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You know
the scenario. You get an occasional click from
Google for a certain keyword. You go to find out
why you aren’t getting more clicks, and you find
out that you’re ranked in the 30's, 50's, or
heaven forbid, the 300's. “Great”, you think, “I
finally get ranked for a good keyword and it’s a
worthless ranking”.
Not necessarily.
If you got ranked for a keyword you wanted At
All, the game’s not over yet. If your site’s
content is geared towards that subject, you can
get your ranking in search engines increased, at
no cost. How?
The first thing you want to do is find out
how well you are ranked for this keyword. For
Google in particular, this used to be a
difficult chore. In the old days of 2003, you’d
spend your valuable time doing a search on your
desired keyword, then a sub-search for your
site, and crawling through pages of listings to
find out exactly where you stood.
Now there is hope in the form of the
following website. Direct your browser to:
http://www.googlerankings.com/index.php
You can use this site to find out what number
you come up for in the Google listings, which
can be very powerful information if used
correctly. If you’re ranked in the top 1000, you
have a shot at raising your listing for that
page by tweaking the page to be a little more
relevant.
So, secondly, you have to know how good a
shot you have at getting a better listing. Go
to:
http://www.searchguild.com/difficulty/
I posted a tip about this a month ago, and
it’s also in the free optimization Guide I
released the week of March 7th. It tells you how
hard it is to rank well for certain keywords in
Google. You’ll need a free Google API key to use
it.
Now that you know your chances, the third
piece of information you need to know is how
much traffic you can expect. Digital Point has a
free tool that gives an approximation of how
many hits per day a good ranking gets. Access it
here:
http://www.digitalpoint.com/tools/suggestion/
Okay, let’s say everything checks out so far.
You rank in the top 1000. The term you want
won’t be that hard to get, and will get you
enough traffic per month to justify your
efforts.
Our fifth step is to take the term you chose
and optimize your page.
This site does periodic reports on the search
engines, and their February report gives their
analysis of what the best ranking pages in
Google have in common. And as a free bonus, it
will also tell you what Yahoo wants. Follow the
following link for details-http://www.gorank.com
Now that you know what to shoot for, you need
to know how the page you want will measure up-
you need to calculate your keyword density. You
can also do the sixth step at gorank.com - it
has a free tool that will calculate it for you.
Prepare your page with that in mind, re-upload,
and you’re almost done.
Great, you’re all set. Now you should submit
your site to Google, right?
Wrong. Absolutely not. If you can help it,
you should never, ever submit any page of your
site to Google. Let it find you. HOW it finds
you can affect your page rank. I don’t mean that
there is a standard penalty for submitting.
There’s been speculation on that for a while but
I have yet to prove it matters.
What I DO know from personal experience and
testing on my member’s sites, is that getting
the Googlebot search engine spider to happen
upon your site shaves up to 6 weeks off the
standard time it takes for indexing. You can
show up in Google in as little as 4 days.
Which site links to you can also affect your
Google Page Rank. While this is not as important
as it once was, it still carries significant
weight– my site didn’t start getting spidered on
a daily basis until my Page Rank increased to 5.
So even if the spider comes to your site on a
Monthly basis, you’re better off waiting for the
spider to come back by. That’s the seventh step,
let your page be re-discovered with it’s great
new changes.
And yes, there’s an even faster, better way
to get Google.com’s search engine spider to
re-index that page, but that’s another article,
isn’t it?
For more free traffic tips, subscribe to her
newsletter at
ftdsecrets-subscribe@topica.com or visit her
feed enabled blog:
http://www.freetrafficdirectory.com/blog
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