Pandia SEM 101: Selecting Keywords

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PART 2

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Finding the right keywords

When searching for information on the Web, searchers enter a search query --i.e. various keywords -- in the search engine's search field. The search engine then looks for Web pages that fits the bill.

One of your goals must be to design your webpages in such a way that the most relevant keywords are present in all the important locations and webpage elements.

But what are the relevant keywords or keyword phrases? How do you find them?

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It is not the number of visitors that matters most, but the number of buying or returning visitors.

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Gathering search engine intelligence

By reading the Pandia Search Engine Marketing 101 tutorial you will learn the basics of search engine optimization and positioning. An if you follow your advice, you will achieve better search engine rankings.

However, if you really want to succeed in this game, you need up to date in depth information.

We recommend that you go on to read one of the authoritative guides to search engine marketing. Here is one of them:

Planet Ocean Communications' Unfair advantage book on winning the search engine wars is an popular and easy to read guide to search engine marketing.

Moreover, it is updated every month, and you get their monthly Search Engine News newsletter as part of the bargain. It's packed with search engine industry analysis and practical search engine optimization advice.

See also our book section.

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Select specific keyword phrases

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The most important part of search engine optimization is selecting the right keyword phrases or "keyphrases".

It is true that many searchers enter one-word queries into the search form. The chance of competing successfully for one-word search queries is fairly remote, however, unless you are trying to promote a very specific and rare scholarly term.

You will need a million-dollar budget to win the fight over general terms such as "car" or "holiday," and what is the point, anyway?

Let us suppose you are promoting a hotel in St. Anton, Austria. What are the chances that someone searching for "holiday" is looking for a hotel room in St. Anton? They are more likely looking for general information on holidays and traveling.

If you search for the generic keyword "holiday" in Google you get millions of hits. A search for "alpine ski resorts" gives a few hundred listings. If you optimize your pages for "alpine ski resorts" the chances for getting a good listing increases dramatically. Moreover, you are more likely to get visitors that are genuinely interested in your hotel.

It is not the number of visitors ("the click-through rate") that matter most, but the number of buying or returning visitors ("the conversion rate").

Setting up a list of keyword phrases

Set up a list of relevant keyword phrases. Ask friends and colleagues what query they would enter when looking for a service or product like yours. Do not trust your own instincts in this!

Then try to find relevant synonyms by using a thesaurus, and take variations of English into consideration ("baggage" or "luggage," "optimization" or "optimisation").

Finally, go to one of the online keyword services and see how popular the various search phrases are. The keyword services will also help you finding other relevant phrases.

We highly recommend the online Wordtracker service for this kind of work.

Why you should settle for only one keyword phrase? You should not! However, you must find one keyword phrase that is to be the crucial one. Optimize your home page for that keyword phrase, as many search engines give more weight to the home page in the top directory (e.g. yoursite.com/index.html) than other pages.

You may try to optimize the same page for more than one keyword phrase, but under no circumstance should you go for more than three. If you do so, you will dilute the effect of the individual keyword phrases.

Stop words

Please note that some search engines ignore so-called "stop words," which are words that are so common that they are left out of the search engine database.

Among these are a, an, and, for, is, on, or, the, and to, as well as commonly used words as "Web", "html" and "title." You can determine if a word is a stop word by searching for it. If you get "no results" it's probably a stop word.



However, that does not necessarily mean that all search engines will fail finding a keyword phrase containing such words. Do some testing! If a certain stop word is absolutely essential, try placing the phrase within quotation marks: "keyword phrase".


GO TO THE NEXT PAGE: On search engine friendly HTML coding >>> next section



Contents

1 Search Engine Marketing 101
2 Selecting Search Keywords
3 Search Engine Friendly Code
4 Search Engine Friendly Webdesign
5 Link Popularity
6 Search Engine Submissions

 




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