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SEO: How Do I Give My Website A Quick SEO Tune Up?
Cars need tune ups and
airplanes go into the hanger to get optimized for the next flight.
If you are a web owner that has the "upload it and leave it"
mentality, consider adding a weekly or monthly tune up to your
website. Ten to Fifteen minutes here and there can only do one
thing--make you more successful.
1. Start small with the meta
information.
a. Examine your
Title meta tag on each page. Do they describe the page contents? Do
they contain the right keywords to drive traffic to that page? Is at
least one part of the Title geo-specific? Example, "Attorney, Los
Angeles, CA" and not just "Attorney" or "Lawyer" or "My Law Firm."
b. Examine your
Description meta tag. Make sure that each page, if it is at all
possible, has a different meta tag description. Google does not like
repeated information.
2. Check your links.
Use a free online
program to make sure you don't have any broken links. Go to your
favorite search engine and type in "free link checker" and use one
that looks good to you.
3. Do a little marketing.
Go to your favorite
search engine and search for something you do or sell. Let's say you
are a dentist. Perform two different kinds of searches, global and
geo-specific.
Example: 1.
"dentist," global and 2. "dentist, (city)", geo-specific. Examine
the backlinks to make sure that you are also on the same business
directories as the top ranked websites. You do this quickly using a
"backlink checker." You can easily find one of your choice through a
quick search engine search.
Steps 1, 2, and 3
can be repeated daily, weekly, monthly--whatever your schedule
allows. The next 2 steps go a little deeper into your maintenance
plan.
4. Google Analytics.
It's free, it's
easy, and it's extremely useful. If you aren't paying an SEO company
to handle your website, you should definitely take advantage of this
amazing tool.
You sign up for it
here:
http://www.google.com/analytics/.
Google will give
you a unique code to put on each page you want to track. You don't
need to be a programmer to figure it out. It's just a few lines of
script that you paste into your webpage exactly where Google shows
you to do it.
It really is as
easy as it sounds. And what do you get? You find out how many people
are visiting your website, what keywords brought them to your
website, what websites referred them to your website, where they are
from, how much time they spent on your website and much more.
This is an amazing
free treasure trove of information. You will find out if the people
visiting your website are, in fact, the type of visitor you are
targeting. If not, all you have to do is tweak your Title meta tag
and your content to let the search engine know, for example: you
want people who were searching for "logo design" not "graphic
design" or "child therapist" not "couples therapy."
5. Alexa.
Alexa monitors
traffic levels for websites. While arguably a flawed system, it is
still used as a measuring stick to gauge your website.
Why should you
care?
Let's say you own a
flower store in Boston. You look up your competitor and find that
they have an Alexa ranking of 79,000 and you have one of 4,500,000.
This is a quick indicator that THEY and not YOU are getting all the
flower shop web traffic in the area. Additionally, the more traffic
you get, the more likely your organic search engine results will go
higher. Marketing activities that increase web visitors will give
you a better Alexa ranking.
Across the board,
SEO experts agree that if you download the "Alexa Toolbar" and visit
your website once a day, encourage friends and colleagues to
download the tool bar and visit each other's websites--that this
will increase your Alexa ranking, too. It's a simple thing to do,
but don't expect dramatic results. You can also flaunt your url in
Alexa forums, but the best use of your time is simply to try to get
targeted visitors to your website through standard marketing
channels. |