READ THIS BEFORE STARTING THE DAUNTING TASK OF PUTTING TOGETHER A SEARCH ENGINE OPTIMIZATION STRATEGY

1. Google is the only search engine that matters

The plain and simple truth is not everyone uses Google. In fact, for the month of August 2009 there were nearly 4 Billion (Nielsen Ratings) searches in the US alone conducted on other search engines. That is roughly 50 Billion searches each year on the ?other? search engines. It is true that Google does receive almost 65% of all search traffic and should probably receive at least 65% of your focus, ignoring the other search engines is equivalent to ignoring 35% of your potential market which probably does not make sense.

2. I need to submit my site to search engines and resubmit every week or every month

Technically speaking, a site with a proper SEO strategy does not need to be submitted to search engines at all. It is technically not a bad idea to submit a new site, particularly one that will have a hard time getting quality incoming links, but the whole notion of submitting to hundreds (or thousands) of websites to provide some benefit is incorrect. Once a site is submitted once, the search engine does know it is there and they will not visit or update the site more often if you continue to submit it.

3. Search Engine Optimization is a collection of tricks to fool search engines

Putting a bunch of white text on a white background is not going to help a site become #1 in search rankings. Repeating the same word over and over again at the bottom of the page in a tiny font will not help either. The plain and simple truth is SEO is really about providing good quality content, structured in a proper format with authoritative sources (i.e. high ranking websites) linking to the content. The best approach will ALWAYS be to identify the sites that rank at the top for the searches important to you and do a better job than they are doing at adding value to the web. While there are some trying to use ?black hat? (trick the search engine) techniques, these are very risky as they risk being permanently banned from search engines.

4. SEO is a single event performed after I initially build my site

Optimization is an ongoing effort for a few reasons. Search engines continue to refine the way they value sites in an attempt to always provide the most relevant results, so it will always be important to identify changes being made (for example, at one point, meta keywords was an important function of SEO until everyone started stuffing keywords into this tag). Another factor is the fact that information can become outdated, with the time being dependent on the subject and industry. The simple answer is SEO should be closely tied to the overall marketing strategy and should move to continue to support the overall marketing efforts.

5. SEO is a function of IT

While there is certainly a technical component to Search Engine Optimization, the overall strategy and implementation should be handled at a much higher level. There are many things that factor into the overall strategy, including marketing (branding, advertising, etc), legal, information technology, product development, etc.

6. I need Multiple domain names to rank well on Search Engines

There are several reasons to purchase multiple domain names, but they are not really related to SEO. Having 50 different domain names pointed to the same site does not improve search rankings and it could actually hurt rankings if they are not directed properly. Ideally all of the links to a site will be directed to a single domain name. While having multiple websites could be a good strategy to target different markets, merely creating multiple websites for the sole benefit of linking to each other will usually result in diluted websites and not better rankings.

7. You need to update your site frequently

It is not necessary to update a website weekly or even monthly to remain at the top of the search rankings. It is always about the other sites that are competing for the top spots for certain terms. If one site provides 500 pages of good quality detail about a specific subject and has high quality links from established websites, it will not be surpassed by another site with only 50 pages of average quality content with low quality links just because that site is updated more frequently. Of course, if the smaller site continues to add 10 pages of good quality content each week, it will certainly close the gap very quickly. The main focus should be to make sure the website is providing relevant content at all times. Changing the site should only be done to improve relevancy, not change just for the sake of SEO.

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