Ireland
United States

Archive for the ‘Web Copywriting/SEO’ Category

Too Many Waste SEO Time and Effort

Thursday, June 3rd, 2010

Let’s spend a few moments discussing, or at least contemplating how the Internet is used, and how someone is likely to find your web site It comes as a surprise to people still that launching a web site is not the end of the story, merely the beginning. After all, the purpose of your web site is to make is easy, or at least easier, to find you, your product or your service, and the finding does not come by accident.

Past columns have talked about making sure your web site is ready to receive visitors before you spend your time, money and effort inviting them, and that concept is so important.  You have only the one chance, probably, to make that favorable first time impression, and if you don’t grab them in the first three seconds or so of their initial visit, you’ve likely lost them to your competition.

This is not the same thing as saying your web site needs to be beautiful – – really, it means only that it can’t be ugly.  Purpose and process are far more important than pretty, something I have written of often, and yet folks still get hung up on the pretty.

Attention spans are very short in real life today, and shorter, still, on the Internet.  If a user has spent time and effort searching for something in particular, they want that particular something quickly once they find it.  Your “call to action,” what to do and how to do it, is far more important than your pretty, so if you need a definition of “purpose and process,” there it is.  Tell your visitor what to do and how to do it, and then get out of their way.

Graphical works better than words, and if your product or service lends itself well to a graphical call to action, put it “above the fold,” where the visitor will see it as soon as the page opens.  Purpose and process – – give your visitor what he or she wants.  Make it easy for them, and stay out of their way.

But, let’s get back to how the Internet is used. It’s a single word – – searches.  People use the Internet to search – – for products, for services, for news, for answers.  What do they use for their searches?  Search engines.  Google, alone, is used for 1 billion searches per day world-wide.  The average Internet user conducted about 33 searches online per month in 2009  and that number is expected to grow to about 50 in the next five years.

Google represents about 67% of the searches conducted every day, more than any other search tool.  Last year, both Google and Yahoo began incorporating real time search from Twitter and blog feeds.  This will contribute to the growth of searches per month because it makes the results of those searches more relevant.  Search tool bars for Internet Explorer and Firefox will contribute to the growth of searches, too.  But it still comes down to searches.

How does your web site end up as one of those search results?  By its content.  Searches are still word value-based, irrespective of the search tool used.

What does that mean from a practical standpoint?  Do your research, find out what the inventory is for every conceivable word or phrase someone might use in a search for which you want to be found, and then make sure there’s enough of a search inventory to warrant having those words on your site.  In other words, find out what people are already searching for that has to do with your product or service, and then make sure your web site content is crafted around those keywords.

When you’ve done that research and have your list of keywords you know users are already searching for, then and only then are you ready to create content.  Without the knowledge aforehand that comes from solid research and well-conceived plan, the chances of success that come from a carefully coordinated strategy among all of the resources and online tools is diminished greatly. And when I speak of content, I mean content on your web site, content on your Twitter page, content on your Facebook business page, content in your blog.  If you haven’t done your research, assembled your Plan, and coordinated all of that content before you undertake its creation, you’re really just wasting your time.

Everything in its place, in proper order, all aspects correctly interwoven.  This is the best practices approach to the development of an overall Internet Marketing Plan, and is far more likely to achieve the success you hope for – – not high follower numbers on Twitter, not high friend numbers on Facebook; rather, visitor traffic to your web site with a high conversion rate.

“Followers” and “Friends” are nice, but a good conversion rate is the brass ring.  Get your web site ready first, make your Plan first, create your call to action first, craft your unified content first.  Then, you’ve maximized your chances for success.

Social Media as Integral Part of Marketing

Monday, February 22nd, 2010

The social media race is well underway, and the two major players are running as fast as they can to catch attention and grow their numbers. Facebook, with its 400 million members, is driving more traffic to the major portal sites today than Google; Google, still the leader with its 67% of the search engine traffic, has rolled out Buzz to compete.

