Tag Archives: website

Tips to Improve Google Rankings for Small Business

Small businesses face an uphill battle online. Creating a website optimised for search engines that could eventually rank on Google for significant keywords can be daunting. Here are some tips to help SMEs get their site optimised.

1. Free SEO Tools Are Your Friend

Build a Site on the Cheap with WordPress

For small businesses that don’t already have a website, WordPress provides a great platform to build a search-friendly website quickly and on the cheap. It’s not something you’d use to sell online (for eCommerce, you’ll want something more substantial), but if you’re looking to disseminate information and get calls, then WordPress might just be for you. (FYI: Amplify’s Blog runs on WordPress and provides us with a cost-effective, search friendly blogging platform…)

Open a Google Webmaster Tools Account

Once you’ve built you’re website, a nifty SEO tool to keep tabs and enhance your website for search engines is Google Webmaster Tools. Among its many features, Webmaster Tools can give you a Google search bot’s view of your website – a quick and easy way to spot trouble and stay on top of your SEO game.

Google Webmaster Tools Screenshot
Oh! And the best thing about WordPress and Google Webmaster Tools – they’re free!

2. Do Keyword Research First

Now, before you leave this blog post and run off to build your WordPress website, think about the keywords you want your business to rank for. What words do you use to describe what you sell and (more importantly) what words do your customers use? Using those words as a base, it’s time to find out what words potential online customers are using. It’s time to start your keyword research using some free keyword tools like:

Keyword Research – A Great Way to Better Understand Your Business

From your keyword research you may learn that the keywords you want to rank for aren’t being searched by your customers, while other keywords are extremely popular.

A classic example is ‘health insurance’ vs. ‘health cover’. Insurers often refer to their product offering as ‘health cover’, but many more Australians search for ‘health insurance’ according to Google Trends.

Google Trends Screenshot

To Rank, Be Relevant

To improve your website’s ranking on search engines like Google, incorporate the most relevant keywords into your site’s copy. Remember, it’s always easier and cheaper to build a website based on keyword research than to change an existing un-optimised website.

3. Now, Build Your SEO Friendly Website

With the keyword research out of the way, now you you’re free to create your optimised WordPress portal. Create a well structured website with a few categories formed around some of your top keywords. Add keyword-optimised content sprinkled with keyword heavy page headings and subheadings and you’ll be well on your way to developing a user-friendly website built to rank on search engines.

4. Quick Keyword Optimised Content

If you think the easiest way for websites to rank highly on Google is to repeat the same keyword phrases again and again, you’d be wrong. Sure that might have worked back in the day when search engines weren’t as sophisticated, but nowadays, Google considers this practice ‘spammy’ and will likely penalise your site if it finds out.

Optimise Content – But Don’t Over-Optimise

The key to SEO is to use the words your audience is using, but not to overdo it! Rather, include important keywords throughout your content and make use of keyword optimised <H1> heading tags. Keywords should also be included in your website’s main category names, Meta data and even in your URLs. But again… don’t overdo it. If you’re in a pretty competitive online space for certain keywords, build specific pages (and back up subpages) around those keywords. It’s radical, but you may just have to go there!

Optimise Your Page Titles

An example of a simple keyword optimised Meta title for Brand X’s family health insurance page might be:

<title>Family Health Insurance Quotes – Brand X Family Insurance</title>

This title tells the search engine what your page is about with the inclusion of keywords. Common mistakes include having a Meta title that only contains the brand name across the entire website or an over-optimised Meta title which includes every variation of a keyword.

Note: Remember to lead with important keywords and to save your brand name for the end of the page title.

Things to Keep in Mind

These are just a few tips that can help your small business get a website up and running for search engines. Naturally, there are other factors that will help boost your your site’s Google ranking and no doubt you’ll encounter some hurdles along the way. But to get started quickly, we trust these quick tips will help your small business get a foothold online without breaking the bank.

Do you have any other SEO tips for SMEs to get a site up quick and on the cheap? Please feel free to share them below!

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The Return of the Splash Page?

With Google’s recent statement they were going to give increased importance to the loading times of a website’s home page (and penalise accordingly slow loading sites), could we be seeing the return of the Splash Page?

 

Here’s a favourite Splash Page of mine - Ginko Gardens

  

Ginko Gardens Splash Page

 

Splash Pages – Counter to ‘Usability’ and SEO best practice?


Much like hard copy brochure covers, splash pages typically contain very little content. Instead what you find is Flash animation, a striking image, a fancy tag line or a brief intro spiel advertising what the site is about. Throw in a logo, a keyword optimised footer and you’re done!

 

From a user’s perspective, splash pages are just one more click to make to get to the content they’re after. So they’re a big waste of time.

Splash Pages = Low Exit Rates

For website designers and online marketers, splash pages aren’t necessarily all bad news. For one thing, they can load pretty quickly (which given Google’s recent pronouncements is good news) and they usually offer a low exit rate.

 

Assuming few users leave the splash page and pursue their journey further into a website, that could have some SEO benefit. Search engines are known to value positively websites with low exit rates on their top web pages…

Is Google encouraging the return of the Splash Page?

So could Google’s latest pronouncement in favour of fast load times further encourage the use of splash pages? And doesn’t that run counter to usability best practice?

 

Imagine the web populated by useless splash pages. They would no longer contain Flash (as Flash increases load times), but they would be extremely content light to upload fast and would likely require users to click on to get to the content they’re after.

 

With savvy web marketers around… That scenario is not so hard to imagine.

 

Your thoughts?

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When to use AJAX… and when not to!

A client recently approached us with the plan to render most of their website in AJAX (otherwise known as Asynchronous JavaScript and XML), a web development technique used in online forms and other interactive web apps.

For Responsive Webpages and Forms

AJAX is designed to make web pages more responsive – it allows for a page to be ‘seamlessly’ refreshed with new data without requiring a reload and effecting the look and speed of the interaction. It’s fantastic in application forms where instant feedback or additional details may be required.

AJAX – Handle with Care!

But AJAX should be used with care. It can have a negative impact on a site’s search engine optimisation (SEO) and can prove problematic for disabled users. So here’s a quick breakdown of what AJAX is good at and what it’s not so good at…

What AJAX is good at:

  • Delivering small blocks of content – for small quick changes it works well.
  • Reducing the number of steps in a process – it’s great for forms with options (like application forms).
  • Delivering instant feedback such as validation of form fields and quick feedback on from submissions.

AJAX is not very good at:

  • Making content visible to search engines and any device that is not JavaScript enabled.
  • Bookmarking – once you’re some way down an application process in an AJAX rendered environment, you cannot bookmark individual steps like you could if each stage of the app is delivered in standard HTML.
  • Providing content for disabled users – the blind and vision-impaired are not able to access AJAX rendered content (and can have legal ramifications as in this example with Target in the United States and with the Sydney Olympics Website).
  • Providing speed benefits to users with slower machines as it puts the processing onus onto the user’s machine.
  • SEO: a typical implementation of AJAX is invisible to search engines. As you can replicate AJAX functionality with HTML, you’re better off using the latter for web content if you’re concerned about ranking on search engines.

To see an example of AJAX functionality, play around with the flight booking engine on Bezurk.com

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