Article Directory :: Internet Marketing/Online Business Articles

Static Sites And SEO Are Dead: Please Make A Note Of It

By Jack Humphrey

Subscribe to Jack Humphrey's RSS feed using any feed reader!

Republish: EasyPublish
Published: 03Oct2006
Word count: 823
Viewed: 501 time(s)
Bookmark this article using any bookmark manager!
Get Free Content For Your Site

The Dodo, T-Rex, and Aggressive Search Engine Optimization – Gone Forever. Here’s What You Can Do Now…

You can really take a lot of flak from people who don’t read and listen carefully to what you say.

Note to reader: Never declare the death of something even if it is a foregone conclusion and 100% true unless you are ready for some grief from the peanut gallery.

Such was the case when we started telling people on webinars and teleconferences that SEO was dead.

SEO? DEAD? My goodness you could hear the cans of whoopass opening up from all the 90-pound geekling search engine optimization firms around the world.

The pocket protector (a geek’s gauntlet) had been thrown down.

Context has a lot to do with any bold statement and declaring SEO dead was in a context that explains perfectly what I meant by it.

The web has changed drastically this year. Call it web 2.0 or whatever you wish, but the webscape is a mighty different place than it was a year ago.

Everything has changed from search engines to social networking to publishing platforms (what you actually run your content on).

I guess I should qualify that by saying the web has changed, but most marketers have yet to wake up and smell the coffee.

Back to SEO being dead. The context in which this declaration was made was when we were recently discussing the new results we’d gotten from heavy testing and the fact that what used to work for us no longer worked.

One might think “bummer, man!” Actually it is a blessing in disguise. With the right system for publishing, the right technology, tools and tactics, the web is easier to market on than it ever has been before.

Website owners no longer have to pour through endless forum threads and documentation, expensive courses and training seminars to learn heavy-duty search engine optimization.

It is no longer necessary to do anything more than post and rank, once you have the right tools working for you.

One big reason is that Google and the other engines are switching to become more dynamic and fluid in their rankings. This is evidenced by our own testing and what you’ve probably seen yourself.

There has been a fluidity to search engine rankings in the last few months unbecoming the slow, lumbering state the engines used to operate in when trying to stay up to date and relevant.

Google is actually living up to its promise to reward webmasters who develop relevant, topical, visitor-useable content. Visitor Optimization, they call it.

It was a leap of faith, but we started publishing solely to please our markets without aggressively optimizing. Just like Google asked us to do. No hardcore late night sessions doing endless keyword research or inflating our keyword densities to cheat the system.

(We’ve concluded that trying cheat a multi-billion dollar mega corporation with thousands of geeks programming and watching our every move was a dumb idea.)

Simply putting out content that the market wanted appreciated is all we do now.

Guess what? My sites now enjoy a plethora of top 10 rankings in Google for scores of keyword phrases. Keywords people are actually using to find my site, not just “vanity” keywords no one searches on.

We are doing this with no aggressive or even moderately aggressive search engine optimization.

We are using a blog platform that performs better than anything else we’ve used (based on Wordpress). We are using high tech RSS tools to syndicate content. We are using social networking to get links. We are tagging and pinging and using autodiscovery in a new way.

Aside from using common sense SEO strategies like carefully naming our posts, linking within our sites with keyword phrases (as long as it makes sense to do so) and naturally writing about relevant topics, there is nothing remotely like the old SEO we had to do on the old web.

Once people take the same leap of faith we have and start using publishing tools that engines eat up along with posting regular, ORIGINAL, relevant content, they will start to see the same results.

What you need to see this happen for you:

1. You must be blogging on a high-tech platform (At least Wordpress out of the box – nothing does better in the engines.)

2. Create multiple tagged RSS feeds based on your top keywords and use autodiscovery in your template to shove content in the face of spiders.

3. Tag, Tag, Tag! And Ping! Ping! Ping!

4. Supplement your original content with relevant syndicated content.

5. Post every single day, even more than once a day, on real topics of interest to your market.

Make these changes and watch the fun begin. Post, rank, and watch those aggressive, sleepless, stressful search engine optimization days fade away in your rearview mirror forever!

