Hi, I want to rank my website for keyword "pain management" and local search volume per month of this keyword is 1200000. Any SEO Expert can guide me how can i rank this keyword as soon as possible? Thanks in Advance, Mimran
There is not going to be any sort of "fast as possible" with that demographic. I really don't even know where to start without seeing the site. It is going to take several months like 6 at least and that is a favorable estimate for a new site with a proper seo and marketing team on board. Nigel
Send me the URL so I can give you something that may help you regarding ranking issues for your particular KW.
you have to use this keyword in "meta tags and tile, keywords, description " this is on page part and then you have to make 9,9808 back links using anchor text keyword "pain management"
I suggest you to use long-tail keywords for your site to target.. Long-tail might have low search volume but they less competition; you can rank high easily. And also you can get good traffic even with small number of search volume.
First of all make your content very unique and powerful. Do internal building in your website then go ahead with promoting this keywords and start link building.. You will get the results soon.. Hope this helps..
According to Alexa, you should be enjoying pretty good traffic. Where is the problem? Is it converting? Are you advertising a real-life (i.e. offline) service? If so, why don't you say that it is in Florida. I mean, it can be anywhere in the world. If it is Florida, say that and target only people aged 30+ and living in Florida. What, is that url he's already given not good enough for you? Do you prefer it in a different color?
You have to build back linking and pointing your website by that Keywords and start keyword position and used this as a primary keyword
Build high quality and unique content with keyword density in bold, add your keyword in title, meta description and keywords, H1 tag, alt tag , bread crumb Afterward you can bookmark your page in top social bookmaking site and write article on the same and post it high quality article directories, same with Press Release Just do this activities you will definitely achieve your targeted ranking.
Go longtail and get yourself ranked for a local listing. Do you know how to go about that? I could write a tutorial on that alone. That's your best bet because not only are board keyword terms (pain management) difficult to rank for, they are also not buying keywords. Many people searching "pain management" may be doing that for research purposes. Find a comprehensive keyword tool like Wordtracker that breaks down keywords and keyphrases so you know which keywords to target and how to target them then get as many authoritative backlinks with those in the anchor text as you can.
Hi Mimran, The keyword you have selected is VERY competitive (almost to the point that it's not worth targeting any time in the next decade) not to mention generic. As you're optimizing a single page for that specific keyword and not an entire section of a large Web site (or an entire site for a small to medium-scale endeavor) unless you have links pointing back to that page from sites like the American Medical Association, the Centers for Disease Control and the US Surgeon General's office, not to mention most of the entire pharmaceutical and health care industries, you're not going to stand a chance for breaking into the top ten in any of the major search engines. (Oh, and just so you know, the real local search volume for the US version of Google is 33,100, not 1,200,000. Sounds like you used a broad search with Google's External Keyword tool.) I'd say 30 given how competitive the keyword is, the lack of actual content on the site and the fact that it's just targeting people in the Kissimmee, Florida area. That's not going to help in this case, given how Mimran has cast such a large and wide net (you can't catch minnows if your net was made to catch trout). Otherwise I'd agree with you on the on-page optimization that's needed (even though you even got that wrong). Screw the long tail. Mimran needs to go local, otherwise even the best SEO campaign is going to fail. While I do agree with the unique, highly relevant and targeted compelling content that turns visitors into customers, that's not going to help much here. Mimran's trying to attract one type of audience but optimizing for another. Now we're getting somewhere. But even people under the age of 30 have pain management issues. All those sports injuries, and don't even get me started on the python wrangling that's becoming a popular industry down there. *shudders* Actually it's put the page's main headline in the H1 tag, and make sure the main keyword is included in that heading. No amount of link building is going to be truly successful unless there's a site of value worth linking to in the first place. Remember, link building always starts at home, and you can't even begin there if your site hasn't been optimized (not to mention developed) from start to finish. Yes yes, the "build high quality and unique content" mantra I've been preaching here the past few years. It's not enough. It also has to be clear, concise and compelling. It has to get people to take the action desired by the site owner in order to be successful. As for keyword density, it's nonsense and utter rubbish. Bold tags should only be used when the text absolutely positively has to be bold (same as when using STRONG to give a string of text "strong emphasis"), the META tags don't aid in rankings at all (though the META description can increase click-through rates if the search engines decide to use YOUR snippet for a given search query), and -- just because the Web developer inside will kill me if I don't say this -- there is no such thing as an alt "tag". You also can't just shoe-horn a breadcrumb navigation menu into a site -- it has to be incorporated into the design (or the design changed to accommodate one), and even then most people get the optimization of THOSE page features wrong. Spamming the social bookmarking and network sites isn't going to help Mimran's business image online -- or rankings. Article directories won't be of much help either given who Mimran's target market is. I also doubt this particular business does anything news-worthy that would justify the cost of issuing a press release (though to be honest I don't know anything about the business so I could be wrong on this last point -- there's only so much you can do for free before you start losing time and money). Not for this keyword. As I said before, going "long tail" won't help here. Mimran needs to go LOCAL, since that's where the business is. Targeting the long tail for the sake of SEO isn't going to do this business a lick of good if most of the site's search traffic is coming from Nome, Alaska or Maui when the company serves the people in the local community. I don't even recommend WordTracker anymore -- they use the Dogpile meta search engine (which nobody uses to begin with), and the information it provides isn't even enough to draw reasonable conclusions from by itself. If you want search volume data, Google can provide that for free. -------------------------------------------------------------------------- With all that out of the way, here's what I'd do. Your business is local -- targeting those in the Kissimmee, FL area (which includes Orlando and all the theme parks that are within and surround it). From what I can tell, most of your customer base is in a 50 mile area of where your medical office is located (and that's being generous, despite your prime location). So those are the people you need to target. When you conduct your keyword research (or hire someone to do it), make sure you're using local (geographic) modifiers to find your primary set of keywords to target. Don't just pick keywords, see how competitive they are by using either of these two sets of criteria: intitle, inurl and inanchor, or allintitle, allinurl and allinanchor. Then check the main competition for those keywords. If they have well-optimized sites (that make proper use of headings, have strong internal link and site architectures, well written content that take advantage of the keywords they targeted, and have strong healthy link profiles -- and I don't mean blog comments, directory submissions, forum profiles/signatures, link wheels and other spam, social media detritus, etc), chances are you're going to have a fight on your hands. Fortunately, the link wheels and other spam will be easy to combat -- report them to Google for violating their terms of service. When that's done, look at your selected keywords. Do you see any natural groupings that you can categorize into sections? Is there a common keyword or phrase that ties all of those search terms in a particular category together? If so, you'll know what your category keywords will be, as well as the ideal pages to put on your service pages within each category. For more information (and because you've probably already screamed "AH!!! WALL OF TEXT!!!" in abject horror a few times already), read How Keywords Help Determine Site Architecture on Search Engine Watch by Eric Enge. Once you know what your ideal keyword are and how to organize and structure your site, look into having it redeveloped. Don't run towards the nearest Web designer at this stage. Instead, hire a Web copywriter (a Web copywriter is a copywriting specialist who focuses on writing sales copy for an online audience; one of the best known Web copywriters is Maria Veloso, the author of Web Copy That Sells) who knows how to write customer-focused sales copy. When your content is ready (with the titles, headings, bold and emphasized text clearly defined), then hire the Web designer to create the look and feel of your revamped site (even if the overall design remains the same, the layout will have to change at least a little bit to accommodate the new content). Make sure the Web designer you hire is capable of creating accessible and easy to use content-driven Web sites (if you need help with this, ask me and I'll evaluate them for you) using clean minimal and semantic HTML that separates the HTML, CSS and JavaScript from each other as much as possible. Their focus should not be on "painting a pretty picture" in Adobe Photoshop, but Web site accessibility and usability, information architecture, and the various Web-related best practices that are the norm today (like not using tables for layout). Granted, using tables instead of semantic markup won't harm your rankings, but they won't help either. And you're going to want every possible advantage you can get (not to mention save money in the future when it comes time to update your Web site again). After all, would a soldier give his enemy a weapon or kill him with it? Anyway... the next step would be to link the various pages of your Web site together. I don't just mean with your main, section and breadcrumb menus -- I mean internal content links. Then test, test and test again. You don't need to bring in an expensive usability consultant -- just ask a few of your customers to "try your upcoming Web site redesign" (perhaps in exchange for a discount on their next visit). Answer their questions, write down any and all advice they give you, watch how they use the Web site, but don't attempt to influence their decisions. If the feedback is positive, then chances are you've done everything right and are ready to launch. Well, almost. The last thing you need to do before you launch is to make sure you (or your Web designer/developer) have configured the server to deal with any canonical URI issues and set up the proper redirects from the old pages to their new locations. Setting up a Google Analytics account (well, you already appear to have one so that's not an issue) and a Webmasters' Central account with all the major search engines (Google Webmasters Tools, Yahoo Site Explorer, and Bing Webmasters Tools) is also essential. After you launch your new Web site, start looking for places to get links from. This post is too long as it is, so I'll give you the link to my link building articles post so you can go from there. Needless to say most of the garbage you see about social media, blog comments, and especially the "Angela + Paul's" nonsense just won't work compared to what you'll learn in that post. You'll also want to keep adding content to your Web site. Articles on preventative medicine, how to self-diagnose and treat common ailments, when to see a doctor, and the like will be a gold mine -- and can get you even more links. (This is the ideal time to target the "long tail" of keywords, believe it or not.) If you have any relationships with other businesses in your area (ESPECIALLY the theme parks), ask them if they'd be willing to link to your site as a "partner". After all, people at theme parks tend to eat too much, get sick, fall down and hurt themselves... becoming those vendors' preferred service provider can get you a lot of tourist business (not to mention the money they bring with them). You could even write some articles for the businesses that cater to out-of-state tourists on how to stay safe and healthy while in Florida (aside from the obvious, like avoiding the alligators and the Burmese pythons that are now eating said gators). Not only would you establish yourself as an authority and "recognized local expert" but the links you can get from those articles would be worth more than their weight in gold.
Use this keyword in your title tag and do some offpage for this keyword like dir submission, articles, smo and forums postings ,you will see the result soon....
Did you not read what I said? That keyword is FAR TOO COMPETITIVE to rank for overnight. Especially with the sewer quality links you guys keep throwing around here as if they were $diety's; Gift to SEO (hint: they're not).
yea, i agree with him, it's too competitive to rank for overnight just keep on proper link building campaign,