Monday, October 4, 2010

How to Write Effective Meta Tags for a Website: Importance of Advance Meta Tags


 Meta tags are playing a vital role while doing an optimization on a website. It is to observe that Search Engines identifies a website goal and its purpose by acquiring its Meta tags. Meta tags contain page tile, page description, Meta keywords, Meta author information, Meta company information, etc. a website owner can use different Meta tags according to his or her needs.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Page Title Tag

The Title Tag must contain no more than 60 characters (generally, 100 characters may be indexed). This is the text that appears in the blue title-bar of your web browser.

Author Information – bio Tag

The Author Tag is for the person who wrote the material for the site. Normally people add up their names such as content writer, developers, SEO and SEM.

Website Subject Tag

The Subject Tag is for what your site is about. Music, Home Remodeling, Security, search engine optimization, etc. You can use upto 100 characters to write an ideal subject title for your website.

Page Description Tag

The Description Tag can have up to 150 characters. Generally, we use 200 to 250 characters in the description Tag which may be indexed, although only a slighter part of this amount may be displayed. You can find page description under the Google Results for a particular keyword search just above the teaser url path. Normally we call this a site or a page snippet. In other words this is a quick summary of the information on the page.

Classification Tags

Classification tag is quite similar to description but more in detail.

Keywords Tags

In the Keyword tag you can use everything relating to your site rich content that you think someone will search for to find your site. Its all upto you how many keywords you use to optimize your website. In general we create contents and then optimize them for a particular keyword targeting to that content.

Geography Tags

Where are you located? You can use Geography Meta tags to provide information about your geo location to the search engines. Like, if you are living in the California, USA, you can put a full street address (USA, CA, Montero, and St.12) in Meta Tags.

Language Tags

Is your site in English, Spanish, French, German or what? You can use Language Meta Tags to supply language information to search engines. In other words this Tag is used to known as localization tag.

Copyrights Tags

Who is the Owner of the site? We use normally a Company Name in copyrights tag e.g. Smart Solutions Net Technologies ®

Zip Code Tags

Enter your zip code in Zip Code Met Tags. You can use your state or city Zip Code to supply the local information to the Search Engines.

City or Town Tags

Your City or town name. E.g. New Mexico Nevada.

Country Tags

Your Country, you must use all names in Country Meta Tags e.g. USA, United States, United States Of America, America, etc.

Revisit-After Tags

This tells search engine how often this page updates. (Eg. 25 days) Mostly search engines ignore this Meta tags and to follow their own policies of visiting a website.

Distribution Tags

This distribution Meta tags normally used to publish a website in some limited areas and regions where the webmaster or a site owner needs to get traffic.

Robots Tags

You can use robots tags to direct search engines to index your pages with noidex, nofollow, index, follow links on a page. The values ALL and NONE set all directives on or off: [ALL=INDEX,FOLLOW] and [NONE=NOINDEX,NOFOLLOW].

The above Meta tags are in detail and complete, these meta tags will be added after the "html" tag and used to put before the "body" area of the page. You can use these Meta tags globally for your website or can add up for a particular page. This article has shown that how easily you can write such advance Meta tags without doing hard work on them. You can also use such free online tools to get Meta tags. But I’d recommend you to do not use these services for security reason. I’m hoping that this article will help you to create such advance Meta Tags for your websites. In the next article I’ll explain how to write effective page titles and page description for a particular page or a website.

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

7 Simple SEO Tasks to Complete for a New Site

I have assisted countless websites in launching a new or redesigned website. Regardless of the business or the industry, there are a number of tasks you should perform to make sure your SEO gets off on the right foot. The good thing is, these tasks can take no more than 30-60 minutes to complete and are well worth it.

1. Setup Webmaster Tools

Using a service like Google Analytics is great, but you really should verify your site with each of the search engines webmaster tools. These services allow you to diagnose and analyze things on your site, that a website analytics solution can not. Submit sitemaps, find error pages, diagnose slow loading pages, and tons of other neat tools are provided by the webmaster tools.

