Posts Tagged ‘Page Optimization’

Patience and Persistence

February 4th, 2011

Just be patient.  No one likes to hear this phrase, especially not while waiting for results from their new business. However, patience is a key to having a successful business. Now, don’t misunderstand me. Patience doesn’t mean you just sit around and wait for the dough to come rolling in. Life doesn’t usually work that way unfortunately.  I mean persistently working to improve and grow your business. Marketing and sales for a new business are a lot like an experiment. You change one thing at a time, track your progress, and then tweak the small things that need to be changed.

A Yahoo business article says that growth for new businesses is slow in the beginning for a two reasons. 1. It takes shoppers a little while to know your business is out there. 2.When they get to your site it takes them a little while to decide if they should order from you. They wonder if you are a legitimate online business. They don’t want to be ripped off. Can you blame them?

But, as you grow and word of mouth cycles, you’ll gain loyal customers. Just be patient and do all you can in the mean time to encourage and reward their trust.

Some  Improvement Ideas to Make While Waiting:

1. Find Ways to be Seen Online

Use seo to optimize your website. Check out these seo tips for some help knowing what to change about your site.

Participate in social media like Twitter, Facebook, and Digg.

Post your products in various locations, so that more eyes will see your products.

2. Research New Product Possibilities

Look online and see what’s selling. Subscribe to blogs and newsletters about running a business.

Know as much as you possibly can about your product.

3.Improve Your Website and Postings

Write unique product descriptions and have a quality picture posted on your website.

Produce content that will draw people to your site. If you sell sports gear, why not write about players, trades, and the  championship or playoffs.

Make your website easy to navigate. Test it out on friends and family to see if it is easy to navigate.

4. Develop a good relationship with your supplier. They’ll be more likely to help you if you’re not a pain to them.

I’ll Be Watching You

February 23rd, 2010

Always Watching

Always Watching

In the immortal words of Sting (and The Police), every breath your site takes, every move it makes, you need to be watching it. It may sound silly, but every minor change that you make to our website can have drastic effects on your website and the traffic which you receive, so it is very important that you’re watching your site diligently, and determining what is doing what. Is your new PPC campaign flourishing, or is it dead in the water? Are people grooving on that new logo you’ve got there, or is it having them running scared? If we’re not paying attention to this, we’re wasting time, and we’re losing money… both in costs we’re paying out, and in revenue we’re not capturing! There are a few key points to being vigilant, which we are going to go through this week!

As an overview, there are two main points which we will be focusing on: First and foremost, we’re going to walk through what exactly it means to ‘track’ what we’re doing. Secondly, and equally as important, we’re going to talk about ways to record what all of that means.

A lot of website tracking and ‘maintenance’ is not something that anyone is going to ‘force’ us to do; the responsibility falls on us to take care of our site, and make sure that what we’re working on and what we’re doing to market it is having any effect, be it positive or negative. We’re not going to have someone pushing us to keep following through with these steps, and they may seem mundane, but proper, diligent review of our site on a week to week or day to day basis is going to make the difference between a site that is doing well, and a site that is struggling to get off of the ground!

Dotting Your I’s and Crossing Your T’s: The Art of Business Professionalism

February 12th, 2010
Check Your Spelling

Check Your Spelling

When we’re first building our website, the mantra is “Content is King”. We NEED some content, but on the forefront of everyone’s minds is not typically “how does our content LOOK?”. Spelling and grammatical errors that we might excuse in a quick email are simply unacceptable on our website. Our buyers are expecting a certain standard of excellence from our site, and if we fall short, they’re going to fall off and go elsewhere.

Before you start panicking, all this does not mean that each and every bit of our website needs to be poetry, or the beginnings of a Master’s thesis. On the contrary, if we follow a few simple rules, our site is going to look much better, and we’re going to hopefully calm down those skitterers just itching to turn and run away!

Bouncing that Bounce Rate: Tips and Tricks to Website Improvement

February 11th, 2010

You’ve got your site up, and everything looks to be going good. Your products are loaded in, and the test order has gone through green: the engines are running, we’re ready to drive off into the sunset.

