If you?re reading this and your web site
doesn?t contain any body text on the
home page, give yourself a good smack
and go to your room without supper. When
you?re ready to behave and design your
site with the search engines in mind,
come back out and read this article.
The
simple truth is this: search engines read text and not
much else. You absolutely, positively need to use text
on the pages of your site that you want indexed and
ranked highly. Not graphical text that you created in
your fancy design software, but actual, visible body
text. Not sure if your site uses graphical or body text?
A good rule of thumb that I learnt from search engine
guru Danny Sullivan is to try and highlight the text
with your mouse. If you can drag your mouse over the
text when viewing it in a browser, chances are this is
body text and the search engines can read it.
Ok, so
you?ve created your body copy and your site pages are
loaded with good old-fashioned text. But your job?s not
over! Now you need to get targeted. Search engines
aren?t going to rank your web site about socks highly if
your body copy talks about foot sizes. You need to get
specific. If you sell socks, then for heaven?s sake,
make sure your site copy has plenty of references to the
word socks! At the risk of sounding like Dr Seuss, if
you want to be found for, big socks, small socks, cotton
socks and wool socks, then mention them all. Better
still, sort your copy into categories based on your
products and services. If you sell blue socks AND red
socks, then have a page dedicated to each kind. This
allows you to target niche keywords within your copy and
meet the relevancy guidelines for logical search
queries.
It
sounds so obvious, but I?m constantly amused by the
number of web sites I see selling particular items
without once making reference to those items in their
body copy. For example, there are thousands of sites on
the Internet promoting web site design services right?
Next time you see one, take a look at their body copy.
You?ll be surprised how often you?ll see flashy looking
sites without a single mention of the phrase "web site
design" in their page copy. Instead they?ll use fancy
all graphic pages or Flash movies. Or if they do use
body text, it might include cryptic jargonised language
like "Internet Solutions" or "online brand
building".
What
the heck does this tell a search engine about their
business? Absolutely nothing. Are these sites going to
be considered a relevant match for search queries about
"web site design"? No way! The creators of these
sites might think they?re being clever, but they are
really missing the boat entirely. What?s the point of
having a web site if you are going to sabotage its
ability to be found?
Anyway,
back to you and your web site. So now you?ve added
plenty of text to your pages and the copy flows well for
the reader. You?ve researched your keywords and phrases
using
WordTracker or something similar and now you?re
faced with the dilemma of integrating the keywords into
your carefully written copy. So how do you satisfy the
search engine?s craving for keywords without
interrupting the copy flow for the reader? The answer
is: very carefully.
Let?s
take a look at a practical example. We have a client
that specializes in luxury adventure travel. Before I
optimized their site, part of the home page copy read
like this:
"We
specialise in providing vacations for people who want a
personal service. We bring to our efforts a fanatical
obsession with quality and exclusivity. We also bring a
freshness, an outward-going passion for discovery which
justifies our growing reputation as one of the world's
top travel providers. We can put together packages that
include all adventure activities, accommodation,
transport and food".
Extensive
WordTracker keyword research for the client had
determined that the home page should target the
following key phrases:
So
taking our original home page text, the challenge was to
integrate these keywords carefully and naturally so as
not to disturb the logical flow of the copy and lose the
interest of the visitor. Here?s how I did it:
"We
specialise in providing the best adventure vacations
for people who want a personal and tailored travel
service. We bring to our efforts a fanatical obsession
with quality and exclusivity. We also bring a freshness,
an outward-going passion for discovery which justifies
our growing reputation as one of the world's top
overseas adventure travel providers. We can put
together luxury travel packages that include all
adventure activities, accommodation, transport and
food".
Note
that the key phrase "overseas adventure travel"
accommodates the phrase "adventure travel" too. Voila!
The search engines are happy because the site contains
text content relevant to related search queries, the
client is happy because we were able to integrate the
keywords without distracting the visitor and I?m happy
because I know the site is going to rank highly for the
client?s target search terms.
Now go
and apply the same principles to your own site...
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Article by Kalena Jordan, one of the first search engine
optimization experts in Australia and New Zealand, who
is well known and respected in the industry,
particularly in the U.S. As well as running her own SEO
business Web Rank,
Kalena manages
Search
Engine College, an online training institution
offering instructor-led short courses and downloadable
self-study courses in Search Engine Optimization and
Search Engine Marketing subjects.