Posts Tagged ‘search engine optimization’


Link Building for SEO Tip: One Man’s Broken Link…Is Another Man’s Treasure

Friday, December 28th, 2012

Link Building Trick: Find Broken Links and Replace Them With A Link to Your Site.Broken Web Links

Link building is an important aspect of SEO.

Obtaining links from relevant and authoritative sites allows for a little bit of their accrued trust to be passed on to you. Acquiring links therefore helps you rank better in the search engines. When link building you want to make sure you the types of links your are acquiring are diverse. Meaning, you’ll want links from blogs, articles, websites, directories and news sources.

A great way to acquire links to your site is to replace broken links in other folks’ content with links to your own brilliant (and relevant) content. 

Here’s how to do that…

The first way is organically.
Simply reach out to bloggers and webmasters when you come across a link that is broken. We have all clicked on a link for more info only to find an error or worse irrelevant or outdated content. If you have a piece of copy that is more useful or can be updated from the version the site is linking to, offer to replace it and give them a reason why.

The second is to actively search for those link errors using tools (free or paid) that do the searching for you once you plug in the URL.
Here is a list of potential tools to help you find broken links. Use the one you find most user friendly.

You simply plug in the site you would like a link from and it does all the work for you. Once you’ve found the broken link, test out the URL to see where it goes. Does it go to a page of content that no longer exists? Your next step is to reach out to the author or webmaster to let them know, point out the broken link and then offer up your link to make it easy.

Some helpful tips:

Don’t know which sites to plug in to the tools?
Start with your competitors. Who links to your competitors site? Plug their URL in and see if you can get a link too!

How do I find The Right Person to Contact When I Find a Broken Link?
Most blogs will have information about the author right there for you to find and email or use a contact form. You can also use different tools out there created for the purpose of finding the right contact such as BuzzStream or Link Research Tools Contact Finder.

Find out who else is linking to the broken link!
You can use SEO Moz’s Open site explorer or another tool to do this. Once you plug in the broken URL and find out who is linking to it, it gives you that many more sites to go after for a replacement link.

Looking for some more creative ways to use broken links to your advantage? Check out these awesome blog posts…

Creative Broken Link Building
Tools and Tips for Effective Broken Link Building
The Broken Link Building Bible

Have you had any success replacing a broken link with your own content? Share your strategy with us in the comments section!

Joan Woodbrey Crocker
SEO via Link Building

 

Photo credit: by xJason.Rogersx


Change Isn’t Coming…It’s Here

Monday, April 30th, 2012

The Agents of ChangeThe most important channels today are search, social & mobile. Here’s a conference with all three.

If you’ve been following this blog for a while you know that for the past few years I’ve been running a conference called Social Media FTW with a couple of friends.

We retired that brand after three successful years but I wasn’t quite done.

So this year I started a new conference that would focus on the three most important channels for businesses and organization today: search, social & mobile. These are the Agents of Change.

Earlier today we launched the website for The Agents of Change Digital Marketing Conference.

This all-day conference is happening in Portland, Maine and online on 9.14.12. 

And while the speaker lineup is just getting started, we’ve got some amazing speakers already lined up:

  • Chris Brogan, co-author of Trust Agents and Google+ for Business
  • Amy Porterfield, co-author of Facebook Marketing All-In-One for Business
  • Derek Halpern, brains behind the insanely popular marketing website Social Triggers
  • Rich Brooks, who hasn’t done anything, but might. One day.

So, how much are tickets? you’re probably wondering.

The physical ticket is $199 and the digital ticket is $99. The digital ticket gives you access to the live stream and you can watch the presentations over and over again for a full year!

But for a limited time only, we’re offering an early bird ticket: you can get the physical ticket for only $99 and the digital ticket for only $49…that’s over 50% off each!

But wait…there’s more!

If you order the physical ticket by 11:59pm, Tuesday, 5.1.12, we’ll throw in the digital ticket for free! (And yes, it’s still only $99. That’s $298 worth of edutainment for only $99!) Why would you want both the physical ticket AND the digital ticket? So you can watch all the presentations over and over again, or see presentations you may have missed.

