Misconceptions About Search Engine Optimization
1. SEO only involves writing meta tags and working on
"invisible" code
Many people want to get a high ranking for various keywords or
keyword phrases, but if you look at the text on their web pages
you can hardly find these vital words. They come to a search
engine optimizer and think that he or she will sprinkle these
words into the meta tags and it will work like magic. This is a
major misunderstanding.
It is true that your main keywords and key phrases should be in
your title tag and your description meta tag, and even in the
keywords meta tag, but they must also appear on the page itself
and they must appear in some strategic places on that page. Some
clients say, "But I like the way it looks now." You may like the
way it looks, but the search engines will not recognize that
your page is truly about Electronic Widgets unless these words
appear in headlines on the page, in the opening paragraph, in
the file or domain name in link text and in the body text of
your page.
So, by all means if you already have copy that works, that can
convert visitors into buyers or otherwise accomplish the
purposes of your site, keep it. But you should also be ready to
listen to what the optimizer has to say about modifications that
will enable search engines to select your site when a potential
buyer makes a query for your key words or phrases.
2. Search Engine Optimization is Tricking the Search Engines
Some clients say, "Don't touch the visible copy but put in the
modifications invisibly." Using invisible text is something that
can get you banned from a search engine. The main purpose of
search engine optimization is to give your website the best
possible chance to come up in good positions when someone makes
a query for your keywords or key phrases. The key to doing this
is to design web pages and write copy that is intelligible to
search engines, without sacrificing the experience and
understanding of your end-users, the people who visit your site.
So, don't ask your SEO professional to try to trick the search
engines, but work with him or her to present your website in the
best possible way. 3. Search Engine Optimization deals mainly
with onsite modifications
Even if your website is well designed, has proper meta tags and
has keyword-rich text, this alone does not guarantee that your
site will rank high in competitive queries. All of these
factors, design, meta tags, and copy, are on-site factors.
Search engines certainly take them into consideration, but they
also value off-site factors such as how many high quality or
authoritative websites link to you. This means that hand-in-hand
with your on-site optimization you and your promotion team will
have to embark on a campaign to get links to your websites
coming from websites that are already highly regarded by the
search engines and by the public in general.
4. Search Engine Optimization works instantly
Don't expect to get a flood of traffic right after your site has
been optimized. Some search engines work in a fairly rapid
manner, but the main search engine at the present moment,
Google, is believed to have deliberately put an aging delay into
its algorithm. This means that it may take several months before
your site makes it into the top results for your particular
category, especially if it is a newly created site. During this
initial period you will also have to consider using other
promotional methods such as pay per click advertising, article
marketing, joint ventures, paid advertising in ezines and
offline advertising.
So, the next time you work with a search engine optimizer, let
him or her go about the task of making your website both user
friendly and search engine friendly.
About the author:
Donald Nelson is a web developer, editor and social worker. He
is the proprietor of A1-Optimization
http://www.a1-optimization.com and provides search engine
optimization, copywriting, reciprocal linking and article
marketing services.