Fixating on Where You Rank Can Lead to Bad SEO Decisions – Video Tip

May 3rd, 2011 Nick Stamoulis Posted in Marketing Videos, seo goals, SEO tips, SERP rank, website traffic No Comments »

Obviously every site wants to rank well for their chosen keywords. The better a site ranks, the more traffic it is likely to get from the search engines. But focusing solely on where your site ranks as the end-all-be-all goal of SEO can make website owners cut corners in order to artificially boost their rank. Taking such a narrow minded approach to SEO will actually limit the success of your website. The real goal of SEO should be to increase the amount of traffic being delivered to your site. Focusing on generating traffic, as opposed to rank position, will help ensure that you take a diversified, white hat approach to your SEO.

Watch this week’s SEO video tip from Nick Stamoulis here!

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Keywords Have to Match User Intent

April 27th, 2011 Nick Stamoulis Posted in Keyword Research, user intent, website traffic No Comments »

Let’s say you took the time to do thorough keyword research (or hired an SEO consultant to do it for you) for your website, a wholesale fruit distributor that sells to restaurants. After weeks of combing through hundreds of potential keywords, you narrowed it down to your top five choices for every page. The keywords accurately reflect the content of each page and you took the time to update the Meta tags, H1 tags and page content so the keywords seamlessly fit without disrupting the user-experience. Not too long after you optimized the site, it moved up in the search rankings for your choice keywords. Everything looks great…but you aren’t seeing any significant in traffic. Houston, we may have a problem.

There can be a variety of reasons that, even if you have good SEO working for you, your site just isn’t seeing the traffic increases you were hoping for (I mean a realistic increase). One thing to consider is that you carefully selected keywords don’t match user intent and therefore, even though your site is being pulled into the search results, it doesn’t contain the information the user is looking for. It’s not enough to just rank, people have to actually click over to your site. Sometimes it isn’t a simple thing to connect the two.

So you’re a wholesale fruit distributor, right? Well, a very common fruit is the apple, which you selected as one of your top keywords for your apple page. Here is the problem- if a user types “apple” into the search engines, do you really think they are looking for a wholesale fruit distributor? Chances are they are looking for Apple, of the Steve Jobs variety. In fact, if you type “apple” into Google, it’s going to be a few pages before you find any results that aren’t related to the computer behemoth.

If you wanted to go after “apple,” it would probably be better to make the keyword a long tail keyword and incorporate something like “apple fruit” and “apple fruit distributor” into your content. The difference is using the word “fruit.” Someone searching for “apple distributor” or “apple seller” is most likely looking for an authorized dealer of Apple products. While these phrases may have less people searching for them, it is going to help place your website into the search results of a more targeted user who is more likely to click through to you site.

Understanding user intent when they type in their search query is not something that you can learn over night. It can take years of getting used to small differences. For instance, in the SEO world, someone searching for “SEO consultant” is usually looking for a single person to work with. Someone searching for “SEO consulting” might be looking for an SEO consulting company, not just a one-man enterprise.

There is no rule about going back in to your keyword research and redoing it after a few months. Some pages may be right on target after the first round, others make take a little more editing to really hone in on the keywords that both matches the content and coincides with user intent.

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Turn Website Traffic Into Customers

December 29th, 2010 Nick Stamoulis Posted in Internet Marketing, website traffic, website traffic customers No Comments »

What good is all that website traffic if nothing ever converts into a customer? Would you rather have lots of visitors with no conversions or less visitors with higher conversions? You have to realize that everything starts with your website. Your website needs to be able to funnel the traffic in a way that will create some sort of action. That means conversion aspects in place, up to date design and lots of branding.

Here are some ways to turn your website traffic into customers:

Live Chat
The live chat features out there today are incredible allowing you to see where a visitor is going and where they came from. You can chime in and ask them a question or you could simply wait until someone needs a question answered and they ping you.

Shopping Cart Development
Shopping cart abandonment is a big problem for some websites and if the development is not in place to analyze or at least try to save the sale there could be a great deal of revenue lost over the long haul. Install efforts that can ask a customer a question if they decide to leave the shopping cart anywhere through the process or propose to them a discount or coupon in order to have them move forward with the transaction.

Easy Communication
Your website visitor should be able to communicate with someone at your business with little to no effort. They shouldn’t have to look for a contact form or seek out a phone number at any time because most people will not look for a way to communicate with you. Make it as easy as possible for them to be able to talk to you.

Clean Up Your Design
Sometimes all it takes is to really clean up your homepage design to entice people to want to work with you. You only have once chance to make a first impression and if your design and development is really off queue than people might just tune out right away.

Turning website traffic into customers is no easy step. It takes time and testing a variety of different efforts to see what works best. Overtime you will figure different tweaks that work better than others.

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