And then a week goes by, and we have no sales.

Two weeks go by, no sales.

Three weeks, and we’re in a panic.

Four weeks… something is DEFINITELY wrong.

Going into Google Analytics, we see that our bounce rate is through the roof. Ninety percent of our visitors are turning tail and running away! Our products are good, our content is optimized? Why are people fleeing faster than you can say “Bubonic Plague”?

Proper optimization of a website and creation of content are both just the start. Part of building a professional site is creating a professional image for your site. If your site looks like that geeky kid Francis in your neighborhood built it in his spare time, you’re not going to keep a lot of attention. You’ll see those kind souls every now and again that will take a chance on a site that may not be the prettiest, or the cleanest, but by and large if people don’t see a professional-looking website, we’re not going to see any of their money in sales!

In our next articles, we’re going to go into two of the most common causes for a ballistic bounce rate: grammatical errors that would make our old English teacher cry, or a banner that looks to have been a crash course in the basics of MS paint. Stay tuned throughout the week, and let’s find a way to put these problems to bed as soon as possible, to start making that site as successful as possible!

The Whole is the Sum of the Parts

February 5th, 2010
The Whole is the Sum of the Parts

The Whole is the Sum of the Parts

When it comes to Search Engine Optimization, one of the most common failings is focusing a lot on optimizing your home page content, but letting the ball drop on your other content pages. The home page optimization is very visible, but other page optimization, such as category pages, or even business pages, such as a frequently-asked-questions or About Us pages, usually comes up a bit short.

The important thing to remember, as we have talked about before, in On Page Optimization, you are going to make it or break it based on your keywords, and while your home page is the obvious contender here, we cannot neglect the rest of the site. Meta Keywords should be plotted out for all of your pages on your website; it may seem like a silly little thing to optimize your “Rice Cooker” product page around the keyword “Rice Cooker”, but the effect it can have on your ranking is nothing to laugh at!

There are naysayers that will try and convince you that the effort required is not worth the reward; in every case, you will want to ignore them! Success online is going to be based on doing all the little things, no matter how inconsequential they may seem. Proper optimization of a site is going to require focused effort all throughout the website, not a haphazard application here and there.

You have to look at your website not as compartmentalized parts, all together, but not really a single, cohesive unit. A website is the sum of all of its parts; if you have great optimization on some pages, but little to nothing on others, its going to hurt us overall. You want to have the same attention and care paid to each individual page, and from there you’ll be able to start seeing better results. It is easy to let things slip when it comes to page after page of content, but always remember the path of least resistance, and seemingly most ease, often is the path with the least reward!

On Page Optimization

January 27th, 2010

There are a few tricks to learn when optimizing pages but, for the most part, it’s not terribly difficult once you pick a strategy and stick with it. There are a few different strategies and, to be honest, I don’t believe anyone but Google really “knows” which strategy for page optimization is going to produce the best results. My advice, do your research, and pick a strategy that you believe will work best for your company. If it doesn’t work, you can try another one.


When optimizing for a keyword or keyword phrase within an article, industry experts suggest optimizing the word anywhere from three to five percent. Which means that for every one hundred words in your article that keyword or phrase appears three to five times. However, no matter the importance of repeating your keywords or keyword phrases, I suggest writing useful content not simply content to rank your website.


I cannot stress the importance of a well-optimized title enough. When you search for any keyword or keyword phrase, you will find that the highest ranking results will have all or part of the keyword or keyword phrase in the title. If your keyword is not in your title, your ability to rank just went down automatically. I cannot stress enough the importance of creating a well-optimized title.


Some people will tell you that meta data doesn’t do anything for website optimization. I say, why not take the opportunity to optimize for your keywords or keyword phrases. Some people say that using optimization in keywords is overrated and that the search engines do not pay any attention to them anymore. Well, I would like to say that I think they do matter and I have noticed a difference between the two ideas as I have tried them both out for a while.


Long story short, get your keywords and keyword phrases out there; it’s very important. You can still write content that doesn’t include your keyword phrases but it will be less likely to be ranking the way you would like it to rank.