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The Orange Blog is a place for us to offer advice to help make your web site better. It's also here for us to recognize our clients for their exceptional search engine rankings, and to help promote their efforts wherever possible.


Five Search Engine Myths, And The Truth About Each.

Probably the most common questions we receive about search engine rankings relate to keywords. People ask how many keywords should be added on a given page, whether hiding text behind other objects works in increasing rankings, if adding words that the company is not actually relevant for will help in search engines, etc. Hopefully, this article will help to dispel some of these myths, while providing a clearer understanding of what is necessary to create a web site that is both highly ranking, and also friendly to site visitors. Because, after all, who cares how search engine friendly a site is if customers leave in disgust as soon as they find it?

Myth #1: Forget wasting my time writing good content, Adwords will do the work for me, right?

Yes and no. Yes, if you want to keep piling money into adwords, you will keep bringing in traffic. But, the moment you stop paying for adwords, you are right back where you were before but with less money in your pocket. Google Adwords will not increase your organic rankings. It’s worth saying this again, because it seems to be a very pervasive myth, Google Adwords will not increase your organic rankings.

You can spend $100 million dollars, but as soon as that money is gone, so is the traffic that was created. You can’t throw money at your search engine rankings and hope that they will raise. Now, that’s not to say Adwords doesn’t have it’s place, it’s great for sites with a low organic ranking to start (ie a new web site, or one that has recently been redesigned and is still being indexed), as well as for bringing in traffic in an incredibly competitive arena (we use Adwords ourselves), but the fact is that organic rankings are always more important and valuable to your company than paid rankings.

Myth #2: People will search for my site using industry jargon.

This one is less a myth than an attitude. Consciously or not, most people tend to write their content from the perspective of an industry insider (you know your industry better than anyone, right?), and don’t think to review their content with the people who matter most, their customers and potential customers. If you sell “Information Technology” but someone is looking for an “IT guy,” you lose, plain and simple.

Thankfully, there is a quick remedy. Talk to four or five people who are outside of your industry, and ask them “if you were looking to buy a (insert product or service here) online, what would you type into Google to find it?” Take those phrases and words, and make sure that they are actually on your web site. If they aren’t, then add them in, in context on your web site.

If it means removing some of your industry jargon, all the better, as visitors probably don’t know what they mean anyway. If your industry is highly technical, consider a page that provides straightforward definitions for some of your more complex terms. This has the added benefit of giving you a great place to write the list of phrases that you have gleaned in talking to your customers.

Myth #3: I heard that I can just write the top 100 keywords on my page, in no particular order, in the description of my product and call it a day.

You could do that, but you’d run the risk of annoying your customers. No one likes to see a page full of paragraphs of nonsensical content when they are looking to purchase from you. It shows that you have shady morals, or at the very least that you don’t really care that your description doesn’t make sense. And since Google can read your content almost in the manner that a person does, they will quickly notice that your text is garbage.

Myth #4: Someone told me I can hide text on my site by writing it in the same color as my background.

Yes, we still hear this one, and no it won’t work. Google is way too smart to be tricked by an obvious scheme like this one. Enough said.

Myth #5: I heard that Meta Keywords are important, and I want to add them to each page of my site.

This is a complete waste of time. Instead, take that hard work you spent making a list of keywords for each page and put it to good use, by making sure that those are actually written on your web site in some context. If they aren’t, consider rewriting the content. For more on meta tags, read our article entitled “Meta Keywords Tag: Long Dead, But Still Not Gone.”

Take these tips to heart in your writing, and take a hard look at your web site. When is the last time that you isolated half a day to cover your web site’s content? Just how old is what you wrote on there? Does the site even mention your latest products or services? What about the ones that you no longer offer, are they still prominently displayed? Set aside a day’s worth of time every few months (at a minimum) to focus on your web site. In particular, take these words to heart if you just said to yourself “the web site doesn’t bring us enough business to justify spending time on it.”

The web site doesn’t bring you business because you have not taken the time to create value. Make your site a resource, and you will have no shortage of business coming from it.

