
Off-Page Optimisation
If you have followed the last few chapters of this guide you should now have a better idea of how to develop and format content for your website. This formatting of your content is known as on-page optimisation. However, for web pages to rank well on Google and other engines, you need to build trust and popularity. To do this you need to employ a variety of off-page optimisation techniques (so called because the optimisation work does not involve directly editing the HTML or content of your web pages). Off-page optimisation aims to generate links from other trustworthy, relevant and popular third party web pages back to your website. This link-building process is fundamentally the most important element of SEO. However, link-building is also one of the trickiest and time consuming parts of the SEO process. For bigger businesses this process is made inevitably easier as a result of large budgets for online and offline PR, promotions and general marketing. Bigger businesses may also employ large teams of marketing staff to execute the “linkable” creative. Small business SEO, on the other hand, may be hampered by smaller budgets and limited human resources. This chapter of my guide offers general advice on the kinds of links that need to be sourced and the tactics small businesses can employ to attract inbound links and improve search engine placement. This article follows on from Part Seventeen: Optimising META Titles & Descriptions. To go back to the start of this guide you can read my Introduction.
General Guidelines
Some key considerations to remember when sourcing links for your website:
Small Business Link Building Strategies
Link-building for small businesses is a question of finance and human resources. Most small businesses do not have unlimited budgets for marketing, promotions and PR. Smart small business link building strategies therefore need to place emphasis on what’s unique and compelling about their online proposition. This together with a careful consideration of your budget and human resources will help you to determine your off-page optimisation strategy. Here are a selection of options:
Part Nineteen
These are just a few methods and strategies that small businesses can employ to increase links and improve their SEO performance. In the next chapter I will look at another area of off-page optimisation in more detail – social media optimisation.
Part Seventeen: Optimising META Titles & Descriptions
META Titles & Descriptions Research carried out by SEOmoz indicates that the majority of SEO professionals still consider the use of key-phrases in META title tags to be the most important on-page element for optimising your content. Following on from Chapter Sixteen: Content Generation & Formatting, this chapter of my small business SEO guide looks at best practice techniques for optimising your META titles and descriptions. To go back to the start of this guide you can read my introduction. META Title Optimisation In the last chapter I discussed the importance of using your key-phrase research to determine a content generation...Read More
Part Sixteen: Content Generation & Formatting
Content Generation & Formatting As mentioned in previous chapters of this guide, content development is one of the key cornerstones to successful search engine optimisation. However, filling your brand new website with endless pages of poorly written content or, worse still, content copied directly from other websites, will not help you to secure link popularity with web users or trust with the search engines. Following on from Part Fifteen: On-page Optimisation Overview, this chapter of my step-by-step guide to small business SEO looks specifically at the on-page topic of generating & formatting content for your site and how small business owners...Read More
Part Fifteen: On-Page Optimisation Overview
On-Page Optimisation Overview In the last chapter I referenced the importance of ensuring that unique META title tags are written for each individual web page on your site before it launches. Adding META titles is one element of what’s commonly referred to as “on-page optimisation”. On-page optimisation is essentially the process of tweaking HTML mark-up and page content in order to increase the potential for higher search rankings. This is in contrast to “off-page” optimisation techniques such as link-baiting. On-page optimisation should be given considerable focus by small business website owners especially in the immediate few months after a new website...Read More
Part Fourteen: Launching New Websites
Launching New Webistes So far my SEO guide has covered all of the steps that small businesses need to take before a website goes live. As I am now on my fourteenth chapter this perhaps gives some indication of the importance and precedence that ought to be given to SEO planning and preparation. I hope that, so far, I have shown how small business SEO strategies can be reasonably cost-effective to implement; dependant, of course, on how much of the process you choose to develop in-house and how much you outsource to an agency or consultant. In part fifteen of this...Read More
Part Thirteen: Sitemaps
Sitemaps Small business company websites and internet start-up businesses need to consider content development as part of their SEO strategy. Once you have added content to your site and instigated a plan to develop the number of web pages on your site, you need to ensure that these pages can be crawled and indexed. One method to assist with this is to make use of a sitemap. This stage of my step-by-step guide to small business SEO covers the reasons why you should implement this before your website launches. This article follows on from Part Twelve: Web Analytics. To go back...Read More
Part Twelve: Web Analytics
Web Analytics One of the final tasks that small business owners need to complete before launching a new company website or e-commerce business is to ensure that an adequate web analytics solution is set-up. So, in this stage of my step-by-step guide to small business SEO, I will look at the analytics options available, the tasks to set when monitoring website activity and ways to use web analytics data to improve your performance in the search engines. This article follows on from Part Eleven: Competitor Benchmarking. To go back to the start of my guide click here. Web Analytics for Small Business Installing...Read More
Part Eleven: Competitor Benchmarking
Competitor Benchmarking So far all of the stages in my step-by-step guide to small business SEO have covered the various processes that need to be given consideration before a new internet start-up business launches. One of the final most important things you need to do before you brief a web designer or begin the process of building your website is competitor benchmarking (carrying out analysis on your major competitors). This is another important process that will help you to define your key-phrase integration strategy as discussed in Part Five: Web Design and SEO and in Part Nine: Key-phrase Research. This article...Read More
Part Ten: Targeting Local Search
Targeting Local Search Increasing numbers of people are using local search terms to find products, information or services online. Targeting local search is therefore an ideal starting strategy for many small to medium size businesses that are looking to increase their website visibility. So, for part ten of my step-by-step guide to small business SEO, I will offer some advice on how to target local search more effectively. This article follows on from Part Nine: Key-phrase Research. To go back to the start of my guide click here. Setting up for Local Search In Part Nine of this guide I indicated the...Read More
Part Nine: Key-phrase Research
Key-phrase Research So far my step-by-step guide to small business SEO has covered many of the planning stages that ought to be considered before a new website business is launched. The advice offered so far is most relevant to internet start-ups or small businesses looking to venture onto the web for the first time. One of the most crucial SEO planning stages is key-phrase research. Key-phrase research should be conducted before you brief a web design agency and, as mentioned in Part Six: Site Architecture, it should be integrated into the brief for the technical set-up of your website. This article...Read More