Google made some major missteps in rolling out its Buzz, but that will pass. Once Facebook introduces its own email product (development well underway), the competition will become even mightier.

What does this mean for your web site marketing strategy, and is there a common element addressing both of these tools to improve your traffic?

Well, obviously, you need a presence on Facebook.  Your presence can’t be static, though.  It is no more true with Facebook than it has always been for your web site.  The “Build it and they will come” Internet strategy has never worked, and it still amazes me that so many think they simply need a web site to make their fortune.

Actually, let’s expand the discussion about social media to include Twitter, because it’s an excellent tool in its own right as a part of an overall social media marketing strategy.  And, the right tool for the right job applies as equally in this mix.

The element common to all of these tools, one so often overlooked or neglected, is actually the starting point in your social media marketing strategy.  The concept that “Content is King” has morphed just a bit, but it is as valid a concept today as it ever was.

Think about this carefully:  Social media works only if you have compelling content and something interesting to say.  Punch up your copy first – then invite guests.

Your strategy in the social media arena will be wasted energy if you have nothing of value to say on your website.  Traffic is one thing; but a clear “call to action” and meaningful content to back it up must be in place before the guests arrive, or the effort you invested inviting them will be for naught.

We’ve preached content growth and content refreshing, carefully planned, strategized and crafted around the most appropriate keywords for your business, for years.  It’s as true and necessary today as it has ever been, and it’s the reason we’re writing this piece to our blog today, as a matter of fact.

We want visitors to find a good take-a-way, something worthwhile and of value.  We want our visitors to find enough of interest in our content to help with their own online efforts, and hopefully something sufficiently useful to make them want to return later to learn something else of use.

We’ll then use our social media strategy (Twitter and Facebook, at least) to promote this piece, and hope it brings those visitors.  Excerpt feeds to our home page place these thoughts prominently for those visitors to see, as does our use of the Twitter Widget in the home page’s right side bar just below those excerpt feeds.

But, it starts with the content of the site.  We’ll say it again:  Social media works only if you have compelling content and something interesting to say.  Punch up your copy first – then invite guests.

By taking that first step, by offering that meaningful content, you’ll be ready to entertain and inform your guests when they arrive.  Neither your time nor theirs will be wasted, and you’ll have a much better chance to engage them in a solid conversation.

That is the point of the exercise, after all.

SEO Benefits of a Blog

Thursday, January 7th, 2010

We’re asked often about the use and popularity of blogs, and if you look closely, you will see that virtually every one of the sites we build has a blog as an integral part of it. The SEO benefits of having a blog as a part of your web site are enormous. In fact, you are reading a blog post now and our sister site, www.kisscomputing.com, also has a blog – - The Tao of Kiss.

Blogs are pure content, and as you have read on these pages often before, content is still king on the Internet. Content growth and content refreshing are two of the practices we recommend to every one of our clients, and with good reason.

Search engines reward the growth of content on a site, and why wouldn’t they?  More content, well planned and regularly added, keeps a site dynamic and interesting for its visitors.  Take a moment and read the Webmaster Guidelines at Google, and you will find the strongest of recommendations that sites be made user friendly with helpful content.

Reviewing your site’s performance, and staying abreast of Internet user search habits, help you identify keywords, especially of the long-tail variety, that your potential customers are using in searches you want to be found for, and refreshing your content puts you in front of their eyes.  Blogs can help you do that.

They are as easy to manage and write to as emails are to write and send.  Blog systems will have a password-protected back end, and a rich text editor that works very much like MS Word or Open Office Word.  Anyone familiar with email sending can write to a blog.

Writing for a blog is not something to be intimidated by, either.  We tell clients what they write is not as important that they write, and since we assume you know your business and your products and your services, writing about them should come easy to you.  Blog systems even have spell-checking, so there’s no excuse for misspelled words, either.

All of that having been said, take a step back and look again at what you are reading and where.  We customized the blog system and seamlessly integrated it into our web site.  We added an excerpt feed from it to the home page of our site, too.

