The 5 Basic Rules of Seo Copywriting
Thursday, November 26, 2009
Posted by
Georgia - Digital Marketeer
at
11/26/2009 12:39:00 PM
SEO copywriting is a writing technique used for producing readable and persuasive website content. With this technique we produce quality texts for the visitors of the website and at the same time, we target to specific search terms in order to rank highly in the search engine results. Finding the perfect balance between having the correct keyword density and an engaging text for the visitors is not an easy task.
Search Engine Optimization improves the volume of traffic that a website receives from the organic results of search engines. In order to have a successful SEO campaign, you need to make sure you are optimized for the different factors that search engines use in order to determine the relevancy of a site. One of the key factors of success is the quality content and thus the effective SEO copywriting.
Here are the 5 basic rules you need to follow while writing your texts:
1. Conduct Keyword Research
Conduct a keyword research to determine the exact keywords and keyword phrases that should be incorporated into your website content. Search for terms that your customers might search when they look for products & services like yours. Check the popularity of each keyword by comparing the number of results in Google Search and the Global Monthly Search Volume from Google Adwords.
2. Write Descriptive Texts
Usually the pages that do not contain enough text do not appear on the first results. Always try to write quality content and have more than 250 words per page.
3. Avoid Duplicate Content
Duplicate content is a major issue for sites like online stores, news portals etc. If two pages look very much alike, Google removes one of them from the index. This means that it deletes pages that contain very few or not unique text. Thus always try to write unique, quality and descriptive text for each page. You can check your site for duplicate content by using the tool Duplicate Content Check.
4. Mind the Keyword Usage
Use a group of terms that share a common word or phrase to optimize one page. It will allow the search engines to consider the entire page relevant to the common theme.
Add two, or at most three targeted search terms in each page and place them strategically within the text. Be careful not to insert more than two or three keywords per page that can divert the search engines’ ability to recognize the most relevant phrases.
5. Keyword Optimization – KeywordRank
Incorporate the selected keywords in each page title, HTML headings (H1-6), meta description and meta keywords. The page title is the one appearing in the top bar of the browser window. It is also the one it appears in the Search Results, so it must attract the user to click on it. The H1-6 tags are the headings of the page’s paragraphs. The meta description is a meta-data field appearing sometimes in the search results as snippets. The meta keywords have not any significant value for SEO these days, nevertheless you can use this meta-tag and include the important keywords of your site.
Keyword density should be higher for the most important terms of your page. Additionally in order to be sure that you have optimized for the correct terms you need to find the KeywordRank (KR) of each keyword of your page. The KR is a special rank that measures how optimized a term is inside the page. You can use the Keyword Analyzer tool to perform such an analysis. Make sure you keep the KR relatively high for your important keywords and low the unimportant ones.
In addition to the above, the most important is to create a copywrite appealing to the visitors-consumers. Don’t forget that they are your website’s end users and they need to discover your products or services uniqueness, through a comprehensive and attractive website.
Labels: copywrite, keyword density, keywordrank, Seo, seo copywriting
Nelios.com advanced Internet Marketing & E-commerce Greece
Thursday, November 19, 2009
Posted by
Georgia - Digital Marketeer
at
11/19/2009 01:53:00 PM
Nelios.com internet marketing Greece welcomes you to a new world of endless marketing and advertising opportunities over the internet. Our specialists in advanced internet marketing in Greece and e-commerce industry, provide you with the opportunity to apply the power of the internet to your own e-business in order to enhance your sales and your brand identity.
We provide you professional internet marketing services in Greece like internet advertising, search engines marketing, search engines optimisation, high quality web design and web development, content management systems and CRM tools, all essential to achieve your goals, secure your investment and retain your clientele.
Nelios specialises in advance e-commerce services: E-commerce, E-stores building, Internet advertising, Pay per click advertising, Web Marketing, Banners Advertising, E-Brochures, Live chat services, E-mail marketing, Web media plan, Search engines optimisation, SEO Consultants, Content writing, Directory Submition Services, Articles Writing, Link building, Linux hosting, Windows hosting, Dedicated Servers, Email hosting, SSL Certificates, Data Center, Support, CMS developments, Custom programming, Web design, Web usability, Corporate branding, Web templates.
