No Quick Fixes Where Search Engine Optimization is Concerned
by Jill Whalen
Updated January 2006
Wouldn't it be great if we could simply edit Meta
tags and get high rankings?
Many years ago I read Stephen R. Covey's "The 7
Habits of Highly Effective People." One thing Covey discusses is the
glitter of the "Personality Ethic." He mentions how some people try
to find some "quick and easy way to achieve quality of life ...
without going through the natural process of work and growth that
makes it possible." Then he goes on to say, "The Personality Ethic
is illusory and deceptive. And trying to get high quality results
with its techniques and quick fixes is just about as effective as
trying to get to some place in Chicago using a map of Detroit."
What Covey says is nearly identical to what I've
been saying for years regarding search engine optimization: There
are simply no quick fixes.
I wish I had a dime for every potential client who
came to me and said, "We just need you to fix our Meta tags so our
site will rank highly with search engines." These people don't
realize that if it were simply a matter of fixing Meta tags, they
could probably do it themselves!
Why Not Meta Tags?
Search engines don't have a whole lot to work with
when trying to figure out which sites to show in their list of
results for any given keyword search. Considering this, it's
actually quite amazing how relevant most search results tend to be,
given the sheer number of pages on the Internet these days.
For an internal search engine that just searches
through pages or products on your site, the information provided in
the Meta keyword tag can really help to narrow down the most
relevant pages that one of your site users might be searching for.
Unfortunately, the differences between an internal
search engine and a public one such as Google are many. For
instance, with an internal engine, there are only a relatively small
number of pages or products to search through to find a relevant
page. Plus, the content and Meta tags on the site are trustworthy,
since your goal and that of your internal search engine is to help
people find exactly what they're looking for on your site.
On the other hand, with major search engines, their
database contains basically every page on the web that they know
about. They can't necessarily trust the Meta tags they find since a
site owner's goals may not necessarily be the same as the major
search engines' goal (i.e., you would like your site to show up in
the search results as much as possible for as many keyword phrases
as possible, but the search engine would like to show the most
relevant pages, whether those are yours or someone else's).
This makes changing or adding Meta tags on your site
neither a quick fix nor a slow fix. It won't fix anything and it
won't have any effect on your search engine traffic.
What About Content?
Sure, you can add all kinds of content to your site
and hope that will be a quick fix, but writing lots of good content
cannot be done quickly. It will generally take years of writing a
little bit every day or every week, to eventually end up with a
genuine archive of truly useful information. It's highly doubtful
that if you're somehow generating 100 pages a week, you're actually
creating good content. You're either stealing from elsewhere,
auto-generating it from some sort of icky software program, or
you're some kind of robot with too much time on your hands!
How About Links?
It is true that links are very important to helping
your site gain visibility and search engine traffic. But quick-fix
link schemes are not going to result in long-term high rankings for
your site. Everyone knows to avoid "link farms," but nobody seems to
quite know what they are. No worry, because it doesn't matter
whether something is a link farm or a link scheme or a link
popularity bonanza software extravaganza. If you set out to get
links for the sole purpose of increasing your search engine
rankings, you're already thinking backwards.
Forget about link popularity and instead think about
your target audience and how you can let them know your site exists.
It's really just marketing, plain and simple. You have a website and
a business that presumably is [better] [more unique] [cheaper]
[friendlier] than the others out there and it needs to be marketed.
You may even have to <gasp> spend a little money to publicize your
site. Good, old-fashioned newspaper, magazine, and even TV ads that
mention your website can really get your site noticed. The more
visible your site is, the more it will be talked about in the right
circles, and the more links it will obtain just because. Even PPC
ads can help, because they put your site in front of people looking
for what you offer. The point is that people have got to find your
site one way or another while you're waiting for your SEO campaign
to kick in. It's your job to figure out how to get it in front of
them as often as you can.
Regardless of how you market your site, don't count on becoming
an overnight sensation.
This brings us back to Covey's Personality Ethic. Sure, someone
can edit your Meta tags quickly and submit to 50 billion search
engines and trade links with 90 million useless sites. However, if
you haven't invested the time up front to create a website with
great content that speaks to the reader in plain language that real
people use (in other words, without technology buzzwords), you will
not see good long-term results.
How To Achieve Long-term Results
You may achieve high rankings very quickly for words that nobody
is searching for, but as Covey so aptly put it, these will be
illusory and deceptive results at best. If no one uses those words
in the engine's search box, all the #1 rankings in the world won't
keep your business afloat.
It's imperative to think of the search engine optimization
process as a long-term investment for your site, so here are 5 tips
to help you invest in your future success:
- Thoroughly research your keyword phrases using the paid
versions of
Wordtracker or
KeywordDiscovery. Keyword research is completely and utterly
the key to everything that is search marketing.
- Make sure your site is not made up of graphics alone, as
these cannot be read by the search engine spiders that come
a-crawling. (This is especially true of graphics that look like
text -- these are often used when a particular font is desired.)
- Be sure to use natural, easy-to-understand language that
conveys the message of your website and includes keyword phrases
you'd like your site to rank highly for.
- Make sure your Title tags and link anchor text all jibe with
the visible content on the page.
- Be patient! You knew I'd end with that one, but with
Google's aging delay in place for new sites, patience is more
important than ever. It's most likely going to be a good 9
months before you start seeing much (if any) traffic from
Google's natural results. Don't be discouraged, but instead use
that time to constantly make your site better than the other
guy's.
Remember, you are working toward the future. Good
placement achieved by doing things the right way will have staying
power over time with very little additional effort. Like everything
in life, if you spend the time and money to do it right to begin
with, the long-term results will always be impressive.
From:
http://www.highrankings.com/quickfix.htm |