The Art of SEO

Perhaps someday they will actually be able to do that, but for now, they still need our help, whether they like it or not. Google wants to find the best, most relevant sites for the search query at hand all by themselves.  As much as Google *pretends* to like SEOs by inviting us to parties at the Googleplex and posting on SEO forums, the bottom line is that they don’t like what we do.

It’s not a huge stretch to say that they believe have been SEO’d. Because of search engine spammers, Google is constantly changing their ranking criteria and is always on the lookout for the telltale signs of SEO on any given site.  Unfortunately, unscrupulous SEOs have given Google good reasons not to like us.

If you think that having your keyword phrases “in all the right places for SEO” is a good thing, think again! You’re essentially telling Google, “Hey look…my site has been SEO’d!” To which they reply, “Thanks so much for letting us know… ZAP … see ya later!” Doesn’t matter if your site is the most relevant (in your mind) to the search query. Doesn’t matter that you’ve placed your keyword phrases strategically throughout the site.

Like, if you have a certain number of traditional SEO factors on any given page, those may set off some Google warning bells (otherwise known as a spam filter). As to what might trigger an SEO “red flag,” my guess is that it’s a combination of things.  Stuff that worked like a charm for many people in the early years of SEO may actually hurt rather than help now.

Some of the traditional SEO formulaic elements that you may have been taught to use include putting the keyword phrase:

- in the domain name
- in the file name
- in the Title tag
- in the Meta description tag
- in the Meta keyword tag o in the image alt attributes
- in an H1 (or any H) tag
- as the first words on the page
- in bold and/or italics or a different color
- multiple times in the first paragraph or twice on the page
- in the copy in every single spot on the page where it might possibly make sense to use it, and
- in all the hyperlinks pointing to a page.

If you put the same keyword phrase in many of those spots, you might very well trigger a spam filter. Since it’s difficult to determine how many and which combinations of those things might trigger the filter, the best advice I can give you is to do your SEO without any particular formula in mind.

That’s how I’ve always done it and it’s always worked because every site is
unique and has different SEO needs.

Unfortunately, it’s difficult to describe this type of SEO to others, as people are always looking for the magic formula. For as long as I’ve been doing SEO (over 12 years now), I’ve had it in the back of my mind that I wouldn’t want to tip off the engines that my sites were SEO’d. This is one of the reasons I’ve never used keyword-rich domain names or file names. That’s probably the most obvious SEO thing you can do.

Don’t force one to be there just for the search engines. And many images don’t really and truly make sense with a keyword phrase in their alt attribute (alt tag). If your page isn’t designed to use H1 headings, you don’t need to change it to use one just for SEO purposes. You shouldn’t worry too much about the specifics of putting keyword phrases in it. The most important aspect to being a good SEO is creativity.

You can definitely have too much of a good thing. My report is supposed to help you think about a few places you may have missed because you weren’t thinking about being descriptive when you originally wrote the copy. Please don’t read my Nitty-gritty report and then put the same keyword phrase in every single available spot on your page that you can find.

Please don’t read my Nitty-gritty report and then put the same keyword phrase in every single available spot on your page copy and how you use your visible keyword phrases, less is definitely more.  Most importantly for Google (and for your users), when it comes to your page copy and how you use your visible keyword phrases, less is definitely more.

If your copy reads poorly to a human, and does not come across as natural professional copywriting, the search engines won’t like it either. I know that I have stressed this in my conference presentations and in our High Rankings seminars, but no matter how many times I say this, people don’t quite grasp the importance of working this way. It will look and sound dumb. A first paragraph on a page that has, say, 4 sentences, should not have 10 instances of your keyword phrase.

There should be an equal distribution throughout the entire page, and you should never use the phrases so much that you hear them constantly when you read it. Never, ever, ever think that it’s the first paragraph that matters and stuff ‘em all in there. Always optimize for 3 or 4 or even up to 5 phrases, and spread them out throughout the entire page. Think like a search engineer and consider all the possible things they might have to combat both now and in the future. When you do SEO, you don’t follow a guidebook.

You can easily teach someone like that the SEO writing part. You need someone who really and truly understands target audiences and how to speak to them about the benefits of what you offer. Even if you don’t want to hire an SEO, you absolutely MUST hire a professional copywriter.

This is the best investment you can make for your site and your business. Even if you don’t want to hire an SEO, you absolutely MUST hire a professional copywriter to work on the important pages of your site. This is the best investment you can make for your site and your business. Last, but not least, hire a professional copywriter to work on the important pages of your site. A trained SEO should be able to spot what your keyword phrases are, but it shouldn’t be glaringly obvious. If you’ve done it right, an everyday user should not have any idea that a page has been SEO’d.



Date: August 18, 2008

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