Our Plumbers, 100% Steroid Free.

LOOK AT ME!!!!

I was driving down the road a few days ago, when I passed a sign that made me stop (metaphorically speaking of course) and think. It read something like this:

“Our plumbers, 100% steroid free.”

What???? Why would anyone care that a plumber doesn’t use steroids? Does it affect job performance? How does this have any bearing on anything?

Then I realized, the ad was simply designed to catch my eye and to keep me thinking about it. Well, it succeeded at that, but it failed in it’s ultimate goal Read the rest of this entry »

Why Nobody Is Contacting You Anymore

Why Nobody is Calling You!

Why do so many companies steadfastly refuse to provide enough information on their web sites for customers to make an informed buying decision?

Over the years, we have heard dozens of companies respond with the same message. “We don’t want to provide them with enough information right off the bat, we want them to call us.” That technique may have worked back when there wasn’t a huge, multi-billion (trillion?) page entity called the internet, providing answers to literally anything you can think to ask. Now, it just turns potential customers into no-potential site visitors. Read the rest of this entry »

Meta Keywords Tag: Long Dead, But Still Not Gone

Death of Meta Tags

Only three things are certain in this world: Death, Taxes, and Meta Tags. Long regarded as useless, officially and often labeled as such by Google itself, the meta keywords tag alas still manages to persevere.

I have a theory as to why meta tags won’t just “rest in peace Read the rest of this entry »

The Time is Now to Update Your Web Site

It’s no secret that we are in a recession, but that doesn’t mean there’s nothing to do if your business is slow. Now is the perfect time to re-dedicate yourself to your web site. I’m not suggesting you call up your web guys and drop $10,000 (though our feelings won’t be hurt if you call us), but if you have a web site that allows you to edit your own content (and if you don’t, it’s time to rattle the cage of your current web designer), now is the best time in years to be working on making your site better. Why? Simply because if business is slow, you probably have a little extra time on your hands.

The people who come out of this recession, just like any other, stronger and better will be the ones who take this time to make their business better. In the web world, that means Read the rest of this entry »

How to ensure that your web site sells you, and not your competition.

Our original article, entitled “Is your website selling your company, or your competition?” explains the effect that a poorly formed web site could have on your competition. It’s now time to clarify exactly what steps you can and should take to ensure that you aren’t helping to sell your competition with your web site Read the rest of this entry »

Is your website selling your company, or your competition?

It may be obvious that a good web site will sell your company much better than a poor one, but have you ever considered the effect that your own web site can have on your competition? If you have a poorly created, hard to navigate or just plain ugly web site, you may be doing more than just hurting yourself, you may be making your competition look better by comparison. Read the rest of this entry »

Having a web site is irrelevant. Having a good web site is a necessity.

It used to be said that “if you don’t have a web presence, the chances are high that people who don’t already know you, won’t do business with you.” Now, it’s no longer that simple. With the ever-growing number of sub-par web sites out there (with no end in sight), it’s nowhere near enough just to “have a web presence.” Having a web site is a given, but it’s how useful and attractive your site is that matters. Have tons of tasteless flash or music that plays on it’s own on your web site? Your days may be numbered. Here are just a few signs that your web site needs some serious love. Read the rest of this entry »

The Dreaded Update: keeping your site up to date the simple way.

Let’s face it. Sometimes we just don’t have the time to keep up with everything that needs to be done in a given day. As your life speeds up and work flows over in your inbox, the first thing that generally gets neglected is the web site. It can’t talk and won’t complain when it doesn’t receive enough attention, but an out of date web site can cost you, big time. Here is a short list of ways that an out of date web site could be hurting your business, as well as suggestions on how you can prevent these problems from ever happening. Read the rest of this entry »

A quick look: YouTube and what it could mean for your business

Just about everyone has heard of YouTube by now, but not everyone has thought about the site in terms of what it can mean for their business. Yes, dancing monkeys can be a nice distraction, but YouTube has much more potential than just watching people fall down or viewing highlights of former football stars. Here is a short list of ways that you can potentially utilize YouTube for your business: Read the rest of this entry »