Search Engine Optimisation

What Are Keywords Used For?

Keywords

Many people start a website and think it will immediately appear on every search engine that is available on the web.  Those of you who are reading this and who are really familiar in the world of the web are probably suppressing a giggle right now (or just laughing out loud), but those of you who are not so familiar will be sitting there in shock, thinking “you mean that’s not how it works?”.

 

So what is a Keyword?

You have to think of internet search engines as telephone directories.  With telephone directories, you search for a specific name and a list of everyone with that surname will come up.  Keywords are like surnames in a telephone book.

 

If you own a website and you want people to find you, you need to put yourself in their shoes and wonder how they would look for what you have to offer without knowing that you exist.  Say for instance you sell high heeled shoes for women with larger shoe sizes.  The keyword (it is often a sentence) for your website could be “large size high heeled shoes” for example.

 

How Do You Use Keywords?

You need to ensure that your keywords appear in a lot of places on your website.  Preferably in the title and quite densely placed in any text you have on your site.  Make sure you also put your keywords in the meta-tag.

 

Keyword Statistics

There are millions and millions of pages on the internet so you can guess that there will probably be someone out there who is already using the same keywords as you.  It is difficult to achieve the top place on the search results of a search engine, but getting on the first page should be achievable.  One way to do this is to make sure you are not using the same keywords as everybody else.  Looking up keyword statistics is a great way to achieve this.  On the other hand, it is important to also use the most frequent keywords as this will mean people will be more likely to find your website.  It is a complicated balancing act of being original and predictable at the same time.

 

Keyword statistics can be looked up through Google, WordPress and many other online sites and tools available.  The top 10 keywords vary on a day to day basis, but the overall top 10 keywords are:

 

  1. Facebook
  2. Facebook login
  3. YouTube
  4. Craigslist
  5. MySpace
  6. Facebook.com
  7. eBay
  8. Yahoo
  9. www.facebook.com
  10. Mapquest

This shows you that many people search for things that have to do with social networking and is an important clue towards determining what your website needs: a link to social networking sites.  If you also advertise this fact in some of the text on your site, you will already be one step closer towards climbing the ladder of search engine pages.

 

As you can see, keywords are an important tool to help you attract visitors to your website.  Keep using the telephone book analogy: nobody would be able to find your number if you weren’t registered in the telephone book, would they?

 

You have probably read technology blogs such as TechnoZeast.com, TechFume.com, and TechnoTropis.com. Today’s article is authored by Ajeet Khurana who runs those blogs.

Keywords

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Posted by John MacDonald - April 20, 2012 at 12:46 pm

Categories: Search Engine Optimisation   Tags: keyword research, keywords

Website Metrics You Should Be Tracking

Website Metrics

Website metrics are statistics that relate to websites and their visitors. Different types of data are useful for a website to track and analyze so that it can refine its operations and increase profits or progress toward its goals. Given the plethora of different metrics it is possible to monitor given today’s data tracking and analysis software, it pays to know which metrics are the most beneficial to focus on. The following are some of the most important metrics, and ones website owners should be giving their attention to if they are not already doing so.

 

Traffic Sources

 

The three main categories of sources of traffic for website visitors are: visitors that type in the URL of a site directly, visitors who find a site by way of a search, and visitors that are referred by back links from other sites. The latter could be social media sites, blogs, other websites, forum posts, or anywhere a link may be posted. Knowing the source of visitors is important in knowing which visitors convert the most or perform some other action on the website.

 

Conversions

 

Tracking conversions is important for obvious reasons. You need to know how many times actual sales occur on your site, or a call to action is completed, and the proportion of site visits to conversions. This will allow you to work with increasing the amount of visitors that actually convert.

 

Bounce Rate

 

When someone visits a website and leaves after only viewing one page, this is considered a bounce. Knowing the bounce rate, or number of visitors per a certain time period that bounce, is important because high bounce rates mean that your site it not capturing people’s interest and making them want to spend more time. If bounce rates are high to begin with, or increase, it may be time to restructure your content so that it becomes more attractive and engaging to site visitors.

 

Goal Path and Abandonment

 

The goal path or funnel consists of the series of steps a visitor takes on your site that lead to a goal being accomplished. Much site tracking software has reverse goal path functionality that allows you to see what steps, in what order, customers took to complete a certain goal. This may be a conversion or some other goal such as registration or completing an opt-in page to receive email. Goal abandonment can also be tracked, allowing you to see who left the goal process and where and when they did so. Both of these are very useful metrics that can lead to a much better understanding of how to lead visitors to conversions.

 

Value per Visit

 

Value per visit in the basic sense is similar to conversion rate – it is simply the total value (i.e. sales or goal accomplishments of some other type) divided by the number of visits to a site. However there are other dimensions to value. Someone simply viewing a page or leaving a comment can add value simply because there is increased traffic and interest in a site. So estimate these along with the basic figure to get a better value per visit number and then try to increase the visit value if necessary.

Eric Wyatt writes on social media and internet marketing, focusing on conversion rate optimization and landing page design.

Website Metrics

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Posted by John MacDonald - August 4, 2011 at 7:20 pm

Categories: Search Engine Optimisation   Tags: Tracking, Website Metrics

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