Chase_Those_Page_One_Blues_AwayGet_Themed_Content_On_Your_Site_And_Get_On_Page_One
| Chase Those Page One Blues Away...Get Themed Content On Your Site And Get On Page One!
Here is my latest article. It may be freely used in ezines, on
websites or in e-books, as long as the Resource Box is left
intact.
I would appreciate notification of where it was used, and if
possible, a copy of the ezine or newsletter that it was used in.
Please send notification mailto:webmaster@online-wealth.com
______________________________
Not on page one of the majors yet?
Elsewhere, I've written about getting on page one of the major
search engines with an article here:
http://online-wealth.com/yahoosuccess.htm and the relative ease
of actually developing a website to do just that here:
http://online-wealth.com/articles/getting_on_page_one.htm .
If the process is so easy then, you may ask, why are there so
many services touting their ability to "guarantee a top 10
placement" for your website?
The easy answer, of course, is that most people do not know how
to go about designing a website that SEs drool over, and have
even less knowledge about the HTML coding required to display
the website on the web. For a relatively easy approach to site
building for yourself - and a fun one at that - go to this link:
http://online-wealth.com/buildasite/ where you'll get the help
you need...and then some!
Of course, there are many services that will do the job for you,
and obviously, many of them do a good job. But again, if you're
gonna do the job yourself, you have a lot to think about...
First of all, however, just what do SEs drool about? Well, the
best phrase I can think of is "a website with themed relevance".
Meaning? Well, suppose you're an expert on the sport of
baseball, and you want to build a website that ranks in the top
ten SEs. Most of all, you want to have a site devoted to
baseball rules and terminology - a narrow-focus topic, but still
having broad appeal and relevance to all baseball players and
fans (your target audience, naturally).
Well...a couple of days ago (it's June 18, 2001 today!) a quick
search on a few of the majors, for the search term 'baseball
rules and terminology'(the 'and' in the phrase isn't required,
actually), drew quite a mixed bag, thus :
Altavista: 17,115,664 Google: 8720 Excite: 1,621,610 Lycos: 5728
Northern Light: 6086
Now they were the results when I entered the above search phrase
*without* quotes. When the phrase is entered *with* quotes, the
results are markedly different, thus:
Altavista: Zip Google: 2 Excite: Nada Lycos: 1 Northern Light: 4
*By placing the quotes around the phrase, I forced the SEs to
find the exact phrase somewhere in their databases.* However,
not *one* of the SEs returned the exact phrase, which means it
may not even exist anywhere on the web.
Furthermore, when I enter the same search phrase in one of the
meta-search engine (a fancy term that means it searches the
search engines), I get the following:
Ixquick.com - Without quotes: 20,346. With quotes: 1.
And, just so that you know I haven't ignored the one and only:
Yahoo.com - Without quotes: 2230. With quotes: 1
So...all of *that* means you have a golden opportunity to be
number one in the majors, with your baseball rules and
terminology site.
Why? The first set of results ranged from many thousands to
multi-millions, so how can that be beaten, you say? No problem -
those first set of results covered *any* occurrence of
'baseball', 'rules' and 'terminology', so there were even sites
for cricket, public administration, medicine, religion and
goodness knows what all on the results page I received!
Do you see my point: if there had been a site with that exact
phrase, the search engine software *had* to pick it. That's the
way search software works, basically.
To make sure your site appears on page one though, you have a
bit more work to do.
A quick check with Betterwhois.com for
'BaseballRulesAndTerminology.com' showed that it is available
for purchase. Guess what? So are the .net and .org names
available, and I'll bet .TV and .biz are also!
Now, for ranking purposes, most - if not all - SEs place more
emphasis on the domain name, the domain title, the domain
description and the themed content of the site. The last is
perhaps the most important. The keyword meta-tag is all but dead
(I'd make sure I followed the rules, but I wouldn't worry about
keyword meta-tags much). Links are important, but they're last
in priority.
Now, if I were that baseball expert, I'd boogie on down to my
favorite domain registrar, buy the name(s), build the site and
get on page one...
Well, now...how can I be *so* sure, you ask?
Let me answer that with examples from my own domain,
online-wealth.com. The two words - 'online' and 'wealth' - are
pretty common on the web, right? And, when used as a phrase
'online wealth', you'd be inclined to think the same, right?
Well...right again!
Here are the results (i.e. number of web pages) for the search
phrase 'online wealth', using the same search engines, without
quotes and with quotes:
First up, without quotes: online wealth Altavista: 105,722,390
Google: 946,000 Excite: 15,634,290 Lycos: 525,516 Northern
Light: 490,409
Yes, those figures from Altavista and Excite *are* the numbers
returned to me, I assure you!
Now, with quotes: "online wealth" Altavista: 1556 Google: 1750
Excite: 490 Lycos: 1662 Northern Light: 871
The only results page that does NOT include our domain of
online-wealth.com on page one, is that from Lycos. All of the
others have us on page one, and usually number 1! (I'll have to
find out why Lycos is ignoring us!)
What does all that mean? Simply this: anybody who punches in
"online wealth" or 'online wealth' (no quotes), into a search
box, will find our site on page one of the majors and probably
in number one position. And that includes Yahoo, Ixquick, and a
few others!
So, you expert on baseball...with more information about the
topic than anybody else...get that domain name, organize that
information into a coherent whole - be it a catalog, a
dictionary, a database, an e-book or whatever - develop a killer
title and description that precisely encapsulate what your new
site is all about, promote it to all SEs and directories and...
Hey, don't expect *me* to click through...I prefer deep-sea
shark fishing...even if you are on page one of the majors, for
your theme! ;-(
Huh!?
Well...that's the web! Even if you are on page one, 30% of
searchers will ignore you, anyway!
But, at least you'll *be* on page one, and ahead of the rest,
whenever your target prospects find you.
P.S. When I last made enquiries, there were maybe only 48 links
pointing to online-wealth.com. I get different results from
different SEs...so I don't worry about links at all.
About the author:
Roger Burke has been involved with computers since 1967, and has
managed to break quite a few, over the years. He, and his wife
Sherry, are now actively engaged in online self-publishing and
promoting specific affiliate programs at
http://online-wealth.com . If you have any comments or questions
about this article, please send emails to
mailto:webmaster@online-wealth.com . Copyright 2001,
Online-Wealth. All rights reserved.
|
|