SEO for WordPress Blogs White Paper
We love Wordpress and we love SEO - blogging is a superb way of keeping your site fresh and enhancing your marketing efforts. Here’s an interesting SEO for WordPress Blogs White Paper, found on Blizzard Internet.
We love Wordpress and we love SEO - blogging is a superb way of keeping your site fresh and enhancing your marketing efforts. Here’s an interesting SEO for WordPress Blogs White Paper, found on Blizzard Internet.
I’m starting to put together a few guides to help shatter some of the myths about Search Engine Optimisation.
Keywords and Keyword Phrases are what people type into search engines. It follows that if your site is understood by the search engines to have a lot of ‘answers’ relavant to the person doing the search, you’re more likely to be higher in the search rankings, and hence there’s more chance they’ll click through to you.
Keyword density is a measure of how many times your targeted keyword or keyphrase is being used in the content of your web page.
By repeating your important keyword - or keyword phrase, your increase the prominence of those words to the search engines. This will help the search engines to identify your target keyword and rank the web page accordingly.
However, search engines aren’t daft; they penalise sites (by ranking them lower) if they keyword-stuff or use the same keyword phrase too many times in an unnatural way.
Repeating identical keywords or phrases for more than three times in the body of the the page may actually damage than good as far as the search engine algorithm is concerned. There is an optimum level you should aim for. You should also aim to use words with similar meaning - just like when you write naturally. Search engines are smart enough to recognise synonyms and variations such as man, men, male, boy, boys, masculine and etc.
In each page, focus on one or two keywords but not more than three keywords so that it is apparent to the search engine what your page is about.
Keyword Positioning
As much as possible, use the keyword or keyword phrase in the heading of the page, in the first sentence of the first paragraph and near the bottom of the page. Bold or <header> tagged keywords help, too.
As a rule of thumb, your most important keywords - the exact phrase should not be repeated for more than 3% of the total word count. If you have a 500 words page, keep the keywords count to less than 15 times.
This is something that my great friend and mentor Dave Bancroft at Reverse Delta pointed me to.
It’s quite simply the best detailed guide to Search Engine Optimisation that I can point anyone to - it’s so thorough. The guys at SEOmoz have really put so much time and their fantastic expertise into this - if you’re even slightly interested in SEO then this is a great read.
All you need to know are the basic elements of what makes up a web page and mix it with this advice!
Sometimes a good reminder about the basics of search engines does us all good - even us SEO geeks. Many people started to get out of the habit of getting good quality meta
Mistake…!
This article from MarketPosition.com typifies exactly why it’s important to have relevant and well-written title tags in place.
A friend is setting up an optician in Rochdale, Lancashire, and he still needs convincing about the power of the search engines in getting his custom through the door. My personal blog is well optimised for search engines, with content regularly getting to the top of organic google listings (search on ‘Elvis Posing’, for example). I decided some rather unsubtle SEO work might convince my friend how powerful simple SEO can be. Now, for a Rochdale Optician search in Google (10 May 07), with just one carefully written blog article, the article is above the NHS listings and many large national chain opticians, in sixth place in the listings.
See the Rochdale Optician article here , and do the Google Rochdale Optician search here.
A simple lesson. I hope it’s well learned. People don’t pick up the yellow pages when they’re looking for an optician. They probably can’t read all that small print anyway.