Every time we write a new blog post, like this column, the content of our site has grown.  And, because of the excerpt feed to the home page, every time we write a new blog post, the content on our home page gets refreshed.

Now, look even closer.  One of the services we offer is search engine optimisation, writing content for a client’s site optimised for the most appropriate keywords, all designed to improve search engine rank position for those keywords.  SEO is our business, and one of the better tools for SEO best practices is a blog.

See the title of this blog post?  “The SEO Benefits of a Blog.” See the first paragraph of this blog post?  “The SEO benefits of having a blog . . . ” are included in the excerpt feed to the home page of our web site.

Having a blog as a part of your web site gives you the ability to grow the content of your site, introduce and increase the keywords that are the most appropriate for your business, and refresh the content of your home page.  These all represent search engine optimisation best practices, and help improve your search engine rank position.

That’s why we recommend a blog to every one of our clients.  As you have seen, we also follow our own advice.

Another SEO Test For You

Monday, December 14th, 2009

In October, we wrote of a search engine optimisation self-test we thought worth your taking, and suggested it could help sort out some of the issues with your own web site for future planning. This is another effort along those same lines with a slightly different slant – - nonetheless worth considering, though.

We’ve written so many times about basic SEO concepts, and yet it’s still the most common question we get asked everywhere we go. “I’ve got this new web site, take a look, let me know what you think,” are some of the most often spoken words to us.  And, “I rank #1 on Google for our site’s name” is another.

The purpose of this test today, though,  is to see how well you know your own site,  and not what we think of it. So, let’s get to the questions, and we’ll see your degree of self-awareness:

1.  For which keywords have you optimised your web site?

2.  Where does your site rank on Google, Yahoo and Bing for those keywords?

3.  Which search engines are sending visitors to your site and in what numbers?

4.  What searches are your visitors conducting on those search engines that bring them to your site?

Four questions, a pretty easy test.  How did you do?  How many could you answer?  Let’s review the importance of the answers and let you know your grade.

1.  One of the concepts many don’t yet get is that you choose the keywords for which your site will be ranked.  You choose those keywords based upon your product or service and the keyword inventory of how many searches are being conducted for those keywords on search engines now.  You write your home page copy, your page titles, your meta description, to incorporate those keywords in a good density that will insure a good search engine indexing.

In short, you choose, and you optimise based upon your choices.  So, if you don’t know what keywords your web site has been optimised for, you didn’t do your work properly.  For those of you who do know, though, we say “Well Done.”

2.  Assuming you got a “Well Done” on the first question, and your site has been optimised for the right keywords and in the right way, the rank results on Google, Yahoo and Bing should be good.  That will mean your site is easy to find in a search at one of those engines, and perhaps is in the top 20, or even the top 10.  Simply go to one of them and enter one of the keywords for which your site has been optimised – - and then scroll through until you find your site listed.

If you don’t find it in the first two or three results pages, then perhaps you optimised it for the wrong keywords; or, your keyword density is too low for a good rank.  This means you have more work to do on your site.

3.  Your site should have some statistical gathering tool for you to review, whether it be one provided by your hosting company, like Webalizer, or perhaps Google Analytics or Yahoo Web Analytics.  Any one of those will be able to tell you which search engines are sending visitors to your site, and in what number. This data is helpful in determining the success or failure of your optimisation efforts, and should be reviewed at least monthly.  How else will you know whether you are on the right track?

4.  This is the second part of question #3, actually.  Those statistical gathering tools will tell you what searches your visitors actually conducted that lead them to your site.  Once again, the word or phrase used in a search for which your site is a relevant result is called . . . . a keyword.

It’s important to know how visitors are finding your site.  The data tells you whether your efforts in creating optimised content were successful.  The data also tells you what adjustments in your content might help improve your rank position to make it even easier for people to find your site.

So, how did you do?  How many could you answer?  What did your answers tell you?