Nelios specialises in advance e-commerce services: E-commerce, E-stores building, Internet advertising, Pay per click advertising, Web Marketing, Banners Advertising, E-Brochures, Live chat services, E-mail marketing, Web media plan, Search engines optimisation, SEO Consultants, Content writing, Directory Submition Services, Articles Writing, Link building, Linux hosting, Windows hosting, Dedicated Servers, Email hosting, SSL Certificates, Data Center, Support, CMS developments, Custom programming, Web design, Web usability, Corporate branding, Web templates.
Custom Sections Directory for Google News
Thursday, November 5, 2009
Posted by
Georgia - Digital Marketeer
at
11/05/2009 10:57:00 AM
Google News added a directory for custom sections and an easy way to create your own custom sections. Until now, the only way to add a section to Google News was to perform a search and click on "create custom section" at the bottom of the search results page.
Now you can click on "Add a section", find your favorite sections or create new ones.
Labels: Google News
Google Now Indexes Pages via RSS / Atom Feeds on your Site
Friday, October 30, 2009
Posted by
Georgia - Digital Marketeer
at
10/30/2009 03:54:00 PM
Google uses numerous sources to find new webpages, from links we find on the web to submitted URLs. We aim to discover new pages quickly so that users can find new content in Google search results soon after they go live. We recently launched a feature that uses RSS and Atom feeds for the discovery of new webpages.
RSS/Atom feeds have been very popular in recent years as a mechanism for content publication. They allow readers to check for new content from publishers. Using feeds for discovery allows us to get these new pages into our index more quickly than traditional crawling methods. We may use many potential sources to access updates from feeds including Reader, notification services, or direct crawls of feeds. Going forward, we might also explore mechanisms such as PubSubHubbub to identify updated items.
In order for us to use your RSS/Atom feeds for discovery, it's important that crawling these files is not disallowed by your robots.txt. To find out if Googlebot can crawl your feeds and find your pages as fast as possible, test your feed URLs with the robots.txt tester in Google Webmaster Tools.
Measure Your Display Ad’s Impact with AdWords Campaign Insights
Tuesday, October 20, 2009
Posted by
Georgia - Digital Marketeer
at
10/20/2009 12:19:00 PM
Following the view-through reporting campaign it rolled out recently, Google AdWords is launching a new ad campaign impact measurement tool called Campaign Insights. Campaign Insights will let you measure how well your display ad campaign is working beyond just clicks.
According to the Inside AdWords blog, Campaign Insights is a unique measurement tool that gives you reliable data about how a particular ad campaign was able to raised brand awareness or active user interest on a particular product or service that you are promoting. It measures the incremental lift in both online search activity and website visits brought by display ad campaign, beyond the usual click and conversion indicators.
Campaign Insights analyzes large quantities of data and compare two data sets – large group of users who saw and ad against a large group that did not see the the same ad to see whether there is a big difference in searches and visits to an advertiser’s websites. It will then determine whether the incremental change directly attributable to the display ad campaign is enough to establish how well a display ad campaign is effectively working beyong clicks.
Campaign Insights is currently available for display ad campaign in the US and UK. It will be a useful tool for you if you’re running display ad campaigns over the Google Content Network.
Google does not use the keywords meta tag in web ranking
Wednesday, October 7, 2009
Posted by
Georgia - Digital Marketeer
at
10/07/2009 06:16:00 PM
Recently we received some questions about how Google uses (or more accurately, doesn't use) the "keywords" meta tag in ranking web search results. Suppose you have two website owners, Alice and Bob. Alice runs a company called AliceCo and Bob runs BobCo. One day while looking at Bob's site, Alice notices that Bob has copied some of the words that she uses in her "keywords" meta tag. Even more interesting, Bob has added the words "AliceCo" to his "keywords" meta tag. Should Alice be concerned?
At least for Google's web search results currently (September 2009), the answer is no. Google doesn't use the "keywords" meta tag in our web search ranking. This video explains more, or see the questions below.
