of web traffic
comes through the search engines. We also know that
keywords and links to your site are the two things
that affect your ranking in the search engines.
Your keywords tell the search engines what you do,
and the inbound links tell them how important you
are. This combination is what determines your relevance.
And relevance is what the search engines are after.
There’s a lot
of information around about how to incorporate
keyword phrases into your HTML meta tags. But
that’s only half the battle. You need to
think of these tags as street-signs. That’s
how the search engines view them. They look at
your tags and then at your copy. If the keywords
you use in your tags aren’t used in your
copy, your site won’t be indexed for those
keywords.
But the search engines don’t
stop there. They also consider how often the keyword
phrase is used on the page.
To put it simply, if you
don’t pepper your site with your primary
keywords, you won’t appear in the search
results when a potential customer searches for
those keywords.
But how do you write keyword-rich
copy without compromising readability?
Readability is all-important
to visitors. And after all, it’s the visitors
that buy your product or service, not search engines.
By following these 8 simple
guidelines, you’ll be able to overhaul the
copy on your website ensuring it’s agreeable
to both search engines and visitors.
1) Categorise your pages
Before writing, think about the structure of your
site. If you haven’t built your site yet,
try to create your pages around key offerings
or benefits. For example, divide your Second Hand
Computers site into separate pages for Macs, and
PCs, and then segment again into Notebooks, Desktops,
etc. This way, you’ll be able to incorporate
very specific keyword phrases into your copy,
thereby capturing a very targeted market. If you’re
working on an existing site, print out each page
and label it with its key point, offering, or
benefit.
2) Find out what keywords
your customers are searching for
Go to www.wordtracker.com and subscribe for a
day (this will only cost you about AUD$10). Type
in the key points, offerings, and benefits you
identified for each page, and spend some time
analysing what words customers use when they’re
searching for these things. These are the words
you’ll want to use to describe your product
or service. (Make sure you read WordTracker’s
explanation of their results.)
3) Use phrases, not single
words
Although this advice isn’t specific to the
web copy, it’s so important that it’s
worth repeating here. Why? Well firstly, there’s
too much competition for single keywords. If you’re
in computer sales, don’t choose “computers”
as your primary keyword. Go to Google and search
for “computers” and you’ll see
why… Secondly, research shows that customers
are becoming more search-savvy – they’re
searching for more and more specific strings.
They’re learning that by being more specific,
they find what they’re looking for much
faster. Ask yourself what’s unique about
your business? Perhaps you sell cheap second hand
computers? Then why not use “cheap second
hand computers” as your primary keyword
phrase. This way, you’ll not only stand
a chance in the rankings, you’ll also display
in much more targeted searches. In other words,
a higher percentage of your site’s visitors
will be people after cheap second hand computers.
(WordTracker’s results will help you choose
the most appropriate phrases.)
4) Pick the important
keyword phrases
Don’t include every keyword phrase on every
page. Focus on one or two keyword phrases on each
page. For your Macs page, focus on “cheap
second hand macs”. For the PCs page, focus
on “cheap second hand pcs”, etc.
5) Be specific
Don’t just say “our computers”.
Wherever you would normally say “our computers”,
ask yourself if you can get away with saying “our
cheap second hand Macs” or “our cheap
second hand PCs”. If this doesn’t
affect your readability too badly, it’s
worth doing. It’s a fine balance though.
Remember, your site reflects the quality of your
service. If your site is hard to read, people
will infer a lot about your service…
6) Use keyword phrases
in links
Although you shouldn’t focus on every keyword
phrase on every page, it’s a good idea to
link your pages together with text links. This
way, when the search engines look at your site,
they’ll see that the pages are related.
Once again, the more text links the better, especially
if the link text is a keyword phrase. So on your
“Cheap Second Hand Macs” page, include
a text link at the bottom to “Cheap Second
Hand PCs”. If you can manage it without
affecting readability, also include one within
the copy of the page. For example, “As well
as providing cheap second hand Macs, we sell high
quality cheap second hand PCs”. TIP: If
you don’t want your links to be underlined
and blue, include the following in your CSS file:
<style type="text/css">
<!--
a {text-decoration: none;}
-->
</style>
Then format the HTML of each
link as follows:
As well as providing cheap
second hand Macs, we sell high quality <a href="pcs.htm"
style="text-decoration:none"><font
color="#000000">cheap second hand
pcs</font></a>.
7) Use keyword phrases
in headings
Just as customers rely on headings to scan your
site, so to do search engines. This means headings
play a big part in how the search engines will
categorise your site. Try to include your primary
keyword phrases in your headings. In fact, think
about inserting extra headings just for this purpose.
Generally this will also help the readability
of the site because it will help customers scan
read.
8) Test keyword phrase
density
Once you’ve made a first pass at the copy,
run it through a density checker to get some metrics.
Visit GoRank's Keyword Density Analyzer and type
in the domain and keyword phrase you want to analyse.
It’ll give you a percentage for all the
important parts of your page, including copy,
title, meta keywords, meta description, etc. The
higher the density the better. Generally speaking,
a density measurement of at least 3-5% is what
you’re looking for. Any less, and you’ll
probably need to take another pass.
Follow these guidelines,
and you’ll be well on your way to effective
SEO copy.
Just remember, don’t
overdo it. It’s not easy to find the balance
between copy written for search engines and copy
written for customers. In many cases, this balance
will be too difficult to achieve without professional
help. Don’t worry, though. If you’ve
already performed your keyword analysis, a professional
website copywriter should be able to work your
primary keyword phrases into your copy at no extra
charge.
* Glenn Murray is an advertising
copywriter and heads copywriting studio
Divine Write. He can be contacted
on Sydney +612 4334 6222 or at glenn@divinewrite.com.
Visit http://www.divinewrite.com
for further details or more FREE articles.
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