These are only four questions, four basic questions.  There are many more that should be asked on a regular basis.  Search engine optimisation is not once-off, no matter what anyone else tells you.

When you open a “sticks and bricks” store, you don’t simply open the door and expect to find a queue already.  You hang a sign, place adverts in the local papers, perhaps consider radio spots, neighborhood leaflets.  Even these are not once-off efforts – - they continue from month to month, season to season, and that’s how you grow your business.

On the Internet, it’s the same.  You don’t just launch your site and have a queue form the next day.  SEO is ongoing, or at least it should be if you wish to be successful with your online presence.

If you couldn’t answer those four simple questions, that success is not likely to happen.

SEO Basics That Work

Tuesday, November 24th, 2009

We’ve written so often about basic search engine optimisation (SEO) practices, and maybe it’s because they seem so simple that so many overlook them. Page titles, word count/keyword density, headings, paragraphs, as well as the research that precedes the actual writing – - these aren’t the whole of it, but they do matter. Web site owners ignore them at their peril.

Perhaps an example might help. I hesitate to tell the story because I don’t want to create the impression it’s SEO lightning that will strike the same place time and time again. There’s no magic to it, and just taking the time to read the Webmaster Guidelines Google offers will tell you that. And, SEO efforts achieve varying degrees of success at different speeds depending on the web site, its subject matter/products/services, and a site owner’s dedication to engage in ongoing best practices.

With that said, let’s look at Inuit Images. John and Victoria have been operating an Inuit Art Gallery for thirteen years, and their web site was ten years old when they called KISS. The Inuit sculptures, carvings, drawings and master works are beautiful, authentic, and both prehistoric and contemporary.

Yet, even with that tenure on the Internet, the web site did not rank well for keywords associated with their art. We were asked to give their site a face lift and help them be found a bit easily in searches. We performed our due diligence on keyword inventory research, assembled a list of keywords to target, wrote new page titles, meta description and structured copy, helped them find a new look and feel for the site, and launched the new version in early October.

Last week, we reviewed the site’s first month performance and were delighted to find that its rank position for the targeted keywords, which for the old site was not in the top 50 results in any instance, had improved into the top 25: “inuit art” has them ranked #25; “inuit art sculptures” at #8; “inuit sculptures” at #13; “inuit art books” #24; “eskimo art” at #6; and, “inuit art gallery” at #18.

These are keywords for which their site wants to rank well – – they all have to do directly with their gallery offerings and the pieces they present. There’s no mystery here, either. You assemble the list of keywords, craft the copy around it, and review the statistical data periodically to see how the content is performing.

Results are not always this quick, to be honest, and not often as dramatic. We always assume the first month will simply establish a baseline performance for the second month’s stats, and hope for some movement by then. The basics don’t change, though, and the exercise is still the same.

Of course, there is more to the work than these steps. There’s link building strategies, social networking (LinkedIn, Twitter, Facebook, etc.), as well as content growth and refreshing, to mention a few. Websites are perpetual works in progress, frankly.

But, that’s where it all begins: compelling content that targets the right keywords; words in all the right places; keywords in the right frequency; page titles; headings; main body text; all coordinated for a solid and strong indexing by the search engines.

It does work.

An SEO Self-Test Worth Taking

Thursday, October 29th, 2009

My partner in Dublin, Ireland, Micheal O Donnabhain, was asked to make a presentation to his business networking group recently, and the subject he was to present was search engine optimization basics. Three group members had volunteered their websites for a quick review, and we evaluated their sites using just four of the far more than four SEO considerations – Micheal had to keep his remarks to about 20 minutes.

Those four site elements were: page title, meta description, headings, and word count/keyword density. So that we could make sure everyone was on the same page, we offered a definition of “keyword”: a word or phrase a person was likely to use when searching for a web site’s product or service for which the site would want to be a high-ranked result.

