Monday 19 August 2013

Top Tips for Excelling on Bing

If you want to hit the top of Bing's rankings for your chosen keywords, here
are the best ways to score a high ranking:

* First and foremost, make sure that social tactics are a huge part of your
marketing strategies. A heavy presence on * Facebook, Pinterest, LinkedIn
and related sites is a must.
* Be a heavy Facebook user, as opposed to Google+. Leverage your fans, and
encourage social signals (Likes, comments, etc.)
* Test your keywords specifically against the Bing audience. What will get
you high rankings in Google will likely be different in Bing. The smaller
audience also means less competition for your keywords, so you're more
likely to do well using more popular selections on Bing than on Google.
* Bing is a stickler for error free XML sitemaps. Make sure yours have zero
404s, or the Bingbot might ignore the whole thing.
* The Bingbot is also big on Robots.txt files. If your site doesn't have
one, it risks being completely ignored by Bing.
* Bounce rates are also big deciding factors. If most visitors bounce off a
page before spending a certain chunk of time, the entire website may suffer
a ranking decrease.
* Just like Google, content - good, quality, fresh, current, irresistible
content - is essential to a high ranking.

Whether you decide to go full throttle into a Bing approach, or stick to the
tried-and-true Google, make sure you at least keep some strategies in mind
for both. Bing may not yet be the homecoming queen, but it's earned enough
votes to make the reigning royalty start quaking in the knees. That means
you're very wise to not ignore this new kid on the search block.

What are your top tips for rising in the Bing ranks? Or do you even concern
yourself with Bing at this stage in the game?

my motto is "Keep it simple" and "don't leave anything for tomorrow that can
be done today."

Regards Gerald Crawford

Stellenbosch South Africa
Cell: +27-0720390184 (mobile)
E-mail: gerald@webcraft.ws

Thursday 10 January 2013

On-Site SEO

There are two main components to SEO, on-site and off site. On-site is
easy as you have control over it. You'll want to make sure each of your
key pages (i.e. home page, main category pages and product/service
pages) are targeting 2-3 main key phrases unique to that page. Then
you'll want to make sure you're using these keywords on your pages in
the following areas.

1. The page title. Try to keep this under 70 characters for all of your
additions to be seen by Google.

2. Body copy. Two or three instances of your keyword or key phrase will
reinforce that it's what your page is about.

3. Meta description. This doesn't affect the search engines, but it
usually shows up in the two lines of the Google search result, so adding
your keywords in under 160 words while making a pitch as to why a user
should click on your link here can help improve your traffic.

4. Alt tags. If you have pictures on your pages of your target keywords,
make sure your alt tags reflect this to further reinforce to search
crawlers that your page is full of content relating to your keywords. DO
NOT add keywords to images that don't match your images.

The tool that can help you here is Screaming Frog's SEO Spider. The free
version will crawl 500 pages of your site and return a tidy Excel sheet
of all of your URLs and their meta information, as well as handy info on
alt tags, broken links and header data. This will help you quickly
identify what pages need the most TLC as you go through and audit your
pages using the info above.

For more in depth information on this topic, try these posts:

*
http://www.seomoz.org/blog/getting-onpage-seo-right-in-2012-and-beyond-whiteboard-friday


*
http://searchenginewatch.com/article/2196496/How-to-Conduct-an-On-Page-SEO-Site-Audit

Off Site SEO – Link Building

This is the hardest part about SEO and the toughest to understand for
most people. Good links to your site will make you rank higher. If you
think about how many times you search and see Wikipedia show up, it's
because people constantly reference Wikipedia by linking to pages on the
Wikipedia website. To Google, this means the content is relevant and
authoritative. So to boost your own rankings you'll want to get some links.

But where do you even start? That's a question with a lot of answers,
but for beginners the easiest thing to do is to see where your
competitors are getting their links. If a site links to them, they
should link to you, too, right?

If you want to check out a competitor's links, one of the best free
tools is Bing Webmaster Tools. You'll need to first get your site
verified (you can learn how to do this here) and then you'll have a
chance to get to the goodies in your dashboard. Just click into
Diagnostics & Tools > Link Explorer and you'll be able to get
information from Bing's database on links to any domain or page you'd
like (with a limit of 1,000 links).

1. Filter by site – this allows you to limit the results to one specific
site. So, for example, if one of your competitors has 200 links from
competitorbuddy.com you could limit your search to see all of the links
just from that site.

2. Anchor text – this allows you to filter the results by what the
actual text of the links say. For example, if I wanted to rank highly
for "table tennis" I'd want a lot of my links to my site to actually
read as "table tennis" and then link to my page optimized for that term.
If your competitor is ranking highly for a specific term, put it in here
and see where they're getting links with the right anchor text.

3. Additional query - this just lets you do a good ol' fashioned Bing
search within the sites linking to the competitor you're looking at. So
if your competitor sells indoor and outdoor products but you only sell
indoor products, you may want to use some terms here to limit your
results to pages that relate to your indoor products.

4. Scope - this lets you view links to individual pages (dictated by
the main search window, here reading swimtownpools.com) or the entire
site if you choose domain. If you want to see why a certain page is
doing well, select "URL" – if you want the whole site choose "Domain."

5. Source – this is pretty straightforward, the internal links are links
within the site (so if your competitor's about us page links to their
contact us page they'll show up here) while external only shows links
from other sites and both, of course, returns both. For your purposes,
external is likely the most valuable.

Armed with some of this data you can see where your competitors are
getting links from and what kind of links. Are they writing guest blogs
for industry websites? Are they sponsoring events to get links from
those sites? Are they making sure all of their suppliers link to them?
If the answers to any of these questions are yes, you can at least get
started trying to mimic the strategies that are letting your competitors
beat you. Once you get started you can keep tabs on your organic search
traffic in Google Analytics and see if you're moving in the right
direction. Chances are, you will be if you stick with it.

While the tools are free, you will have to invest some time to use them.
Whether you choose to continue doing SEO on your own or through an
agency, you'll at least have the ability to speak intelligently and ask
some better questions if you tackle these tasks.