If you can’t make it to Portland, Maine on 9.14.12 we’ve still got an amazing deal for you. The digital ticket is only $25 during this 36 hour sale!

Whether you plan to attend in person or virtually, don’t miss this amazing, very limited sale.

Get your tickets now!

Rich Brooks
Agent of Change
 


Why Doesn’t My Site Show Up In Google?

Thursday, August 18th, 2011

Can’t find your website in the search engines? You’ll need to engage in some search engine optimization (SEO). Here’s how to get started.

Dear Rich,

I’ve had a website for years but people tell me they can’t find me at Google. What am I doing wrong? How can I get on the first page of Google and other search engines?

–Invisible in Islesboro

Dear Invisible,

Good question. Without knowing your website I can’t give you the exact reasons why your site doesn’t show up in Google, but I can give you some common reasons why you may be difficult to find when your prospects are searching for you.

1. You’ve got no content on your home page. Many web designers (and site owners) like big, beautiful pictures on their home pages and feel text just “gets in the way.” Unfortunately, search engines are blind. They can’t see the beautiful view from your waterfront rooms, or the quality craftsmanship in your handmade, wooden toys.

Solution: Bite the bullet and add some text. The text should include some keyword-rich copy (in other words, use the words in your copy that your prospects are searching for) and then link those words to the pages on your site where they can find more information.

Keyword Rich Text with Links

2. Your title tags aren’t descriptive. Ask the opinions of two search engine experts and get three different opinions, but almost all search engine marketers agree that your title tag is critical to your search engine visibility.

Too often companies have generic title tags, or just have their company name as the title, or use the same title on every single page…a huge missed opportunity.

The title tag are the words that appear in the title bar of a web page and let the search engines know what this page is about. Your title tags should be keyword-rich, descriptive, and specific to the content on the page. Here are some examples from our website.

Home Page Title

Home Page Title

Internet Marketing Title Tag

Internet Marketing Title Tag

CMS (Content Management System) Title Tag

CMS (Content Management System) Title Tag

You’ll notice that each one is unique, keyword rich, and focused on the content on that particular page.

3. You’re using the wrong keywords on your site. This is a tough one. Maybe you’re using technical terms but your audience isn’t familiar with the language. You’re writing about your vocal stylings and they’re searching for a wedding singer. Or you’ve coined a term that differentiates your business…but no one is searching for that term.

Or you’re targeting a keyword that’s too broad, such as travel or coach. Those terms are so broad there’s little chance anyone will find you for them. Instead, you might do better targeting to a narrower niche, such as Maine family adventure travel or leadership coaching for non-profit professionals.

Solution: Perform some keyword analysis of the phrases you’d like to rank well for or that you think your prospects are searching for. While there are some powerful for pay tools out there, you can start with Google Adwords Keyword Tool.

Put in your keywords:

Find Keywords

And reap the results:

Keyword Results

(And, yeah, we can help you with your search engine optimization if you don’t want to do it all yourself.)

4. You put all of your products/services on the same page. Google and the other search engines prefer focused pages. They are hungry for rich detail so that they know if they should recommend your page (or your competitor’s page) to your prospects. You need to help them out.

Solution: Instead of listing your five service areas on the same page under the header “Services” create a unique page for each service. Give each page a unique page title, strong header, go into more detail about the service in the body copy, consider adding photos or video, and create links to all the other services pages.

If you’ve got dozens of services (or products) you may choose to highlight the most important (or lucrative) and bundle the rest onto a single page. If you can’t think of how you can create unique content for each service (think 300 – 500 words minimum), then consider writing up a case study of someone you helped to round out the page, or include a testimonial.

Silos of Information

5. You’ve been hacked, blacklisted, have some technical problem on your site, or worst of all, have an all-Flash website. It happens to the best of us: some scummy guy from across the hemisphere has hacked your site or your host company for some nefarious purpose…or just to see if he could do it. Or your web designer created a gorgeous site that is 100% Flash, which is often 100% invisible to search engines.

