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Balancing SEO and Visitor Engagement part 2

Part 2 of SEO and Visitor Engagement..(Read Part 1)

Safe Ways to Increase Your Search Presence

The recent Panda and Penguin updates at Google have wreaked havoc among webmasters. Nobody knows for sure what works and what doesn’t work. Some SERPs are dominated by low quality websites while thousands of high quality websites have been banished. This has all created a climate in which webmasters are afraid to make big moves.

The good news is that not all hope is lost. It is still entirely possible to build backlinks and rank well for keywords. The key is to do it the old-fashioned natural way. Buying links in bulk does not work like it used to. In fact, bulk link buying is more likely to hurt your website than it is to help.

You might already know the basics of natural SEO, but let’s mention them again:

  • Produce fresh, original content and add new posts frequently
  • Make your website worth linking to
  • Contribute guest posts to other quality websites
  • Issue press releases that actually contain news
  • Fresh Content

Fresh content is always a good thing. Google likes websites that are updated frequently and your websites has more pages that can rank for long tail keywords. The more pages your website has, the more traffic it gets.

Big Caveat: Do not add new content for the sake of adding new content. Every piece of content you add should serve a real purpose. A million pages on your website will do absolutely nothing if you get pegged as a content farm. Take your time to write every page with a purpose and to engage your visitors.

Make Your Website Worth Linking To

The whole first half of this page basically addressed this point. You make your website worth linking to by engaging the visitor. Useful websites receive links. There is no better SEO strategy than to build a website that people think is awesome.

This is the most important part of building a successful website. A truly useful resource will sustain itself for years. Cheap websites that rely on SEO and new visitors do not last. They do not retain readers and they die as soon as the algorithm boots them off the first page. Make a website that people remember and want to link to.

Press Releases

Webmasters have been abusing press releases for years now and Google knows it. As a result, the typical press release doesn’t do a whole lot of good. But, that doesn’t mean press releases are dead.

Find newsworthy content and issue press releases that are actually worthy of their own stories. For example, don’t waste your time with press releases that talk about the awesome new website you just opened. Take a survey, collect data and issue a press release that provides a unique look at an interesting subject.

Don’t look at press releases as a “gimme links now” SEO tactic. Your press releases need to give more than they take. Mention your own website in there somewhere, but don’t focus everything on your website. Give the journalists out there real news that they can use in their own stories. This gives your press release the maximum potential to get picked up by major news outlets.

This type of press release is a perfect example of balancing SEO and visitor engagement. You are giving people something they want, while also getting something you want. The old days of just taking, taking, taking are gone. You have to produce stuff that people really want to see.

Guest Posting

The same thing also goes for guest posting. Guest posting is still a great way to build links to your site and make connections with other people. Look for high quality websites that produce real content and approach those webmasters with ideas of your own. Do not write for websites that obviously sell links or websites in which almost every new post is a guest post.
Make sure to make your guest posts as valuable as possible. The better your guest post is for that other person, the better it is to you. Make your guest posts so great that they get their own links. This will not only give you more link juice, but it will give you greater recognition as an author. You would be surprised at what kind of a name you can make for yourself with the help of guest posting.


About the Author: Wes Burns is a full time freelance writer and student of SEO. He values old fashioned, high-quality content over the latest link building gimmicks. His latest project is an online storage website located at OnlineFileStorage.com.

Balancing SEO and Visitor Engagement part 1

The traditional view of SEO is that webmasters must walk a fine line between visitor engagement and writing optimized content. This view says that webmasters must build content that targets specific keywords and find ways to keep that content interesting for readers. It’s a delicate balance between writing for visitors and writing for search engines.

I personally disagree with that point of view. The traditional view of SEO makes it out to be a battle between writing for search engines and writing for real people. The truth is that visitor engagement comes first. Search engine optimization should always come second to visitor engagement.

Bear with me. This is not another “content is king” piece. I still plan to explain how you can rank for keywords and build a profitable website. I’m just going to take a different point of view than what you see at most SEO forums.

Writing for the Readers vs. Writing for Search Engines

Let’s start with writing for the readers. If you don’t write for your readers, your website is doomed in the long run. What I mean by “writing for the readers” is writing content that other people actually find useful, entertaining or controversial. This is how you create a long-lasting website.

The other way you can go is to write specifically for search engines. This means you do lots of keyword research, you base new content ideas on keywords that you want to hit and you try to stick your keyword in the content as often as possible without getting dinged by an over optimization penalty.

