Getting to Know Google
by Dali Singh
Published on this site: July 27th, 2005 - See
more articles from this month

Having greatly benefited from my relationship with Google
in the past several years, I am dedicating this article to
the search engine superstar.
I have to be brutally honest and relay that our friendship
hasn't always been rosy. I got to know Google several years
back, when it was just a small fish in a big pond. I started
to analyze its every move and realized that Google is a fickle,
clever and extremely mysterious being. Still, I decided to
get more acquainted. Here are a few things I learned along
the way.
When it comes to logic, Google is the queen
In other words, avoid participating in anything that may
blacklist you from this search engine, including keyword stuffing,
link farms and hosting 50 "sister" sites on the
same server. Keyword stuffing doesn't refer merely to the
content of your site, but also the alt tags, headers, URLs
and any additional areas of your web site.
Google likes to stay focused
When optimizing the individual pages of your Web site, try
to hone in on one or two relevant keywords per Web page. Analyze
each page and identify which keyword would be most suitable.
If you decide to optimize for two keywords per page, make
sure that they are similar in context. For example, if you
are optimizing for the key phrase "insurance leads,"
you may also consider optimizing for "insurance sales
leads" within the same page.
Google loves to travel
It is commonly known that Google loves links, both inbound
and outbound. When it comes to search engine optimization,
lots of research has focused on inbound links, but little
has focused on the number of links on an actual page. It appears
that Google favors sites that have several internal and outbound
links over those that don't have links.
If you have any doubts about this theory, simply do a search
on any high-volume keyword or phrase within this search engine
and analyze the first few sites that come up. Notice how the
majority of them have numerous internal links on the main
pages of their Web site.
Google is popular and expects you to be, too
The more popular your site is across the Web, the more Google
will favor you. Obviously, having several high-quality inbound
links to your site is key in achieving higher rankings. When
identifying Web sites for inbound links, target the ones that
are highly relevant to your site. For example, if you run
a jewelry site, look for sites that are purely informational
on the topic of jewelry or gemstones. Also, make sure that
the sites you decide to partner with have a good PageRank
(at least a 5) and online presence.
To save yourself a lot of hassle, conduct a keyword search
relevant to your business and target the Web sites that show
up on the first and second pages of Google (weeding out the
competition, of course); contact the Web masters of those
sites and tell them about your company and find useful ways
to compensate them for adding your company's information on
their site.
If you have an affiliate program, don't be shy to pitch it.
If you have an online advertising budget, offer them a pay-per-click
deal or monthly advertising fee for promoting your Web site.
Note that partnering with these sites or purchasing ads should
complement your overall marketing and business development
strategy-and not be used merely to get link value.
Google gets bored easily
Regardless of whether your site is informational, e-commerce
or just a sophisticated version of a business card, having
quality content is crucial for search engine optimization.
Adding to that factor is how often you update your site's
content.
If you run a site that has new content added on a monthly
basis (do not overdo it), then eventually the Google "freshbot"
will start visiting your site more often and index your new
content into the database. The more content you update, the
more Google visits your site and indexes it quicker. Do not
refresh your content simply for search engine optimization
purposes, but do take the effort to keep interesting articles,
blogs and entries to keep your visitors coming back.
If you haven't already noticed, keeping pace with Google
is not an easy undertaking. It takes a certain level of knowledge,
skill and creativity to truly benefit from this relationship.
The rest is up to the stars.

Dali Singh is the Managing Director for Blueliner Marketing,
a full service marketing and Internet consultancy. Visit http://www.bluelinermarketing.com
or email her directly at [email protected].

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