
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.

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 plan based on quality and “linkability”. Prior to publishing your content, there are two more elements to consider: these are the META title and description tags. Following on my On-Page Optimisation Overview, here are some more key considerations for optimising your META titles:
Meta Description Optimisation
To avoid the search engines randomly displaying text from the body copy of your document you can write a META description that contains the specific content, key-phrases and incentives that you want search engine users to see. Here are some key considerations for optimising META descriptions:
The keyword META tag is now pretty much obsolete but you may wish to add a small selection of the most relevant keywords to this tag. Small business owners should be aware that writing great titles and descriptions will not immediately transform your website into an overnight success. Once your content is published, you need to promote it and gain trust and popularity for it via a number of off-page optimisation factors. These off-page factors will be the focus of the next three chapters.
Part Eighteen
The next chapter of this guide will look at the crucial off-page process of link-building paying particular attention to ethical methods small business owners can employ to increase the “linkability” and SEO potential of their sites. Click here to go to part eighteen.

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 can maximise the potential of new sites by developing content tailored to a specific niche. To go back to the start of this guide you can read my Introduction.
Generating Useful, Targeted Content
If you have followed this guide from the beginning, you should by now have established through your key-phrase research an extensive list of “head”, “long-tail” and “local” search term targets. Each of these key-phrase terms should be unique although connected to your “head” key-phrase theme or “niche”. The next stage for your web development process should be to put in place a content generation plan with the aim of gradually increasing the volume of genuinely useful web pages that individually target your unique key-phrases.
Content generation and link-building are without doubt the two most important elements of SEO. If you don’t provide your website users with useful, engaging, informative, unique, newsworthy, intelligent or amusing content, you will not be able to entice people to link to you naturally. Authority sites will almost never link naturally to a site that does not provide at least one of these qualities, and authority links are the ones that count! (More on link-building and determining link authority in part eighteen).
Small business start-ups need to give a lot of thought to the presentation and delivery of content on their new websites. What differentiates your content from what can be found elsewhere on the web? What style and tone of writing are you employing to appeal to your target market? What is the purpose of your content, is it simply to drive sales enquiries or to build credibility as an authority on your subject?
Formatting Your Content
Once you have considered these questions and determined your content generation plan you next need to write the content itself, format it and publish it on your website. Many big businesses employ experienced SEO copywriters and engineers to do this work, however, some small business owners may wish to develop this process in-house to keep development costs as low as possible. Should you decide to do this there are several things you should consider when writing and formatting your web copy:
Part Seventeen
This chapter has covered some of the questions small businesses should consider when developing a content generation plan plus the key elements to formatting content for the web. The next chapter will look at some advanced techniques for optimising title and description META tags. Click here to go to part seventeen.

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 launches. As a result, the next few stages of my step-by-step guide to small business SEO will be dedicated to on-page optimisation techniques, beginning here with an overview of the key elements. This article follows on from Part Fourteen: Launching New Websites. To go back to the start of this guide you can read my Introduction here.
General Guidelines
If you choose to add or optimise content on your website yourself, there are several key things to consider.
Meta Tags
Body Copy and HTML tags
Internal Links
Images
Review
On-Page Summary
This overview of on-page optimisation factors is intended to outline the key considerations when creating content for the web with both users and search engines in mind. Start-up companies and small business websites can start to maximise on the potential to drive qualified traffic to their sites through the provision of highly targeted, niche content that is genuinely useful and engaging. In the next few chapters I will look at on-page factors in more detail. Click here to go to part sixteen.