The problem with writing for search engines is that it places your website at the mercy of search engines. The next time Google changes its algorithm, your website might be knocked off the map forever. And since you never wrote for the visitors, it’s unlikely you will get much return traffic or type-in traffic. As soon as your website disappears from page one, it is forgotten by everyone.

When you write for your readers, you build a search engine-proof website. You can handle the minor ups and downs because you get traffic from a variety of sources. Your visitors have you bookmarked, people recommend your site in forums and people come back to comment on old articles. This is also known as building an authority website.

A Healthy Balance

Write every article with the visitors in mind first. Even on your high converting pages, make the content useful. Give people your honest opinion and explain their options. If your conversion pages come across as salesy, it will turn people off and search engines will rank it poorly.

And speaking of which, not every piece of new content has to be designed to get more sales. Don’t be afraid to write content that serves no purpose other than to serve the reader. That alone is a good purpose. You will build good will among your visitors, Google will see that not every page is riddled with ads and other people will be more willing to link to you.

For example, I run an online storage website (here) whose goal is to earn money by referring visitors to online storage services.  If you visit that site, you’ll see that not every page tries to sell storage space. I have written long how-to guides about encrypting files, downloading music and increasing computer security. The purpose of these articles is to give visitors useful information, not to sell storage space.

Read more in Part 2


About the Author: Wes Burns is a full time freelance writer and student of SEO. He values old fashioned, high-quality content over the latest link building gimmicks. His latest project is an online storage website located at OnlineFileStorage.com.

Google Plus SEO: Engagement

SEO for social networks is not the same as SEO for your website or blog. A large component is the social element and Google Plus is no different. Not only do you need to optimize your profile, link your website and optimize your posts, but you also need to talk to people.

Sharing your Posts

When you write a post, make sure that you are sharing it to the public. You have a choice of what circles and with whom you want to share your content. You can make it as limited or open as you would like. But if you want people you don’t yet know to access your content you need to make sure it is publicly available. You do this by selecting “public” when you select your circles.

By making your posts public, not only will people be able to find you in searches but when they go to your profile they will be able to see what you have posted. Many people like to “browse” profiles before they circle someone. Think of this as your Macy’s window and they are window shopping.

Respond Back!

So many people ignore the people who engage with them. This is bad. If you want to grow your network, your exposure and improve your SEO you need to engage back. If someone pluses your post, add them to your circles. If someone comments on your post, respond back…and add them to your circles.

Tag People

A great way to initiate conversation with someone is to tag them in a post. You do this by typing + and then their name (which will auto-populate when you start typing). This creates a tag, or linked text, in your post. Doing this also gives a notification to that person that they were tagged.

This is a great way to start conversation or let someone know that you are talking about them, or their content.

Comment

Comment on other peoples posts. It really is that simple. Stop only looking at what you are putting out there and start looking at what other people are sharing. If you post thoughtful comments on other peoples posts you might make a new contact, create a conversation or debate. You will all be introducing yourself to all their followers who saw that post, because when they see the post they will now see your comment. If it is good they may circle you or look at your shared posts.

Circle People

Circling people is one of the easiest and fastest ways to grow your network. Go out and find people in your interest area. Find people you might want to talk to. Add them to your circle and start engaging with their content. Many people will circle you back just because you circled them.

Finding Content

Finding people can best be done by finding content. You do this through G+’s real time search. Type in a search term and your results will stream in real time what people are currently posting. You can keep this search list auto-refreshing or pause it for easier reading. This is a great opportunity to comment on people posts and find people to add to your circles.

All of these things will help boost your overall SEO. Google+ will rank you higher in their internal search engine, getting you more exposure, and thus helping your overall SEO.

Websites That Work!

I don’t know if you got the memo, but Google basically runs the world.

They control more than half of the Internet search market, and more than 90% of mobile search. Their ad system is genius and their products ubiquitous. Thought the company has branched out recently, their bread and butter is still in search and in order to succeed in Google’s world, you have to play by Google’s rules.

Google populates search terms by indexing websites and plugging them into an ever-mysterious algorithm. Over time, SEOs have determined the most important factors in that indexation and they are speed, relevance, freshness and content.

What does that mean? It means that if your site is not easily indexed in Google, you may as well cease to exist.

SEO has been around since kids were trying to sneak into adult chat rooms on AOL, but the industry and its methods change as often as the Internet does: every day. Many entrepreneurs are just getting started with a serious site and have only just heard about SEO. For those people, here is a quick guide to building a website that works well with Google’s search index and will help you rise in rank and increase your views and potential for conversion.

