The Most
Common Small Business Web Site Traffic Killers
A prospective client asked me
to view his web site and give him some advice on how to make the
site better. Unfortunately, his site was such a mess it became the
inspiration for this article.
One of the primary reasons to
have a web site is to attract and educate visitors. However, this
obvious concept seems to be lost on many web designers. The way
your site is designed, whats there and whats not there, including
what's in the unseen HTML code, can have a great impact on how much
traffic your site will generate.
Heres my list of the most
common web site design sins and traffic killers. Use this list as
you design your own site or show it to your web designer. If your
web designer doesnt understand these points or dismisses them as
unimportant. . .move on!
One word of warning, we are
going to look under that hood of that shiny web page and see some
of what makes it run from the search engine view. This is not
always for the squeamish.
No title tag or meaningless
title tags. Title tags are part of the HTML structure of every web
page. Think of them as the informal name of the page. See for
yourself. Go to http://www.ducttapemarketing.com. Look up there at
the top of browser window and you will see the words - Small
Business Marketing Ideas and Strategies thats the title of that
page. Now right click your mouse in the page and hit view source or
view page source.
When you do this, you are
looking at the HTML code for this page. Now, see that [title]Small
Business Marketing Ideas and Strategies[/title] Every page has got
them and they are one of the most important aspects of your web
site. . .yet most people dont even use them. NOTE: While you are
looking at this source code realize that this is what the search
engines see. No matter what your page looks like it wont be found
if this code doesnt help you get found. More on that.
Your title tags can be a great
tool for getting you search engine traffic if they are combined
with good page content. Notice that my title tag is not Duct Tape
Marketing or the often used Welcome to My Site. My tag is Small
Business Marketing Ideas and Strategies. Now, think about this for
a minute. Not too many people search for Duct Tape Marketing and
nobody searches for Welcome to My Site, but small business
marketing, now thats another story. Most small business owners
waste the effectiveness of their title tags with something like:
The name of their business or our products. Use title tags and make
them part of your site content. Think about what people search for
in your industry and name your pages based on that.
Flash Intro pages Dont get me
started on this one. You know those pages that do all this really
cool animated motion graphics and then present you with an entry or
splash screen. Ill admit, these are works of art and I couldnt
design one if I had to, but visit
http://www.superclubs.com/home.asp and do that View Source trick
again and tell me if you think a search engine could tell what that
page was about. Remember, search engine spiders can't see pictures
or hear sounds!
Cleverness There are lots of
little things that designers like to do because they can. The
question is whats it costing your site. One of my favorites is that
date thing. Youve likely been to a site that publishes todays date.
Perhaps there is a good reason for that but go on back to view
source on one these pages and you will see the price of that little
trick. This date trick adds 300-400 lines of JavaScript code at the
beginning of your page. All of this makes it hard for those search
engines to find your real content. Think long and hard about adding
stuff that gets in the way.
No Anchor Text Hyperlinks Web
site designs like to make little buttons and badges for navigation
links. Now, this can be okay but this is also a place where less is
more. Text with a hyperlink is easily understood by search engines.
Remember, they cant see images. Help them understand what your page
is all about. Even if you have images navigation, put text links at
the bottom of your page with all of your navigation.
Referral Marketing - This is a
text link
Contact info hidden There are
some web site owners out there that dont want to be easy to contact
but Im guessing thats not you. Put your address and contact
information on every page and make them text. More and more people
are turning to their web browser like a phone book. Lots of local
address and content links can make it easier to find you in your
own town.
Most important content out of
order Search engines read your source code in the order they come
on it. Some engines only read a small portion so you should make
sure that your most important content is early on your page. Left
side navigation columns, commonly found on web sites, appear at the
top of the source code and could be hindering your site from
receiving proper credit for the content it contains.
No use of Heading tags HTML
uses a series of H or heading tags to help structure a page like an
outline. H1 for the most important headings h2 for subheads and so
on. Each of your pages will do well to contain a keyword rich
headline, much like an ad for the page, and h1,/h1 mark-up in the
code to let the search engines know that this is a really important
part of the page. Then, do the same with sub sections with h2,/h2
tags. I know that most designers understand these tags when it
comes to styling a page but few get the important role they play in
the search engine game.
Look, there is plenty more to
learn about this subject and certain aspects will change from week
to week but now that you have a better understanding of how search
engines view your site you can go out there and make pages that get
found.
Copyright John
Jantsch
John Jantsch is a marketing
consultant based in Kansas City, Mo. He writes frequently on real
world small business marketing tactics and is the creator of Duct
Tape Marketing a turn-key small business marketing
system.
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