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 guide I intend to offer an overview of the “on-page” optimisation techniques that can be implemented once your site has launched. However before moving onto this it would be useful to recap here the planning and preparation stages taken so far plus an outline of the final considerations before your launch. This article follows on from Part Thirteen: Sitemaps. To go back to the start of my guide click here.
Overview of SEO Planning
Small businesses and internet start-ups planning on launching a website for the first time should give consideration to the following steps. The links within each step point back to the relevant sections of this guide.
1. Choose a reputable web hosting company
2. Choose a domain name for your business
3. Define your SEO Planning model
4. Define your key-phrase integration and website design brief carefully
5. Ensure that site architecture directives are central to your website build
6. Ensure that you implement an SEO friendly content management system
7. Consider WordPress as a cost-effective CMS for small business SEO
8. Conduct thorough key-phrase research before you brief a web designer
9. Target long-tail and local search key-phrases for short term wins
10. Conduct competitor analysis before committing to a key-phrase strategy
11. Install effective web analytics on your website
12. Install a sitemap on your website
Final Considerations
Also give some thought to the following before launching your website:
1. Technical. Ensure you have given unique META titles and descriptions to all of your web pages (more on this in the next few chapters). Also ensure that you are happy with the URL structure of your main pages. Once your site launches you may start to receive inbound links straight away (depending upon how much you’ve invested in general marketing). Changing your URL structures at a later date means implementing page 301 redirects and subsequently diluting the power of the links pointing at your site.
2. Offline Marketing. SEO is not just about technical adjustments to your website, content development and link-building. Really effective SEO strategies are ones that are integrated with your other marketing activities. Before your website launches, give some thought to your offline marketing. Press advertisements, flyers, posters and outdoor media should encourage people not only to visit your website but to engage with and share it. If you offer great, free content on your site, make sure you this is clear in your offline promotions. Encourage people to sign-up, share or comment on your website content. This will help you to build “natural” links into your site. Although small business budgets can be prohibitive, you should avoid the trap of focusing all your efforts online. Targeted offline campaigns such as flyering, need not be overly expensive.
3. Public Relations. Again, give some thought to how you intend to “announce” your site to the world. Draw up a list of press and industry targets that are most likely to show some interest in your niche. Devise a range of unique and eye-catching press releases featuring genuinely newsworthy or topical information (a press release simply stating that your new website is now online will get you nowhere). Make sure you follow up your press release distribution with phone calls to the journalists, editors and industry professionals that you have targeted. Consider using a site announcement service such as Eric Ward’s URLwire.com. Also give thought to on-going online and offline PR campaigns (this could be a whole guide to itself, so perhaps visit the Chartered Institute of Public Relations for further advice).
4. Social Media Engagement. Consider setting up accounts on major social networking sites, video sharing sites and content syndication portals. Enable your site visitors to follow you on Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn and other popular social media channels. Enable people to comment on your blog and sign-up for your updates. Link out to other related bloggers and established, authority sites. I will cover more on social media in a later chapter.
5. Maintenance Strategy. Make sure you have a plan in place for content development, general marketing, public relations, link building and general web development. Once your site is online you will need to work hard to build its profile and credibility. Good SEO results will not occur without on-going work and maintenance.
Part Fifteen
In part fifteen I will offer an overview of the on-page optimisation techniques that you can implement once your website has launched. SEO requires a lot of minor tweaks and on-going adjustments. The next few chapters of this guide will cover the key areas for improvement. Click here to go to part fifteen.

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 to the start of my guide click here.
Generating Sitemaps
You can generate a sitemap using a free service such as the one offered by XML-sitemaps.com. You will need to set-up a Google Webmaster Account to implement this (which will require you to add some custom code to your header file). Alternatively, if you are using a content management system such as WordPress, you can use a Google Sitemap plug-in.
Although sitemaps won’t necessarily improve your rankings for existing pages, they can enable more of your pages to be indexed and can help to determine how often search engine robots come to visit your site. This enables you to:
Generating a sitemap is one of the final technical considerations that small business owners should be aware of before preparing to launch a new company or e-commerce website with SEO on the agenda. The remainder of this guide will now be focused on the tasks and techniques that can be implemented once your website has launched. This includes “on-page” SEO factors for improving your site content plus “off-page” strategies such as link-building, offline promotions and social media engagement.
Part Fourteen
In part fourteen I will cover some of the final preparations that need to be made before a new website goes live whilst also recapping the steps taken so far to reach this point. Click here to go to part fourteen.

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 a web analytics solution on your site is crucial for numerous reasons. You need to be able to track not only the volume of visitors your site receives but also other crucial metrics and information such as how long your visitors spend on your site, what key-phrases people use to find you, where your visitors come from (for example, via Google referrals or third party websites) and which of your site pages appear to be most successful at converting visits into sales or enquiries. Bigger businesses require more complex solutions to monitor their site activity. For sites with 100,000+ visitors per year, businesses would be advised to consider a paid solution such as Coremetrics or Webtrends. For many small businesses an investment in a paid solution is not essential or necessary. However, installing a web analytics solution of some sort is an absolute must. Two of the most popular free options are Google Analytics and Statcounter (although the latter is only free for a “basic” level of service). Both of these analytics tools are essential for equipping small business owners with the information necessary to improve SEO performance.
Google Analytics
Google Analytics is easy to install, especially if you use a Content Management System such as WordPress (where you can utilise a plug-in such as this one to add the tracking code to all your web pages). Once Google Analytics is installed and you have started to experience site traffic you need monitor the following:
Part Thirteen
In part thirteen I will cover the topic of sitemaps and how installing a sitemap improves your website’s chances of indexation. Click here to go to part thirteen.

