Is My Search Engine Optimization Working?
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You’ve just built a website and can’t wait to start popping
up in the top listings of search engines. After all, you’ve
paid this company even more money to create “optimized,
search engine friendly pages, start building links and add
lots of fresh content.” If it takes weeks and months for the
search engines to notice me, do I have to wait that long to
see if the money was worth it?
No! It’s true that it takes time…weeks, even months to build
up your web presence, but there are ways to follow your
progress. It’s important to note that if you already have an
established Internet presence and wish to further optimize
your site, it usually happens much faster than a site that
is brand new with a brand new domain.
If you are already listed in various directories and your
existing website has been up and running long enough the
search engines have probably already indexed your site and
those linking to it. (to see if your site is indexed with a
particular engine, in the search field type
“site:www.yourdomain.com”). As you modify your pages and add
new content the process of moving up in search rank is much
swifter than starting from a brand new, un-indexed site. ?
The ranking process has an inherent unchangeable variable of
time. Sponsored search listings are one of a few ways around
this hurdle to get you to the top instantly while the search
spiders dig through your new site. But for the long haul,
while you wait for that big chuck of cash you just paid your
SEO to start returning, here are some ways to tell if he or
she did you justice.
Ways to keep tabs on your progress:
Monitor Search Engine Positions
If you’re a brand new domain name the first step is to watch
for yourself to be indexed. Chances are that your optimizer
submitted your site to the most prominent search engines at
the very least. While the search crawlers will ultimately
find you on their own, there is some merit in submitting
your site manually. It may take some weeks before a check
of site:www.yourdomain.com reveals any activity though.
Take care not to be over anxious and resubmit your site.
That will only hurt your efforts.
Once you find yourself being listed by particular keywords
in a search engine, monitor how your rank moves every week
or so. (Frequently, the more you add fresh content, the
sooner the crawlers will return to your site.) Change the
preference settings in search engines to speed up your
research efforts.
Google will display up to 100 results per page, MSN up to 50
in “advanced search.” This makes it much easier to find
yourself if your down in the 300th position. Don’t be
discouraged though! Being listed even at 300 is an
accomplishment. And as you optimize you will see your
listing move up in the ranks.
Visitor Tracking
The best, and easiest way to see who is reaching your site
by search engine and particular keyword phrase is to
implement some sort visitor tracking system. These are not
complicated and can cost only a few dollars a month. Take a
look at a company like www.webstat.com for example.
A small piece of code is placed on each page you want to
track. When you log into the online service, you can tell
the exact word and phrase someone used to reach you and from
what search engine... not to mention scores of other useful
data about your site traffic. This quickly gives you a
snapshot of which keyword phrases are most successful and in
which engines. This data is invaluable to further optimize
your pages.
Are your top search engine rankings on par with the industry
percentages?
Again using visitor tracking you can see if the people
reaching you by Google are close to the percentage of people
that use Google compared to MSN or AOL. If the industry
shows that overall 25% of searchers are using MSN and 5%
Lycos, your results should be similar. If they’re not, it’s
a sign that some modifications might be in order.
Monitoring these processes will show you that there’s
actually quite a lot of activity. And there’s nothing more
exciting than watching that 300th position search climb to
the first page!
John Krycek is the owner and creative director of <a
href="http://www.themouseworks.ca">theMouseworks.ca
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