I gave away a little of today’s post in my last one when I addressed how to use keywords. Remember, I asked you if you could:
Use them effectively in your H1, or header title.
Use them in your H2, or header for a bullet or numbered list.
Use them in the body of your short, opening paragraph.
That’s a start. Choosing one keyword, and using it like I showed you in my last post is very important. Using too many keywords can often take away from the quality writing you want to share with your readers. That one primary keyword should be used as described above, and it should be used in the opening lines of text under your title.
More Keyword Effectiveness
Another important placement of your primary keyword is in the anchor text of a link. Here’s why:
The anchor text, or the different colored wording used when linking, provided the links connect (and you must always check), adds good authority.
Anchor text used for linking outbound to another, possibly higher ranking site, may naturally turn into an inbound link once a relationship between authors is established. Keyword-rich anchor text coming in on an inbound link is good for authority.
Anchor text using effective keywords for your internal linking between pages of your website is also good for your reader, and by default, you.
Posting comments on relevant blogs and forums will also bring links in from other sites, so you want to include good keyword-rich anchor text when you leave them.
You’re not completely limited to one keyword for all your content. If used too frequently, you can actually hurt your site, not help it. Shoot for using your primary keyword naturally 2-3 times on a page in the places we’ve talked about. Then, go back and see if another word or phrase that you’ve researched can be used as a subordinate, worked into the text of your content. Don’t use it more than a few times.
It’s imperative that you write for your readership; your potential customers, your existing customers, and others, such as information gatherers and peers in your business to business relationships. If you can do this fluidly, and maintain the quality of your content, you’ve got the basics of a recipe for success.
One more thing as I wrap up this series. Be a good steward of your site. Make sure to reply to comments and return links to readers who have helped you link. It’s not going to hurt your company to complement or agree with a competitor’s comments or product lines, and doing so can actually be helpful for more than just linking. Once relationships are built, and that takes some time, you may very well find yourself in a situation where you may be offered extra work. Sometimes a company finds it better to send extra work to someone they trust than to risk turning down work with no alternative for their customer. That could only be possible with effective link strategies.
We’d love to hear from you. Be sure to leave your comments or questions with a link to your company along with your name below. Here’s to your small business success!
I gave away a little of today’s post in my last one, where I addressed how to use keywords. Remember, I asked you if
you could:
- Use them effectively in your H1, or header title.
- Use them in your H2, or header for a bullet or numbered list.
- Use them in the body of your short, opening paragraph.
That’s a start. Choosing one keyword, and using it like I showed you in Part 4 is very important. Using too many keywords can often take away from the quality writing you want to share with your readers. That one primary keyword should be used as described above, and it should be used in the opening lines of text under your title.
More Keyword Effectiveness
Another important placement of your primary keyword is in the anchor text of a link. Here’s why:
- The anchor text, or the different colored wording used when linking, provided the links connect (and you must always check), adds good authority.
- Anchor text used for linking outbound to another, possibly higher ranking site, may naturally turn into an inbound link once a relationship between authors is established. Keyword-rich anchor text coming in on an inbound link is good for authority.
- Anchor text using effective keywords for your internal linking between pages of your website is also good for your reader, and by default, you.
- Posting comments on relevant blogs and forums will also bring links in from other sites, so you want to include good keyword-rich anchor text when you leave them.
You’re not completely limited to one keyword for all your content. If used too frequently, you can actually hurt your site, not help it. Shoot for using your primary keyword naturally 2-3 times on a page in the places we’ve talked about. Then, go back and see if another word or phrase that you’ve researched can be used as a subordinate, worked into the text of your content. Don’t use it more than a few times.
It’s imperative that you write for your readership; your potential customers, your existing customers, and others, such as information gatherers and peers in your business to business relationships. If you can do this fluidly, and maintain the quality of your content, you’ve got the basics of a recipe for success.
One more thing as I wrap up this series. Be a good steward of your site. Make sure to reply to comments and return links to readers who have helped you link. It’s not going to hurt your company to complement or agree with a competitor’s comments or product lines, and doing so can actually be helpful for more than just linking. Once relationships are built, and that takes some time, you may very well find yourself in a situation where you’re offered extra work. Sometimes a company finds it better to send extra work to someone they trust than to risk turning down work with no alternative for their customer. That could only be possible with effective link strategies.
We’d love to hear from you. Be sure to leave your comments or questions with a link to your company along with your name below. Here’s to your small business success!
Photo Credit: Flickr’s danielle_blue
Related Posts: Very Basic SEO 5 PT Series, Where Do You Find Your Keywords PT2, Using Keyword Research Tools PT3, How Do We Use Those Keywords PT4
Your SEO Company Can Actually Hurt Your Business
We offer many SEO services for our clients, and take time each day to learn and better understand the particular SEO strategies that help your business succeed online.
Optimizing for search isn’t just a once-and-done thing. It’s a long-term effort, employing some basics that tend to stay true, like quality keyword research and use and building sound back-links.
It’s also staying abreast of current online trends within different industries. Not every company will benefit from the same strategies, and NONE will benefit from anything less than a ‘white hat’ approach. If you think you’re getting into the gray zone, back away my friend. Reputations are hard to build.
Recently, comment spamming has become more of an issue for our clients.
When we manage a company’s entire marketing wardrobe, we include internal website management. We actually moderate comments for clients, and teach them how to determine quality comments from those that merely gum up or potentially invade the system. That gives us a pretty good insight into the dark world of black hat SEO. We’ve seen just about everything.
Yeah, I don’t think some of these businesses that comment on our client sites have any idea they look so slimy. It’s obvious they’ve hired someone claiming to understand SEO to build a back link structure based on comments. If you’re anything like me, you see those stupid comments and wonder if they understand what they’re saying and why they felt the urge to leave that comment on your blog post.
Let me show you how it works:
SEO claims aren’t all black and white, some of it dabbles in gray areas like this. What’s the problem with that, you ask?
Well, to say the least, wouldn’t you call that fraudulent?
Here’s how they look on a WordPress comment dashboard when they come in for moderation. I don’t believe So-and-So’s Service Company has any idea their SEO is leaving links like this on other websites.
Notice the poor use of language. Notice the meanness. Now, notice the website link! If I were the plumber who received the comment, I’d develop a relationship with this company and link to it if the comment wasn’t so stupid.
Now look at another one on the same blog, different post:
So we’ve got great location-based keywords, two different email addresses, one nasty comment, and one nice one with poor grammar. This person was paid by the amount of links he provided the SEO company, but did it hurt So-and-So’s Service Company to get spammed in the comment dashboard? Yeah, it did.
When your company gets marked ‘spam’, it’s an identifier to search engines. It’s a red flag, a blown whistle. Someone working at So-and-So’s Service Company would never have left such ridiculous comments, they would have had some relevant input to add to the post. They would have tried to reach out for dialog, not one-way useless jibberish.
Think about that when you leave comments or approve them in your dashboard. There exists online a monster with a black hat, and it wants to throw your business in the air like a baby in a pool, but won’t be there to catch you when you fall. Quick procedures with little forethought inevitably hurt, so avoid them at all costs.
If you’d like to learn more about our white hat SEO services, please call us today. Your business success is important to us, and we won’t compromise that with poor strategies. Learn how your company can benefit from a better incorporation of SEO services that will help new customers find you easily online and through mobile devices. And … by the way … we don’t comment spam.
For more information, go to Tweak Your SEO Regularly.