Title Tags and Domain

This is the most basic rule of site building in SEO. You want your domain to be easily remembered and easily found. The subject of your blog should be very, very clear in your URL. If you are selling air conditioning services, you probably don’t want your domain to be Plasticmugs.net, right? The title tags appear in the title bar of your web browser and as the headline in most searches. The more relevant your title tags are, the higher you will rank for searches using those keywords or co-occurrence terms.

FRESH

Google’s freshness update was enacted earlier this fall in order to give newer content a bit more priority in searches. For example, if you search for Super Bowl tickets, you’re likely looking for seats at this year’s contest in Indianapolis, and not to the 1993 Super Bowl. Freshness is designed to present you with the most up-to-date information insofar as it is relevant to the search. What that means for you is that if your site has a blog, you can benefit from more frequent updates. Google will read frequent updates as positive activity and bump your site up a bit since it appears to be offering valuable content to a responsive audience.

This is more valuable to sites that deal in constantly changing information. For example, a site about Chicago events has to update constantly because its main subject is always in a state of flux. Sites that sell space heaters or list facts about James Van Allen were not affected by the Fresh update because their topic and content are largely unchanged.

 Locate

Relevance has been the key to SEO since the Panda update, which wiped out four score of bad, spammy sites to greater enhance the user experience. The more relevant your content is, the more Google will like you! Websites about what to do in St. Louis should mention The Loop, Cardinals and all the other things associated with the city. Google will see all those terms connected, and will connect that site with other sites about St. Louis, giving that webmaster a highly targeted audience (people searching already want to know about what to do in St. Louis) and less competition, though the competition is tougher because they all want to bring the searcher to their St. Louis events site.

It’s a long road to good SEO and brand recognition, but a healthy site is a positive and essential first step.

Google Plus SEO: Badges

Hertz Google DoodleBadges! We don’t need no stinking badges! ….ok, we yell we do. But it is hard not to take the opportunity to corrupt a perfectly good movie line. Badges are the little icons on a website that link back to a Google Plus page. One of the key elements to getting the most from your G+ SEO is making sure that you website and your profile/page are linked.

2 Types of Links

There are 2 ways to link your G+ on your website. The traditional badge which links directly to your G+ page, or by adding a plus button to your posts.  You should do both.

The simple badge just lets people easily find your G+ page. But that does not boost your content sharing. Plus, you need to have a Google Plus page.  The plus button lets you give your readers the opportunity to plus your post or page regardless of you having a G+ page/profile.  The plus button simply registers a link with G+ and submits it to their database. Once a post has been plused it can now be searched inside the social network.

Here are some simple plugins for your website or blog you can use to add the plus button:

Google Plusone(+1) Button- simple button but has some features to customize.

WP PlusOne This - simple plug and play. Just install and it is ready to go.

Plus One – For more of the advanced user but allows for complete control over button placement.

To add a badge, you need to add it like you would an image and then simply link the image. But of course there is a trick. When you grab the URL from your Google Plus profile you get a very long link

https://plus.google.com/114527180389797729264/posts

But here’s what the link must look like.

https://plus.google.com/114527180389797729264

Simply remove anything after the number. That number is your profile ID. The clean link ID will not only help with your SEO but will also help with establishing authorship and getting your profile verified. … and yes I will be talking about both of these things in a later post.

Linking

It is not enough to link your website to your Google Plus, you also need to link your Google Plus to your webpage. This is very simple.

Click on your profile and click edit. In the links section click “add custom link” then put in your link URL and title.

Google Plus SEO: Social Snippets (SERP)

Google Plus Collage

An interesting image is not just important for your blog post but important for you SERP.

The most important part of SEO optimizing your Google Plus posts is making sure your content is easy to share. Your social snippet is integral for making your content easy to share. A snippet is also known as a SERP, or search engine results page. This is the description that Google associates with your page. So your SERP is the summary description that people see in a search engine that helps them determine if they want to click on your link or not. In Google+ the snippet is what helps people determine if they want to read your post.Having a strong snippet can help determine if people read, comment or plus your post.

How to optimize your SERP

So now you are likely thinking, yes this is something I need to do! But how? Thankfully for blog writers there are a number of easy plugins you can use. I use Scribe SEO to optimize my blog posts. This helps me with the content, keyword generation, tags and my SERP. I have heard good things about All in One SEO and WordPress by YELP. Though, I have only used Scribe as it works well for me and I see no reason to switch.

If you need to optimize a website you will need to go into the html code. If you are not comfortable or familiar with this, then ask a web designer to do it for you.

In your html you will need to optimize your “Meta Description”, this is what sets your SERP:

<head> <meta name="description" content="This is an example of a meta description. This will often show up in search results."> </head> 

Your meta description is where search engines will pull your snippet from. This is on every page of your website…and yes you want to optimize ever meta description.

