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Our Top Ten PPC Lead Generation Campaign Myths

April 20, 2007 by Vinny Leave a Comment

1. High Position Equals High Value

For high-end companies with ocean deep pockets looking to use the search engines as their own digital billboard, sure, it’s worth the price to pay and get into the top positions for your ppc keywords. But for most small businesses, the cost/benefit analysis will show that over the long term it’s not worth it to push yourself into that prime real estate when what you’re looking for is a significant quantity of quality traffic. That’s the key with setting up a lead generation campaign; finding how little you can pay to get into a good enough position on the first page to get you conversions. So definitely don’t shoot for the sky right off the bat. You’ll likely waste a lot of money before you find that the optimal ROI is further down the page.

2. More Keywords Equals Better Results

Yes, we’re all very proud that you know ten different ways to say “widgets,” but are they all common uses of the term? Is there the potential for any of them to get confused for a different product or service than what you’re offering? And most importantly, are they all the ways that someone who’s looking to pay money for your products and services would phrase things? When faced with questions like these, it’s clear that for your ppc lead generation campaign, you should think long and hard about your keywords. Less can always be more if you pick the right combinations of keywords and key phrases.

3. Don’t Need A Landing Page

Why design an entirely separate page to advertise an individual product or service to my ppc visitors when I’ve got a beautifully crafted home page to point them to? Well, that’s not always an easy question to answer. If you’re just running a branding campaign, then you’d obviously want your visitors all funneled towards the face of your website. And depending upon how you have your website set up, it can act as a landing page. The biggest issues that most home pages have is that they have a lot of navigation options that can make it easy for your visitor’s attention to drift from why you brought them there in the first place: to buy a specific product! Also, the buttons and links on home pages are often set up into directory-like categories instead of appealing calls to action. If you plan on using your home page as your destination URL, then ask yourself this question: Would this look good in print as an advertisement? If you’ve got too much Flash animation and a simple navigation scheme, without reinforcing the offer that you put in your text ads, then your home page definitely won’t optimize your lead generation campaign’s conversions.

4. I Only Need One Landing Page

Ideally, you should have a separate landing page for each of the specific service or products that you are offering. This gives you the opportunity to concentrate on the SEO of each page, and writing copy that makes you seem like an authority when it comes to that individual product or service. This in turn leads your visitor, who usually typed in a very specific key phrase to get to you, to find exactly what they are looking for on your page and nothing else to distract them/scare them off. If you’re going to have several products share a landing page, for heaven’s sake at least make sure the products are closely related. If you can come up with a catch-all phrase to sum up all of the products as a group then that’s the ideal way to set up a multi-product/service landing page for a lead generation ppc campaign.

5. Ad Scheduling Doesn’t Make A Difference

They’ll stumble out of bed in the middle of the night and type in something, anything. They’ll be up so late trying to figure out how to pay the bills next week that they can’t even remember what they were searching for. They’ll be killing five minutes while making dinner for the family, and their heart won’t be into making an online purchase at the moment. You should avoid having any of these people view your ads by utilizing the power of ad scheduling in your lead generation campaigns. Your ppc budget will thank you by having more money around to put towards people who are awake, on a break, and not temporarily financially crunched.

6. I Can Monitor Every Week And Be Okay

It’s only after blowing through tons of cash while your guard is down that you realize how fast the search markets can change. As much as you can use budgeting, scheduling, and just good old proper ppc campaign setup to your advantage, there’s no better way to make your budget work for you than to get involved with your lead generation campaign on a daily basis. Just a half an hour a day will not only let you make necessary ppc budget adjustments and try new text ad variations, it will also give you a bit of time to slowly chip away at the stuff you really need to be utilizing: analytics.

7. Text Ads Just Have To Get The Job Done

You’re the kid yelling out on the street corner selling papers. And you’re hungry. So is your family. You’d better think of something good to say, cause you’ve only got a couple seconds (if that), and you need to start putting some bread on the table. That’s the mind set you need to have when writing text ads, because if you just throw them together it will show. Well-constructed ppc ads have a polished look to them. Some of them grab attention visually. Others rely on great calls to action to motivate people to click on them. So experiment and find the style that works best for your business. And don’t blaze through writing them.. the results usually aren’t pretty.

8. I Only Need Keywords In My Ad Title

You shouldn’t just place Keywords in your ad title, and then say whatever you want in the rest of the ad. You should have keywords in the title, both description lines, the display URL and the destination URL. Just make sure that you word things so that it doesn’t sound like a random collection of keywords. And if you wanna be sneaky, you can always try some nifty tricks like creating shapes out of the keywords that are in bold when your ads serve. If there is a common keyword phrase that has three words to it you are bidding on, try putting one of the keywords at the beginning of the ad title, another at the end of the first line of the description, and another in the beginning of the second line of the description. What you’ve done, my friend, is create an arrow that leads the visitor to view your ad instinctively! And that’s the kind of creativity that will reward you with results in your ppc lead generation campaign.