2. Install Analytics, Setup Your Goals

There is no reason why you should not be tracking your website visitors. Google Analytics is free, easy to install and provides a wealth of information about your website and your customers. Sign-Up for a free account and install or pay someone to install the javascript code on your website.
Also go the extra mile and track key actions on your websites. Things like contact form submissions, downloads, video plays, and purchases should be getting tracked to understand your conversion funnel better and improve your conversion rates.

3. Fix Canonical URL Issues

Something that I would say 90% of all websites never do, it fix the www vs non-www duplicate content issue. This is such a quick fix, but so many websites overlook it. Going with either the www or the non-www, will solve the issue of having multiple URLs for the same web page. Also make sure your internal links are going to the / and on index.html or similar.
PHP Sites: Add to .htaccess file

Options +FollowSymlinks
RewriteEngine on
RewriteCond %{HTTP_HOST} ^domain.com
RewriteRule ^(.*)$ http://www.domain.com/$1 [L,R=301]
RewriteRule ^index.html$ / [R=301,L]

ASP Sites: Done through IIS

4. Add Your Robots.txt File

Go through your web files and identify directories that you don’t want the search engines to index. Things like your administration files or miscellaneous files found on your server, restrict them from being indexed.
Upload robots.txt file with below text. Make sure you replace “/folder name/ with the folder(s) you want to restrict.
User-agent: *
Disallow: /folder name/

5. Submit XML Sitemap 

Once your website is 100% completed, use an XML sitemap generation tool to crawl your entire site and create an XML sitemap that you can submit to the search engines. Each search engine allows you to submit your sitemap right from within Webmaster Tools. This will help get your new site crawled faster and make the search engines better able to find ALL of the pages on your site.

6. Setup Your Local Business Listings

As you may know, Google, Yahoo, and Bing all have local business centers that allow you to add a free business listing that has the chance to show up in the local results when a user performs a local query in one of the search engines.
I would suggest going to GetListed to help manage all of your local business listings. This free service will help you manage and check to make sure you are properly submitting and verifying your local business listings in Google, Yahoo, Bing, Yelp, BOTW and Hotfrog.
GetListed will cover the main local business directories you should submit to, but a service call Universal Business Listing will help you syndicate your listing to all of those 2nd tier local directories like InfoUSA, YellowPages.com CitySearch and Superpages.com. Instead of manually submitting your listing to lots of other local directories, pay $30 and have UBL submit your listing for you.

7. Add 301 Redirects

If you are redesigning a website, try to keep the same URL structure if possible. This way you will reduce the risk of losing any organic search engine rankings and traffic. However if for whatever reason the URL structure needs to change, identify the key pages that are ranking well and gaining traffic and 301 redirect them to the most relevant page on the new site.
If a client has purchased multiple domains and has mirror sites up, direct those sites over to the main site. There is no point in risking a duplicate content penalty for having multiple sites with the same content.
ASP Sites – 301 Redirect


PHP Sites – 301 Redirect
Header( “HTTP/1.1 301 Moved Permanently” );
Header( “Location: http://www.new-url.com” );
?>



Read more:
http://www.searchenginejournal.com/7-simple-seo-tasks-to-complete-for-a-new-site/24419/#ixzz10q1bYM9G

Monday, September 6, 2010

What’s New With AdWords?

