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Internet Marketing
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Quick Website Fixes to Improve Rankings
5 Quick Website Fixes to Improve Rankings
Internet Marketing Newsletter 1Q, 2010
By Alli Denning
June 23, 2010 Birmingham, AL - Many small
business web site owners struggle with the follow up marketing and
maintenance that is the make or break factor in the effective of
their new site. It is easy to feel after completing the web site
design process that the project is over and can be checked off the
to-do list. However, what comes next (or doesn't, as the case may
be) often marks the difference between a site that is a hard working
business asset and one that falters and fails to deliver. Included
below are 5 quick fixes that can improve a web site's usability and
effectiveness within the search engines.
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Optimize Page Titles
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Include Address and Phone Number in Footer
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Have Text Links of Main Navigation Options
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Write Good Content - and, Write it Often
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Claim and Optimize Your Local Listings
First, optimize your site's title tags. The
title tag of a page is arguably the most important on-site factor in
determining the ranking of a particular page. It is found at the top
of a site's code in the <title> brackets and is used as the text of
the link in the search results. This is often a wasted opportunity;
many sites use the same title tag throughout the site and/or do not
include important keywords in the title tag. The title tag should be
around 70 characters long (including spaces) and lead off with the
most important keyword phrase for that page. Each page of a web site
should have a unique title tag. And, the title tag should tie in
directly with the subject matter included in the content of that
page. For many sites, simply paying attention to this oft ignored
tag will make a big difference in rankings. If the site competes in
a local market, be sure to include the city and state in the title
tag.
The second fix is particularly important
for local businesses, but is a good practice for most sites. Be sure
to include the full address and phone number of your business in the
footer area on every page of the site. This is not only useful
information to your site visitor who might be there just for that
purpose, but it is a good signal to the search engines about where
you are located and what type of searcher would most benefit from
your services (those near you geographically).
Also in the footer area of the web site is
the third quick fix, text links of the site's main navigation
choices. Many sites are built using image-based or Javascript-based
(or both) navigation menus. Search engines are unable to follow
those links, providing a barrier to their spidering and indexing the
interior pages of those sites. Repeating the main navigation choices
along the bottom in html text links corrects this problem.
Next up is content. Search engines love
good, quality content that is completely unique (appears nowhere
else online), and they will reward websites that provide it.
Evaluate the website's content by asking the following questions.
Does it provide useful information? Does it establish the
site/business as an expert in the field? Is the content updated on a
regular basis? A site owner's time is well spent in addressing these
issues.
The final quick fix deals with local
listings within the major search engines (Google Maps, Yahoo Local,
etc). If the web site targets local customers or clients, it is
imperative that you are well represented in these listings. A great
resource to help site owners navigate this process can be found at
www.getlisted.org,
which is a free tool that helps owners with five of the major local
listing sites.
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