Design Your site

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10 ways to Design Your Site from the
Bottom Up
So, you have finally decided to build
yourself a website, but really have no idea where to start. The
following 10 steps will give you some insight into what you
need to address when creating a search friendly website from
the ground up.
While this article is not an exhaustive líst of everything you
need to know, it does touch base on many of the important
aspects of creating a new website.
Step 1 -
Keyword Research Even before you choose
your domain name, you should put a little time into some
keyword research. Research all the possible keywords that will
fit your industry and the website you plan on building. Having
a clear idea of what your end targets are will make the rest of
your job much easier and help things to just fall into place.
Take a look at Keyword Research for
SEO, written earlier this
summer, for more help on this.
Step 2 - Domain
Selection If you already have an
established brick and mortar business and the website will be
an extension of that business, using your company name as the
domain name is in most cases the best idea. If your company
name is either irrelevant, or simply unavailable, you may want
to consider a domain that has your target phrase listed as part
of the domain.
A great example of this is if your site is focused
geographically. Using the location as part of the domain when
possible will give you a little extra juice with the search
engines and help draw people to your site as they instantly can
see the relevance in the domain.
Let's say that you are building a website focused on your home
town, "Somewhere USA". A domain you may consider could be
"Somewhere.com"; however, this would probably be already taken.
Other options such as "SomewhereInfo.com" or
"SomewhereGuide.com" may be good alternatives. The same goes
for retail stores. "SomewhereCameras".com or
"SomewhereBakery".com would also be good choices.
Avoid excessive use of hyphens; sometimes it is appropriate to
use one, but if you can help it, avoid more than that as it can
appear messy and even spammy in some cases.
Step 3 -
System Back End If you plan on having a
large scale website that will grow and change constantly then
you may want to consider a content management system (CMS) such
as Joomla. If you decide to go this route, you want to ensure
that whichever CMS you choose is search engine friendly and
offers items such as unique title tags, custom URL's, and full
control over content, heading tags, image alt tags, etc.
Starting a website using a non-friendly CMS is like buying a
car without an engine. Sure it may look great, but it won't get
you anywhere.
Step 4 -
Site Structure & Navigation This is
really one of the most fundamental aspects of your site
creation. If the structure of your site does not work well,
then your site may be doomed from the very beginning.
Take a look back at your keyword research and brainstorm all
the areas of your site that you may want to develop content
for. In some cases you may find valuable keywords that would
fit perfectly into a few pages of content for your site. If the
phrase and the content would be a good match for the theme of
your site, go ahead and note them as pages to create. Get a
líst, or flowchart, of all the content you plan on adding and
sort those pages into relevant categories.
Be sure your site files are saved in a
way that makes sense - this includes both the file name, and
the complete path to the file. Save files, including similar
content in a relevant subdirectory, with simple file names
representing each. Let's take an example of an informational
site dedicated to a specific geographic location. If you have a
series of pages dedicated to recreation, you may save them
as:
/recreation/parks.html
/recreation/trails.html
/recreation/beaches.html
Keeping your URL structure clean and tidy can not only help
with search engine rankings, but it will give a good visual
impression to the site visitor as well. Often, using each of
these categories as main points for your primary site
navigation may make the most sense.
Also be sure to keep your site relatively flat, with as few
layers as possible. Don't make the search engines follow a
dozen links to get to the deepest levels of your site. Unless
the site is literally tens of thousands of pages, there is no
need to click more than 2 or 3 links to get to any deep
content. The shorter the path to an internal page, the more
credít by the search engines.
Step 5 -
Navigation When developing the end site,
you also want to make sure that your site navigation is search
engine friendly - this is critical if you ever want free
organic listings.
If possible, use a text based form of navigation. You can use
CSS to style the text links to fit into your graphical design.
Text links are the best method, but image based navigation and
even some forms of drop down menus are also search engine
friendly.
If you choose to use image based navigation be sure to include
image alt text relevant to the link to give something for
Google to associate with the linked page. If you absolutely
must use Flash, or any form of navigation not friendly for
search engine spiders, be sure to supplement this with text
based links on another location of the page.
Step 6 -
Analytics It isn't ever too early to start
thinking about your stats. Before your site goes live you must
have some form of accurate analytics in place so you can
measure your site's traffic and progress.
There is an endless supply of analytics options out there to
choose from. You can simply use the stats software that comes
free with your web hosting, however, more often than not, they
tend to be very basic with no flexibility. Advanced choices
such as ClickTracks can give you rather in-depth statistics,
but for a very small mom and pop operation it may be too
expensive. Google Analytics, is a free option that can give you
most, if not all the data you will need and does not require
access to your raw log files.
If you do opt for an option such as ClickTracks, check with
your host to ensure that you will have the raw log files you
require. StepForth can also help you with your statistical
analysis and offers a number of inexpensive ClickTracks service
packages.
Step 7 - Content
Creation
Now is the time to get that new, fresh content posted to your
site with the SEO in mind. Make sure that the content you write
reflects your industry and target keywords. You don't need to
flood the content with your target keywords, but make sure they
are in there a few times. When it makes sense to do so, also
include some acronyms to help Google establish the overall
relevance.
If you perform a search in Google for "~keyword", any words
that Google bolds in the search results will be acronyms that
Google deems relevant. Include some of these where
possible.
Step 8 - Basic SEO
Ensure that ALL pages of your site include unique
<title> and Meta Description tags. This is one of
the core fundamental aspects of an optimized size and it does
play a significant role in your search rankings. Make sure that
these tags are not only unique but are accurate representations
of each page. Also be sure to place your target phrase in
heading as well as image alt tags where applicable.
Step 9 - Initial Promotion /
Launch
Now that you have your new site all up and ready to go, you
want to give it that kick start to help drive some traffic. It
will be a while before the search engines fully index your site
and even longer before you start to see organic rankings for
your target search phrases. It is important to start off right
away to get the ball rolling.
Start off by issuing a press release to announce the launch of
your new business website. Press releases are a great way to
get some traffic and a rather valuable first link into your
site. Submitting your press release using a company such
as PRWeb
will get your link in the engine's
path and should help your site to be initially indexed by
Google right away.
Next submít your site to some relevant directories starting
with DMOZ. It can take months, even years, to have your site
listed in DMOZ, so it is important to get it submitted right
away. Consider submittíng to other industry relevant
directories. For some information on how to select the right
directories take a look at Building Links with
Directory Submissions.
Work on getting as many links from relevant industry websites
as possible. The more links you can get from reputable sources,
the better the overall performance of your site.
Step 10 - Ongoing
Promotion
Once you have completed the site, the content looks great, and
all appears finished, you've still got work to do. For long
term success, especially for a brand new site, you need to
continually promote your site. You should always be looking at
ways to build your inbound links and your relevant content.
Consider creating accounts with various social media platforms
to help promote your site. These can not only give you a link
back to your site, but they can help you drive traffic and
raise awareness about your business and product.
A site that is always growing, and always
getting new links, has the best chance of getting a stable top
10 listing in Google.
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