Rebuilding a B2B Website? Incorporate SEO Now!

January 24th, 2012 Nick Stamoulis Posted in b2b website design, seo, website design No Comments »

On-site optimization has become more important than ever to capitalize on changing user search behavior and the new search algorithm updates. Aged and established B2B sites that had never done any previous SEO have the luxury of a strong search engine trust factor, something that only time can bring. A little onsite SEO and they see dramatic results relatively quickly. New B2B sites that build SEO right into their web design get off on the right foot and don’t have to worry about scrambling to catch-up down the road. If you’re looking to redesign or re-launch your B2B website, optimize it as you go!

Here are 3 benefits of incorporating SEO into the initial design process:


Your content is ready to rank.

Optimizing your content to incorporate important keywords is one of most important components of onsite SEO. If you create your content with SEO in mind, you’re already a step ahead of the game. As the search engines crawl and index your site, they will know exactly what kind of search queries your site matches, so you can rank well for targeted visitors from the get-go. You can start collecting data on your visitors and their search behavior from the day your site launches and know what keywords are working and what keywords aren’t much sooner than if you waited 6 months to optimize your content.

You can create a strong internal linking structure.
Developing an internal linking structure helps move your visitors along through your site, as well as helps boost the SEO value of internal pages. For most sites, your homepage is going to receive the lion’s share of the links, but the search engines don’t just rank homepages. Your internal products and services pages have the potential to rank as well. By linking from one page to another, you are spreading out the link juice that first page has earned to other pages, making them more important in the eyes of the search engines.

A good internal linking structure can also help increase your conversion rate. You want to lead your visitors down a predetermined path of conversion that keeps distractions at a minimum. By linking related pages together you can provide all the information your visitors need to make a purchasing decision without ever having to leave your site. It also helps keep your visitor focused—too many links and they don’t know where to go next!

You’ll be able to build SEO friendly URLs.
I can’t tell you how many sites I’ve come across that have the worst URL structure! It’ll be a string of numbers, letters and keywords that is far too long and has no SEO value. The problem is that because the URL structure is tied directly to the way the site was built there is no way to optimize them without redesigning the entire site! Save yourself some headaches down the road and build a URL structure you’ll be happy with for the life cycle of your site.

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Tips for Redesigning Your Website

September 6th, 2011 Nick Stamoulis Posted in Internet Marketing, site redesign, website design No Comments »

Your website is an incredibly important and powerful online tool. First off, it’s your business’s calling card. When someone arrives on your site, they way it looks will influence whether they stay or bounce out. Your brand is (at least it should be) well reflected in your website design. An outdated website creates a bad user-experience. Websites need to be fast, clean and well organized in order to convince your traffic that you are worth doing business with. We can all spot a website that hasn’t been updated since the late 90s (think scrolling banners, bad graphics, never ending pages of text, etc…), and your website at least needs to look current. Sometimes this means a major overhaul, and other times a few simple tweaks will suffice.

If you run an e-commerce site, you at least need to be routinely updating the site (even if that doesn’t mean doing a radical redesign). If you ran a spring special and are still promoting it in September, that doesn’t lend a lot of credibility to your site and doesn’t instill trust with your traffic. It makes you look like a lazy site owner who can’t be bothered to keep the information on their site accurate. Why should anyone trust their purchase to you?

You can make little tweaks to your site to keep it looking fresh and exciting without completely scrapping it. Think of the Google logo—it is constantly changing to reflect special occasions. It’s a simple change that makes for a new site design. Why not create a few versions of your logo and rotate them on your site to give it a new look? (Keep in mind that your brand still needs to be accurately reflected!)

One of the most important things to remember when redesigning your website is that you don’t want to take away from the goals of your website. Don’t let the messaging get overshadowed by your design! Design is very subjective. What one person likes another person may hate. You can’t please everyone, but you need to make sure every has all the information they need to convert, regardless of your design style.

If you are looking to do a major site redesign, I would recommend doing it in phases. If your site undergoes a dramatic change overnight, people might not realize that it’s still your site. When I redesigned this blog last year, my bounce rate went way up for the first few days. The site didn’t look like what people were expecting, so they thought they had arrived on the wrong site. You don’t want your traffic to leave because they think they’re in the wrong place. If you implement you changes over a longer period of time, you give your website visitors a chance to get used to the changes.

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