Tying It Together: SEO For The Big Three
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by Dave Davies May 15, 2006
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| Dave Davies |
Dave
Davies is the CEO of the Beanstalk Search Engine Positioning, Inc.
Beanstalk is an SEO
company
that is proud to offer guaranteed services on all their packages.
Dave Davies is also available to provide SEO
training
to individuals, web developers or IT teams. Beanstalk would like to
extend its sincere appreciation to Metro Hi Speed for providing us
with our new toll free Internet
fax services.
We can now be faxed at 800-979-3215. |
| Dave Davies
has written 1 articles for HostReview. |
| View all articles by Dave Davies... |
This
article is part four of a four part series on optimizing your website
for the three major search engines. Part one, titled "SEO For
MSN" covered optimizing your website to rank highly on MSN,
while part two, titled "SEO For Yahoo!" covered optimizing
your website to rank on Yahoo! and part three, titled "SEO For
Google" covered how to rank highly on Google. In this article we
will cover how to tie your optimization strategies together to attain
the highest rankings possible on all three engines simultaneously.
The
Major Factors:
There
are some constants in search engine optimization; some factors that,
by necessity, must be considered by all the major engines.
Fortunately for us, these factors are generally the most important.
Unfortunately, each of the engines uses them in different ways. Let's
begin by listing these factors:
Age
Many
of you will already be familiar with the aging delay that is commonly
referred to as "the sandbox". For those of you that aren't
familiar with it, the sandbox is a penalty that is applied to new
sites and new links under the assumption that they cannot play nicely
with others. It is only after time that the penalty is lightened and
eventually disappears and the site is left to play in the park with
the rest of the "nice sites".
This
penalty is applied most strongly by Google and to a lesser degree
Yahoo! On Google a new website cannot expect to rank for any
competitive phrases for between 6 and 8 months. Even then, the links
that are being built to this site still have to age so for most new
sites competing for high-competition phrases you're looking at a good
year-or-so to see top results though you'll likely see good results
for many of your secondary phrases well before then. The penalty is
also applied by Yahoo! but to a far lesser degree. The penalty on
Yahoo is both shorter and lighter than that applied by Google. MSN
does not apply such a penalty at the time of this writing.
Content
This
is obviously a key feature across all the engines but again Yahoo!
and Google take the lead in penalizing sites that do not have a lot
of content related to a similar theme. Recently we have seen this act
as mixed blessing, at least on Google, with some major sites getting
overlooked due to a large amount of information on a wide variety of
topics in exchange for sites focused on a single topic, however with
their recent tweaks they seem to be balancing the overall content
focus with other factors to create a solid set of rankings that are
relevant, will provide results that are more likely to produce the
desired information, and don't neglect sites that may contain wide
information on a wide variety of topics yet provide a good deal of
valuable content on the searches subject. Yahoo doesn't seem to be
catching up in this area with some holes in their results. That said,
as they are not "gamed" as much as Google they haven't had
to put on such strong filters and their results remain solid despite
this.
It
should be noted that the content does not necessarily have to contain
the same keywords to be considered related. The engines are getting
far better at determining themes of sites and knowing which words are
related to each other. For example, Google will view the word
"personal" and "personalized" as related by
theme. You may not rank the same for both words in a search however
they are tied together and the use of one will help the overall
optimization for the other.
Keyword
Density
Keyword
density is the overall percentage of your page content that is made
up of the targeted keywords. An additional factor in keyword density
is the percentage of your keyword content that uses special
formatting such as bold, italic, anchor text, etc. While keyword
density is not the end-all-be-all of SEO (there is no single factor
that is) it is a factor and one of the more difficult to optimize
properly. While hitting specific densities for both overall content
and special formats is easy enough, it becomes more difficult when
you consider an area even more important than optimization: your
real-for-real human visitor!
One
should try to attain near optimal keyword densities using a tool such
as Total Optimizer Pro (see below), GRKDA, or other similar software,
however one much always be aware of how the optimized content reads
to your visitors. It's important to keep your visitors in mind, your
sales message clear, and also remember that if you have to sacrifice
a bit in one area (like keyword density) it can be made up through
stronger efforts in others (such as link building).
Keyword
density holds the most weight on MSN, followed by Yahoo! with Google
coming in last. This does not mean it should not be considered for
reasons that will follow below.
How
A Site Fares In The Results
One
factor that is not often discussed among SEO's and which is not known
to many outside the community is that how your site fares in the
results is a factor. This factor is a fairly recent addition but is
sure top become a stronger and stronger part of the overall algorithm
as it matures. Google pioneered this technology however Yahoo!
appears to be following suit and MSN is sure to do so as well
considering that this is information that is very easy for any engine
to track and truly adds to the "democracy" of the results
in that it becomes the users "vote" that helps secure or
topple a high ranking site.
This
factor breaks down as such; the search engine knows when you have
clicked on a result. They also know when you have returned to the
results to try another site. If a site shows up for a specific search
query often yet visitors tend to return to the results quickly after
visiting the site the engine can thus assume that the searcher did
not find what they were looking for on the site and thus the site can
be deemed not relevant for that phrase. This factor alone has
far-reaching effects on a number of traditionally non-SEO related
factors and pulls them into the SEO-realm. Content now has to be more
captivating, navigation has to be clear and easily accessed and the
visitor has to be able to find the information that they're looking
for quickly and easily. If the searcher returns to the search results
quickly you will lose a point. If this happens often enough you will
lose positioning.
