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Search Engine Submission Techniques on Google
by Ivana Giardi
The orientation guide for businesses getting started online Over the years
of its existence Google gained a well-deserved reputation as the top
choice for internet users. Providing a comprehensive coverage of the web
and returning searched queries with great relevancy in less than a second,
Google certainly is the internet’s front door.
Because of the popularity of this search engine, it is critical to get
your website listed in Google and achieve a high ranking in search
results. There are two types of listing you will find in Google search
results: free listings and sponsored listings.
» Free listings
To have your website listed on Google search results for free you firstly
need to submit your website to be indexed at
http://www.google.com.au/addurl.html. Google is a spider-based search
engine that automatically visits web pages to compile its database. After
you submit your web site, your site will be first stored in a "temporary"
database. Then Google will send a "spider" in a regular time to "visit"
your web site to decide whether it should be indexed. This process is
called Search Engine Submission.
However, successful submission does not mean your website will necessarily
rank well for particular terms. Making your website Google friendly in
order to achieve a good ranking can be done through Search Engine
Optimization (which will be explained later on in this article).
» Sponsored Listings (Google AdWords)
Google also sells sponsored listings through its advertising program
Google AdWords. Those sponsored listings appear on the top and on the
right-hand side of regular search results.
Once you sing up for Google AdWords program at www.google.com/ads, your
listing appears on Google almost instantly and the impact on your website
traffic and sales is practically immediate.
Sponsored listings often represent a great alternative for new websites or
websites having difficulties to get indexed by Google.
1. Search Engine Optimization (SEO)
The majority of internet users search information by using search engines.
A query on Google often reveals thousands or even millions of matching web
pages. Therefore, it is difficult for the user to find your website if it
is not listed between the top 10, maximum 20 search results.
The purpose of search engine optimisation is to make a website’s content
highly relevant in order to get listed on top of search engine results for
free. This can be a quite daunting task so let’s take a look at some key
optimisation guidelines:
1.1 Selecting and Positioning Target Keywords
People search for stuff on the internet by typing certain words in the
search box. Words that are relevant to your website are your target
keywords. Your job is to make sure those target keywords appear on the
crucial locations on your website such as across your title, meta tags,
and body of your web page.
There is a good source of optimisation tips at
http://www.dynamicwebsubmission.com/tips.html.
Tip: Your target keywords should include at least two words. This is
simply because lots of websites are relevant for a single word, for
example “flower”.
1.2 Relevant Website Content
Imagine search engine as a library and your website as a book. The library
only wants good quality books to be included in its collection. The
content of your web site is therefore the most important element for
search engines to terminate if your web site will be listed and ranked
well.
If your web site contains only images, flash, javascript etc, it will be
ignored by the search engines because they can’t read those graphics.
Please remember to provide valuable information not just “good looking”
image. Whenever possible, use HTML text on your web pages that will make
your site more relevant.
1.3 Link Popularity – Google Page Rank
Every major search engine uses link popularity as a part of their ranking
algorithms. Google’s algorithm -- Page Rank – is a quite complicated
mathematical formula that determines a relevancy of web pages.
Very simply explained, it uses the structure of the links between web
pages to assign a score of the page that reflects its importance. In
effect, each link from one page to another is counted as a “vote” for the
destination page, and each page’s score depends on the scores of the pages
that link to it. But those pages’ scores, in turn, depend on the scores of
the pages that link to them, and so on.
In conclusion, link popularity of a website is determined by:
The number of relevant web sites that are linking to your site The
popularity of those web sites The higher the relevancy of the website the
better is its listing in the Google results.
From what has been said, it is quite obvious that for brand new websites
it may take about a month before they get listed and ranked well by
Google. As mentioned earlier, paid listing can provide an excellent
solution to cover this “waiting list” period. Google will set your website
live within few hours and the impact on your site traffic is practically
immediate.
2. Paid Search Advertising (Pay-Per-Click, PPC)
This unique form of search engine advertising gives your website an
excellent opportunity to achieve guaranteed top position on the search
results. Paid listings are used not only for websites that are not indexed
or waiting to be indexed. They are (or should be) widely used by marketers
in the overall internet marketing mix when launching new products,
targeting a specific market segment or enhancing sales of a product that
has not been doing well lately.
The introductory to Paid Search Advertising Basics is explained in details
at http://www.apexpacific.com/newsletters/nl1004.html#2.
Since the launch of Google AdWords in February 2002, Google has clearly
become the main provider of paid search advertising. Because Google is
special in everything it does, let’s take a look at Google AdWords more
closely.
