Showing posts with label SEO Basics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SEO Basics. Show all posts

Wednesday, 9 October 2013

SEO - Basics and Must Haves Part 2

Meta Tags, meta description tags.
In our last issue we discussed Title tags. Following on from that we can now look into Meta tags and description tags, which help funnel users to what they are looking for in search results!

<Meta> Tags

Meta tags were once the cheat codes for Google rankings. People once upon a time would stuff keywords into the tags and search engines would then rank those pages highly, regardless to if the content on the page was relevant to those keywords. Those days are long gone. Google and other search engines are smarter now, yet Meta tags can still play an important role in getting the benefits of whatever you are selling out to the appropriate market.
 “What are these meta tags?” you ask.

“They provide the text under the title in search engine results” I reply.




Description tag, snippetFIGURE 1: THAT'S A META DESCRIPTION THERE! PEOPLE TEND TO REFER TO THIS TEXT AS A "SNIPPET".

Not only do Meta Tags provide the text, they also provide Google with an overview of what your page is about. It is important to have your keywords in the description. Meta tags do not influence Google rankings, however as the text is under the title, it will influence the behaviour of the reader. Furthermore Google will not take note of your Meta tags if it thinks they are unrelated to the content on your page and will truncate the first paragraph of your page and use that instead. So as with the aforementioned title tag, relevance is key.  Meta description tags can be any length, however best practice is to keep your descriptions down to 150-160 characters long. Finally, Meta descriptions will not appear on your web page at all. This is one of the reasons Google now takes no note of them as people could literally pack hundreds of keywords in and still have a nice looking webpage about something completely different. Aka, spamming!
 
Below is what the code looks like, if you don’t have IT or developer staff to help there are hundreds of resources out there to walk you through the process related to the platform you are using.

FIGURE 2: AS YOU CAN SEE, THERE IS MORE THAN ONE TYPE OF META TAG...
The more observant of you will have noticed that there are quite a few different Meta tags. Different tags do different things. Often different web services will use specific Meta tags as a way to verify ownership of a website as it will not be displayed on the page. The key tag we are concerned with is the Meta description tag. It looks like this
<META NAME=”description” CONTENT=”this is where you type the content you want to type” />
Capitals are not necessary; however they are the parts that remain constant between all Meta tags. Another type of Meta tag to note is the Meta name= “keywords” tag. Google pays no attention to this at all. Other search engines do, so it is worth putting five or six key terms related to your site. Meta tags are located in the <head> section of the HTML code.

To Do For My Business

        All pages have a unique meta description tag
        Tags are interesting and compelling
        All tags are relevant to their page
        All tags are between 150 – 160 characters long

For Psychs and HR
As your viewers and potential customers will likely scroll through various descriptions very quickly, try to get to the point and avoid using technical terms as much as possible. You need to allow for further questions to be asked around “will this business have the right product or service I’m looking for?” and generate a reason for following through to your page. At first it’s best to answer what you do, what you offer and stand out with your competitive advantage.

Now you have a great starting point to get your pages performing! But to get real about SEO we suggest you talk to one of our specialists and email info@psychpress.com.au with an idea of your site’s objectives.

SEO – Basics and Must Haves Part 1




What is SEO? Why is it important? How can title tags help?


Definition: “SEO (n) - The practice of actively attempting to optimize a webpage to improve its search engine visibility”. In essence, Search Engine Optimization is about linking what people are looking for and what your page has to offer.


In the ‘caveman’ days of internet SEO, certain tricks and underhanded means were available to get your page ranking higher in search engines. Nowadays the focus has moved (and continues to move) toward what the searcher wants to see and the most effective ways they can find it, which is why we need our websites to behave accordingly! Just about every bit of text throughout your site is searchable, from headings and titles to links and informative text. So if you can have the right words written in the right way placed where the user will see what they’re looking for, you’re already doing well.

Now I’m sure you’re keen to get started on optimising, so let’s get stuck into some “Key” terms, starting with Key Tags and Title Tags. We’ll look into how to identify them and how you can update yours...

Key <Tags>

Websites are coded in HTML. It is a rather simple coding language at heart. If you can understand some HTML, web optimization can be a friendlier place. Essentially a tag is a command inside triangle brackets < >. If you don’t know HTML the below is still important to grasp, and can be passed onto your IT!

 

The <Title> Tag – “Title tags are one of the simplest things to optimize for search results”

Title tags are the title of your web page. They appear in two locations: in the tab or top of the browser (depending on the browser) and as the link in search engine results.
They are the official title of your webpage. Every webpage on your website should have a different unique title, as no two pages are the same (at least no two pages should be the same…)


 Figure 1: Title tags appear at the top of the tab
 Figure 2: Title tags also appear as the link in search engine results i.e. Google

Title tags are easy to spot in the source of the web page if you would like to go further. All browsers support a way to view the source of the webpage (If using Google Chrome it will sync bookmarks across all the devices used). Press Ctrl + U to open source in Google Chrome, or right click and select View Page Source in Firefox then press Ctrl + F to open up a find box, and then type Title and push enter. It is easy. Below is what should show up.




Figure 3: Source View highlighting the title tag



The importance of these tags goes deeper than just the two places they are viewed. Whilst keeping in mind what people are clicking on in Google is important, there is a greater importance here. Title tags heavily influence search results and are very easy to optimize for search results. Google looks at page titles for relevance to the search term. If a title is rather generic and doesn’t contain a whole lot of keywords relevant to its business it will not rank as highly in search as it could, especially for what is presented at the front. 70 characters is currently the limit for what Google will show in its search results. Best practice would be to keep the title to 70 characters or less as beyond that Google will either truncate it or take no notice of it. Another good title for the above example is “Psych Press – Delivering Quality Tailored Psychometric Tests Online” or similar. This way when your audience is using Google they read this and think “yes, that is what I want”. Google will also read it and as it has more keywords it will match the search queries better and potentially rank higher.
Changing title tags alone is not going to rank you number one on Google, especially if the title is not relevant to the content on the page. As title tags are simple to edit they are a fantastic starting point in order to improve your online performance.

“To Do” For My Business

        Title tags reflect your website’s services, products or goals
        All pages have a unique title
        All title tags are unique
        All title tags are under 70 characters long

For those in Small Business
When thinking about the terms most relevant to your business, try to keep any technical language or jargon under control that may be casual to you and your staff but not frequent language to your target audience. If your service primarily solves issues or problems, it’s a great idea to brainstorm what people would search for at a basic level in these instances and include these terms.