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What to look for in a search engine optimization specialist
Search engines are the primary way most people find web sites, but web
site designers forget to think of this when they create their sites. Often,
site designers will make the mistake of building the web site first and
then contacting a search engine optimization (SEO) specialist to make
that site search-engine friendly.
What most site owners do not realize is that a search engine optimization
specialist should be brought into the design process early, not after
the site has been built. It is disconcerting to find out that you are
a dollar short and a day late.
Most so-called search engine optimization specialists are people who
slap keywords and keyword phrases inside of HTML tags without considering
an overall online marketing strategy. On the other hand, there are people
who can write for the search engines, analyze site statistics, have a
thorough knowledge of spider-friendly HTML, have considerable experience
with SEO in multiple industries, and stay up-to-date on search engine
happenings. These are the true search engine experts.
This article addresses five important points to consider when looking
for an SEO specialist to work on your site.
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Search Engine vs. Directory
A true search engine optimization specialist knows the difference
between a search engine and a directory, and will keep the two types
of web sites separate in their promotion strategies. The strategies
for being listed well in search engines are completely different from
the strategies for being listed well in directories.
Search engine optimization is designing, writing, and coding
(in HTML) a web site or some of its pages so that there is a good
chance that these web pages will appear at the top of search engine
results for selected keywords and key phrases. Factors that affect
search engine rankings include keyword concentration, keyword placement,
link popularity, and so forth.
Directory enhancement is the process of selecting the most
appropriate categories for a web site and writing descriptions that
concisely and accurately describe the content of the site or a web
page without keyword stacking. Factors that affect directory placement
are selecting the right category and writing a good description.
Reconsider hiring an SEO specialist who consistently refers to directories
(Yahoo!, LookSmart,
Open Directory,
etc.) as search engines.
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Keyword Research
A majority of an SEO specialist's time should be spent on researching
the keywords your target audience is most likely to type in a search
query and incorporating these words and phrases into your web pages.
You will undoubtedly be surprised to find what your audience is typing
in.
The most important tags in an SEO specialist's arsenal are title tags
and the main body text. Meta tags, alternative text, and comment tags
are supplemental; having extra keywords in these tags alone will not
give long-term results.
-
Guarantees
No one should guarantee a search engine ranking. Search engines regularly
change their algorithms. What works one day might not work the next
day. Search engines want to differentiate their results from one another.
They want "fresh" results from their spidering efforts to appear when
ready, and to flush their index of spam whenever possible. It is for
these reasons that they tweak algorithms.
-
Software
Programmers who make software that steals other sites' content to
generate gateway pages are not search engine experts. Companies whose
sole business is generating gateway pages are not search engine experts.
(We have yet to see a gateway page get good link popularity.) You
can spot these companies by learning whether they host the pages themselves
and "redirect" the user to your domain.
To get the best long-term results, a web site should be constructed
with quality content and a navigation scheme that search engines can
spider. Software cannot generate this type of web site.
-
Cloaking and Gateway/Doorway Pages
Search engines have made it very clear that the web page delivered
to the search engine spider and the web page delivered to the end
user should be the same. If not, the search engines consider it spam
and will have the site promptly removed from the search engine database.
Many search engine optimization companies use scare tactics to convince
people that cloaking is necessary. They will tell you that others
can figure out your online marketing strategy just by looking at your
web pages. ("Stealing your meta tags" is a common scare tactic used.)
This is not an accurate characterization of the situation at all.
In fact, we outlined above that meta-tags alone are simply not effective.
If the content of your page is stolen, then it is copyright infringement.
Cloaking can hide copyright infringement behind the stealth script.
This is one of the many reasons why search engines dislike cloaking
and eventually may ban its use. Other reasons might be that search
engines lose control over where they direct users. If a stealth marketer
swipes code for a top position of "flowers" and then redirects the
searcher to a furniture outlet store, it harms both the engine and
its users.
Stay safe. If the search engines ever decide to ban cloaking, stealth
or IP delivery, you will be safe if you never used it.
In conclusion, to get the best long-term results in both the search engines
and the directories, build a good web site. Make your pages easy to read.
Give the search engines and your end users a navigation scheme that they
can easily follow.
Learn to write your content using the words and phrases your target audience
will type into a search query. By giving your target audience exactly
what they are searching for via a search engine query, you are not only
giving your target audience what they are searching for. You are also
adding value to the search engines.
Article written by Shari Thurow and Detlev Johnson, former VP of Technology
at Position Technologies,
an Inktomi partner for the paid inclusion program, and maker of advanced
search engine optimization tools for top line webmasters and major online
marketing agencies.

If you have any specific questions about our search engine marketing
tips, or if you would like permission to republish this marketing tip
on your web site or newsletter, please use our contact
form or email us at info@grantasticdesigns.com.

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