Google Now Highlights Forum Posts in Search Results
Thursday, October 1, 2009
Posted by
Georgia - Digital Marketeer
at
10/01/2009 11:01:00 AM
For some types of queries, the best results come often come from online forums. What’s the best place to eat in San Francisco? What type of RAM should I buy? Where do I find a flux capacitor? Recognizing this, Google has added a new feature to its search results, highlighting several relevant forum posts on sites that have a large number of posts on a specific topic.
In the image above, my query was “best Intel motherboard” Google has recognized that tomshardware.com contains a forum with several relevant topics, showing it below the main result, together with the dates when those topics were created.
In certain situations, this could save us plenty of time, as you can jump directly to a forum post without searching for it on the actual site. Being able to see the date of topic creation is handy too, as you can quickly filter out old info. I’d like to see a setting that enables you to see more forum results, though; four forum topics often isn’t enough.
Labels: Forum Posts, Google, Google Searches
FeedBurner Goes 301 All The Way
Wednesday, September 30, 2009
Posted by
Georgia - Digital Marketeer
at
9/30/2009 05:45:00 PM
The Google AdSense for Feeds (aka FeedBurner) blog announced that all of their links will be 301 redirected, as opposed to some that are 301 redirected. In summary, when you use FeedBurner to create and host your RSS feed, FeedBurner creates special links that are used to send the reader to your web site. Some users selected to use a 302 redirected link, as opposed to a 301 redirected link, to obtain better tracking.
Google has made the decision to remove the 302 redirect option and make them all 301s. Why? The main reason is Google wants these URLs to become “more compatible with search engines that crawl feeds.” A 301 redirect is the best solution for a search engine to determine where a URL lives. 302 redirects historically have confused search engines, as well as webmasters. So to be “consistent with the way that content is distributed today,” Google has made this change.
If you run FeedBurrner for your web site feeds, you don’t have to make any changes. Google has already made the 301 change for you.
Google Wave Headed to 100K Beta Users
Posted by
Georgia - Digital Marketeer
at
9/30/2009 02:21:00 PM
Google is set to offer 100,000 more testers access to Wave platform
We already know a lot about the collaboration service coming from Google called Wave. The new Wave platform has so far been seen only by developers and press at events designed to showcase the platform's capability.
Since Wave was first introduced, Google has been signing people up as beta testers for Wave in exchange for the users reporting bugs in the platform. Google is now set to roll Wave out to 100,000 of those beta testers as the next step in taking the Wave platform to the big time.
Starting on September 30, the 100,000 beta users will be able to start using Wave. The Wave service is a collaborative environment that allows users to share all sorts of content like video and documents as well as voice and video chat services.
Wave first broke cover back in late May and in July, it was offered to thousands of devs for testing. However, the new test pool is much larger than the original tester pool. The release to a much larger beta tester pool is a lead up to the official public offering of Wave.
Forrester research analyst Ted Schadler said, "Because Google Wave requires people to think about working differently, it's not clear yet what the sweet spot will be. However, you can bet that vendors and CTOs will be watching this with interest to see what develops."
Wave also has functionality similar to a Wiki in that users can write documents to share with others on their wave and that content can be edited by any other user on the wave. Third-party companies are also looking at wave as a platform to launch other types of software offerings. British Telecom plans to launch VoIP gadgets for the Wave platform as an example.
Schadler continued saying, "It's a time of experimentation. We see many companies and plenty of vendors, including all the big collaboration and productivity vendors, looking at new forms of document-based collaboration."
Google Toolbar Adds Sidewiki
Friday, September 25, 2009
Posted by
Georgia - Digital Marketeer
at
9/25/2009 11:21:00 AM
As you browse the web, it's easy to forget how many people visit the same pages and look for the same information. Whether you're researching advice on heart disease prevention or looking for museums to visit in New York City, many others have done the same and could have added their knowledge along the way.
What if everyone, from a local expert to a renowned doctor, had an easy way of sharing their insights with you about any page on the web? What if you could add your own insights for others who are passing through?
Now you can. Today, we're launching Google Sidewiki, which allows you to contribute helpful information next to any webpage. Google Sidewiki appears as a browser sidebar, where you can read and write entries along the side of the page.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)