Past columns to this blog have addressed the importance of page title, meta description, headings and word count/keyword density, and they can be reviewed in the Web Copy Writing/SEO category if you’re interested. What I want to talk about today is the self test we gave the group at the end of the presentation – – our idea for a good “take-a-way” from the meeting. I’d like to offer it for you to take on your own, and don’t worry – – it’s easy, quick, and there’s no follow-up quiz for you.

Pretend for a moment you are not you, and you don’t know your web site exists. Instead, you are a person looking for the real you and your web site, and the product or service you sell. You are that person sitting in front of your computer ready to conduct a search on Google or Yahoo or Bing or one of the other search engines to find the real you.

Make a list of the words or phrases you would enter in the search field to find the product or service you promote and sell on your web site. Write three or four search phrases that occur to you. Remember, now, you aren’t you, and you don’t know your web site exists – – all you know is the product or service you want to find.

Then, with that list in front of you, go to your web site and look at your page title, your meta description, your headings and your home page content. If you don’t find the keywords from your list in any or all of those places, and in the right frequency, you have some serious work to do on your site. If those keywords aren’t there, it’s not likely anyone is going to find you in their search.

There’s a lot more to SEO than this simple test, but it’s a good start. It’s a worthwhile exercise, and it will be very instructive for you.

Find Your Niche and Focus On It

Thursday, May 21st, 2009

I read an interesting article yesterday on the subject of Facebook, a social networking web site with over 200 million members. It is the #4 most visited website in the world, a massive following of family members and friends who share photos and news about each other, generally using the site as a means of staying in touch.

The title of the article is “The Facebook Death Watch Begins,” and the premise of the piece is that Facebook will eventually die an incredibly profitable death, but die it will. His reasoning is sound, and every web entrepreneur should pay attention.

Basically, the article suggests that Facebook will wither and die because it is trying to be all things to all people.  Rather than concentrate its efforts on being the best at one or two features, Facebook is trying to do too many things.

Photo sharing?  Sure, but that’s what Flickr does about as well as it can be done.  Gaming?  Sure.  Email?  You betcha.  Social meeting place?  Okay.  But, there are plenty of alternatives to each of those, and everyone has their favorite.

We don’t always go to the same restaurant every time we eat out.  We don’t watch the same movie over and over.  We don’t always play a game of golf with the same three people every round.  We mix things up, we all like variety, and we have our own ways of doing things.

AOL tried to be all things to all people, and it failed spectacularly.  When you try to be all things, ultimately you become no thing.  Those who concentrate all of their efforts and apply all of their strengths to one or two endeavours usually succeed.

A restaurant that has 100 items on its menu, from Italian to Chinese to Thai and every ethnic offering you can think of, can’t possibly offer the best in each, certainly not the way a single ethnic restaurant can.  It has to carry too many raw ingredients to meet menu demands; the costs to carry such a high inventory eventually pulls it down; and, those wanting Chinese will go to a Chinese restaurant, not the “all foods to all people” place.

When it comes to your online business, don’t follow AOL’s model, and don’t emulate Facebook’s everything to everyone approach. Pick the one or two things you believe yourself to be the best at, and devote your energy to them.

Online shoppers have their favorite websites for the products they buy online.  They’ve had a good shopping experience somewhere, feel comfortable with the purchases they’ve made, and go back to where they’ve had that success.

From an online marketing standpoint, especially when it comes to search engine optimisation, the more finely focused your efforts are, the better the results will be.  A single, strong home page call to action that grabs the visitor’s attention quickly and clearly will most often lead to your getting your most desired response from that visitor.

Keep it simple, and solutions are easy to find.  Facebook will make its owners a great deal of money, but I do agree that eventually it will suffer the same fate as AOL – - it will over-reach and topple over from too many things.  Don’t let that happen to your web site.

Search Engine Optimisation – What You Need to Consider

Monday, April 13th, 2009

I still find it interesting that people believe their web site has been indexed well if they can find it in a Google search for the name of their web site. Let’s think about that for a moment and see if it is truly important.