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 follows on from Part Ten: Targeting Local Search. To go back to the start of my guide click here.
SEO Competition Tools
In the previous two chapters I identified the long-tail and local search as ideal starting strategies for small business SEO. I discussed how tools such as Wordtracker can help you to identify high and low competition key-phrases. However, small business internet start-ups need to be aware of the multitude of factors that can give your competitors the edge in the SERPS (search engine results pages). There are in fact, at least a hundred different factors that influence search positioning, however, the following areas are of the most importance. Most of the SEO competition tools referenced here are free unless otherwise stated.
Domain & Website Age
Small business start-ups should consider buying an aged domain as established domains and websites generally perform much better in the search engines. This should also be a consideration when examining your competition. If, for example, you have identified certain key-phrases that you wish to appear high in the SERPS for, you should also check the age of the websites that also appear highly for these particular key-phrases. There are a number of ways to do this. I would advise downloading the SEO Toolbar for Firefox (you will need to install the Firefox browser to do this). This tool is loaded with an array of features including quick menu options to look-up WHOIS information and check internet web-page archives. This information will allow you to assess the history of your competitors’ sites. This can help you to make a judgement on the likelihood of securing a result for your target terms when compared against other factors such as the specific use of your target key-phrases in your competitors’ META title tags.
Volume of Pages
The depth and quality of content on a site is a very important factor in SEO and content development should be central to most small business SEO strategies. So, again, one of the steps you should take is to analyse how many of your competitors’ pages have been indexed by Google. You can do this by using the syntax “site:” To carry out an analysis of my site, for example, you would enter the following into Google or Yahoo:
site:www.jameshubbardmarketing.co.uk
The above search delivers the best performing indexed pages. This is very useful for both analysing the volume of pages indexed and the content across a site itself. Should you discover that your competitor site is extremely well-optimised on a specific key-phrase, with a large volume of quality web pages devoted to your particular key-phrase topic, you might consider either making changes to your key-phrase strategy or altering your planning to include more content development and link building.
Backlinks
Backlinks are possibly the most important SEO factor of all (more detail on this in future posts). However, a starting point for competitor benchmarking is to analyse the volume, quality and trust of your competitors’ backlinks. Two excellent, free tools to assist you with this are Link Diagnosis and Open Site Explorer. These tools are especially useful as they do not just give a snapshot of the volume of links but also give an indication of crucial context values such link strength and trust. This will help you to determine the most important and relevant links that you will need to chase in order to compete in the SERPS.
Page Rank & Quality of Content
Page Rank (the mark out of ten that Google attributes to individual web pages) remains a useful marker for identifying the quality of a site in terms of its backlink profile. However, Page Rank is no longer very reliable (with Google having admitted that they sometimes attribute random Page Rank to websites to confuse the process of SEO!) As an alternative, I would recommend downloading the SEOmoz Toolbar for Firefox. The free version offers a snapshot of values such as Root Domain and Page Authority. This is extremely useful information for evaluating your competitors’ sites and assessing the possibility of competing with them on your target terms. The paid version of SEOmoz tools are also worth considering investing for greater detail and analysis (at $79.99 or about £50 per month).
META Data
Finally and, as mentioned in previous chapters, you should look at the META data of your competitors’ sites. Wordtracker is, again, an excellent tool for comparing search volumes against sites that feature specific key-phrases in their META title tags. You can also use the syntax “intitle:” to discover the best performing sites that integrate your particular target key-phrases.
Part Twelve
In part twelve I will cover one of the final processes that small business owners need to consider before launching a new website which is the installation of web analytics software. Click here to go to part twelve.

