One month in – How is your local SEO?
January 25, 2010 by admin
Filed under Search Engine Optimization
We’re basically one month into the year (well, give or take a few days). At the beginning of the year you probably made New Year Resolutions and now here we are, a month later… have you been following them?
The truth is, I don’t care that much if you haven’t been following your “watch what you eat” resolution or your “quit smoking” resolution, but what about your business marketing? If you own a small business and you’ve been trying to market it with local search engine optimization, how have you been doing?
I hope you’ve been busy with it, but there’s a good chance that it has lagged a bit. Sure, you had great dreams of a robust local SEM marketing plan as you approached 2010 but now that you’re here and your nose is to the proverbial grindstone, it might not be so easy.
So what can you do? Here are a few tips I’d suggest:
1. Try focusing on just one keyword at a time. Perhaps you’ve bitten off more than you can chew at once. There are a lot of facets to marketing and getting them all perfect the first time around is rare.
2. Get into a habit. That’s it. Find some local SEO thing that you like to do and get into a habit of doing it. Over and over. Once it’s a habit, add something else. But start with one small thing and make it a must-do thing every day.
3. Consider outsourcing. There are lots of marketing people out there who specialize in different facets of marketing and many business owners often outsource to them. Ironically local SEO is not something that is outsourced as often for some bizarre reason.
This Simple SEO Step Can Dramatically Improve Search Engine Placement for Your Local Business
November 6, 2009 by admin
Filed under Search Engine Optimization
Let’s say that you run a small business and you want your website to appear in searches for your local keyword. For example…
- Chicago Pizza
- Cincinnati Wine store
- St. Louis Dairy
- Bethesda Chiropractor
- Bethesda Maryland Lawyer
- etc…
One of the ways to do this is to create search engine optimized anchor text. Here’s the difference between the most frequent form of links and the superior SEO anchor text:
Let’s say you’re me. And let’s say that I’m marketing on other sites (i.e., forums, blogs, or article distribution sites). When I have the chance to include a link back to my site, I could simply link like this:
Visit LocalSEMExperts.com
When search engines see this, they think: “oh, that LocalSEMExperts.com word points to http://localsemexperts.com”… and so my site gets a “vote” which contributes to my search engine ranking. That’s what most businesses do when linking back to their site.
BUT if I instead linked my website address to the phrase:
Visit the Maryland Internet Marketing Agency
… then I get the “vote” for the link back to my site PLUS the search engines associate my website with “Maryland Internet Marketing Agency” and I can begin to appear for that phrase, too. So next time someone types “maryland internet marketing” or “maryland marketing agency” into the search engines, I’m more likely to appear.
These custom anchor texts give your local business a very powerful way to target your business to your local clients. So, identify a few keyword phrases you want to be searchable for (usually your locale and a main keyword) and create anchor links with those as I’ve shown above.
If you don’t want to do this work yourself, please see our Local Domination Service Packages
Local Search Engine Marketing Basics: Long Tail Keywords
October 21, 2009 by admin
Filed under Internet Marketing Basics, Search Engine Marketing
Local Search Engine Marketing Basics is an occasional series of blogs providing definitions and basic guidance on search engine marketing concepts.
Defining “Long Tail Keywords“
In order to understand “long tail keywords”, you need to first understand the “long tail” concept.
The “long tail” is a concept introduced by Chris Anderson in 2004 in which he talked about a phenomenon in business where there is an initial large amount of purchases of a product or clicks on a website (called “the short head”) but those began to trail off (the “long tail”)… however, the amount of the combined trail was equal to or greater than the short head.
In other words, a movie might make $50 million at the box office during its initial theatrical run. But it might make another $50 million or more in “cheap seat” cinemas, DVD sales, and international sales.
Read more about the long tail at Wikipedia.
This “long tail” concept has been broadened to the search engine marketing world.
Common keywords, like “marketing” or “restaurants” are the short head. Millions of people type these into searches every day. Not surprisingly, large companies invest millions of dollars each year to appear at the top of Google searches for these terms.
The local business may have a very challenging time appearing at the top of those “short head” searches. But, for local businesses, the long tail provides some serious possibilities!
Short head keywords might be “marketing” or “restaurants”. Long tail keywords are very specific. On their own they might be searched as much as the short head keywords, but the cumulative amount of search for long tail keywords is dramatic.
So, a local Maryland-based marketing company might forgo the short head keyword “marketing” in favor of several “long tail” keywords like “Maryland marketing”, “Maryland advertising”, “Maryland marketing company”. A Boston-based restaurant might not have a prayer of achieving a top Google ranking for “restaurant” but they have a much better chance of getting to the top of Google for a long tail keyword like “Boston restaurant”.