2.1 How Google AdWords work
As mentioned earlier, Google’s sponsored listings appear on the top and on
the right-hand side of regular search results.
The basic concept of PPC bidding is that advertisers bid for particular
search terms (= keywords). The highest bidder gets his/her advertisement
displayed at the top of the sponsored listings next to Google’s search
results. The second highest bidder gets the next sponsored listing and so
on.
However, Google Adwords work differently than most of the other
Pay-Per-Click search engines such as Overture, FindWhat etc. Google does
not simply put the highest bidder’s advertisement at the top of the list.
It also ranks the advertisements according to their popularity. Therefore,
if more people click on an advertisement it will get higher ranking and
better position.
In conclusion, your ad's position is determined by following factors:
your daily budget maximum cost-per-click your ad's actual click through
rate and your average ad’s position. From the above, you can not directly
control your ad's actual click through rate and average position.
Therefore managing your keywords on Google AdWords is a big challenge and
usually consumes a great deal of time.
If you do not manage your keyword bids properly, you will waste your
advertising money on Google Adwords. A good way to get around this is to
use automated bid management software available on the market today. In
general, those tools allow you to control your ads listing based on rules
you specify.
When you shop around you will notice that there are very few tools that
support Google AdWords. From those they do, there is one available for
free trial at http://www.keywordbidmaximizer.com/bidmaximizer.
2.2 Pay-per-click copywriting tips on Google
The purpose of your advertising on Google is naturally to increase your
sales. Since you are paying for each visitor landing on your website you
obviously wish to convert them in paying customers. Please keep in mind
that more important than number of impressions (=clicks) is the conversion
rate. To drive your conversion rate to the maximum it is advised to
pre-qualify the click with a well composed ad copy. Below are some tips to
help you improve your ads:
» Specific and Relevant Keywords
Be specific and relevant to your business and offers. Avoid general
keywords – they generate more ad impressions but tend to be less relevant.
For example, rather than “flower” consider “birthday roses bouquet”. More
targeted keywords attract more qualified buyers.
Also, your can increase your ad exposure – without sacrificing relevance –
by adding alternate phrasings, spelling variations, plurals and singulars,
and keywords similar or related to those on your master keyword list.
» Target geographical segments
Consider using geographic keywords to target a local or regional audience.
If you sell roses in Tokio, replace “roses” with “roses Tokio”. This way
you will avoid any irrelevant pitches to search users in New York and
Sydney. You can also target your campaign by country and by language to
help focus your message on the audience you wish to serve.
» Target ad delivery with keyword matching options
Google offers different keyword matching options to refine your targeting:
Broad match - displays your ad when all the words in your keyword appear
in the search query. For example for the keywords “birthday cards” your ad
will be shown if users search for keywords “birthday” and “cards” in any
order, and even if the query includes other terms.
Phrase match - displays your ad when all the words in your keyword appear
in the same order, for example “birthday cards”. Your ad will also be
shown with other terms in the query like “birthday cards for girls” but
will not be shown if users search for “cards for birthday”.
Exact match - displays your ad when all the words in your keyword appear
in the same order, and without any other terms in the query.
Negative keywords – excludes searches for which your ad would be
irrelevant. For example, if your keyword is “birthday cards” and your
negative keyword is “-girls”, your ad will not be shown if users search
for “birthday cards for girls”.
Choose carefully landing pages
If users are interested in your offer they click on your ad. It is your
job to send them to a relevant destination page to find out more about
your product or service. When tailoring your ads to a specific audience,
be sure that the destination page on your site fits the goal of the
campaign.
3. Optimization Versus Paid Advertising
Paid search advertising offers companies an excellent solution to drive
traffic to their websites almost immediately. From the short term
approach, pay per click presents a smart way to cover a gap between
campaign launch and achieving desired rankings results. The long term
approach suggests pay per click as an alternative in situations when a
website shows a poor performance in the search results in general.
However, once you stop paying for the positions, the traffic stops.
Search engine optimization is a fundamental part of internet marketing
mix. It requires constant updating and continuous attention of the website
content for solid, long-term effective results.
Therefore, if you use paid search advertising and search engine
optimisation together as an integrated strategy, you have an excellent
chance to reach the greatest number of online users.
About The Author: Ivana Giardi is Marketing Director at Apex
Pacific, developer of smart internet marketing solutions to help companies
increase sales and profitability online. If you would like to learn more
about Paid Search Advertising, visit Apex Pacific at www.apexpacific.com
or email Ivana at marketing@apexpacific.com.
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