Amazingly, these same three steps are fundamental to developing a solid
search engine optimization strategy. So what's the problem? If you complete the
steps with SEO tunnel vision - without giving any thought to your visitors along
the way -- you may be doomed to repeat everything you've already finished.
Here's why:
Creating An Attractive, User-Friendly Design
Many times, sites designed strictly to rank highly in the engines neglect the
design process. You can have a site that's at the top of the search engine
results pages (SERPs) and gets a ton of traffic, but causes visitors to
immediately click away due to lack of trust. If this is the case, you'll need to
change some or all of your design elements, which could possibly have a bearing
on your rankings.
Organizing An Effective Navigation Structure
I've read about companies who develop navigational structures specifically for
the engines. They tell their clients to avoid cross-linking between certain
pages or areas of the site so as not to "confuse" the search engines. Whether it
confuses the search engines or not, if you want to make more sales,
cross-linking and up-selling are excellent strategies that make it easier for
your visitors to find -- and buy -- what they need. If you're ranking highly but
not making sales, it may mean you need to radically improve your navigation,
which could change your rankings.
Writing Persuasive Copy That Informs and Sells
Keyword-stuffed, third-grade-level copy that is repetitive and boring won't make
sales. If you've slapped up any old copy thinking you would improve it later,
you're probably in for a rude awakening. Copywriting is a pivotal element in
search engine optimization. Unless you're having great success with a massive
linking campaign, copywriting will play a major part in your rankings. Changing
copy can (and almost always will) cause either a negative or positive change in
positioning. Oftentimes, pages fall, then return with higher placement -- but
not always. If your copy is preventing your site from converting, it needs to be
changed immediately even if that means a temporary drop in positioning.
The search engines do not make your site successful. The search engines don't
buy anything from you. All they do is send traffic your way. Although there is
no discounting the value of free traffic from the engines, you can get traffic
from countless other online and offline sources. Your site is what makes you
money and it needs to be developed for your visitors. But by focusing strictly
on SEO, it is highly likely you'll be forced to change most of what you've built
in order to improve conversions later on. That means spending more time and
money on something that could have been turning a profit by now.
Copyright 2007, Karon Thackston, All Rights Reserved
Karon is Owner and CEO of Marketing Words, Inc. who offers
targeted copywriting, copy editing & ezine article services.
Click here to learn to
write your own powerful copy.