Images Matter

We are all visual people. Pictures say a thousand words. Ok, sure both of these cliche statements are true. So what does that have to do with SEO? Well, this is another important element of your optimization. If you want people to read your post you want to make it as attractive as possible. So using an image that helps captivate people’s attention is important.

Plus, when you add an image to you blog post not only does is make it more attractive to the reader, it creates another SEO opportunity. You can optimize your image information, so when people do image searches they might come across your post.

 

So not only is it important to make sure you optimize your Google+ but you want to make sure that if you are sharing content from your website that it is optimized as well. The quality of your snippet greatly influences views, comments, pluses and sharing.

Google Plus SEO: Search Results pt 2

This is the continuation of Google Plus SEO: Search Result pt 1

Gaming the Search

Gaming the search, otherwise known as the search algorithm, is optimizing your posts for Google; knowing what Google looks for.

First is simple text. Google does a simple text match in the search queary. Of course this leads to keyword loading your posts instead of writing for quality. However, since your post is all the text you can provide you still need to make sure the writing is quality. Because even if you show up in the search, your text is what will get someone to click your link.

ex. “pink socks. red socks. blue socks. socks. I love socks. knee high socks. ankle socks.” will not likely get you a lot of clicks, but it might get you in the search results for socks.

The good thing is the text match is restricted to people who are in your circles, which does limit the potential for SEO spammers. Additionally, people you engage with more will show up higher in your search results.

Public or Private

So should your posts be public or private? Public posts rank higher than private ones. So if you want to increase the potential visibility of your posts, and reach people beyond your immediate or extended circles, make sure your posts are public. (You can make your post public when you write the post. Where you have the option to add your circles you can also choose “public”).

Most Recent vs. Best of

When you do a search you will notice that they are sorted into two options, most recent and best of. Most recent is simply that. These will be the most recent posts. If it is an active topic you will see your search results refreshing frequently to stream recent topic related posts. You can hit the pause button to freeze the post.

The best of search results will show you the posts that have larger ripple effects. So if you are looking for viral content, you might want to look here.

Plus Button

I have mentioned that the plus button does not have as big an impact on your SEO as a share does, though this is true this is not to say that the plus button is not integral. In fact it is key to Google Plus’ SEO.

When someone gives web content a plus, it is loaded into Google+. Now that post can be found on Google+. The more people give web content a plus, the better your internal search results will be on Google Plus and there for on the Google search engine.

Make sure that your web content: web site, blogs, etc. Have the plus button added so people can easily plus your content.

Google Plus SEO: Search Results pt 1

SEO and searching on Google Plus, the next installment of the Google Plus SEO Series. Last part was implementing SEO on your profile.

Google eliminated social search last year, it has been replaced with Search+. This is Google’s integration of Google+ with its search engine.

Search+ delivers search results based on your circles, engagement and activity on your page. However you can turn the personalization off if you don’t want your user history to be factored into your search:

Click the icon of a person in the top right of the page. Then select “do not use personal results”.

Search Plus settingsSearch Plus is not just being used while you are in Google Plus. Any time you are logged into to the network and use the Google search engine, your results will go through the search plus filter.

This is why making sure your profile is set up properly is important. Now you profile and your posts can show up in search results on Google.

In the results you will be given a list of potentially relevant people and pages. These will be a mix of people you have already circled and ones you have not. If they are not in your circle you have the opportunity to add them.

So how do you come up in the search results? Truth be told circle count greatly affects. So the more people who have circled you the better chance you have. Unfortunately this does encourage people to buy followers just for the SEO boost.

Of course your optimization will affect but currently it does seem that Google Plus has “curated” lists. AJ Kohn from Blind Five Year Old goes into detail on what a curated list means. In a nut shell it means that Google has picked specific well known people to appear in the top of the list. Though they are trying to improve these results a bit by including more of an expanded list.

Powerful Searching

Google does give priority to items being shared in Google Plus, however to make sure you content qualifies for their results you need to make sure your content is easily sharable.

The most powerful element of boosting your search results is making sure you have good amplification. You want people to be plussing and sharing your posts. The more people share your content the better your SEO both on and off the network.

Not sure what you amplification is? Google helps you understand the ripple effect of your posts with Google+ Ripples. Ripples will show you the amplification of your shares. The graph below shows a post that was shared by Good Morning America. The arrows off their profile show all the people who publicly shared the post. The one big circle shows another circle inside the larger one. This means that one person shared the post and then someone shared her share. In this case Laetitia shared the original post then Ogla shared Laetitia’s post.

