This post has been written for us by Fiona Pullen from The Sewing Directory - a great resource for everything related to sewing (and even if sewing isn't your thing, there are lots of business articles on there you might like). SEO is one of those things that it really pays to learn something about - and this article should definitely help. It's quite a long one, so save it for later if you're short of time, or go and get the kettle on right now and make yourself comfy.
OK, I've got my tea, now it's over to Fiona...
teacosy by Charlotte Macey Textiles
OK, I've got my tea, now it's over to Fiona...
I have to start this article by saying that I am not an SEO
professional but I’ve learnt a lot about SEO over the last couple of years
whilst running my site The
Sewing Directory. I started off
getting about 20-30% of my traffic from Google, now I get around 60%. So I’m going to share the things that I’ve
found work for me.
What is SEO?
SEO stands for Search Engine Optimisation, which in brief
means optimising your site to get it picked up by search engines such as
Google, Yahoo, Bing etc so people can find you.
The higher your site ranks in the search engines the more traffic you
will get from them. Search engines work
on keywords: the words that people type into a seach engine when looking for
something. Your aim is to make sure that
your site ranks well for the keywords relevant to your site.
Keywords
So your first question is what are my keywords? Let me give you a little exercise; take a
sheet of paper and write down the words that you think are important and
relevant to your site. Keywords don’t
just have to be one word, they can be phrases too.
Example: If you run a sewing school in Cardiff called
Stitched Up. You would be writing down
words like: sewing, sewing school, learn to sew, sewing classes, Cardiff,
Stitched Up etc.
These words are your starting point. Now you need to consider 2 further things to
help refine your keyword list.
1) Firstly
people tend to use different words when looking for the same thing. So let’s take ‘sewing classes’ some
people might type sewing workshops, sewing lessons, sewing tuition, sewing
school, sewing courses. If you
only use the word sewing classes on your site you could potentially be missing
all those people who are searching using the other terms.
So now back to your list take a
look at your keywords and see if you can think of alternative ways of saying
them. It’s often a good idea to get
other people involved in this as we all tend to use slightly different language
so your friends and family might come up with variations you didn’t think of.
2) The
second thing you need to think about with keywords is that the more specific
you are the less competition there will be on the search engines. For instance, if you type in ‘sewing classes’
to Google you get almost 24 million results! If you make your search more specific and
search for ‘sewing classes Cardiff’ you get under 300,000 results so you’ve
already got a lot better odds of your site being seen. If you break it down further to a specific suburb
of Cardiff eg. ‘sewing classes Roath’ you are then down to 68,000 results. If you break it down to a specific class eg.
Beginners dressmaking classes Cardiff you are down to 24,000 results, beginner
dressmaking classes Roath gives you just over 1,000 results.
So go back to your list again
and break your keywords down into more specific keywords. You should now have a pretty long list with
lots of keywords phrased in different ways, and broken right down to the
specific terms you think your target customers will be using in search engines.
If you want more help on
coming up with keywords for your site take a look at the Google
Keywords Tool. It allows you to put
in a keyword and it will then generate other similar keywords for you, or you
can put in a website and it will generate keywords based upon the content of
that site. The image below shows
the keywords it suggests for my site.
Incorporating Keywords into your site
So now you have your keywords you want to be thinking of
ways you can get them onto your site.
The obvious place is in the text on your website, the about us page,
description of the items you sell, news posts etc. Try and make sure you use a few different
variations rather than just the same words over and over again.
Example - Beginners dressmaking
workshop – Come and join us on this easy sewing class to learn
to sew, ideal for learner sewers.
Instead of just: Beginner dressmaking workshop – a workshop
for beginner dressmaking.
See how we managed to get 4 different keywords into the
first example instead of just the one keyword used twice in the second. Plus we used variations; class instead of
workshop and learner instead of beginner.
Having a news section on your site is a really good idea for
2 reasons; it gives you the opportunity to fit in lots of keywords and it means
you are regularly updating your website (which the search engines look
favourably on). Having a blog on your
site is good for the same reasons; plus if you are focusing on specific
keywords you can write a post around them.
Just a note of caution though don’t overpopulate your posts with
keywords it is very obvious to both your readers, and the search engines.
Other opportunities for including keywords are in your page
titles, in your image names and image descriptions (this is really important as
people can use search engines to search by image name rather than looking for
keywords on a page) and meta tags and meta
descriptions.
Google Analytics/Google
Webmaster tools
If you haven’t already I highly recommend you sign up for
both Google Analytics and Google Webmaster tools. Both of them are free, and provide a wealth
of information about your website, who visits it and what keywords they are
using which really helps when planning/assessing your SEO campaign.
I won’t go into both in detail or this will be a very long
article but the key points are that Google Analytics can tell you exactly how
many hits you’ve had per day, where they came from (including how many from
search engines and which search engines they came from) and what keywords
people used in searches when they found your site.
Google Webmaster has a section on search queries which not
only tells you the number of clicks you are getting for certain keywords but
also tells you the number of impressions and what your average position is in
Google for that keyword as per the image below:
Backlinks
A backlink is a link to your site from another site (more
detailed definition here). The more people link to your site the more
importance Google places upon it and therefore the higher you will rank in
search engines. There are a lot of
places where people will swap backlinks in a ‘if you link to my site I’ll link
to yours’ kind of deal. Google is aware
that this goes on and does not place high SEO value on this type of backlink so
it’s really not worth doing.
What you are looking for ideally is for people to link to
you of their own accord. People who like
your products will often link back to your site, if you write interesting blog
posts/news posts/articles people will link to them, if people recommend you to
others on social networks they will often post a link.
There are also ways to create more back links yourself,
commenting on blogs and on forums which allow you to include a link to your
site can help. Listing your site on directories
also creates a backlink, take a look at the second post on this
thread for a list of free directories. Guest posting for other sites/blogs gives you
a backlink as does providing competition prizes for other sites and blogs too.
Google Webmaster is useful if you want to know how many back
links you have and who from, it allows you to view links to your site from
other sites, and shows you which pages of your site are linked to the most.
I hope that’s enough to get you started thinking about
SEO. I’ve included some further reading
below for when you are ready for more information:
Thanks so much Fiona - that is a really helpful article!
A great post with really useful advice. Will have a more detailed look into this tonight.
ReplyDeleteI've read quite a bit of SEO posts, and yours is by far the best, Fiona, so a huge thank you for that. You make it very easy to understand.
ReplyDelete