Why Google Indexing Requires
A Complex Blend Of Skills
If it was easy, everybody would be
doing it. Getting a companys name
and products, or services, onto the
first page of a genuine Google search
isnt a trivial piece of work.
In fact, there are four distinct skills
that a search engine optimiser needs
to possess. Most people possess one
or maybe two of these skills, very rarely
do people posses all four. In truth,
to get to all four, people who are good
at two of these need to actively develop
the other skills. Now, if you are running
your own business, do you really have
the time to do this? Is this the best
use of your time?
Specifically the four skills needed
for SEO work are:
Web Design producing a visually
attractive page
HTML coding - developing Search Engine
friendly coding that sits behind the
web design
Copy writing producing the actual
readable text on the page
Marketing what are the actual
searches that are being used, what key
words actually get more business for
your company?
Many website designers produce more
and more eye-catching designs with animations
and clever rollover buttons hoping to
entice the people onto their sites.
This is the first big mistake; using
designs like these will actually decrease
your chances of a high Google rating.
Yes, thats right; all that money
you have paid for the website design
could be wasted because no-one will
ever find your site.
The reason for this is that before
you get people to your site you need
to get the spiderbots to like your site.
Spiderbots are pieces of software used
by the search engine companies to trawl
the Internet looking at all the websites,
and then having reviewed the sites,
they use complex algorithms to rank
the sites. Some of the complex techniques
used by web designers cannot be trawled
by spiderbots. They come to your site,
look at the HTML code and exit stage
right, without even bothering to rank
your site. So, you will not be found
on any meaningful search.
I am amazed how many times I look at
websites and I immediately know they
are a waste of money. The trouble is
that both the web designers and the
company that paid the money really do
not want to know this. In fact, I have
stopped playing the messenger of bad
news (too many shootings!); I now work
round the problem. So, optimising a
website to be Google friendly is often
a compromise between a visually attractive
site and an easy to find site.
The second skill is that of optimising
the actual HTML code to be spiderbot
friendly. I put this as different to
the web design because you really do
need to be down and dirty
in the code rather than using an editor
like FrontPage, which is OK for website
design. This skill takes lots of time
and experience to develop, and just
when you think you have cracked it,
the search engine companies change the
algorithms used to calculate how high
your site will appear in the search
results.
This is no place for even the most
enthusiastic amateur. Results need to
be constantly monitored, pieces of code
added or removed, and a check kept on
what the competition are doing. Many
people who design their own website
feel they will get searched because
it looks good, and totally miss out
this step. Without a strong technical
understanding of how spiderbots work,
you will always struggle to get your
company on the first results page in
Google.
Thirdly, I suggested that copy writing
is a skill in its own right. This is
the writing of the actual text that
people coming to your site will read.
The Googlebot and other spiderbots like
Inktomi, love text but only when
written well in proper English. Some
people try to stuff their site with
keywords, while others put white writing
on white space (so spiderbots can see
it but humans cannot).
Spiderbots are very sophisticated and
not only will not fall for these tricks,
they may actively penalise your site
in Google terms, this is sandboxing.
Google takes new sites and naughty
sites and effectively sin-bins them
for 3-6 months, you can still be found
but not until results page 14
really useful! As well as good English,
the spiderbots are also reading the
HTML code, so the copy writer also needs
an appreciation of the interplay between
the two. My recommendation for anyone
copy writing their own site is to write
normal, well-constructed English sentences
that can be read by machine and human
alike.
The final skill is marketing, after
all this is what we are doing
marketing you site and hence company
and products/services on the Web. The
key here is to set the site up to be
accessible to the searches that will
provide most business to you. I have
seen many sites that can be found as
you key in the company name. Others
that can be found by keying in Accountant
Manchester North-West England,
which is great, except no-one ever actually
does that search. So the marketing skill
requires knowledge of a companys
business, what they are really trying
to sell and an understanding of what
actual searches may provide dividends.
I hope you will see that professional
Search Engine Optimisation companies
need more than a bit of web design to
improve your business. Make sure anyone
you choose for SEO work can cover all
the bases.
About the author:
John Fowler trained as a Mathematican
and has worked in the IT industry for
over 30 years, much of the time in sales
related functions. He now spends his
time between being a partner in SEO
Gurus and as a sales and management
trainer for ICT companies. John can
be contacted via http://www.seogurus.co.uk
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