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Predictions about SEO Copywriting
by Karon Thackston
More Search
Engine Optimization articles

Published on this site: January 15th, 2009 - See
more articles from this month

At this time of year, it's hard to resist making predictions
about what the coming days hold. Financial analysts, doctors,
politicians and experts from virtually every industry in the
world give insights into what they think may happen during the
course of the next 12 months. Although my mother always warned
me about following the crowd, I'll chip my two cents into the
pot anyway and give you a couple of predictions about the future
of SEO copywriting.
Looking Back Before Gazing Forward
In the beginning was the word. The keyword, that is. And when
it was placed into the keyword META tag of any web page, that
page received high rankings. Then the Internet boom raged
throughout Cybertown. It soon became a greater challenge to
rank in the coveted top 10. Enter search engine copywriting.
As algorithms changed, a need arose to use keywords (and soon,
keyphrases) throughout a page's copy in addition to its tag set.
Here's where typical Internet behavior set in. The online
marketing mindset that is so common took hold: If one is good -
1,000 is better. Well-meaning copywriters began to shove
keyphrases into existing text willy-nilly. It didn't take long
before site owners and their customers began to baulk at the way
SEO copywriting sounded.
But, with theories about keyword density and fears of keyword
stuffing floating through Cyberspace, copywriters did their best
to find balance.
Coming Full Circle
Due to unceasing demand by site owners for copy that sounded
natural while still being optimized, SEO copywriters began to
flush out ways to write content that didn't sound "like that."
And so, we came full circle - from virgin copy that was written
exclusively for the site visitor to copy that was butchered
horribly in the name of higher rankings to natural-sounding SEO
copy that pleased everyone.
Seems as though all is well and SEO copywriting has settled into
an acceptable balance, right? Yes. But other changes were
taking place behind the scenes that should influence the future
of SEO copy.
Search Engines Get New Skills
Along the way, Google and other engines have been picking up new
skills for indexing and evaluating copy. Many years ago, Yahoo!
and other engines gained the ability to read PDF files. As time
went on, SEO taboos - including frames and the dreaded Flash -
became less fearsome as engines adapted, acquiring the
technology to read these formats as well.
Prediction #1 about SEO copywriting is this: Search engines will
begin to index the copy that is superimposed on the screen of
videos, in video voiceovers and in audio clips. The technology
actually already exists for the most part. Closed captioning
for the hearing impaired could easily be adapted for this
purpose. Search engine copywriters take note: You'll soon be
asked to write optimized voiceover and audio scripts.
Rather than simply optimizing the web page that hosts these
files, the scripts themselves will require a search engine
touch. This will make it all the more imperative that copy be
written naturally. It is annoying enough to read something like
this:
Texas Web Design Firm in Dallas, Texas
Welcome to our Texas web design site. Our Texas web design
staff is highly skilled in creating beautiful and functional
sites. When you need a Texas web design firm to help build your
Internet presence, one of our Texas web design specialists will
be glad to speak with you.
Ugh! Can you just imagine having those words spoken as part of
a voiceover? The old tip of reading your copy out loud to see
how natural it sounds will absolutely become standard practice
once scripts are indexed.
Prediction #2: Latent semantic indexing will continue to evolve,
making the use of synonyms in SEO copy vital. Early in 2008,
Google announced it was indexing synonyms (although not heavily
from what I've seen). I think this practice will be put into
full force in the next year or two. For example, we'll begin to
see results from a search for "handbags" that contain that
term
as well as "purse," "pocketbook" and "bag."
I also believe that Google and other search engines will
consider the overall context of a page more, in addition to the
keywords and phrases that are used. Hopefully this will
alleviate much of the elementary SEO copywriting that goes on
now. (See Texas example above.)
As with everything online, change is inevitable. While certain
core practices and techniques will remain foundational to SEO
copywriting, advancements in search technology and site visitor
preferences will continue to alter the face of this copywriting
niche. Adjust, adapt, advance!

Karon Thackston: See Karon Thackston live in Boston
April 2-3, 2009. Get info at www.highrankings.com/seo-workshops Or
buy Karon's SEO
copywriting course and learn at your own pace. www.copywritingcourse.com.


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