Let’s assume the purpose of your web site is to sell something whether a product or a service. Let’s assume, also, your company name doesn’t identify that product or service. Ex: Mc Grath Enterprises, Ltd., and the product I sell is a blue-fringed widget. The company/web site name gives no hint that you can purchase a lovely blue-fringed widget from us.

If a person doesn’t know the company exists, he or she is so very unlikely to search on Google for “mc grath enterprises, ltd.”  But, if a person knows he or she wants or needs a blue-fringed widget, he or she is very likely to search on Google for “blue-fringed widget.”

If the web site of Mc Grath Enterprises, Ltd., has been optimised well for that keyword, Google is very likely to present it as a search result for that keyword.  If the price for your widget is a good one, a sale is likely.  That is the point of an e-commerce web site.

When you are thinking about the content of your web site, and especially the home page, keep this little example in mind.  You want Google and Yahoo and MSN and all of the other search engines to rank you well for the keywords people are likely to be searching for, and you want your e-commerce web site to be optimised for your products and services.

So, you will want to mention your “blue-fringed widgets” rather prominently in your home page’s copy – - in your headings, in the paragraphs that follow, in the page title, in the meta description, and in your navigation menu even, if possible.  That will get you indexed well and correctly for the keywords that will bring visitors searching for what you sell.

It should be no surprise that you can find your site in a Google search for the name of your site.  But, how many others will be searching for you by the name of your site?  Since they are more likely to be searching for what you sell, that tells you what you need to say on your home page.

Make the words you use count.  And, measure how well your site has been indexed by the rank results for the keywords that count.  In that sense, the name of your site really doesn’t matter.

Here’s another example:  our client, Wynners.ie.  Daphne Wynne’s company sells printed promotional products and corporate gifts. You’d never truly guess that from the name of the web site, www.wynners.ie.  And, it’s probably no surprise to you that for a search on Google for the keyword “wynners.ie” her site is ranked #1 and #2.  But how many people are likely to search that keyword?

Her home page copy was optimised for the keywords “printed promotional products” and “printed corporate gifts” because those are the products she sells.  And, because those are the keywords potential customers are likely to use in their Google searches.

For the keyword “printed promotional products,” her site ranks #3 on Google; and, for the keyword “printed corporate gifts,” her site ranks #4.  That’s not a bad rank for the first month following launch of her new site.

Keep your products and services in the forefront of your thinking when it’s time to write copy for your web site’s home page.  That’s what your customers are going to search for, and you certainly want them to find you when they do.

Web Copy Writing and The Audience

Tuesday, March 31st, 2009

Let’s talk about copy writing for the web today, and specifically who the audience is for that copy. It’s something of a dilemma, with some advocating the search engines as the primary audience while others identifying visitors as the more important one.

It is a valid argument that no one will see your web site unless search engines send them there in the first place. With more than 125 million web sites world-wide and growing every day, the competition for traffic gets keener by the moment. Grabbing the attention of Google and Yahoo and the rest seems just the obvious notion, with the expectation that a high rank position on them will guarantee traffic.

It is also a valid argument that no one will do business with you unless the content of your site grabs them.  Compelling and well-crafted copy that holds a visitor’s attention will get you that most desired response, whether it’s a purchase of your product, or a telephone call to schedule an appointment, or a contact form submission that supplies an email address for followup contact.

So, which is it?  I’m not going to answer the question, actually.  I’m taking a different approach to it today, and give you even more to think about.

There’s an old line from French Revolution history that seems applicable at the moment – - something about needing to find out where the people were going so they could be lead there.

Keywords – - the words or phrases pertaining to your products or services that people are likely to use in a Google or Yahoo search, and for which you want your site to be ranked well.  That’s as good a definition of keyword as any for purposes of this discussion.

You know what your keywords are, or at least you can figure them out based upon the products or services offered through your web site.  In order to be indexed by search engines for those keywords, they must appear in the copy of your web site.  Listing them in your source code (meta keywords) just doesn’t cut it with search engines.  Read our Free Resource Booklet for more detailed discussion.