Google’s been busy with AdWords this summer, launching a number of new features. Here’s a wrap-up of six of those features as well as Google’s new advertising news website.
This tool, which is currently in beta, lets you test and measure changes to your keywords, your AdWords bidding, ad groups and placements. Basically you run your existing campaign alongside an experimental campaign.
You choose what percentage of auctions you’d like each campaign to participate in, and then watch what happens. If your experimental campaign is significantly more successful than your original campaign, you can decide to apply the changes to all of your auctions.
Google has added a new tool to the AdWords Opportunities tab that allows you to see how your campaign performance compares to the average performance of other advertisers. Google measures such indicators as click-through rate, average position, and impressions.
It shows these metrics for each of the different categories that represent your offerings. It can help you identify which aspects of your campaign are inferior to your competition, and then prompt you to improve those aspects accordingly.
Ad Sitelinks let you add additional links to pages within your site in your ads, provided your ads appear at the top of search results. The idea is that more people will click through to your site if you offer them more options. The feature was introduced in November, though this summer Google add a couple of new characteristics.
One new characteristic is that additional links can be condensed into one line of text (previously the only option was two lines). The other change is that advertisers no longer need Google’s approval to set up Ad Sitelinks for their campaigns. You can set up Ad Sitelinks in the Campaign Settings tab.
This new tool lets you see which of your pay-per-click keywords are currently prompting your ads to show, and why the other keywords aren’t spurring ads. You can access it from the More Actions drop-down menu within the Keyword tab.
If you want you can limit your diagnosis to a particular country and/or language. If you are seeing that certain keywords are not resulting in ads because of Quality Score issues, you might decide to resolve those issues. Or you might choose to increase your bids to get your ads shown.
This new AdWords management feature lets you create keywords that are more targeted than broad match and have a greater reach than phrase or exact match. To implement this feature, you put a plus sign (+) in front of one or more words in a broad match keyword. Each word following a (+) sign must appear in the user’s query exactly or as a close variation.
The words that are not preceded by a (+) sign will prompt ads on more significant query variations. This feature will likely drive more traffic for those switching from broad match, and attract more qualified traffic for those switching from phrase or exact match.
The AdWords Report Center is slowly being phased out as performance reports are moved onto the Campaigns tab. According to Google, it’s best to put performance information on the same page where you manage your campaign.
Reports include campaign reports, ad group reports, and account-level reports. They will specifically be stored in a new part of the Campaigns tab called the Control panel and library.
In June Google unveiled Google Ad News, a website that aggregates advertising news, including news related to AdWords. The site is organized into advertising categories, including search advertising; mobile advertising; and TV, radio and print.
For advertisers and advertising professionals with little time to sift through the categories, a top advertising news category provides Google’s most valued advertising-related articles. Articles come from such publications as The Detroit News, Business Week, and The Guardian.

Sunday, August 15, 2010

The Top 10 Free PPC Tools


Below are 10 of what I consider the most useful free tools available. While there are many more free resources out there, these 10 (in no particular order) have generated the best results in terms of campaign performance and time efficiency. It’s important to mention that many of these tools have options to upgrade at a cost.
10. Spyfu: Spyfu provides competitive intelligence for keywords and ad copy. This is a great tool to identify any keyword gaps you might have with your competitors. There is a pro version, but the free version gives you the big picture overview.
9. Geo Keyword List Generator: This is a great tool for building out geo modified keyword list. Just add a zip code and radius and this tool will pull in all cities, zip codes and abbreviations of relevant geo in that area.
8. Typo Generator: Similar to the geo generator, but this tool quickly produces common misspellings and typos of the desired search term.
7. Niche Keyword Finder: This is a great resource to ensure your bases are covered with your keyword portfolio. This often picks up themes that would normally go unnoticed.
6. Keyword Mixer: A quick way to build out a long-tail keyword list.
5. MSN Ad Lab: A full range of tools ranging from audience intelligence to keyword research. I also recommend adding the free Excel plug in.
4. Compete: Very similar to Spyfu, but sometimes the results differ, so it’s best to reference both sources.
3. Ad Words Wrapper: This is a great tool for creating match types.
2. Keyword Map: Another keyword generation tool, but this will display the results visually and showcase areas of possible expansion.
1. Google: There are really 11 resources included in this one.  Rather than going through each one individually, I’ve provided a little blurb about some of the ones used more frequently. I recommend using and researching all of these on your own though.
    • Google Ad Words Editor – This is a great time saver for building and setting up huge campaigns.
    • Google Website Optimizer – This tool allows you to test and optimize site content and design.
    • Google Analytics – Provides much of what an expensive analytics package can for free.
    • Google Insights for Search – A great keyword tool for determining seasonality and trends.
    • Google Mobile Ad Preview Tool – Offers a quick way to see your ads on mobile devices.
    • Other Google tools include: Google traffic estimator, Google Alerts, Google Trends, Google Ad Planner, Google URL Builder and most recently the competitive tools through the Ad Words dashboard.

