Don't Fire Your Web Site!
by Bill Treloar
From BUSINESS TECHNOLOGY TODAY,
Morris County Chamber Of Commerce
Business Technology Committee
June 26, 2002 Issue #21
Your web site is a valuable employee for your business.
It's a member of your Sales Department, your Corporate Affairs Department, your
Advertising Department, your Human Resources Department, and maybe even more.
You've invested a lot in this employee: development costs, maintenance costs,
and monthly hosting costs. If it's not generating enough revenue to offset those
costs, you may be tempted to fire it.
Don't! At least not without giving your web site
a fighting chance to prove its worth to your organization. Why isn't any
new business coming from the web site? Probably because not enough
customers are getting onto the web site. Why not? Maybe because
they can't find it.
The most important way new customers find their way to
your web site is through search engines. Visitors who find your web site through
a search engine are targeted customers because they were actively searching for
what you sell.
Want to know if that's your problem?
Conduct A Simple Test
Think like a customer who wants your most important or
most profitable product or service but doesn't know the name of your business.
Go into any of the major search engines and try to look up your own web site
just like that customer would.
Does your web site show up in the first 30 listings? Is
it in the first three pages of results? If not, customers aren't finding you.
People don't have the patience to scroll through page after page of listings to
find your business.
For potential customers to find your site, you need to
get it into the top 30 listings on most of your important keywords in most of
the important search engines. And the way to do that is with search engine
positioning.
Search Engine Positioning
Search engine positioning involves making changes to
your web site that will cause it to appear closer to the top of the listing when
someone searches for your product or service. It's a proven technology that
makes a real difference in the number of visitors to a web site.
While professional search engine positioning can be a
complex undertaking, one of the most important things you can do to improve your
ranking in the search engines is to make sure the keyword that potential
customers will use to search for you appears more than once on your web page.
Another is to submit your site to the search engines your potential customers
are likely to use, rather than relying on each search engine to find your site
by itself. Some search engines handle many more searches than others, and some
sites charge a fee to ensure up-front visibility, so you'll need to do some
homework. But don't let that deter you; the return on that effort is well worth
the trouble. There are many ways to improve the performance of your web site
with a little business sense and the right Internet marketing advice.
About the Author: Bill
Treloar is president of Treloar Associates in East Hanover, NJ, a consulting
firm specializing making Internet marketing and search engine placement more
efficient and cost effective.
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