Solution: Sign up for Google Webmaster Tools, a free service from Google that will provide you with loads of cool tools and alert you to anything that’s keeping your site from getting indexed by the search engines.

Google Webmaster Tools

Takeaways:

This is just the starting point for increasing your search engine visibility and “finding yourself” on Google. I’d also recommend adding a blog to your website, starting an email newsletter and archiving past newsletters on your site, adding videos, getting inbound links and a whole lot more.

However, if you’re more or less invisible on the search engines, or they’re not delivering the amount of traffic you were expecting, then start with these five tips for improving your search engine visibility.

Also, consider checking out our search engine blog, the Maine SEO Blog.

Rich Brooks
Small Business SEO


What Should I Title My Blog Posts for Maximum SEO?

Tuesday, May 31st, 2011

Lighthouse View by Stacy CrampDear Rich,

I’ve read that I should load my blog titles with targeted keywords to increase my blog’s search engine visibility. However, sometimes I just want to use a clever turn of phrase, or a slightly irreverent title that is appropriate for the blog post, but maybe not for Google.

How do I balance my needs to rank well at the search engines with my desire to put my BA in English to use?

Titling in Thomaston

Dear Titling,

I would argue that you don’t need to sacrifice your cleverness to create a keyword-rich title tag for your blog.

Here’s how you create titles that work for your search engine optimization and your end user:
(more…)


How to Create Killer Blog Content from Email Questions

Wednesday, May 11th, 2011

Dear Rich,

How do I come up with new posts for my blog? You always talk about how to use a business blog to rank higher at the search engines and drive qualified traffic to your website, but I have no idea on how to do that.

Frustrated in Fryeberg

Dear Frustrated,

First off: don’t be frustrated! I’m sure there’s plenty of content that you could turn into search engine engine gold for your blog if you just know where to look. In fact, I’m using one of my favorite techniques right now.

A few times a week a client, prospect or random stranger emails me with some question about search engine optimization, email marketing, blogging or social media. Rather than just hitting reply, I turn the question into a Dear Abby style blog post. The way I figure it is that if this one person is asking me that question, how many more hundreds or thousands of people are asking these questions of Google and Bing? Plus, by posting it to my blog it can be easily shared over social media platforms.

What really makes this a powerful technique is that these questions are what people are asking when their doing research into hiring a company like yours. There’s generally less competition for these phrases (so you can rank higher) and they’re very specific (so people who are researching them are getting ready to make a buying decision.)

For more details on how to optimize these Dear Abby posts for search engine visibility, be sure to read How to Turn Emails Into Search Engine Visibility.

Rich Brooks
Blogging for SEO

Photo Credit: Jay Malone


301 Redirects: How to Keep Your Search Engine Ranking During a Redesign

Monday, March 28th, 2011

Confusing Traffic Sign, Boston MA301 redirects are essential when you’re redesigning your website and don’t want to lose the search engine traffic that you currently enjoy.

The unfortunate thing about a 301 redirect is that it sounds so extremely geeky and off-putting to the average business owner that they’re scared away. That’s too bad, because it is a critical tool in search engine optimization. So, to that end, I’m going to attempt explain the benefits of 301s in the least geeky way possible.

Search Engines and Trust

There are a lot of variables in why one site ranks higher than another site at Google and other search engines. One is how long the site (and a given page) has been in existence, and another is how many incoming links a page has. All things being equal (which they never are), older pages rank higher than newer pages and pages with more inbound links rank higher than ones with fewer inbound links.

Breaking that Trust

Often, when rebuilding a site, you end up changing the URLs–or addresses–of your web pages.  Maybe it’s because you’re reorganizing your site, or maybe it’s because you’re redeveloping your site on a content management system like WordPress, Drupal or Joomla. In either case, the new URLs don’t have the trust that the old URLs do, even if a lot of the content is the same.

