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Learn to Avoid Basic SEO and Internet Marketing Mistakes
by Paul Marshall
More Search Engine Optimization Articles

Published on this site: February 25th, 2010 - See
more articles from this month

Frankly, the biggest search engine optimization mistake you can
make is not doing any SEO at all. It's amazing how many people
believe "if you build it, they will come." Marketing coaching
makes one thing clear. Just putting a site up on the Internet
won't get you the traffic you want or need. By the same token,
building a site and then thinking about SEO after the fact is a
bad plan too. SEO needs to be at the heart of your Web plans from
day one, and it's a job that's never "finished."
Learn What's Bad For SEO And Don't Do It
If you take a drawing class, one of the first things you'll
learn is that it's easier to look at the negative space than at
the object itself. That means that as a beginner, you have a
better shot at recreating the funky-looking space between the
apple and the pear than drawing the fruit the first time you pick
up a pencil. And you don't get so discouraged when your results
aren't perfect. That's a good concept to carry into online
marketing.
Sometimes learning everything that can go wrong is a better place
to start than trying to do everything right. Do-it-yourself,
affordable SEO is too expensive at any cost if you're constantly
shooting yourself in the foot. Some of the biggest mistakes
novices make are really the easiest ones to avoid!
- Bad Navigation And No Sitemap
It doesn't take a marketing coach to know that the entire point
of "search engine optimization" on a site is to get that site
crawled by the search engines. If you use images -- or worse --
Flash or javascript to design your navigation, the search engines
will ignore you. (Also, any page that doesn't have an incoming
link won't be crawled.)
Not having a sitemap is just as bad. Many website owners don't
think they need a sitemap because people don't use them. It's
not about people! Search engines love sitemaps. They literally
crawl all over sitemaps. Even if you have to maintain the sitemap
manually, have one and link to it on every page of your site.
- Poorly Constructed Title Tags And URLs
There's nothing wrong with building your own website, but pay
attention to what your software is doing. Many site building
packages and content management systems repeat the same title tag
on every single page. Good programs of marketing coaching teach
you that the title tag is probably the single most-important SEO
element of any page. The title tag must fit the content of the
page itself.
But, don't pay attention to the title tag and ignore the URL.
This is especially a problem in content management systems and
shopping carts. The URLs are full of numbers and letters. You
need to be including your keywords in your URLs so the search
engines pick up on them. Don't waste the invaluable potential in
either the title tag or the URL.
- Banning A Search Engine By Accident
It's not unusual for a novice site owner to mess up their
robots.txt file. The file exists in your site's root directory
to talk to search engine spiders. You can tell them not to crawl
pages or sections or send other individual instructions. Since
the file is just plain text and is so easy to create, site owners
wade in without really understanding what they're doing. If
you're not careful, you can ban the search engines from your
site altogether. Use Yahoo SiteExplorer or Google SiteMaps to
make sure that your site can indeed by crawled.
- Vague Anchor Text For Links
Using anchor text like "click here" or "next" is a waste.
When you are cultivating incoming links or creating your own
links inside your site, use useful, descriptive anchor text. You
don't want to repeat the same phrase over and over again. Get
two or three relevant, keyword-rich pieces of anchor text and
also use your company name. Empty phrases are just that -- empty.
Doing accurate keyword research is fundamental to successful
online marketing. It's a huge topic in its own right, but you
basically want to concentrate on phrases that are not overly
general or that have too much competition. Good marketing coaches
will spend a lot of time on keyword selection and you should too.
Put that chore right up at the top of your SEO "to do" list.
In reading all the tips available on marketing coaching, you'll
find that most articles and courses focus on the things website
owners should do. It's also important to look at what you
shouldn't do. A poorly constructed site that fails to make good
use of readable navigation, workable behind-the-scenes code,
solid naming structures, and relevant anchor text will have a
tough time online. Consider the fundamentals of basic SEO from
the planning stage of your site to maximize your results and get
the traffic you want.

Paul Marshall: Marketing online since 2004, Paul Marshall can help you market
on a realistic budget. You can learn about his professional
Internet Marketing Coaching and Consulting Services on his home
page: http://strategicwebmarketing.net/. He also offers
Affordable SEO services (and d-i-y Coaching), which you can
learn about here: http://strategicwebmarketing.net/seo.html. Get
to know Paul, just visit Strategic Web Marketing.net today!


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