SEO 101... These Tags Really Do Matter.
You have permission to publish this article electronically
or in print, free of charge, as long as the bylines are
included. A courtesy copy of your publication would be
appreciated - send to ronhutton@gothrive.com.
Title: SEO 101... These Tags Really Do Matter.
Word Count: 593
Author: Ron Hutton
Email: ronhutton@gothrive.com
Article URL: www.submityourarticle.com/articles/easypublish.php?art_id=2046
The article is preformatted to 60CPL.
SEO 101... These Tags Really Do Matter.
Copyright 2005 Ron Hutton
In search of the coveted search engine traffic? Yes?
Then don't ignore your meta tags. If anyone tells you that
meta tags are not important, they are seriously
misinformed. Follow these simple rules and the clicks will
come. Skip them and the high search engine rankings that
you work so hard for will never deliver on the true traffic
potential.
Imagine that you check your incoming email and there are
two messages waiting for you. You look at the summary
information for each and they appear as follows:
MESSAGE #1:
From: unknownperson@obscuredomain.com
Subject: iaviq qiegaie aeiapih
MESSAGE #2:
From: your-favorite-guru@gurusite.com
Subject: An "insider" shortcut guide to creating
sensational ads
If you're interested in how to write killer ads, which
message gets opened and which goes in the trash? It's
obvious I know, but it's relevant.
Test the search engine results for one of your website
pages and here's what you'll find...
The search engine results pages (SERPs) for the big 4
search engines (Google, Yahoo, Altavista and MSN) display
information to their users by spidering your web pages and
grabbing the text from various areas. When someone
conducts a search and sees your web page in the results,
here's what you can expect them to see:
GOOGLE:
Your title tag
Your description meta tag
***********
YAHOO!:
Your title tag
Your description meta tag
Text from the upper area of your web page
***********
ALTAVISTA: Your title tag
Your description meta tag
Text from the upper area of your web page
***********
MSN: Your title tag
Text from the upper area of your web page
Do you see the parallel between your web page's title tag
and description meta tag in comparison to the "from"
address and subject line in our email analogy above? The
copy that you use in these tags becomes your advertisement
to the world when your pages are displayed in search
results.
Since each of the top 4 search engines display your title
tag first, take some time and think through what you want
people to see. Offer benefits. Offer a solution. And
when you write the copy for your title tag, use your
targeted keyword / phrase at the beginning of the title
statement. Search engines place a high value on the title
tag.
Your description tag (used by Google, Yahoo and
Altavista) should serve as your call to action. Write your
description in such a way that it compliments the title tag
and motivates the searcher to click through to your site
for the answers to their specific problem or need. Your
targeted keyword phrase should be included once but not at
the very beginning of the description.
How important is it that your website name be included in
the title tag or description meta tag? You can draw your
own conclusions, but in my view it's not important. The
link to your website will show people where they're going
from the SERPs, and after landing on your site the URL in
their browser along with your site's branding will help
them remember where they've landed.
Don't shortcut or poo-poo your site's title tags and
description meta tags. When the day comes that you're
ranked number one in your niche (and you will be), make
sure that Google, Yahoo, Altavista and MSN display the
information that will motivate searchers to click though to
your site instead of the site listed just below you. It's
your traffic. You earned it.
About the Author:
Ron Hutton is a 20 year sales and marketing veteran with a
passion for coaching and training. Subscribe to "GoThrive
Online", for Free Video Tutorials for Internet Marketing
and big juicy marketing tips in small, easy-to-chew, bite
size servings. Free Video Tutorial Archives Here:
www.gothrive.com/free-video-library/video-directory.h
tml
|