Well, before you get swarmed with the highly-technical stuff, I'd recommend checking out this link: http://unbounce.com/seo/the-adaptive-seo-approach The discussion there includes non-SEO and seasoned SEO perspectives, plus everything in between. Now, I will say this, aside from getting links from relevant, authoritative sites, there are countless other factors that affect SERP positions and keyword rankings, including: * URL keyword density. * Social signals. * Click-through rates. * Average time on site. * Page loading times. * Direct traffic to inner pages. Authority, in simple terms, would describe your entire site's expertise with certain subject matter. Authority tends to shine most when you or trademark coin certain search terms. For example, branded searches for "Nike" will usually go to Nike sites first before anything else. The keyword match in the URL helps too, which takes into account the FQDN and the closest terms to the domain name itself. What this does is prevents black-hat SEOs from usurping traffic that belongs to the owner of that intellectual property. In this manner, you'll rarely see big-name brands have their site buried in junky SERP hits. Google in particular is moving more towards a quality-content focus with social signals being a huge indicator of the significant of any content. You'll find many differing views out there but the key is to capture as much data as possible and then see how your activity correlates with results. What works for one SEO consultant or firm may not work for another. It's not an EXACT science but there is certainly a structured approach to it. 8)
well, treat SEO as a degree course. Lots of fundamentals and techniques required. You might want to get some lynda videos and start from there.
<div>The goal is to make a site easy to find, easy to follow, and easy to read for search spiders and live-visitors, with well written topical content and relevant incoming links. While basic SEO can be time consuming in the early stages, the results are worth the effort and set the stage for more advanced future work. </div><div><br></div>
Ok here is a good thread from Digitalpoint http://forums.digitalpoint.com/showthread.php?t=413544 ....for more info you can download Google Seo Guide provided by Google itself.
There are many sites which explain you how to do seo. Also join forum to ask the question, to get seo knowledge.
firstly do all OnPage SEO. after that submit your URL to google webmaster so that google starts to crawl your site after that do all OffPage SEO.
relay its a long process. search engine fallow the way of synchronization for internet web sites according its data and its popularity .
Onsite and offsite optimization the two work in different ways in getting your site up in the google rankings
There are a lot of answers that precisely answer your specific question. Briefly put there are a number of factors that are involved in this process. You can broadly divide it into main categories, the first one is the ON Page SEO; in which you optimize your SEO for your site. The second one is OFF Page SEO in which you spread the word of your site around the web.
You can learn the concept of search engine optimization online through Google search engine. You will get much informative material and you can also do experiments.
You will find in-depth information on to optimize a page for thousands of keywords at http://www.wordtracker.com/academy/how-to-optimize-a-page-for-search-engines.