Monday, August 2, 2010

Five Steps to an Effective Pay Per Click Keyword Database

If you’re still building pay-per-click (PPC) campaigns from a traditional keyword list, it’s not doing your business any favors. A spreadsheet is an inefficient, outdated way to manage keywords for search marketing, leading to wasted dollars and lost time.
A keyword database is a completely different approach to research and manage PPC keywords. Compared to a keyword list, it’s:


• Private and proprietary
• Easier to organize and manage
• Easier to update and expand
• More actionable
• Collaborative

Essentially, it’s a flexible infrastructure that enables you to work with large numbers of keywords and quickly determine which pockets of keywords have the most business value. You can then translate your database into a highly effective PPC campaign structure.
Building a keyword database isn’t difficult, and as your campaigns scale, you’ll find it much faster and easier to keep things running smoothly. Here’s the five-step process to build an effective keyword database.


Step 1: Start your PPC keyword research
The most important part of a keyword database, naturally, is keywords! To build a comprehensive, up-to-date database, it’s important to look at keyword research as an ongoing process, aggregating keywords from multiple sources.


Here are four sources, both public and private, that will help you gain a complete picture of the terms you should be using in your campaigns:


• Public keyword tools: A traditional Web-based is based on popularity; remember that overall popularity doesn’t guarantee relevance to your audience.

• Historical site logs: Your server logs are a great source of keyword data—they contain a record of the real search queries that have led people to your site.

• Web analytics: The keyword reports in your analytics provide a continuous stream of new keywords. Incorporate those new insights into your research.

 Search query reports: The search query reports in AdWords Editor are another source of real data. These tell you the actual search queries that have triggered your PPC ads.
Pooling these sources gives you a personalized database that is highly relevant to your business. Be sure to keep your research up-to-date with traffic and conversion stats to see which keywords do the most work in your PPC campaigns.


Step 2: Segment and organize your keywords
Better keyword research gets you a lot closer to more profitable PPC campaigns, but to reap the full benefits of your research, it’s crucial to organize your keywords into small, manageable groups of closely related terms. This process will improve your campaigns by enabling:



• Better landing pages: It’s easier to write targeted, high-ranking copy around close-knit keyword groups.

• Better ads: Similarly, you can quickly write relevant, compelling text ads for well-structured keyword groups (aka ad groups).

• Better click-through rates: More relevant pages and ads grab a more qualified audience, so your CTRs and conversion rates improve.

• Better Quality Scores: High CTR and relevance lead to high Quality Scores, so you pay less for better positioning.

A well-organized database structure makes everything else you do for PPC, from adding new keywords to managing bids, simpler and more effective.


Step 3: Cut out waste with negative keywords
With strong keyword research, you can identify profitable keyword opportunities. But for high ROI, it’s equally important to identify and eliminate waste. This means discovering negative keywords, or irrelevant terms that eat up pay-per-click advertising budgets without generating quality leads.



Here are a few ways to find negative keyword candidates:


• Generic negative keyword lists: These aren’t a bad way to get started, but remember that generic negative keywords may not apply to your specific niche, and many are likely missing.

• During regular keyword research: When looking for relevant keywords, also keep your eyes open for suggestions that aren’t relevant to your business.

• Search query reports: Regularly look through your search query reports in AdWords and remove irrelevant keywords from your ad groups.

• Organic log files: By using your own log files for negative keyword discovery, you can catch irrelevant keywords before they trigger your ads.

Step 4: Create strong, targeted text ads
The next step is to write text ads for each keyword/ad group. If you followed the above process, your ad groups are already highly targeted, so it should be simple to write strong, targeted ads. Here are some tips for writing effective PPC ad copy:


• Include the top traffic: driving keywords in the title, text, and display URL of the ad when possible.

• Don’t overgeneralize: address a specific segment of your audience.

• Test several ads for each ad group. Google will rotate the ads so you can see which works best.

• Always include a call to action.

In addition, to maximize Quality Score, your ads should clearly be relevant to their associated landing pages.


Step 5: Repeat as necessary to maintain gains
One of the benefits of a keyword database is the ability to expand your research without losing control. So keep monitoring, testing, and tweaking your campaigns to improve results. And keep adding keywords from your analytics! The keywords your clients use to find you are among your most valuable marketing assets.

