May 19, 2012

Social Signals and Their Impact on Web SEO

Why go to the trouble of having a Facebook fan page for a business? The truth is that social media has become an incredibly important driver of website traffic. Large search engines like Google frequently list sites such as YouTube, Twitter, or LinkedIn among the top organic results for a business name or organization. Even if a business owner has spent tremendous amounts of money on paid advertising, they are more likely to see results by creating free and popular listings on the major social media sites.

 

Social Signals

Facebook and Twitter in particular have become excellent social signals for what is popular or respected. A business without these sites will have difficulty attracting respect or bolstering their SEO. Although Facebook may seem like a giant distracting waste of time, its ubiquitous nature makes it easy for people to share and find sites they like across a much wider platform than traditional advertising. People tend to trust the recommendations of their “friends” more than they trust random advertising. When they see their friends “like” a business on Facebook or “follow” a particular business on Twitter, they are more likely to rate that business as being worthy of further notice.

 

Produce Content With Value

There is an art to attracting visitors and creating a following. Each of the popular social sites have certain unwritten rules that business owners should observe when trying to boost their overall web traffic. The first is that blatant “salesy” techniques are abhorred. The business owner must entice people to a sale or special offer without being condescending or overly promotional of his particular business. Secondly, content placed on the sites must be of some inherent value. Jamming any channel with low quality filler material will only alienate visitors, and may in fact result in the loss of “likes” or followers. Finally, learning how to interact with visitors is key to maintaining a good public face and keeping web traffic high.

 

The Value of Social Interaction

Business owners should set aside a time each day to respond to any comments, messages, or other responses they receive from the social sites. Google ranks pages not only by their SEO, but also by visitor interaction. If a page receives a higher number of page hits, and the average page view time is high, the search engine will subsequently classify that site as having greater relevance and boost it in the search rankings, which will only lead to more page visits. Responding to user commentary is one way to keep page visits high. A business that never interacts with its customers will lose valuable momentum. People won’t want to visit nearly as often, and the comment thread will grow dusty. A business that interacts with its customers will only encourage more visits and longer page views.

 

Sending out positive social signals is increasingly an important part of every business. In the past, there were receptionists whose entire job consisted of interacting with the public. Now, social media has become the new public face of a business. It’s time to learn how to smile, digitally.

If you found value in this post, please share with your social networks and send some SEO love my way :)

Best,


Social Media Manager

President, Bee Social, Inc

What is keyword research and why should I bother?

The “why”of keyword research

You have a small business website for a reason, right? To attract customers and win business. But what good is a business website if no one ever sees it?

For any website to be successful it must generate traffic. There are many potential traffic sources available (email, social media, and YouTube to name a few), but only one consistently puts you in front of prospects at precisely the moment they’re looking for you: search engines.

Unfortunately, competition for search engine traffic is fierce and winning clicks is no easy feat. To succeed you’ll need strategy, patience, and a little thing we call search engine optimization (SEO).

What is a keyword?

A keyword is essentially any word or phrase you use when searching with a search engine. The search engine does its best to match your words with the words on websites. The mathematics involved are complicated (and way over my head), but the first link you see in the search results should be the best match for your keyword, followed by the second best, and so on and so forth.

What does this mean for your business?

In order for you to be deemed the best match for you customers’ keywords your website must use the same words they do. SEO involves the strategic placement of keywords throughout your website (and on external websites that link back to you). You can discover which words and phrases you should be optimizing for by conducting keyword research using a tool such as Google AdWords Keyword Tool.

Keyword research and website copywriting

As previously mentioned, search engine optimization means using specific keywords in specific places on your website. Your web developer might populate some of these for you (e.g. URLs, title tags, page descriptions, and image alt tags). But one facet of SEO that confounds many webmasters is the proper usage of keywords in website content (i.e in the text that your customers actually read).

Some writers make the mistake of overusing keywords to the point of incoherency. Others completely ignore keywords, missing an opportunity to improve their website’s search result rankings. But the Goldilocks of SEO copywriting is to use keywords as often as they make sense, and no more.

A few tips for writing with keywords:

  1. Use keywords in headlines and subheadings.
  2. Use keywords in bullet lists.
  3. It’s okay to use variations of and synonyms for your keywords.

For the the best results hire a professional SEO copywriter to write your content for you. Writers in this niche specialize in creating targeted, marketable, SEO content that is tailored to your business and your audience.

 

 

This article was written by SEO copywriter and Internet marketer Alexa Steele. Also known as The Website Wordsmith, Alexa can provide you with search engine optimized content for your website, blog, syndicated articles, landing pages, and newsletters. You can find more on SEO and Internet marketing on Alexa’s blog.

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...
ViperProof by ViperChill