Google Confirms that Relevant Content is Crucial
Author:-Michele Rempel
Recently during a SXSW (South by Southwest) panel, Matt Cutts, who is the head of Google’s search spam team (now there’s a one-of-a-kind job), spoke about Google’s new focus on websites that are “too optimized” for SEO. He explained that Google is working on an algorithm update that will penalize websites that “throw too many keywords on the page, exchange way too many links, whatever they’re doing to go beyond what a normal person would expect”. Cutts also said that those sites site owners who will be penalized are “all those people doing, for lack of a better word, over optimization or overly SEO – versus those making great content and great site(s). We are trying to make GoogleBot smarter, make our relevance better, and we are also looking for those who abuse it…”
For small business owners, the next quote by Cutts speaks to the frustration of many who are trying to get our websites found. ”Are you pretty much out of luck if you’re not optimizing your site but it has relevant content? If I’m a mom or pop and I’m trying to optimize a site by myself, I’m going to get beat by people paying thousands of dollars.”
“Make a site that’s useful. Make a site that’s interesting.”
As an antidote, Cutts also said something that we business owners and leaders should note: “Make a compelling site. Make a site that’s useful. Make a site that’s interesting. Make a site that’s relevant to people’s interests… We’re always trying to best approximate if a user lands on a page if they are going to be annoyed… All of the changes we make are designed to approximate, if a user lands on your page, just how happy they are going to be with what they’re going to get.”
If you’re working with an SEO company and you’re not exactly sure what tactics they are using, ask them. What you don’t want is an SEO company that is stuffing your pages with keywords, building back-links aggressively and doing other “black hat” sorts of activities. SEO is still useful for making sure that your website is easily “crawlable” and that you do have good and targeted keywords on your site, among other things. However, for most SMBs, I believe that an important takeaway from Mr. Cutts’ statements is that we need to create and post good content that we know our readers will want.
If your strategy lately has been to add interesting and relevant content to your site on a regular basis, then you’re probably ahead of a lot of your competitors. If that hasn’t been your strategy, now is the time to start.
3 Reasons Why Your Blog Should Be Located on Your Website
Author:-Michele Rempel
If you are like many business owners, the idea that you should be blogging came after you spent a bunch of money on your website. So you figure that you can just start a blog on one of the free blogging sites and link it to your website. That should be good enough, right? Wrong.
Here are 3 reasons why your blog should be on your website:
Drive customers to your main digital property: If you are using Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, etc. to announce and post links to your latest blogs, you should be driving that traffic to your main website so that people can check out your company’s products and services. Your blog posts should come from the place that represents your company. Also, it may be tough to brand one of the template sites to look like your own website.
Enhance your SEO (Search Engine Optimization): When your blog is located on your website, any traffic to the blog goes to your website. This can help your search engine ranking. Also, updating your blog gives your website fresh content, which is something that the search engines like to see. Having a blog on your site does not guarantee great search engine rankings, especially if you don’t blog much or use platforms such as Facebook or Twitter to send out links to your posts. However, some fresh content and some traffic is usually better than nothing.
You are at the mercy of the blogging site. When you put your content on someone else’s site, you could risk losing everything if they fold, get shut down or change their policies. Why trust another website with all of your good content?
Talk with your website developer about including a blog on your website (we prefer the WordPress Content Management System). It is also a great idea to think about converting your main website to a WordPress site because you can then update and edit much of the content on the website yourself. Good web developers can make a WordPress site look like a “regular” website.