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Pay Per Click Advertising and PPC Management Tips

Pay Per Click (PPC) advertising is a very effective way to drive targeted traffic to your website, increase your leads-to-sales conversions, and announce new products and services. However, achieving success and maximizing your return on investment withPay Per Click is not merely a matter of outbidding your competition for prime ad placement. As with any Internet marketing strategy, it’s critically important to have a clear understanding of the fundamentals and develop a PPC advertising plan before the campaign is launched. Otherwise, you run the risk of wasting your time and resources to take advantage of this increasingly effective means of reaching your targeted audience.
Here are some Pay Per Click advertising tips that will help you get started:
1. Establish a Budget – This may seem simple and obvious but creating a budget and sticking to it is the best way to keep from overspending and falling victim to bidding wars for popular search terms.
2. Develop a PPC Marketing Plan – Creating a plan in the early stages gives you a template to follow which should include thorough research of your industry, your competition, and a prioritized list of your targeted keywords and phrases.
3. Consider your Target Audience – Spend some time assessing who you want to click on your ad, the search terms they are likely to use, and how broad or narrow your intended demographic may be. Determining your audience in the early stages will help to inform your decisions in every phase of the campaign.
4. Identify Niche Opportunities – Instead of focusing on the most popular search terms where costs and competition will be steep, think about specific two- and three-word phrases that may have been overlooked by your competitors.
5. Write Compelling Ad Copy – You have a finite amount of space, so choose every word carefully to entice your audience to click on your ad. Most web users know the difference between sponsored and organic search results but if your ad copy leads them to believe that the link will help them find what they’re looking for, your click-through rates and sales will take off.
6. Craft Custom Landing Pages – This is essential. Each ad must take the viewer to a landing page where they can quickly and easily find what they need. Always remember that web users scan content and the decision to stay or look elsewhere is made in seconds.
7. Create and Analyze Performance Reports – These reports will tell you which ads are underperforming and which are exceeding expectations. Use this data to fine tune and adjust your marketing plan. Track your results at regular intervals.

Monday, July 12, 2010

PPC Tips for the Small Business Owner

 The following tips provide the framework for developing a successful and cost effective pay per click campaign.

Time/Day Parting – Google allows advertisers to determine the day of week or even the time of day they want their ads to display. This can be a very useful tool for small business advertisers who know when their customers are most likely to look for their product or service. By setting your ads to display at only high performance times you increase the effectiveness of your campaign and reduce your costs.

Ad Scheduling.png

Match Types – Gone are the days of simply adding keywords that are all set to broad match and hoping for a return. Sure, casting a larger net brings in more traffic, but it also punishes your budget. The quality of that traffic might also suffer depending on the chosen keywords. Try using the available match types, especially exact match, to control costs and which searches are actually displaying your ads.

Negative Keywords – Selecting negative keywords to offset unwanted traffic is an absolute must for any campaign, large or small. For example, f a florist that sells only fresh flowers and plants might want to include the negative “artificial” to prevent traffic from artificial flower type keywords. Using negatives also allows you to pursue higher volume keywords without the exposure to unrelated searches.

Geo Targeting – According to a 2009 TMP/comScore report, 80% of consumers expect businesses in their search results to be within 15 miles of their location. This definitely doesn’t apply to all industries and regions, but it should provide a starting point with your targeting. It’s important to mention that with Google’s targeting granularity, you could potentially target your business out of traffic if it’s set so small that only a few people will see the ads.

Other Search Engines- Google has the lion share of the search market, but they also carry the highest bid prices. Bing and the like might not offer the volume that Google does; however, smaller search engines often have lower bid prices, which ultimately produce lower conversion costs. Test out a small budget on these other engines to start looking at your PPC efforts as a portfolio.

Keyword Development–The Google traffic estimator tool might show you that the keyword “new shoes” generates 1,500,000 searches each month, but that doesn’t mean it’s a quality keyword for your ad group. To maximize your budget, think locally and specifically. For example, if you’re in the printing business, expand past the generic and more expensive “printing” keywords;  pair them up with location identifiers to better define your product and audience. By using the keyword ”printing shops Denver 80202,” you pay less for a consumer that is further along in the buying cycle.