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 importance of identifying high and low competition key-phrases and using this research as a basis to form a key-phrase strategy. I concluded that small business SEO strategies need to be both realistic and specific with their objectives. In addition to this, small businesses also need to think about their long and short term objectives. For example, if you were to set-up a new pizza delivery company, you might wish to secure a top ten placement for the search term “pizza delivery”. However, the competition on this key-phrase will be too intense for you to achieve a result in the short term (especially if your website is brand new and you have budget limitations). Small business start-ups therefore need to “think big” but start small (the old cliché “don’t run before you can walk” might apply here). The way to “think big” in the example of the pizza company would be to set the key-phrase “pizza delivery” as your long-term target. Who knows, in a few years time you could find yourself contending with Dominoes and other market leaders. So, as mentioned in Part Five: Web Design and SEO, you should build your site with the term “pizza delivery” in mind, by including this key-phrase in your navigation scheme, categories, headings, page titles and cross-links. However, don’t expect to achieve a top placement in the search engines any time soon. Instead focus your short-term objectives on low(er) competition key-phrases that sit within this key-phrase niche. One way to do this is to target local search.
Optimising for Local Search
There are several key things you can do to optimise for local search. These include:
This is not an exhaustive list of steps you can take to optimise for local search. There are several SEO guides available that focus specifically on this topic. Two of the best are David Mihm’s Local Search Ranking Factors and Andrew Shotland’s Local SEO Guide. However, bear in mind that both of these guides are written for the U.S market and that several of the optimisation methods they suggest are irrelevant to those here in the UK.
Part Eleven
In part eleven I will cover the importance of high and low competition key-phrases in more detail by looking at the broader topic of competitor benchmarking and methods to use when analysing your competitor’s websites. Click here to go to part eleven.

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 follows on from Part Eight: WordPress and SEO. To go back to the start of my guide click here.
Key phrase Strategy
Key-phrase research and selection is particularly important for small business enterprises that have SEO on their agenda. Many small businesses make the mistake of not conducting any research at all based on the assumption that they know which key-phrases people are likely to use to find their products or services when searching on Google or other search engines. This approach is very risky for two main reasons. Firstly, the reality is that people will often not use the search terms you expect them use. Secondly, and more importantly, by assuming that you can achieve a top ten result for your selected key-phrase (“Home Insurance”, for example) you are not factoring in the competition from other websites that are already optimised on this term. Brand new websites that plan to enter a competitive market are unlikely to achieve top ten results for “head” key-phrases (high volume, one or two word search terms) in any short period of time. This is because established sites have factors such as their age, link popularity and site content stacked in their favour. A good small business SEO strategy should therefore be based on realistic objectives, taking into account market competition and the intent of the key-phrases selected.
Identify High and Low Competition Key-phrases
The first step you need to take to clarify your key-phrase strategy is to identify high and low competition key-phrases that people actually use when searching online. One of the best tools to assist you with this is Wordtracker. Wordtracker offers insight into actual daily searches across all of the search engines. More importantly, it offers competition analysis metrics such as KEI (Keyword Effectiveness Index) and a snapshot of the number of websites that use specific search terms in their META titles and back-links (two important elements of SEO, which I will cover in more detail later in this guide). Wordtracker has also recently introduced a tool that enables you to import search data from Google, allowing you to compare actual monthly searches on Google for specific key-phrases against the number of other websites competing on these terms. This data will help you to identify high and low competition key-phrases that you can use as a basis for your SEO strategy. You need to bear in mind that high competition key-phrases will often require a very significant amount of development time and link-building work in order to achieve a good result. Low competition key-phrases, on the other hand, can often be targeted through effective on-site optimisation. This can be summarised as follows:
Small Business SEO Strategies
A recommended small business SEO strategy is to start by targeting low competition key-phrases (whilst optimising your website structure for high competition phrases as a longer term objective). Low competition key-phrases are, generally speaking, also characterised by low search volumes. These phrases are known as the “long tail” search, as they are normally four or more words long in opposition to the “head” of the tail which are one or two words long. The chart below illustrates this concept.

An example head key-phrase is “web design” which would appear near the top of the red section. An example long-tail key-phrase would be “cheap web design company Bournemouth” which would appear somewhere in the orange section. Although long-tail key-phrases are searched less often than head phrases, they often show a greater level of intent to purchase or sign-up on the part of the person searching. Someone who searches for “televisions”, for example, shows much less intent to purchase than someone who searches for “cheap Sony 40’ flat screen television”. Targeting the long-tail search is therefore an ideal starting strategy for small businesses and internet start-ups for the following reasons:
Part Ten
In part ten I will cover local search in more detail looking at how small businesses can maximise the potential of geo-targeting. Click here to go to part ten.