Jack Humphrey has a lot to say about successful marketing and publishing on the web. The gurus subscribe to his blog and you certainly should too if you want to hear more about the new web and how to market on it! http://www.jackhumphrey.com .

Bookmark this article using any bookmark manager! Subscribe to Jack Humphrey's RSS feed using any feed reader!

EasyPublish™ this article - publishers click here

More articles by Jack Humphrey

Free Report!
Ten Essential Secrets Of Article Marketing ... Grab Your Free
Copy
Now:




We respect your privacy.


Need Content?
Regular Top Quality Content for your Blog, Ezine or Website ...
Delivered Direct,
For Free!

Click For Details



Arts & Entertainment
Automotive
Business - General
Computers & Technology
Finance & Investment
Food & Drink
Health & Fitness
Home & Family
Internet Marketing/Online Business
Legal
Pets & Animals
Politics & Government
Reference & Education
Religion & Faith
Self-Improvement/Motivation
Social
Sports & Recreation
Travel & Leisure
Writing & Speaking

More internet marketing articles:

  • Have You Ever Considered Quitting an Affiliate Internet Program? (Michelle Jayes)
    If you have ever joined an affiliate program and not really been happy with it in spite of marketing it diligently and for a fair period of time, but are reluctant to give up on it for the simple reason that you have been told by successful internet marketers that "A quitter never succeeds".

  • How To Advertise Your eBay Business On One Of The Highest Ranked Websites On The Internet - For FREE (Martyn Boaden)
    How to use eBay's "About Me" page to enhance your professional image on eBay, increase customers' confidence in your business and increase your sales ...

  • How To Create A Squidoo Lens It Is So Easy (Ryleigh Cantrell)
    Learn exactly how easy it is to advance your online presence and earn money too by using Squidoo. Step by step set up of your first lens.

  • Top 4 Strategies To Structure Your SaaS Reseller Agreement (Chip Cooper)
    If you'd like to leverage your success with your SaaS model by setting up a SaaS reseller channel, or if you'd like to begin to offer SaaS services originated by another vendor, you're facing the question of how to structure your Saas reseller agreement. There are at least 4 ways to do it, and one of these may be a good fit for you.

  • Google AdWords - How To Track Conversions (Simon Bell)
    As I'm sure you know; when a visitor to your website signs up for your newsletter, buys a product or even fills out a form this is classed as a conversion. The reason you're probably paying for traffic to your website is to increase your conversions. Buy why is it important to track your conversions?

  • 4 Ways to Gracefully Set Boundaries In Your Business (Alicia Forest)
    One of the many things I discovered when on my recent private retreat with my mentor coach Kendall Summerhawk was that I sometimes still have a tendency to bend in situations where I shouldn't. Not actually bend-over backwards, but enough that I end up not feeling good about the situation.

  • Do You Need a Website for Your Work at Home Business? (Mary Stansifer)
    You're going to start a work at home business. Do you need a website? Do you think that having a presence on the Internet will strengthen your company's overall marketing goals and contribute to your success?

  • Short Term Versus Long Term Marketing For Your Online Home Business (Lyle Holmes)
    Understanding short term marketing versus long term marketing can determine the type of results your online home business gets. Knowing how to properly promote your business will help separate your site from the rest of the field.

  • Getting to the top of search engines through one way linking (Ivana Katz)
    One way links are links that point to your site from others, but which are not linked to from your website. Google and many other search engines include link popularity as part of the way they evaluate and rank websites. Links are seen as a positive "vote" towards the quality of the website. As such, the more links from other relevant websites to yours, the better.

We Automatically Distribute Articles
To Thousands Of Publishers And Web Sites:

Submit Article
All content is viewed and used by you at your own risk and we do not warrant the accuracy or reliability of any of the information. The views expressed are those of the individual contributing authors and not necessarily those of this web site, or its owner, Takanomi Limited.
 
Copyright © 2009 Takanomi Ltd. Company no. 5629683. All rights reserved. | Privacy | Legal | Contact Information