SEO Listings That Stand Out on Results Pages
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In SEO, it's easy to obsess about getting Web pages to rank high
in organic search results. But when your listings actually appear, it's
just as important to give users a compelling reason to click. Optimize
three key page elements to make your listings stand out in search
engine results pages.
Basic SEO Principles to Keep in Mind
Before we jump into the three page elements, let's quickly review some basic principles that should guide your SEO initiatives.
The first is a reality check. For some highly competitive keyword
phrases, your Web pages simply won't make it to the first page of
search-engine results. For example, if your company provides financial
advice, you'd be hard-pressed to get on Google's page-one result for a
generic keyword like "financial services." But a long-tail keyword like
"early retirement planning consultant" might give you a much better
shot.
That's why it's important to optimize your site for a number of coveted
keywords by featuring keyword-rich content on inside pages of your
site, not just your home page. Target a variety of landing, product and
about us pages with unique keyword-rich content that highlights
individual products, services and other key offerings.
With that as your foundation, you've given yourself a fighting chance
to rank high in organic search results for a wide variety of phrases.
Now you need to make sure that what actually appears in the
search-engine-results pages entices qualified visitors to click
through. Three page elements go a long way toward making your search
result stands out in the crowd:
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Page title
-
Page description
-
URL link
The page title, description and URL link appear in organic search results, enticing users to click through.
Page Title: Summarize What Each Page Contains
In organic search results, search engines treat your page title as the headline in your organic listing.
Basic SEO wisdom says that using the most crucial search keywords as
early as possible in your page title pays off in higher search-engine
rankings. That's still true – and necessary. But for the visitor, the
title should also reflect what they're looking for.
For our fictional financial-services firm, a generic title such as "Wide-ranging financial services for your retirement," might be fine for optimizing the home page.
But unfortunately, many organizations make the mistake of re-using the
same title copy on many or even all of their pages. With this approach,
all of your different pages begin competing against each other for the
same phrase, ultimately undermining your SEO efforts.
For greater success and more targeted results, incorporate keywords
that better describe the specific subtopics that are covered on each
particular page. For example, inside pages might be more aptly named "Estate planning for seniors" or "Estate planning for the self-employed."
Make sure that page titles (found in the "head" section of each page's HTML source code):
-
Contain keywords that explain
what the page covers, based on what users search on or might expect to
find. It goes without saying that you should focus on the keywords that
are most critical to your business or that traditionally work well for
you.
-
Stick to 65 characters or less,
the cutoff point for most search engines. It's ok to be well under this
allotment, unless you feel that a longer, more detailed keyword phrase
is more appropriate for a specific page.
-
Grab the reader's attention. These attention-getting headlines are the number-one thing that readers will see as they skim organic listings.
Description: Give Readers a Reason to Click Through
A well-thought-out description details what users will find on the Web
page and how it will solve their problems. In organic results, it is
the paragraph that appears between the page title headline and the URL
link.
Again, it's more important than ever to customize the content for each
page instead of re-using the same description as your home page. When
you repurpose the same information over and over throughout your site,
it's likely that your home page will end up as the highest-ranking
organic result for each keyword phrase. And it's equally likely that
your home page won't contain the detailed information most users
actually want.
So take the time to craft detailed, page-specific descriptions, such as "Good
tax planning for seniors saves you money on both state and local taxes.
Our experts help you take advantage of recent changes to the tax code."
To write great descriptions:
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Stay within the 160-character limit
allotted by most search engines and use complete sentences. If you
don't, your description may simply end in mid-sentence on the results
page.
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Don't sweat the keywords.
When possible, weave descriptive keywords into these sentences to help
search rankings, but keep in mind that descriptions that don't
accurately reflect page content do a disservice to visitors. It's more
important to provide a compelling summary of what's on each page.
-
Avoid logistical information about the company, such as your mailing address or the names of company officers.
Your description tag is located in the "head" section of each page's
HTML source code. It is part of the meta tag and looks something like
this:
URL Link: Use Plain-English Links to Reinforce Your Message
The final, and most overlooked piece, is the actual URL link that users
click on from organic search results. Users scrutinize the link for
clues about who you are and how relevant your site is.
Many Web content management systems spit out number-based URLs that don't provide much information, such as:
http://www.domain.com/financialplanning5602894.html or
http://Domain.com/928b4139046346428.html?.v=.
Plain-English URLs do a better job of encouraging users to click
through by building on what users have already seen in your title and
description, such as:
http://Domain.com/Planning-your-401k-Portfolio-for-Growth/.
Most search engines only show the first 46 characters of your URL link,
so try to reinforce your page message within the allotted space.
Standout SEO That Gives Users a Reason to Click
By optimizing page titles, descriptions and URLs for each Web page, you
make the listings that appear in organic search results work harder for
you, so that a higher number of qualified visitors actually click
through. And isn't that the whole point?
Published by: Jeff Jones
Published 21st July, 2009
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