Can I Really DIY SEO For My Website?
Great question. I hope the answer is yes. This week I am updating my retail website and doing all of the SEO myself. Why? Simply, I have gotten too many quotes that range from cheap to ridiculous. So until I truly understand what it takes to do SEO and find a company or person I can trust to do the job right, I will do it myself.
So in preparation I took a few workshops and read several blogs and articles on the subject. Now I am ready to start SEOing (is that a word?). I will share with you my plan of action, step by step, and my results.
If you had success with doing SEO yourself please share your methods, tips and results with us.
Wishing You Much Success.
Lorne
WANT TO USE THIS IN YOUR BLOG, E-ZINE OR WEBSITE? You can, as long as you include this complete tag with it: Lorne S. Wellington has a BA and MBA. She has been consulting and advising businesses and nonprofit organizations for over 12 years. In addition, she created a nonprofit in 1997 and today she owns Sculpted Silhouette, a lingerie boutique in Los Angeles. Her clients are located in the USA, Italy and South Africa. She has worked with a food manufacturing company, several retailers, an international aid organization, a bed and breakfast and a multi media company.
Redesigning Your Website? Don’t Neglect SEO
Mark Jackson | SEO | December 8, 2010
About 9,999 times out of 10,000, companies that begin a redesign of their website do so with the following reasons in mind:
- “We want to freshen the look/feel.”
- “We need to update our content, to be more relevant for where we are today.”
- “We have too much information on our website…we need to clean house and provide a slimmed down version.”
It’s rare, even in 2010, that companies will speak to things that also matter a great deal: usability and SEO.
Usability and SEO go hand-in-hand. Search engines want to rank websites that provide a quality user experience for the searcher. How that’s defined can be somewhat subjective (every website is unique and its target audience will also be unique).
So, rather than speak to usability, let’s look at common mistakes that can happen when you’re redesigning your website.
Keyword Research
If you’re building a website to do well in SEO, you must begin with quality keyword research and competitive analysis. Many tools are available for keyword research, including Google’s AdWords Tool, Wordtracker, and Keyword Discovery.
Another great source for keyword research is your existing paid search campaigns. After all, you can see actual impressions and historical data on how these words have performed in terms of CTR, time on site, pages visited, and – most importantly – conversion rate.
OK, so the keyword research is done, but we’re not quite ready for the graphic designer yet.
Competitive Analysis
Once you know which keywords you want to target, you need to determine what it will take to compete (or if it’s even feasible to try). If you determine that “travel” would be a great keyword, make sure you have loads of content and links already, or have the patience to ride out the long process of building up this kind of authority. You may want to rethink this keyword, unless your brand is already a household name.
A quick and easy way to check the competitive landscape is to do a Google search for your targeted keyword(s). Find the top 10 ranking websites, then do a “site:www.example.com” search on Yahoo and see how many pages (and backlinks) are indexed for these websites. From there, you can also see how these other websites have built their information architecture and structured their content.
Information Architecture
Your goal should absolutely be to have a website that looks good, is search engine friendly, and provides a quality user experience. This stage of the game is very important. You don’t want to just throw together a bunch of pages with little meaning or pages that don’t add to the user experience.
That said, there are ways to generate quality, useful content that is good for SEO and adds to the user experience.
Review Analytics
The expression, “you don’t know what you’ve got until it’s gone,” is so true for many redesign projects. There’s such a rush to get the new look/feel that you fail to review your analytics to see where you’ve been getting your traffic.
Perhaps you’d want to run a ranking report, as well? Perhaps you had rankings and traffic for a page that was about to disappear from your website, with the new launch? Maybe you want to reconsider dumping that page? Perhaps you could, at a minimum, 301 redirect that page somewhere else, so that you have a chance of maintaining that ranking or at least keeping the links that were pointing to that page from now pointing to a 404 page?
Redirects
If there’s one piece of headache-saving advice I can give you, it’s this: make sure you 301 redirect most every page of the old site to the new URL structure. If you can remember nothing else from this column, remember this.
If you can keep your URL structure the same during the relaunch, that’s ideal. If you’re like most, your URL structure will change. Remember that even a small change in the URL is a change and will require a redirect.
Staging
I’ve seen websites that were built out on a staging environment by their design agency, but lacked password protection. These development versions of sites were indexed by Google and, once launched, didn’t do well at all because their content on the new site was a duplicate of the staging site.
The search engines didn’t know they were the same company. Once this is live, it’s very hard to correct. The design firm would have to 301 redirect every URL on the staging site to the new site’s URLs.
Spare yourself. Make sure that the staging version of the website requires a login.
Network Solutions provides website redesign services. You can see how many different websites are listed on its netsolhost.com domain.
Hopefully, these tips help spare many of you from the pains that often go along with a redesign and, more importantly, save you time and money.
Mark is off today. This column was originally published on September 15, 2009 on SEW.com.
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