How to optimize blog posts

Discussion in 'Google' started by abdul.pcet, Jul 23, 2008.

  1. #1
    Tip 1: Your Blog Post Titles Have Two Audiences

    You’ve no doubt read that you need to make your blog post titles “search engine friendly,” but doing so often kills the creativity and initial appeal of your writing. Instead of trying to appeal to your loyal readers and Google at the outset, approach the two difference audiences in separate stages.

    Stage One - Your initial blog readers

    Your initial audience is likely going to be those that have already subscribed to your blog’s RSS feed–or happen to check your blog every day. They want to be thrilled, excited, and given a reason to not only read your post, but also share and link to it.

    When you first publish your blog post, follow this advice:

    * Make your post title interesting - it could be that you ask a question, share a scoop, or offer a cryptic title that peeks your reader’s curiosity. I’ll often use a blog title that sounds like a scandal/scoop, but is really just a question. For example, “Microsoft Buying Yahoo?” I ran that headline last year–before Microsoft made its bid. It generated a lot of traffic then and even more so now.
    * Keep it short and sweet - if you make your initial post title too long, you run the risk that you’ll either confuse a reader or give them so much information, tthere’s no need to read the post itself. Back to my example, “Microsoft Buying Yahoo?” leaves a lot of unanswered questions that just beg the reader to click through to view the entire post. If I had used “Rumors that Microsoft May Buy Yahoo, but No Confirmation Yet,” how many of you would have clicked through to read the entire post? Not many.
    * Appeal to keyword scanners - When you read posts in your RSS reader, do you sometimes scan the titles looking for keywords that you know will interest you? Apple, Google, Wii, and Blue-Ray are all examples of keywords that might appeal to your specific audience. This is not the same as keywords for SEO–that comes later–at this stage, you’re simply looking to include words that will make your post stand out to your readers. Use popular keywords in your post titles and your post will have a greater chance of standing out among all of the other posts in your reader’s RSS aggregator.

    In stage one, your goal is to appeal to the initial readers that will likely view the post on the day that you publish it. But what happens after your post is relegated to the archives? It’s unlikely someone will spend hours just wondering through your archived posts. Instead, they’ll likely discover your “great content” via one of the search engines. OK, only one search engine: Google.

    With this in mind, you need to massage your post’s title so that it can go to work for you in Google’s search results.

    Stage Two - Your Google readers

    That cryptic, enticing post title you used to attract your initial readers isn’t going to cut-it when it comes to attracting Google search engine users. Sure, you want your post title to entice a click from the SERP (search engine results page) but if your post is sitting on page 10–and not page 1–it doesn’t matter how engaging your post title. In stage two, you need to give your post title the Google-juice it needs to make the first SERP.

    * Add keywords to your title - you should have already included a relevant keyword that appeals to the human “keyword scanners.” Now that it’s Googleblot scanning your post title, it’s time to pump-up your keyword count. Now, don’t go overboard and add half a dozen keywords to your post titles–you want the title to remain targeted and enticing–but you should look for opportunities to include additional keywords. Compare this before, and after post title. Before: “Ten Ways to Avoid a Google Reputation Management Nightmare.” After: “Ten Ways to Fix Your Google Reputation & Remove Negative Results.” Both are engaging, both convey the same meaning. Yet, the revised title removes keywords that are not likely to be Googled such as “avoid” and “nightmare,” while adding keywords that are searched often, such as “fix” and “remove negative results.”
    * Change the word order - I always try to take into consideration my potential Google ranking, when writing my post titles. However, there are many times when I see my post sitting at #11 on Google, because the word order I used–while appealing to my initial audience–isn’t doing me any favors in the SERPs. So, like a good optimizer, I go back and change the word order so that the beneficial keywords are closer to the beginning of the title (which is where Google prefers to see them). Here’s a before: “26 Free Tools for Buzz Monitoring.” And after: “Buzz Monitoring: 26 Free Buzz Tracking Tools.” (Notice I also added the keyword “buzz tracking” to the title).
    * Optimize your TITLE - When you first publish your blog posts, you’ll likely want your TITLE (aka title tag) to match your actual post title. Once you start focusing on your Google audience, it might make sense to tweak your page TITLE so that it’s even more optimized than your post title (side note: most blog software will simply match your page TITLE to your post title). If you’re using WordPress, consider installing the SEO Title Tag plugin to do just that! I don’t use it on Marketing Pilgrim, but on other blogs, I’ve found it a great way to further optimize my TITLE–which is what is displayed in Google’s SERP.
    * Don’t play with slugs - I’ll write more on the topic of page “slugs” (aka permalinks) but I’d be negligent if I didn’t warn here that, while you should change your post title, changing the actual page slug is to be avoided.

    I hope you’ll find the above tactics to be fruitful in your quest to increase both initial, and Google-referred, visitors to your blog. I’ve got plenty more tips I can share, so let me know what you think and if you’d like to read more blog promotion tips.
    Regards,
    www.elechub.com
    For more posts on search engine optimization:http://elechub.com/category/search-engine-optimization/
     
    abdul.pcet, Jul 23, 2008 IP
  2. zk200083

    zk200083 Peon

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    #2
    Tip Three

    Submit your article on press release distribution sites.
     
    zk200083, Jul 24, 2008 IP
  3. lightlysalted

    lightlysalted Active Member

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    #3
    an excellent summary, very helpful for newbies in particular
     
    lightlysalted, Jul 24, 2008 IP
  4. SEO_WatchDog

    SEO_WatchDog Well-Known Member

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  5. spyrit

    spyrit Well-Known Member

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    #5
    interesting post, nothing new but nicely gathered info.
     
    spyrit, Jul 24, 2008 IP
  6. lipsigprice

    lipsigprice Banned

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    #6
    lipsigprice, Jul 24, 2008 IP
  7. prasad5

    prasad5 Peon

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    #7
    I agree with the points mentioned above. But what I would like to known more is how to do link building of blogs? can anyone help me!

    And can I have sitemap.xml and robots.txt file for blogs to get my blog indexed by search engines?
     
    prasad5, Jul 24, 2008 IP
  8. lycos

    lycos Well-Known Member

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    #8
    Maybe to add here….Try to insert tags to every post that you make and maybe you can also consider submitting to digg and stumbleupon everytime new post is made.
     
    lycos, Jul 24, 2008 IP
  9. gunakesh

    gunakesh Well-Known Member

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    #9
    Good one...its informative...i like it.....
     
    gunakesh, Jul 25, 2008 IP
  10. teampower

    teampower Well-Known Member

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    #10
    stop posting others articles you shouls just points the link
     
    teampower, Jul 25, 2008 IP
  11. whiteguy

    whiteguy Banned

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    #11
    informative post, especially for someone who was looking into starting blogging ;)
     
    whiteguy, Jul 25, 2008 IP