Site
Structure
The
way your site is structured determines how easily a search engine
spider can get through it, the priority is gives specific content,
and how much code the spider has to weed through to get to your
content. Essentially, having a structure that allows the spider to
easily get through your website, places the content areas as high up
in the HTML code as possible, and which minimizes the use of
formatting code such as the font tag, will increase the overall
weight of the content and insure that the content you want the
spiders to focus on is what they "see" early on.
Many
sites are structured such that the actual content doesn't appear
until half-way down the page as far as the HTML code is concerned.
Having a content area that starts at line 174 in the code is not a
good start when it comes to SEO. While there is no specific answer as
to what line the content area should start, using proper table
structures or better yet, tableless design practices using CSS can
greatly increase the weight your content is given. Using CSS again we
can significantly reduce the need for formatting code, further
reducing the amount of coding that the search engine has to go
through to get to the content.
The
higher up in your HTML the content lies the greater the weight it is
given. Optimized site structure, especially in moderate to high
competition industries, is one of the first steps one can take to
secure a competitive advantage over one's competition.
Backlinks
Ah
backlinks. Once upon a time simply securing mass numbers of links to
your site using whatever means available was enough to rocket sites
to the top of the rankings. Fortunately for search engine users this
is no longer the case. With backlinks, as with websites in general,
it's quality that counts. While there are numerous factors regarding
the value of a link (many of which were discussed in the article,
"SEO For Google") the basics are:
Age.
The older the link the more weight it has. (Google and Yahoo!)
Link
location. Links higher up on the page hold more weight. (All three)
Link
location two. Links occurring within content hold more weight that a
directory-style link. (Google and Yahoo! to a lesser degree)
Anchor
text and formatting. The anchor text and the use of special formats
in the text affect a link's weight. (All three)
Relevancy.
The relevancy of the site linking to you. (Google and Yahoo
predominantly)
Number
of links. The more links there are on a single page, the less
valuable the link to your site from that page is. (All three)
Non-recip
links. Non-reciprocal links hold more weight than reciprocal links.
(Google and Yahoo! to a lesser degree)
Authority
sites. Links from authority sites (.gov, .edu and respected news and
information related) hold more weight. (Google and Yahoo!
predominantly and MSN to a lesser degree)
Tying
It Together
Knowing
all this one must assess the best course of action when launching
into a new SEO campaign. For the purposes of this conclusion we will
assume that the keywords we are targeting are in the moderate to high
competition levels. In this event one must balance the various
factors and timelines to produce the highest ROI in the short term
with an eye on maximum benefit in the long term. What we mean by this
is that with aging delays occurring on Google and to a lesser degree
Yahoo! one should focus first on MSN. This means that when you are
adjusting your keyword densities and tweaking the onsite factors
early in the campaign you will want to focus on hitting optimal
levels for MSN knowing that Google, regardless of what you do, is
unlikely to rank you highly for your primary phrases for some time.
Your
link building efforts will need to take into account the long-term
objective of ranking highly on Google with an understanding that MSN
is not going to penalize your newly created backlinks with aging
delays. A balance of speed vs perfection will be required. All the
links you build should be relevant (if your visitors wouldn't be
interested in going to the site then don't link to it) however if you
can't always get inline links or your link will appear lower on the
page you will still want to secure it.
After
time (assuming that the right tactics have been used) you will notice
your MSN rankings improve. This is a good benchmark for how your site
will fare overall. Once you are ranking well on MSN it's time to
focus your attention on Yahoo! At this stage you will want to slowly
shift the onsite optimization towards Yahoo! You may be asking, "Am
I about to lose my MSN rankings?" Good question and the answer
should be, "no" if you’re continuing on the right path.
Non-optimal levels in one area can be offset by increased strength in
another. While you are slowly shifting the onsite optimization away
from MSN's optimal levels you are continuing to develop more and more
links further strengthening your site in this area to make up the
difference.
After
a couple months you will notice your Yahoo! rankings improving. A
general timeline would be (assuming you are working diligently at it
and are targeting fairly competitive phrases with a new site):
2
- 3 months: MSN rankings secured
4
- 6 months: Yahoo! rankings improving
6
- 8 months: Yahoo! rankings secured and Google improving. Many
secondary phrases are attained on Google.
8
- 12 months: Google rankings secured.
The
timelines will be quite different if you are working with an existing
site (i.e. it has a solid history and a good PageRank already), are
targeting less competitive phrases, and a variety of other
considerations.
Conclusion
The
path is not an easy one (or SEO's would be out of their jobs) however
with hard work and perhaps more importantly, constant work it can be
done. Remember, there are currently 10 sites sitting on the first
page. Match what they did, do 10% better and you will be there too.
Resources
Below
are a few important resources to help you on your path to higher
rankings:
Total
Optimizer Pro
- Total Optimizer Pro is the tool we use for onsite and offsite
competition reporting including keyword density and backlink
analysis.
Google's
Webmaster Guidelines
- They're put out by Google but apply to all the major engines. Add
this one to your favorites and reference it often.
Search
Engine Watch
- Great source for news on the search engines in general. The also
give great coverage of the Search Engine Strategies conferences when
they're being held.
Note:
There are resources specific to each engine in the first three
articles in this series noted above. |