Search Engine Optimization (SEO)
SEO is the active practice of optimizing a web site by improving internal and
external aspects in order to increase the traffic the site receives from search
engines. Firms that practice SEO can vary; some have a highly specialized focus,
while others take a more broad and general approach. Optimizing a web site for
search engines can require looking at so many unique elements that many
practitioners of SEO (SEOs) consider themselves to be in the broad field of
website optimization (since so many of those elements intertwine).
This guide is designed to describe all areas of SEO - from
discovery of the terms and phrases that will generate traffic, to making a site
search engine friendly, to building the links and marketing the unique value of
the site/organization's offerings.
The
majority of web traffic is driven by the major commercial search engines -
Yahoo!,
MSN,
Google &
AskJeeves
(although AOL gets nearly 10% of searches, their engine is powered by Google's
results). If your site cannot be found by search engines or your content cannot
be put into their databases, you miss out on the incredible opportunities
available to websites provided via search - people who want what you have
visiting your site. Whether your site provides content, services, products, or
information, search engines are a primary method of navigation for almost all
Internet users.
Search queries, the words that users type into the search box which contain
terms and phrases best suited to your site, carry extraordinary value.
Experience has shown that search engine traffic can make (or break) an
organization's success. Targeted visitors to a website can provide publicity,
revenue, and exposure like no other. Investing in SEO, whether through time or
finances, can have an exceptional rate of return.
Why can't the search engines figure out my site without SEO help?
Search engines are always working towards improving their technology to crawl
the web more deeply and return increasingly relevant results to users. However,
there is and will always be a limit to how search engines can operate. Whereas
the right moves can net you thousands of visitors and attention, the wrong moves
can hide or bury your site deep in the search results where visibility is
minimal. In addition to making content available to search engines, SEO can also
help boost rankings so that content that has been found will be placed where
searchers will more readily see it. The online environment is becoming
increasingly competitive, and those companies who perform SEO will have a
decided advantage in visitors and customers.
How much of this article do I need to read?
If you are serious about improving search traffic and are unfamiliar with
SEO, I recommend reading this guide front-to-back. There's a printable MS Word
version for those who'd prefer, and dozens of linked-to resources on other sites
and pages that are worthy of your attention. Although this guide is long, I've
attempted to remain faithful to Mr. Strunk's famous quote:
"A sentence should contain no unnecessary words, a paragraph no unnecessary sentences, for the same reason that a drawing should have no unnecessary lines and a machine no unnecessary parts."
Every section and topic in this report is critical to understanding the best
known and most effective practices of search engine optimization.
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