Overcoming Your SEO Fears
By: Eric Reyes
SEO and SEM are complex, but too compelling to ignore.
Ask nearly everyone and they'll say that search engine optimization is
intimidating. Search engine optimization – SEO for short – should
be a familiar term and practice for anyone or any commercial company with a
website. SEO is what you do to your website to get a higher ranking on search
engines,particularly Google,Yahoo and MSN.The higher you rank the more likely
someone will click through to your site and buy your stuff. Lately, information
and tips on just how to do that can fill a library.
"I don't think you can be in business without realizing that
search is a big part of the tool you need – you need to have a strategy
to be found," says John Battelle, search guru and author of the
book The Search: How Google and Its Rivals Rewrote the Rules of
Business and Transformed Our Culture.
And yet being found is still perceived as some sort of magic formula.
"SEO is not sorcery or deception; just something that requires diligent
research and staying on top of changes to the way search engines
do things," says Joe Balestrino, who runs the Mr. SEO website.
If someone enters the term pizza into Google, for example, the
first results are most likely the product of SEO. Pizza Hut, Domino's
and Papa John's have all made an effort to rank in the top three
spots on Google. Whether they remain there is something search
engine marketers will need to stay on top of. Search engine marketing
– SEM – are the tactics employed in order to rank higher,
be they through paid search or other nonpaid methods. It could be
by transforming a website's look and feel to gain higher ranking.
Take the term iPod and plug it into Google. What you get is a
sponsored (or paid) search result for Apple. The first nonpaid
result is also Apple. Not a coincidence. The Apple brand is so strong
that it ranks very high on unpaid results, and paying for a sponsored
result is just bet hedging.
People who are new to selling on the Web can get very confused
by the "science" behind SEO. Talk of relevant keywords, algorithms
and cost per click can terrorize Web sales newcomers. It's
an issue that continues to frighten brand-name companies as well.
Since the concept of SEO is only about eight or nine years old,
most companies have typically hired a chief marketing officer with
as little as two years' experience in matters of SEO.
Companies are also realizing that search engine marketing is a
full-time job and have created executive positions just to monitor
and enact SEM strategies. Companies that will do your SEO for
you are growing as well. Books and conferences continue to provide
advice whether you are a newbie or have been practicing SEO
for awhile.
While trying to demystify SEO for people who have gone to a
few dozen websites and have not been able to understand it, we
can't ignore the advancements in SEO and how big the market has become.
Search still finished first in online ad spend
in 2006, to the tune of 40 percent of total online
advertising revenue, according to the Internet
Advertising Bureau and PricewaterhouseCoopers.
This trend of 40 percent is predicted to continue
through 2010, according to eMarketer.
Back when there wasn't a name for SEO, the
tried-and-true way to rank high on search engine
results pages was using as many keywords as you
could in your content. If you sold cigars, putting the
word cigar in your articles and written materials as
many times as humanly possible would probably get
you a pretty high ranking. With the ascension of
Google and its algorithmic rankings, that doesn't
work so much anymore. Not to look too far under the
hood, but the Google algorithm that ranks pages basically
looks at who is linking to whom on the Internet
and the quality of those pages. The more high-quality
pages linking to you, the higher you get.
Most marketers employ a combination of SEO
and paid search, also called pay per click, which
results in a sponsored ad when someone searches
for certain keywords. For example, that's why searching
for iPod brings up Apple's URL in the sponsored
position and as the first search result – or the "natural"
search result.
Getting there has been considered by some as
rocket science. And there is a current debate in the
industry over whether SEO is too hard for the average
Joe to execute effectively. Some consultants who
do SEO say, of course, it's a very difficult science.
Critics claim that search gurus want to keep SEO
sounding complicated so that they will continue to
get your business.
"SEO is a new-school-of-marketing thought –
switching someone's beliefs is nearly as difficult as
converting someone's religion," says Todd Malicoat,
who consults on SEO from his StuntDubl.com site.
"I think that there's a complete misnomer that
SEO equals top position on the search engines," says
Dave Taylor, tech blogger at AskDaveTaylor.com.
"In fact, smart SEO is much more about being findable
for the specific keywords and phrases that will
drive customers to your site, rather than just a more
simplistic popularity contest."
That said, there is no denying that SEM efforts
continue to grow. Forty-two percent of advertisers
say that their SEM budgets are new, says the Search
Engine Marketing Professional Organization
(SEMPO), in its recent annual survey of marketing
executives. The survey also found that 83 percent
of advertisers prefer organic (or natural, nonpaid)
search, while 80 percent put paid search at second
place. Continued on Page 2...
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