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The Magic Keywords
Teacher: Bob
McElwain
What will your potential visitor
enter into a search engine to find your site? If you can find
these magic keywords, phrases real people will use, then optimize
your pages for them, you will have taken a key step toward
generating hits. If you use the wrong words, you will waste
a good deal of effort and achieve next to nothing.
A friend of mine has been working
with an ex-IRS agent who can be of significant help to those
with tax problems. But he has decided to search for clients
only in the area in which he lives, the Santa Clarita Valley
in Southern California. It is a snap to get a #1 position on
most search engines with such phrases as Santa Clarita Tax
Expert, Santa Clarita Tax Solutions, and so forth. And he did
so. But he is not getting any hits.
The problem is in two parts.
Many people who live in the Santa Clarita Valley do not know
that they do. Even those who do tend to feel they live in Los
Angeles. Secondly, many do not know how to spell Santa Clarita.
So his first place position is meaningless, unless he turns
to advertising in locally circulated newspapers, magazines,
and newsletters. This can cost bucks, and he could have done
this without the effort it took to build his site.
Discovering what potential visitors
might enter to find your site is a challenging problem, one
often overlooked in advice regards position on search engines.
One way to begin is to list a few words you feel will work,
go to your favorite search engine, enter them, and see what
comes up. Any phrase that generates a lot of unconnected listings
is not likely a good candidate.
When you find something that
ranks your competitors high in the list, check out the sites.
Once the page has fully loaded, take the option in your browser
to view the page source code. Find the keyword meta statement
near the top of the page, and check those listed. Add as appropriate
to your list. Also check the page content to see which keywords
are sprinkled throughout it. These may be the most important
ones. In particular, see how the keyword you used to get this
page is handled. You may find clues as to how best to use it
on your page.
At this point you have found
and expanded your list to include keywords others use. So is
that it?
No! To stop at this point assumes
you have found what potential visitors will enter when they
want a product or service such as yours. But you do not *know*
these are the phrases real people will use. You do not know
you have the magic keywords.
I have a suggestion. It is not
a guaranteed solution, but I have used it successfully. It
goes like this.
I write a good description of
the product or service I want to sell, maybe half a page. I
describe what it is, what it does, and how one will benefit
from it. I write much as I would when producing an ad. However,
I do all possible to *avoid* the keywords I feel will be used.
Next I pester everyone I know,
asking what they might enter to find this product. And I give
it time; not everyone is as interested in my problem as I am.
When I have collected replies,
I go back and pester these same people with a list ranked with
the most common suggestions up top, including phrases I found
that were not mentioned. I ask them to pick four or five they
feel are best.
I have found some really neat
keywords in this way, phrases I would never have discovered
on my own. I hope you can make it work for you.
I sense this is an aspect of
search engine positioning often overlooked. It is easy for
me to pick a phrase related to your business and get you top
position on at least some search engines. It is meaningless,
though, unless people actually enter that phrase.
About the teacher:
Bob helps webmasters
grow their sites by showing them how to work smarter for more
fun and profit with less effort. He has been marketing on the
Web since 1993. Visit his newest site: http://SiteTipsAndTricks.Com.
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