It’s like moving to a new town. You may have been the greatest manager/plumber/accountant in your old town, but that doesn’t mean anything in the new town. You haven’t changed; you still have an excellent bedside manner or mad sales skills, but you’re starting from scratch in this new town.

When you take your established content, uproot it and replant it somewhere else on your site, you are resetting the clock on when that content was created and breaking all of the inbound links that pointed to it.

Reestablishing that Trust

There are many ways to tell the search engines that you’ve moved your content, but the most search engine friendly way is the 301 redirect. By setting up 301 redirects for your content, you show search engines where your content has moved from, and your inbound links will now direct to your new pages.

How you setup your 301s may depend on the type of host you have. If you have no idea what I’m talking about, it’s time to talk to your web developer and get them involved.

If you want your web developer to create redirects for you, I recommend writing up a guide for him or her to show where the old pages should be redirected. Here’s a guide for you to use, where the first item is the old page and the second item is where you want the traffic to flow:

  • old/old.html -> new/new.php
  • van-halen/david-lee-roth.html -> van-halen/sammy-hagar.html
  • wonka/gene-wilder.php ->wonka/johnny-depp.php

If you do feel comfortable playing around with 301 redirects, .htaccess and other files on your server, there are plenty of resources online:

These are just a few of the top results.

Final Thoughts

301 redirects are also great when you are changing from one domain to another (never a great idea, but sometimes a necessary evil.) Even with a 301 redirect, you should expect a dip during a major overhaul of your website. However, my own experience has been that the numbers get back to normal in about a month or three and then you see increases after that.

Rich Brooks
Maine SEO

Photo credit: nnecapa


How Creating Videos Helps Your Online Visibility

Tuesday, March 15th, 2011

Maine Web Design VideoOnline videos are a powerful tool for search engine optimization (SEO). For some people this doesn’t compute: search engines can’t watch videos the way they can read and understand text, so how does an online video increase your search engine visibility?

Search engines like Google or Bing want to deliver the most relevant content to their users, regardless of the form or medium of that content. To that end, they look at the words in the titles of videos on websites like YouTube or Vimeo, as well as the description and the tags.

There’s also some evidence that they look at other factors, such as the number of views, the number of comments, viewer ratings, whether people watched the video to the end, number of incoming links, the number of times shared, etc. Search engines may even be converting the audio to text and using that to better determine if the video content is relevant to a given search.

It’s also been my experience that search engines want to present searchers with a mix of media in the results: web pages, images, video, local results, news, tweets and more. Each one may be another opportunity for you or your business to rank higher and get in front of your best prospects.

So, if you’re looking to leapfrog your competitors in search, you should add video to the mix.

For example, we wanted more visibility for the search term “maine web design.” (If you’re a Maine web designer you can stop reading now. This doesn’t concern you.) So we created a video slideshow called “Maine Web Design – Maine Business Websites” and posted it to YouTube and a dozen other video sharing websites. (I recommend TubeMogul for posting to multiple video sharing sites at once.)

Within a day that slideshow made up half of the top 10 results in Google’s video search for “Maine web design.” That was nice, but there were no video results displayed on the first page and I don’t know how many people click over to video results for that type of search. Still, it showed the potential of video.

Then, about two weeks ago I happened to perform that same search again and, lo and behold, the video was the sixth result on Google in the regular, organic search results. I logged out of Google to confirm my results, and the video was still number six. (When you’re logged in your results are skewed/tailored based on your previous search history.) Although the sixth position isn’t as good as the first slot, many people are more drawn to video than text links, so it has that added benefit.

Maine Web Designers

I’m not sure when the video started appearing in the regular search results, but it is still hanging tough at the time of this post.

Something to note about this video: it’s just a slideshow of screen captures from websites we’ve designed for Maine-based businesses; there’s no audio, just imagery. However, we did feature this video on a previous blog post, which may have helped its visibility and views, which in turn may have improved its ranking. Blogging about it again should give it an additional boost.

What’s the takeaway? If you’re looking to leapfrog your competition for popular keyword phrases, you should experiment with video. Just don’t expect overnight success; be patient, and keep on uploading new videos targeting different keyword phrases you want to rank well for.

