Ranked 1 at Google for "Invisible Entrepreneurs" But
No Traffic?
by Mike Banks Valentine
Published on this site: June 15th, 2005 - See
more articles from this month...

I am ranked 1 for that silly phrase at Google. So What?
Here's a secret. You can be ranked 1 at Google for the phrase
"Waterfall Watches" if you put the phrase on your
page 4 times and in metatags twice. How do I know that? I
did it in 2001 and still rank number one in Google for the
phrase in 2005. On another of my sites I rank #1 for the phrase
"Screeching Camels" by simply putting it on the
page once in a comment about silly SEO guarantees.
I'll wager that many phrases you've targeted for your business
are almost as silly and deliver NO traffic to your pages from
the search engines. Don't take that too personally. Simply
look at your traffic statistics to see what phrases are bringing
visitors to your web site. If your logs show no delivered
traffic for keywords you thought were golden, you've targeted
the wrong phrases.
I'm always fascinated when discussions of search engines focus
excessively on ranking of a particular site in one particular search
engine without checking corresponding statistics about referred
traffic delivered to the site from the targeted keyword phrase.
Referred search visits from engines is not taken into account. Anyone
who looks at their rankings without looking at how much traffic
is referred and DELIVERED to your site through the rankings is missing
the most important part of the story!
When you check your site traffic statistics for where visitors
are coming from and in what numbers, for which keyword searches
and from which search engines, you will be astonished to see
that things you think are important are sometimes not so important.
I've struggled for years to gain top rankings for "Small
Business Ecommerce" and have achieved 1 at Google 5 at
MSN and 13 at Yahoo (at this writing).
But guess what? Nobody searches for that phrase in significant
enough numbers to deliver any traffic from it! I'm not saying
that this was wasted effort, because in the over 1000 pages
at WebSite101 we have enough related phrases that the targeted
phrase contributes to the rank of hundreds of related phrases.
"Open Source Ecommerce" gets huge traffic for one
single page, ranked at 29 in Yahoo, 7 at MSN and 1 in Google
(as of this writing).
But the really interesting thing is that even on phrases that rank
equally well across all three major engines, Google delivers referred
traffic at a rate of 65% compared to MSN at less than 1% and Yahoo
about 5% of all referred visitor traffic. In NO case does Yahoo
or MSN refer any clickthroughs at higher than 10% of all referred
traffic.
Referred traffic being visitors that clicked on your link from
search results or links. This applies both in single instances for
specific keywords and cumulatively for all referred traffic.
Hear this very clearly - it has nothing to do with ranking! There
are dozens of search phrases that visitors have searched on all
three of those engines that deliver traffic to my site that I can't
find my own site for in the top 100 results at ANY search engine.
In every case, Google delivers more than twice the traffic for every
keyword combination than does MSN or Yahoo!. In many cases, I rank
HIGHER on both Yahoo and MSN for many of those phrases, yet Google
delivers far more referred traffic for those phrases ranked higher
at MSN and Yahoo! Does that make any sense?
If your referred traffic from top rankings at MSN and Yahoo
send you no traffic, why be concerned that you rank well with
either of them? This same scenario has played out across dozens
of client sites I've reviewed traffic statistics for. No matter
how the site is structured, no matter how many pages they
have, no matter what keywords they are targeting.
Search engine referred traffic from Google is always ALWAYS 2 times
higher than the other two and very often as much as 10 times. If
we ranked engines, NOT on number of searches performed, but on how
much traffic they refer, then Google would be more than twice as
highly ranked in all cases.
If Google disappeared tomorrow, there would be some dramatically
reduced visitor numbers for ALL sites across the web. We would,
every single one of us, lose over half of our (organic) search engine
referred traffic. Look at your traffic statistics for natural search
engine referred traffic (not PPC) volume and which keywords are
currently working to deliver that traffic as far more important
than
your specific keyword ranking on those search engines.
Avoid the practice of "Keyword Voodoo" to rank
for words that nobody searches. Google "Keyword Voodoo"
and you'll find me ranked 5 times for that phrase on page
one of the search engine results page. "Reciprocal Linking
Turkey" will give you the same result, showing my article
on several web sites. Each of those does me no good at all
and brings no more search engine referred traffic than does
my number one ranking for ñInvisible Entrepreneursî
used in the title of this article.
Target the wrong keywords and you will become one of those Invisible
Entrepreneurs.

Mike Banks Valentine practices ethical search optimization
through content aggregation and creation for your website Optimizing
press releases for keyword density - distributed online for visibility
& more effective link building Contact Mike at: http://www.seoptimism.com/SEO_Contact.htm
Download Free link popularity software - check inbound links http://website101.com/download/link-popularity-software.html
Check your link popularity at major search engines and Alexa.

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