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15Jan/1032

How To Rank Top In Google

How To Rank Top In GoogleNo matter what topic, you should always be focused on where your pages will be placed.

When creating a page, the first thing to check is where it will rank once it hits the search engines. The following 6 steps will show you how:

1 - Make a list of all possible keywords

Brain storm lists of all possible keywords that may be relevant to your business. Try to figure out what possible searches someone would be typing into a search engine and would like to find your content at the other end. You're not trying any sort of linkbait here. What the goal is here is to picture someone saying "I was searching for XYZ and I came across the perfect site."

This is the time to get far out and come up with words and phrases that your competition may have not. It is true that the more out there you go the less search traffic there will be but, the less traffic, the less competition for these keywords. If your just starting out, there is a good chance that you don't command the authority to rank for the top keywords. In that case it's best to start with some search terms that are a bit out there, have less traffic, but you'll be able to totally own.

2 - Check PageRank (PR) using Google Toolbar

Once you install the toolbar in your FireFox browser, you may have to enable the PageRank feature. To do this you can simply:

Adjust Google Toolbar Options (blue wrench on the far right) -> Tools -> check off PageRank -> Save

Now that this is complete, you will start to see a small green bar up on the toolbar for each page you go to. If you mouse over this bar you will see the numeric PageRank (ie 5/10). Each page on your site will have a unique PageRank assigned to it. Normally internal pages have a lower PR than your front page. If your site (at least the first page) has less than a PR3 your going to need some link-building work before you can rank for many search terms.

There are many arguments out there that the Google Toolbar is no longer a useful tool for checking PageRank. My responses to that would be

1. Since we don't know exactly how the search engines work this is more of an art than a science

2. It's one of the best tools we currently have to figuring out page authority so I will keep using it until something better comes along

3- Check PageRank for your keywords

Now that you know the PR of your site, go back and figure out what you're up against. Take all of the keywords that you came up with in step #1 and search for each in Google (feel free to use Yahoo, Bing, etc. but most of your search traffic will come from Google, so I recommend you start there). Make a list of the PR for the top 3 results that come back from Google for each search term.

This will give you a clue of the competition out there for this keyword(s). Keep in mind that if you are a lower PageRank, it is possible to beat out a higher ranked site using onpage SEO tactics. Just make sure that you are realistic, if your site is a PR1 you should not be attempting to go after PR8 sites.

You need to pick a set of search terms that will have an opportunity at coming up in the top three page results. That means for 99% of people trying to go after a term such as New York Lawyer is pretty much out of the question. Instead you should be trying to get much more specific, for instance Staten Island Medical Malpractice Lawyer.

4 - Check the overall search traffic with the Google AdWords: Keyword Tool

After you've completed step #3 you have the short list of SEO terms to target. Using the "Keyword Tool" you'll be able to focus your efforts on the best choice. Out of all the terms that you can compete against, run them through the Keyword Tool. Sort the results by the "Global Monthly Search Volume" and that will give you a fair indication of how many searches there are each month for this term.

Now that you have these terms, and the amount of search traffic each of those terms have, it's up to you to make the choice of what term(s) to optimize for.

5 - Highly optimize your content

You will find a great checklist at Google Ranking Factors - SEO Checklist of what Google weights each of these on page elements, but here are a few places to start.

- URLs
- Title tags
- Page descriptions
- page content
- H1, H2 and H3 tags
- Image alt tags

Now don't go and stuff a lot of worthless keywords in each of these tags... Google does not like that and more importantly your users will not like it. Instead, just keep your terms in mind when building your content. For example, you make choose a title such as "Bob Smith - Staten Island Medical Malpractice Lawyer" instead of something less specific such as "Bob Smith - New York Law".

See what we did above? You're not stuffing keywords where they do not belong. Instead, be aware that the terms you use reflect what your page will be known for. Have a goal of the terms your optimizing for and keep that in mind while you're crafting new content.

6 - Get links from other pages with high page rank (see step #2).

This may be the most important step that has been left for last... without inbound links, nothing else you do matters. The number of quality inbound links your page has, the higher your PageRank will be. Also, since the results are cumulative, the more high quality inbound links the better.

What is a high quality link?

A high quality link is a link from another authoritative page with the less outbound links, the less the better. For instance, normally if your site is the only external link on a PR4 page, that is better than being one of 1000 links on a page (a directory for instance) even if it's a PR5.

Just off the record, I would not pass up the PR5 link but I am just saying that I would pick the PR4 if I had to choice.

How do I get inbound links?

Most of the time you'll hear "Create remarkable content" and that will get you inbound links. It will usually involve publishing a blog, writing interesting articles, and getting people to link to you because of it. This is what inbound marketing is based on, and it's honestly one of the best ways for building long term value.

Contacting site owners directly is another method of getting inbound links. This will have a lower chance of success in most cases but it is usually worth trying. To increases your odds of success, try to be sure the link will be mutually beneficial to both you and the other site owner. This will usually mean that your site will have to offer information or a product that is useful to the users of the site linking to you. Don't just email random site owners but start with a small number of highly targeted emails.

Other methods are to simply buy your inbound links. Many directories, blogs and other small sites are willing to sell text links to your site. Just make sure that they do not include a nofollow tag. I believe this a gray area in search engine policies... Google has openly stated it is against their terms to buy links. At the same time preferential treatment is given to sites listed in pay-for-inclusion directories such as Yahoo! Directory. This is a gray area so use it at your own risk.

Keep in mind that as you do this, your PageRank will be increasing. This does not show up on the toolbar right away... updates to the public PR only take place about 4-5 times a year. This does mean that as your PR increases, you should go back to setup #2 and re-evaluate your list. Now that your site has become more creditable, your going to be able to go for the more popular search terms, so constantly be reviewing where you stand.

