Keyword Use that Goes Beyond the Search Engines
by Karon Thackston

Published on this site: May 5th, 2006 - See
more articles from this month

It seems to be a single-sided debate. When you mention keyword
use, all thoughts normally go to the search engines. Copywriting,
however, is more about your human visitors than it is the
engines. In fact, even the mainstay of SEO copywriting (keywords)
is based on a need to spur visitors along as they work through
the information on your site. If you want truly effective
SEO copy, you'll take time to learn that keyword use goes
beyond the search engines.
Let's go offline for a moment. Go get your telephone book.
If you were going to conduct a search for, say, an office
desk, how would you go about it? You'd look in the Yellow
PagesT under office furniture. Next you'd drill through the
ads in search of ads that specifically mentioned "desks" or
perhaps the particular kind of desk you want.
SEO for Newspapers?
When looking through the inserts that come with your
Sunday newspaper, your eye would be especially drawn to office
supply
flyers that featured the word "desks" or a picture
of desks. Why? Because you've got desks on the brain right
now. You're going to be especially sensitive to that word
because that's the current need you're trying to fill.
The same, exact thing applies when someone searches online.
Keywords started out because human Internet searchers typed
them into the search engines, not because the search engines
selected the terms. The same holds true today. You don't just
make up keywords. You use services and programs that allow
you to research the exact phrases human beings are typing to Google,
Yahoo! and other engines. When you incorporate those words
and phrases into your website copy, you're doing way more
than attempting to boost your rankings; you're also helping
to navigate the site visitor from the search engine to the
right page of your site.
If you're the owner of the office supply store we've been
talking about and you want to create a newspaper ad to sell
a new line of desks you carry, what do you think might appear
in the headline? The word "desk" or perhaps the
phrase "office desks." Why would you do that? There
are no search engines to optimize for in the newspaper industry.
You'll include
those keywords because it makes sense to do so. You'll include
them because they are descriptive of what you're selling.
You'll include them because it will attract the readers'
attention
and draw them to your store. That's not search engine optimization;
it's just good marketing.
Lead, Don't Shove
The same applies when writing copy for your site. There's
more than one reason to include keywords in your copy. The
primary one is not the engines.it's your site visitors. Strategic
keyword placement helps guide your visitors to the information,
products or services they are looking for. Don't shove keywords in everywhere you think you can possibly fit them. Instead,
use keywords to lead your visitors in the right direction.
Even if there were no such thing as search engine optimization,
your copy would almost certainly still contain keywords.
It
only makes sense to have keywords in the headline, so visitors
will know what the page is about. Sub-heads? Sure thing!
People scan more than they read, so having keywords in sub-heads
is a great idea. And in the body copy? You bet! After all,
it's pretty hard to sell desks without actually using the
word "desk." Since there are school desks and computer
desks and many other desks, you'll want to make it clear that
your sale is for "office desks." That, too, only
makes sense.
As you can see, keyword inclusion has been going on far longer
than the Internet has existed. It's been an important part
of copywriting since marketing was invented. When you create
a copywriting plan for your site pages, think through which
keywords you should use and where the most effective places
to position those keywords would be. Then develop your SEO
copy with a goal of directing your visitors to the right information.
When you do, you'll naturally optimize for the search engines
at the same time.

Karon Thackston - (c) 2006, All Rights Reserved. Copy not getting
results? Learn to write SEO copy that impresses the engines and
your visitors at http://www.copywritingcourse.com.
Be sure to also check out Karon's report "How to Increase Keyword
Saturation (Without Destroying the Flow of Your Copy)" at http://www.copywritingcourse.com/keyword


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