RipplesNotice that I did say publicly shared posts. People have the option of sharing publicly or privately. Privately means they only shared it with their circles and the post is not publicly searchable. Your amplification data from Google only includes the public shares, though they do you tell you the total shares.

If you see someone who shares a post and then has  number of other people share their share, that is someone who has good personal amplification. It would be a good idea to reach out to that person and work on engaging them. They could be an influencer. If they continue to share your posts you could increase your “ripple effect” greatly.

The more people who share your posts the better it will come up in search results. So do pluses affect in the same way. Unfortunately no. This is not to say they have no value, but a share is weighted significantly more.

 

Google Plus SEO: Your Profile

SEO (search engine optimization) on Google Plus is an absolute must. Since they announced they are indexing everything posted, this is huge opportunity to boost your SEO. But what do you do if you don’t know how to optimize for SEO? Google Plus is making it easy.

Your Name

Make sure that your name is actually your name. Think of this as your personal branding. You want people to know who you are. The nice thing is that if you use a nickname, they give you the option of adding it without it replacing your name.

  • To add a nickname, click edit on your profile. Then click your name. Then click “more options”. You will see a box to add your nickname.

Google Plus Nicknameor

Google Plus Nickname

Just a little word of caution. Just like Facebook, Plus does not like you to change your name to frequently. So make sure you know what you want before you change it.

Your name, whether it be on your profile or you page is important. When people are searching for you on the network or on search engines, they will be using this name to find you. Make sure it is the name you want representing your brand.

Search Signals

Search signals are the things that search engines are looking for when you do a search. Google Plus has made this part easy. The search terms that you want to be found for are the ones that you need to put in your profile.

The most important areas to load keywords are you introduction, employment, education and places.

If you place your keywords in these sections you will be more likely to turn up for search results for that key term. Places is an important one in case people are looking for someone from, or living in, a specific town. Make sure to include places you previously lived to make it easier for people to find you.

What about the tagline? Good question. It does not seem to be heavily weighted, if all. So put whatever you want in the tagline. Occupation and bragging rights are also not weighted.

In a search for your query, after your key word the number of people in your circles, profile verification, and engagement are all weighted and in that order from heaviest to lightest.

Currently Plus seems to be giving profiles more weight than pages, which makes it even more important to SEO optimize your pages!

Certain search fields are more important for internal searching on Google Plus vs. searching on Google the search engine. Places you lived is one of those fields, it seems only relevant for people searching for you within the social network.

There are ways to spam with keyword loading and people are doing it. But Google is smart and will catch on to this kind of SEO practice. So it is best that you do not blatantly keyword load. Keep your descriptive writing relevant and good quality. It will be better for you in the long run.

Google Plus SEO: Step by Step

Blogher Badge
Google Plus is becoming a major player in the social networking world. One of the biggest advantages of Google Plus is the built in SEO. Google Plus indexes every link that you post. Meaning, if you post a link to your site, that link is immediately added to the Google search engine. But that is not the only SEO boost. Your profile, you engagement, your circles and the way in which you post also contribute. You can give yourself some wonderful free SEO if you optimize your Plus account and activities.

Because there is so much information that needs to be covered to go over Google Plus SEO properly, I am going to break it up over 5 days.

  • Your Profile: How to optimize your profile to appear in search results
  • Search Results: How you appear in search results on and off Google Plus
  • Social Snippets (SERP): How to optimize your SERP (search engine results page)
  • Badges: Linking your website and your Google Plus page
  • Engagement: The importance of being social

These posts will cover SEO on Plus from a basic to advanced level. There are things that everyone can do very easily, and some things that you might need to ask your webmaster to implement. But even if you do the bare minimum of SEO you will be doing yourself a huge favor.

After this series, I will be writing on a couple of more advanced issues for Google Plus SEO: Getting Verified and Authorship.

Getting verified will talk about how to set your page/profile up to qualify to get verified by Google Plus. This means that they give your page/profile a little check mark that says you are really you, or your brand is really the official brand page. This is more important for larger brands and for people with a modicum of renown.

Authorship is the ability to establish that you are the original author of your content. Often on social networks, your blog posts or web content gets credited to the person who is posting about it rather than the person who wrote it. Social etiquette says that you should give credit to the original poster, but that is often not the case. Guy Kawasaki is a huge violator of this rule of etiquette, and when someone of influence posts your link then the web generally gives authorship to that person. Google Plus is giving you a solution to that.

Overall SEO for Plus is not the simplest of tasks. But once it is set up, maintaining good SEO habits is very easy. No matter what, if you are investing in Plus then take the time to invest in SEO.