Rich Brooks
Ready for My Close Up


Keyword Research: What is a Keyword Analysis?

Monday, November 8th, 2010

What is a keyword analysis?

A keyword analysis is an early, critical step in search engine optimization (SEO.) It’s the difference between guessing what your prospects are searching for and knowing what they are searching for.

If you’re a plastic surgeon writing great copy on “rhinoplasty” but everyone is searching for “nose jobs,” you’re not helping anyone. If you provide “environmentally friendly office supplies” but businesses are searching for “green office products” you’re not going to sell much. Depending on your business, your search engine visibility could be worth thousands or tens of thousands of dollars each year.

How do you find out what people are searching for?

The first step is to generate/brainstorm a list of keyphrases. I often recommend approaching the brainstorming session with five perspectives in mind, including:

  • products & services
  • prospects problems or pain points
  • actual or perceived benefits
  • features
  • competition

I have a more detailed article on this called “Keyword Research: Five Ways Your Prospects Search for You.

Next, you need to test your keywords to see if they’re actually the phrases your prospects are using.

There are a number of paid and free tools available. Some of the paid tools include WordTracker, Keyword Discovery and Raven SEO. Raven SEO is especially powerful and is currently one of the tools we’re using at flyte. Yes, I said “one of the tools” because no tool is perfect. And, many of these tools don’t have access to Google’s results, so you’re not getting a full picture of search activity.

These tools will generate additional, related keyword phrases and measure them all for their keyword effectiveness. This number, often called the KEI (keyword effectiveness index or indicator) is based on how many searches have been done for that phrase and how much competition from other sites you’ll have for those phrases.

We also use a few free tools, the most important of which is probably Google Adwords Keyword Tool. Although this tool is ostensibly for paid search, it gives you access to Google search numbers and volume, as well as how competitive each phrase is.

Using multiple tools, along with your own experience and the customary “gut check” will give you a good idea of what words you should be using at your web site, on your blog, in the titles of your online videos, and other places throughout the web.

How to you use your best keyword phrases to increase your search engine visibility?

More on that in another post.

Rich Brooks
SEO for Small Business


SEO and Social Media Consults Giveaways

Monday, January 25th, 2010

This is the last week to enter for two of flyte new media’s Web marketing giveaways:

Search Engine Optimization:

Would you like your site to rank higher at the search engines? Do you wish you could attract more qualified leads to your Web site? Do you wonder why your competition beats you at Google?

If so, register for our Search Engine Optimization Consultation, that includes two one-hour consultations, a review of your site and recommendations, and a mini-keyword analysis from Nicki Hicks, our search engine marketer.

Web Marketing / Social Media:

Are you struggling to understand Facebook? How Twitter can help grow your business? How YouTube can attract qualified leads to your Web site? Whether a blog will increase your search engine visibility or eat up your last remaining free time?

If so, register for our Web Marketing / Social Media Consultation, with your man about town, Rich Brooks. We’ll talk about social networking sites, blogs, video and anything else you need to drive more qualified leads to your Web site and grow your business.

Both contests wrap up on Sunday, 1/31/2010, so be sure to take advantage of this offer if you’re looking to build your business in 2010.

Rich Brooks
Web Marketing for Small Business


Win a Free SEO Consult from flyte!

Thursday, January 21st, 2010
Nicki Hicks, seen here before her crazy SEO consult giveaway.

Nicki Hicks, seen here before her crazy SEO consult giveaway.

This is what happens when I take a four day weekend: Nicki Hicks, our intrepid search engine marketer, decides that she wants to give away some SEO consulting, so she created her own little giveaway.

The winner will get:

  • an initial one-hour consult,
  • a mini-keyword analysis,
  • a link building strategy,
  • additional Web marketing strategy, and
  • a follow-up one-hour consult with Nicki.

The woman is out of control! Still, the offer is out there, so you might as well take advantage of it before time runs out.

Sign up for the SEO Consult giveaway!

Rich Brooks
SEO for Small Business