Planning A Web Design Strategy To Include Search Engine Marketing (SEM)

11/24/2009

The phrase "web design strategy means a range of different things to different people, and involves more than merely "design decisions. The term seems to imply that the issue is about color, page layout and the use of Flash animations. Yes, these factors are part of the big picture, but the "bigger picture is about the overall design of your website, meaning its entire "architecture.

You need to find out how your site's overall "information architecture affects its visibility to search engines. The truth is, specific web page elements like your navigation scheme and technologies like CSS (Cascading Style Scripts) or JavaScript can either interfere with or aid a search engine's ability to "spider and rate your site. Sometimes an element can do both, at the same time!

The whole topic of a "site architecture or web design strategy that supports Search Engine Marketing (SEM) has really been quite poorly addressed. Many companies that do SEM consulting have less than state-of-the-art knowledge of how information architecture and design strategy affect a site's usability and organic rankings. If your consultant, or your own research, is focusing only on search advertising, media buys and bidding processes, you are not getting the whole picture.

A top position in the Google results is useless if site visitors aren't being converted into buyers. A successful site architecture and site design strategy will address the needs of both the search engines and your visitors/customers.

Directory setups

Generally speaking, the pages nearest the root directory are the most important pages of your site. Essentially, by placing them near the root you are telling the search engines your priorities, strengths, and focus.

One of the oldest and

Navigation is key

Important elements of your site's design is Nabigeshonsukimu. In general a set of pull-down menu button (DHTML) rather than down, even old-fashioned hypertext link, and is easy to use and easy to use than buttons. During the text link format for these programmers to use the CSS (click) the simple truth is, the site is not the end user's preferences, you will need to consider the designer and owner of the site.

The fact is, many usability tests and user focus groups reveal definite preferences among Internet users for intuitive buttons and those dynamic, pull-down menus. Even though some usability experts may not recommend these latter approaches, you really must consider how the users react to them, since it is their actions that lead to sales and rankings, not the theories of the tech squads.

File names, directories, URL's

When queried on which URL is more memorable - domain.com/car/seats.html or domain.com/carseats.html - more than 90 percent of people in an online survey reported preferring the one without the subdirectory. A surplus of "forward slashes" is a common complaint heard by site designers who take the time to check in with actual users.

Many SEM experts create extra subdirectories as a means of adding another keyword in a URL, assuming that it will help ranking. It is fairly well established that keyword-rich title tags are far more beneficial than keyword-rich URL's. Never forget for whom you are creating those URL structures. It's the users. URLs that are easy for users to remember are also easy for them to pass on to others.

Web page categories

Some usability experts have web pages broken into seven specific, while others argue that we have 11, or even a dozen or more. The actual number is not really that important. The knowledge to take away is that there are different types of pages, the SEM-oriented Web strategies must take into account. Which you use depends both on your type of business and your approach. And as you will conceptualize, design and promote any website is dependent to a large extent on the nature of the site that it is.

Some type of index page, category / library pages, advertising (pointing to) web pages, product pages, news / media page, Web forms, Web services, shopping cart pages, search / results page and the "credibility of the page. Each must requires a different approach. it would be foolish to optimize your product pages are the same way as to optimize a number of other types of pages, self-optimizing and design strategies, depending on many factors, not least, and this It is action (CTA) requires that each page type.

Layout, look and feel

Naturally, layout strategies will be as varied as the different page types, and a product page will not work according to the same principles as a news page. Of course, you also have to have an integrated and consistent overall design. When you are planning for a site, you need to focus not just on the overall effect, but all the individual ones that are put into play on each page. There must be some overarching sense to the site, while still allowing for differences at the page level.

Successful site design and web strategy entails issues of language, design, color, shape, layout, look and feel. The strategy must make sense while allowing for sufficient flexibility and creativity "along the way." Certainly you want to improve the ability of search engines to access your keyword-rich content, but the bottom line is that you want to increase those site conversions. Keep your eyes on the prize and stay vigilant.

Posted in: dhtml| Tags: Marketing Strategy Picture page web search design site engine architecture

SEO - A Non-Spammy, Natural Linking Strategy

05/02/2009

Despite there being over 200 parameters taken into account by search engines when ranking sites, one of the most popular facets of search engine optimisation (or SEO) continues to be linking.

However, this article isn't about non-spammy content, it is about non-spammy linking strategies. Yes, although linking has fast become an industry whereby directories have popped up everywhere and links are put in footers, headers, background colour, or a myriad of other disguised ways, there is still a non-spammy way to do links. Whats more, my history shows that this way works better for your ranking over the long term as well.

Before we get started, a very brief introduction for those newly initiated into the world of SEO. The bottom line is this - Google will recommend your site, if others recommend it first. This means, to get high rankings in Google, Google needs to know that others find your site useful. How does a search spider know what people think about your site? Links. If people are linking through to your site, the Google spider will think your site is well liked. If relevant sites are linking through to you, this is even better, because Google will consider you to be an authority on this topic.

So, how do you go about getting the nice mix of links that Google might consider appropriate? Well, you can just dive in and submit your site everywhere you can think of. Or you can take the longer, more well thought-out way around�

1. Before you even start - look at who your client is. What is and isn�t going to be effective for them? Where and where wouldn�t they want to be seen? You need to know exactly what the limitations of your link building strategy are going to be. For example, if you have a government body as a client, you are going to have to think VERY conservatively. Similarly for national brands or straightlace industries like insurance. On the other hand, start ups, media and online retail might be more willing to take risks. You need to note all this down, and make a memo of what kind of strategy you will be following. This is particularly important if you are sharing this client work with others.

2. Similar to point 1, point 2 is about relevancy. you don't want to damage your brand image for some basically worthless links, so make sure all your links are on topic in some way. Its best for your SEO and it is best for your brand. The effect of directory links seems to be negligible these days, so you might want to consider if this is worth your time. In content links however are much more valuable.

3. Assigning the work. Link building is often assigned to junior staff, or as a starting task. Now, sure, it might seem like brainless work - but if your junior gets an irrelevant or inappropriate link for your client, and your client or a competitor sees it, you will have a lot of explaining to do. Make sure that the person doing your links has some experience or good training, and most importantly, that they have read your client memo.

Posted in: SEO-Webmaster| Tags: SEO Non-Spammy Natural Link Strategy

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