After you’ve assembled your list of those keywords, though, don’t take pen to paper just yet.  Check the keyword inventory for them first.  Use an online resource like Nichebot, or even Nichebot Classic – - find out how many searches were conducted for those keywords in the past and what the predicted search inventory will be in the future.  Also, find out in what variations your keywords have been searched or are likely to be searched.

Think about that. You can learn what people are already searching for, what they are already wanting to find.  You can learn how they are searching for you, too – - what phrase or variation of your keywords they are already using in those searches at Google and Yahoo.

Find out where they are going so you can lead them – - invaluable information.  Now, take pen to paper and write your copy.  Make sure it contains keywords (words and phrases) that people are already searching for and that you want to be found for, and lead them to your site.

Let that be the perspective of your writing, rather than who your audience should be.  Search engines will reward you with a good rank, and visitors will have found what they have already been looking for – - your site.

Search Engine Optimization and Search Engine Intelligence

Wednesday, February 25th, 2009

As we’ve written so often in the past, search engines are word value-based systems. They do not “see” images or colors, graphics or photos. They scan the words they find, run those words through their algorithms, determine how a site should be indexed (stored in their data bases), and for which searches it should be presented as a “relevant” result.

Their little “robots” scour the Internet from site to site, examining what they find, and reporting back to the “mother ship” those findings. They recognize the words they scan, but without any understanding of their meaning. After all, those “robots” are merely pieces of software, and not sentient beings.

Let me offer a simple and simplified illustration of one thing this means.  We’ve all seen it, and you’ll know exactly what I mean.  You are at Google or Yahoo or another of your favorite search engines running a search.  The results page pops up in response, and you notice some of the sites given, both in the organic list and in the sponsored results list, don’t really seem appropriate to your search.  The sites listed don’t have much to do with exactly what you are looking for, and you wonder why they’re listed.

There are two reasons for this.  First, the site has likely played a little with its keywords, taken some liberties with content or copy that has little, if anything, to do with their products or services.  The site has nonetheless been indexed for those keywords and “fooled” the robots into thinking that is what the site is about.

The second reason is that robots, so far, only recognize the words, and not their meaning. That may change someday.

Search engine algorithms have evolved mightily over the years, and the way search engines work will always be dynamic.  The most important concept for them is relevancy – - delivering search results matched exactly to the search.  This is how they help their brand loyalty build, believing that searchers who are given the most relevant results for their search will return to that engine for all future searches.

Imagine, then, a search engine algorithm that understands the meaning of a phrase, rather than simply recognizing the word(s).  How much more relevant, then, would search results be?  I’d say pretty darn relevant, and searchers would be given “just the facts, Ma’am” every time.

This is one of the directions Google and Yahoo and the rest will be moving toward, if they are not already doing so.  In the meantime, though, you can probably expect them to assign greater value to “brand” in order to combat those web sites who play games with their content in attempts to “fool” the robots.  The better known the brand, the more likely it will be presented as a high ranked search result.

Search engines are fighting for their own brand loyalty, if you will, in their efforts to grab a large share of the billions spend on sponsored results.  Recognizing a “brand” name is one way to fight for market share, because it has the best chance of presenting relevant results.

It also means the little guys will have a harder time achieving high rank positions.  Longer keyword phrases, or “longtail” keywords, will still have high value.  Searchers have learned that if they drill down their searches with longtail phrases, they are likely to be given more relevant results to their search.

Simplified, but a good example:  “hotels” gives you hundreds of millions of results; “hotels Dublin” gives you tens of millions of results; “hotels Dublin Leopardstown area” will give you far fewer, and if that is where you need to stay on your trip to Dublin, you’re going to get the most relevant results for your search.

Yes, search engine algorithms undergo regular changes and updates.  Some day, the robots are going to recognize the meaning of the words they find, and not just the words.  For the time being, though, us “regular” folk should simply continue to drill down our searches for the best and most relevant results.