Useful Advice On How To Improve Your Website
"Getting On
Page One Is Easy...Getting The Sale Is The Hard
Part."
Written by: Roger J.
Burke
Just how difficult is it to develop and promote
a domain that will rank on page one or two of
all the majors?
Well...like anything, that
depends upon many factors.
You can buy your way to
the top, of course, with pay-per-click SEs. That
can get very expensive, and may well be beyond
a person's budget. At the moment, however, there
aren't too many pay-per-click SEs. (You can expect
that technique, just quietly, to grow and get
more expensive.)
You can get what's called
a "sponsored" listing to appear at the
top (or side) of page one when certain search
terms are entered. That can cost, too.
A lot of sites, I'm told,
resort to cloaking techniques i.e. presenting
a certain page to each SE and then redirecting
the prospect to the real page. SEs don't like
that, I'm also told, and rightly so. When, f'instance,
was the last time you looked in your Yellow pages
for a certain business, called it on the 'phone
and then found out that you were connected to
something entirely different?
You wouldn't stand for that,
nor would I. Nor would anybody. Ditto the SEs
regarding cloaking (although, just quietly again,
I understand that there are inherent problems
in exposing those who cloak).
On the other hand, appropriate
advertising is good - good for you and me, good
for business. Too much, from the same source however,
is tiresome. It batters the senses, sometimes
to stupefaction, almost. Many sites seem to revel
in that, with hundreds of doorway pages in areas
you would not suspect, yet which lead you to the
same old stuff.
Spammers delight in that
tactic, so I understand, but SEs are developing
techniques to root them out. And so say all of
us, right?
So, let's put aside cloaking
and zillions of cloned pages...bandwidths shouldn't
be burdened with bandits, right? ;-)
So...getting back to the
question: just how can any regular Joe or Jane
develop a website that will rank high, without
resorting to trick or treat tactics (or sponsored
/ pay-per-click payments)?
Actually, it's easier than
you think - provided certain limitations are recognized
and accepted:
1. Whatever you're selling, sell one product per
domain name.
2. Have a domain name, if possible, that describes
your product explicitly.
3. Have a TITLE for your main page that enhances
and specializes your product even further.
4. Have a "killer" headline, as the
first sentence in the BODY, that talks only to
your targeted group of prospects. That headline
is also the META Description you must use.
5. From the BODY of your sales copy, extract the
most significant and repeated words or phrases
as the Keyword META tags to use in the HEAD.
Do all of that, and you
have a fighting chance.
If you can differentiate
your product as unique, develop a website that
targets only those people who would be interested
in that product, and then construct pages that
clearly demonstrate to SEs the quality of the
content, I can assure you that your page(s) will
rank very high.
You won't be on page one
or two for every search for a product that is
similar to yours. But, if your targeted prospect
uses your specific keywords for your niche product,
your chances of being on page one or two are very,
very good.
And, it doesn't matter whether
there are nine hundred or nine million pages out
there, with similar products!
Now comes the really hard
part...
Next time you punch in any
set of search words or phrases and then follow
the links to the sites on page one of your favorite
SE, critically assess each page you view.
Do you "buy" from
the first page you view? I doubt it - that would
be very rare. Especially if you had my recent
experience - I clicked on number one and got back
a 404 Page Not Found! Sheesh, can you believe
that (a problem with the SE's housekeeping, perhaps)?
Anyways, I persevered and
finally got to what I wanted waaaay down in the
list. Maybe my search term should have been more
specific? Whatever...I had to look through a few
sites before I got to one that was talking to
*me*.
That's crucial.
When you walk into a store,
you expect the sales help to talk to you, and
to answer your needs and wants. You would expect
no less from any website that is trying to sell
you its particular product or service.
In fact, you'd probably
want more! And that's what you've got to deliver
to your own prospects.
If you're good with words,
you can construct your own sales copy. In fact,
you should construct your sales letter before
doing anything about a website page.
If not, hire a professional
to do it for you. When you're satisfied with that,
only then should you construct your web page(s).
If you do that, you have
half a chance of actually getting the sale when
your prospect finds your link on page one or two!
Now...if you don't have
a niche product or service, then you'd better
get one from some-one else or develop one yourself.
But, just remember the five
points above when you've got your niche product
and your sales copy ready.
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