Ever see a website that seems to speak a foreign language...in English? We
encounter many SEO client websites that rely on buzzwords in the page copy to
get the word out about their product. The problem lies with visitors who may not
be familiar with those terms. This means optimizing with buzzwords may not be
the best way to gain traffic. If your prospective visitors are not searching for
those terms, how do they find your website?
Start
With The ObviousYou really need to know your industry. Study
your prospective visitors--who your target audience is. If your prospective
visitors are highly technical and work and talk in “buzzword speak”, no problem.
But if you also want to attract prospective visitors who may not be immersed in
the terminology used in your business, you must compensate by optimizing with a
wider array of targeted keywords.
How Do I Find
All Those Keywords?Start researching. Yes, it’s going to take a
little work on your part to analyze what keywords you may be missing out on.
Monitor website visitors who may use other terms to find your website. Track the
keywords used by visitors through your log reports. Most log statistics programs
have a report showing the keywords used by searchers to find your website. Using
your server logs or log statistics program for keyword information is a good way
to get a better picture of how visitors are finding your website. Use Overture’s
keyword tool
(http://inventory.overture.com/d/searchinventory/suggestion/)
or Wordtracker (http://www.wordtracker.com)
and note the words used on your competitors’ websites. Using these, or similar
tools, type in your buzzwords and see what variations come up. Competitor
websites may use slightly different wording than you when writing copy for their
pages. Visit their websites and learn all you can about how many ways your
business can get its message across. Read online articles; visit business
newsgroups and forums. Find research information through industry websites and
companies that specialize in producing reports about your
industry.
Help Search Engine Robots Do Their
JobSearch engine robots are just automated programs. Their
concept and execution is relatively simple: search engine robots “read” the text
on your pages by going through the source code of your web pages. If the
majority of the words in your source code text are buzzwords, this is the
information that will be taken back to the search engine
database.
It’s Obvious (the “DUH”
factor)Ok, so it’s obvious to you what your industry buzzwords
are. But don’t discount the simpler versions of those catchy words. Focus also
on some lesser used terms and make a list of additional keywords you might be
able to add. Clear, precise copy that catches the visitor’s attention and tells
your story is generally
more effective in the long run.
Compromise - Mix SEO Keywords and BuzzwordsYou
don’t want to change the copy on your webpages? This is often a problem with
business websites. Once you have your keyword list of other-than-obvious words,
work at fitting them into the page text carefully. You want them to make sense
with the context of the web page. Use these new keywords as many times as “makes
sense” so they do not sound spammy. Read your copy out loud or have a colleague
read your copy to get a sense of how it might sound to a website
visitor.
The Bottom LineIt
should be easy enough to see how those extra keywords are producing for you.
Keep track of your log reports and see if those new terms start showing up in
your reports. Test a variety of keywords, then test again to see if visitors are
staying on your website, moving through your individual web pages, or clicking
away. Create specific pages using those keywords as a test scenario. The
information you need should be available to you in your log statistics reports
for visited web pages.
Don’t let business jargon get in the way of
getting your message across to your audience. Yes, buzzwords may sound cutting
edge, but the bottom line is, traffic and sales are what you really want to show
for your hard work.
more capable of generating revenues than being
sticky, because people only part with their money after they are comfortable
with a product, after they’ve seen it a few times and interacted with it
somehow.