Home -> Law Blog Directory -> Paralegals & Legal Secretaries Blogs -> Impartial Inc
(866) 635-2689 for Personal Injury or (866) 635-9402 for Criminal Defense
Find a Local Lawyer
Divorce (866) 635-6190
Personal Injury (866) 635-2689
Criminal Defense (866) 635-9402
Paralegals & Legal Secretaries
: Impartial IncUse the Right Keywords in Your Web Site's Content
When you are writing for your Web site, use keywords that your customers use to reach the most searchers.
Use your customers? search terms. You may sell ?vegetable-tanned cowhide foot coverings,? ?green groundcover seed,? or ?one-of-a-kind extra-special violet outer garments?, but what if your customers are searching for organic leather shoes, grass seed, and purple coats? Until you?ve built up brand recognition, you may need to change the way you talk about your product or service.
Speak the same language as your customers. Search engines don?t think the way people do. A search in Google for ?house? brings up different results than a search for ?home.? If you only mention ?homes? on your site, you aren?t reaching everyone you should. Users query Google for ?purple coats? approximately 3,600 times per month. There are zero searches each month for ?one-of-a-kind extra-special violet outer garments.? More searchers will find you if you speak their language.
Analyze your site. How do you find out what words people are using to find you? Web site analytics. There are free and fee-based analytics tools that can tell you how many visitors came to your site on each keyword, which can help you decide which words to use to describe your product.
In addition to keyword analysis, Google Analytics, a free tool, will give you a wealth of information on your site visitors. This information can help you measure the effect of your SEO efforts, evaluate A/B testing data, monitor which pages receive the most visits, and assess which pages lose the most visitors. An analytics expert can help you interpret your reports and plan your course of action.
Once you know which words searchers use, use the same keywords. Add in the words that set your business apart from the others, but speak the same language as your customers to get the best results.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
About The Author
Stacey Morgan Smith is the director of search engine optimization at NetStrategies, an Internet marketing company based in Northern Virginia. Read her SEO blog at http://www.netstrategies.com/blog/category/search-engine-optimization Follow her search engine optimization "tips of the day" at http://twitter.com/staceymsmith
Full post as published by Impartial Inc on May 15, 2009 (boomark / email).
What are the Terms of Use for this site's news feeds
From time to time I receive requests to use this site's news feeds eg by adding the headlines or the full content to your own website. Here is my reply: Our news feed is a free service...
High School Students' Copyright Lawsuit Against Anti-Plagiarism Site Rejected:
The opinion is here. The court quite correctly accepts the site's fair use claim. The court also accepts the site's clickwrap contract defense (a conclusion that might be more controversial,...
AP, Website In Fight Over Use of AP Content
The AP is in a fight with the Drudge Retort over that site's use of the AP's material, and has issued takedown notices over the copyright violations. The news service claims that the site uses far more of the AP's...
Facebook Users Face Off with Facebook
Faced with the ire of thousands of users who objected to the social networking site's new policy on ownership of user-posted content, Facebook has done an about-face. They have dropped the changes they made to their terms of use, and...
Should you add keywords to the name field when you leave comments on a blog
Darren Rowse at Problogger asked that question of his readers last week. Asked another way, should you just do what makes by far the most sense to me, should you you key in your name in the comment field labeled 'name?' People leaving keywords such as the name of their blog, which is full of keywords itself, such as Russia Law Blog or Missouri Injury Lawyer, is a real turn off to me as a blog publisher...
Bad Results for Google in Recent 2nd Circuit Ruling Over Keywords
In a widely anticipated ruling, a three-judge federal appellate panel ruled on Friday that Google must face a trademark infringement lawsuit for selling keywords that trigger ads.
Google
alleging that companies who used internet advertising to sell mobile content have overpaid for keywords.
Third Party Mobile Content Charges Settlement
Third Party Mobile Content Charges Class Action Settlement
Job Site Fatalities Increase
Safety Experts Concerned
Dating Site
Settles Class Action for $1.5 Million
Lip Gloss Keychains
for Lead Content
Sears, Roebuck & Co.
alleging the company’s web site used spyware to track customers Internet use.