This is just a crash course in how to rank top in Google. Keep in mind that this subject is always changing and evolving so you will also have to.

Have these methods worked for you? If not, what have you done that has worked? Please let me know in the comments section.

Update #1

@petewailes has suggested the following link for additional research on what factors most effect your ranking. Thanks a lot Pete.

http://www.seomoz.org/article/search-ranking-factors

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  • great article. I found it very useful. Thanks
  • Great article! Good tips on getting links too. Other things you can do to generate links and organic traffic is to participate in forums and include your link in your signature (preferably as anchor text), blast out your RSS feed, write articles that contain your link and submit them to article directories and things of that nature.
  • calvinjmitchell
    A great post, Charles. Would love to read follow up posts that explore the other aspects involved in it more deeply. Meanwhile you could check out this link, it also tackles the issue of ranking on Google: http://blog.directorymaximizer.com/2010/01/12/w...
  • Calvin, I have a few posts that I am working on now. Some should hopefully cover the topics that your looking for. When they are published I would like to hear your thoughts on them.

    Thanks for sharing the link.
  • Thanks for a great post. For anyone looking for SEO 101, this post comes in handy. I've shared it with all my followers and friends. Thanks for putting it together.
  • Marifer, your very welcome. Thanks for sharing it.
  • Extremely helpful! Thank you for the wealth of information!
  • Thanks, I am happy that you enjoyed it.
  • very useful!thanx.
  • Your very welcome.
  • GREAT ARTICLE...
    I've learned a lot from this article, I hope from this blog article I can find the best places in google.
    thank you so much for this information ...
    SERBA BLOG
  • miamiolivia
    What an incredible post, thank you, thank you!
  • It's great to hear that you like it, thank you so much for your kind words.
  • Really great post .Any one can easily understand about SEO basics through this article.Great work
  • Thanks, that's exactly what I was thinking for the goal of this post. I hope that it serves as a place to start for people learning the basics of SEO and keyword optimization.
  • A very helpful article especially for Newbies. Well done
  • Kanaga, thanks for your support. Let me know any other topics that you would like to see explored.
  • petewailes
    Please refrain from posting on SEO, if you don't know what you're talking about/having been doing it for long.
  • Pete,

    Sorry to hear that you disliked this article. I know that it's very basic for most people who are familiar with the subject and may be below your level of experience.

    I intended this post to be targeted to people who are just starting off and learning the basics about SEO. The purpose is that by giving people a few simple steps they could start off by learning the basics.
  • petewailes
    Which is fine, but don't post about checking PageRank, given that it's a poor metric. or keywords in H1, H2 and H3 tags. Those are good for web standards, not for SEO. Second, due to how outbound links work, and how link weight is calculated (being exponential, not linear), simply working on "this page has more links, so it's less valuable" isn't useful.

    Also, people are (IME) very bad at keyword research (especially in b2b sectors). I've seen people think that good keywords would be "service", "product", "industrial", "business" and so on.

    Always assume people will do exactly what you say, without putting in any thought, before you tell them to do something. Always remember, common sense is anything but.

    Btw, sorry for flying off the handle a little. When you've been doing this as long as I have, you'll understand!
  • Honestly Pete that is great advice you have. PageRank is not a great metric of a page's popularity but in many cases it's the best we have. What other method(s) would you suggest?

    You are correct that using proper H tags is part of good web standards. I've included them because they are also a valuable tool for SEO also. Unfortunately they are still not used by all people so I hope that more people will use these tags for both SEO reasons and because it's just a good practice.

    Your also correct that keyword select is a tough process for those just starting out. I hope that with the examples I've include reads will get a better idea of what a good choice in keywords really is.

    I totally know where your coming from, the subject of SEO always seems to bring out a lot of passion in people. Please keep in touch, I would like to hear more about what your working on.

    Thanks a lot for the comments.
  • petewailes
    I'd go for MozRank, which is probably the best number based metric around, and experience, which only comes from doing it for years sadly.

    No, they (H tags) really don't have any value from an SEO perspective. It's just for web standards, and if you want to scrape your content for doing other things (so you can pull the formatting properly, instead of using XML). Set up a test and see.
  • @petewailes I've been doing SEO for 15 years or so and I have to disagree with you on the H tags. Combined with the Title tag, H tags can do wonders. Agree totally on the keyword research though!

    @Charles - good intro to SEO. I agree links are very important but these days it's sometimes easier to 'create remarkable content' than it is to find good quality, high ranking, undiluted links!
  • anon
    Data can actually be used to prove that H(x) tags are largely useless (but, weirdly, that alt tags on images are surprisingly good places to put keywords).

    http://www.seomoz.org/blog/googles-algorithm-pr...
  • From the paragraph following the part you reference in the seomoz article - "...this is a perfect example of why raw correlation is flawed" (Rand Fishkin does produce some excellent data though)

    I have long believed that on the web data can be found to prove anything :-)

    I quoted from experience. Two months ago, a change to a homepage H tag alone moved a site from P3 to P1 for a highly competitive single word search term.
  • Thanks a lot, I am glad you enjoyed the post.
  • Armitage5
    This is really an excellent article. This is going to my starting point when educating people on the topic. Great job!
  • Thanks a lot.

    What other SEO topics would you like to read more about?
  • Armitage5
    Personally, I would like to hear more about measuring improvement. I really only audit and analyze 3 or 4 times a year (SEO is not my primary role). So taking measurements every day/week/year is a pain and not realistic. So this is one of the aspects I am least confident about.
  • Great idea for a post, measuring improvements is clearly important and there are some analytical approaches towards doing it.

    I usually like to chart it over time to see how I am performing. The visuals give you a good idea of what direction your ranking is moving.

    I will absolutely be writing a post on this, you'll have to let me know what you think of it.
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