| The Honest
Truth About Search Engines |
There's a pretty
good chance that we can save you literally
hundreds or thousands of hours worth of
research, work, and frustration when it comes to
search engines - and using them to promote your
site. You see, in terms of marketing
effectiveness search engines are highly over
rated. And most marketers pay them too much
attention.
The absolute
truth of the matter is that for most online
businesses, search engines are definitely not
the most effective way to promote a web site. In
fact, depending primarily on the products and
services you're marketing they can be almost
useless.
Don't take that
the wrong way, many targeted prospects discover
our web sites at the major search engines. And
we'll show you how to profit from them too. But
before we do, you need to know the truth about
search engines - and how they should fit into
your overall Internet marketing strategy. It's
quite possible that they won't be a top
priority, because search engines are just one
little part of a much larger picture.
No doubt you've
heard search engine fanatics shouting things
like, "90% of your traffic will come from
search engines!" Well guess what? That's
total BS. The only way that 90% of your traffic
will come from search engines is if you listen
to these people, and do nothing to promote your
site but submit to search engines all day long.
It's a proven
fact that most searchers rarely look past the
top ten or twenty listings, so to begin with you
need a really good ranking in order to generate
a decent number of visitors from search engines.
This presents the first big problem with relying
on them for web site traffic - the competition
can be extremely fierce.
If you're
targeting a small niche market competition may
not be a big problem. With a modest amount of
effort you may find that your web sites get
listed in the top ten or twenty positions at the
major search engines, generally because there
aren't 50,000 other marketers to compete with.
But what if your market is a little bigger?
It's a classic
Catch-22 really. As the number of web surfers
searching for a particular keyword or keyword
phrase increases, so does the competition for
their attention.
If your
intention is to attract web surfers who are
searching for things like "software,"
"gifts," "games,"
"chat," "jobs,"
"music," "free stuff," or
any other popular topics, you need to realize
that you'll be competing with thousands of other
Internet marketers for just a few top rankings.
After all, how many "Top 20" listings
can there be?
To make matters
worse, search engines don't all rank web pages
the same way. In fact they are all quite
different. Here are a few examples:
Using good meta
tags in your pages will normally give your
ranking a boost on HotBot and Infoseek, but not
on the other search engines.
AltaVista,
Infoseek, and Lycos will index image
"alt" tags which can affect the way
your page is ranked, but other search engines
don't.
AltaVista and
Infoseek are case-sensitive, but Excite, Lycos
and Webcrawler are not. And HotBot is somewhere
inbetween.
Most search
engines make use of "stop words,"
which are common words that are ignored in
searches -- but Infoseek doesn't.
Infoseek and
Lycos use "stemming" which means that
a search for "swim" might also turn up
"swimmer". But not on the others it
won't.
Excite, Infoseek,
Lycos, and Web Crawler will give your ranking a
boost if lots of other sites link to yours - but
AltaVista and HotBot will not.
Meta refresh
tags and invisible text will result in a penalty
on AltaVista, but Excite doesn't seem to care.
The rest have mixed feelings.
Each search
engine places a different priority on each of
the criteria used to rank web pages, and they
change their procedures often.
And that's just
the beginning. After all of your hard work
trying to get everything right, a page that you
manage to get into the famed "Top 10"
on Infoseek might be listed #100 on AltaVista -
and a listing in the 100th spot is almost
worthless.
The bottom line
is that in order to achieve a high ranking on
each of the major search engines, you'll need to
create a separate web page that is optimized for
each. If there are five keywords or keyword
phrases that you're targeting, you're looking at
creating and maintaining at least thirty
different versions of one web page.
Is it worth the
time and effort? If you're promoting an adult
site it might be, because "sex" is the
most popular search term with millions of
queries per day. But if you're selling anything
else there are more effective ways to spend your
time - especially if yours is a small business
with just a few employees who are already
overworked.
And that's only
half of the story. An even bigger problem with
search engines is that unless you're dealing
with a really popular theme, you just won't get
that many visitors from them. Even with a
favorable "Top 10" listing at all of
the major search engines, most businesses will
not receive enough traffic to generate
significant profits.
We're talking
about daily visitor counts in the five-figure or
higher range - the kind of traffic that 99% of
sites can't get from the search engines.
Stick to basic web page optimization
strategies that everyone should take advantage
of while designing a web site. Then, as you go
along you'll need to decide how important search
engine rankings are to you and your business.
Remember, you need to spend your time wisely.
Originally
published in IMC's Internet Marketing
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