These
are some of the most often asked
questions in search engines regarding
San Francisco.
This
is how you will build the pages,
and it is so easy once you have
the questions to focus on.
First,
the file name. Name the file the
name of the question. Let's take
the first one as our example,
"Where can I find tourist information
on San Francisco?" The file name
would be:
where-can-i-find-tourist-information-on-san-francisco.html
Make
sure the file is in all lower
case, as that is the way 70% of
the web surfers type. Separate
the words with dashes, leave off
the question mark at the end (search
engines hate them) and finish
it off with the extension of your
choice (htm, html, shtml, etc.).
Next
is the Title. The Title is the
question. Keep it to 72 characters
or less, if possible. In your
code, it would look like this:
<title>Where
can I find tourist information
on San Francisco?</title>
Why is
"San Francisco" capitalized in
the Title when we made sure it
was in lower case in the file
name? Pure and simple, it is for
aesthetics. This is your Title,
and having "San Francisco" in
lower case would not look right
and could affect your "click-thru"
rate.
Your
description is next. Your description
should ANSWER the question. It's
as simple as that. Keep it to
150 characters or less.
<meta
name="description" content=
"All the information you need
on San Francisco can be found
at Norma's Gifts - and it's free.
Walk through our rooms of gifts
as our walls show you the 'secrets'
of The City By The Bay that most
tourists never see.">
Meta
Tag Keywords? Forget about them.
They are overrated and will not
help your cause according to our
testing.
The body
of your document. This is key.
Okay, you will repeat the question
in a Heading Tag, like this:
<H1>Where
can I find tourist information
on San Francisco?</H1>
You will
then use about 300-500 words of
text to answer the question, discuss
your business and give compelling
information with a link back to
your Home Page or another page
with additional information.
This
is how you make your site successful
on the web. Give quality, free
information on topics related
to your business and what people
search the web for. If your information
is good and compeling, the visitor
is sure to visit other pages on
your site, and thus their confidence
in your business increases.
More
buyer confidence always equals
more sales.
Make
sure the page matches the overall
theme of your site, so the visitor
doesn't think they are at another
site when they go to your home
page.
Now,
sit back, wait a few weeks and
check your log files. You should
have a boost in traffic via Ask
Jeeves!
------
© 2000, WebMarketingNow.com
Jerry West is the Director of
Internet Marketing for WebMarketingNow.
He has been consulting on the
web since 1996 and has assisted
hundreds of companies gain an
upper-hand over their competition.
Visit http://www.webmarketingnow.com/
for the latest in marketing tips
that are tested and proven.
The above
article can be reproduced on your
site or e-zine as long as the
signature file remains.
Article
Search Phrases: Ask Jeeves, Increase
Traffic