9. One Campaign Is Easier

What’s easy rarely makes you rich. Now when it comes to a ppc campaign, you can’t settle for throwing all your keywords into one group with one campaign and expect to get the best bang for your buck. Not to mention you can’t even effectively track what types of traffic are getting you the best results. So if you’re a widget dealer throughout the southwestern U.S., set up campaigns for all your geographic targets. After you launch them all, you’ll notice which ones are flying out of the gate, which ones are keeping up, and which ones need you to pick them up off the ground (or bury them!). Also, you’re gonna get bonus points for setting up Groups for each specific product or service. That way you’ll know what your big sellers are. If you’re running a national campaign, you can use separate campaigns for your products instead of geographically targeting the campaigns. You get the same benefit: separating your product/service lines so you can evaluate what’s getting you the most out of your lead generation campaign.

10. Keywords Are Easy To Figure Out

You may think you know a lot about your target demographic, what they would search for, what’s gonna make you rich. Just stop with it already. You can’t possibly conceive of how rapidly the markets change. What might seem like a traffic gold-mine can be a term that no one in ten years would ever search for. So instead of thinking you know what’s your optimal keyword list and just going for it, do some homework with Google’s keyword tool, researching your competition, and reading a few more posts like this one before you start to structure your keyword lists to optimize the leads you generate through your ppc campaign.

Filed Under: Paid Search Marketing

10 Easy Tips To Help You Write The Most Effective SEO Content

April 19, 2007 by Vinny Leave a Comment

Okay, so you’re psyched to get your SEO content rolling… well that’s great! When you’re eagerly chomping at the bit to start assaulting a blank page with copy for your site, the last thing you want is someone digitally handing you an SEO style guide, but that’s what you need to consider before you even type the “w” in “Welcome to Widgets And More.” Allow SEOContentPros.Com to chip in here with its ten top tips to maximize the SEO effectiveness of your copywriting efforts.

1. Make Your SEO Copy Relevant

This one may seem obvious, but it’s easy to stray from your topic (and its key phrases) without even realizing it. Just make sure that, like a good politician (that’s an oxymoron, right?) you remain focused on your message, excluding any extraneous information. That’s not to say you can’t take things where they naturally would go through your copy, but just be careful that you don’t start entirely talking about unrelated topics that may water down the SEO potency of your keywords and key phrases.

2. Who Is Your SEO Target?

This is a big one, because if you don’t take that into consideration, the person who ends up reading your copy will quickly bounce off the page. If your site mainly appeals to middle-aged hippies, then don’t start off on some lengthy l33tsp33k blitzkreig. Not only will your readers not get it, but the kinds of sites that you want to be identified with by the search engines will not be associated with your site due to the vastly different demographic you’re appealing to with the SEO copy.

3. Spellchecking & Grammar For SEO Content

No, we’re not all librarians, that’s for sure. But that doesn’t mean we can’t give our copy a little editing TLC along the way. There are benefits to running your SEO copy through a spellchecker. For one, any keyword or phrase that’s misspelled will not get indexed properly. And unless you want to get into the shady business of targeting misspelled words, this will not help get you the kind of quality traffic you desire. If you can’t properly edit your copy, then by all means hire someone, or pass it along to that friend who wrote papers for you in your college English class.

4. Organize Your Information Wisely (SEO Friendly!)

It doesn’t matter if you have all the great subject matter in the world for your keywords and key phrases. If you don’t know how to hierarchically organize it into neatly manageable chunks of writing, the strength of your overall marketing effort through the SEO copy will suffer. Before you begin writing a passage of text, ask yourself “how does this piece of writing fit into to my website’s plan?” And remember, if you break a lengthy assignment into smaller portions that have their own unique headers and content, that will make them better candidates for indexing than if you cram them all together onto one page.

5. Make Your SEO Copy Timely

Go onto message boards, blogs, social bookmarking sites, and other fresh content centers, especially the ones that relate most closely to your market and its keywords and key phrases. Any posting you notice has a high readership, ranking, or number of replies is a gold mine for you. Immediately make plans to address the same slant with a great article and use it to steer that traffic towards your site by posting it on other forums, newsgroups, etc. It’s just your way of making sure that the popular word gets spread, and that it benefits your SEO as well.

6. Condense Your Information To Maximize SEO Benefit

How concise can you say something? Now is the time to find out. Unless you’re a poetry website (which, if that’s the case, by all means go astray with your use of alliteration, metaphor, and enjambment) there’s no reason you can’t get to the point about things when it comes to writing your SEO content. No one who’s quickly looking for information cares if you can compose a perfectly worded, tear-jerking introduction into your materials. Bottom line: if you can say it clearly and correctly in as few words as possible, your likelihood of being picked up by the search engines improves.

7. Would You Link To Your SEO Content? Blog About It?

Why bother writing anything at all unless it’s something people would be interested in reading! Sure you could write pages and pages about your return policy, but it’s frankly a waste of time. Instead dedicate your time and energy towards fleshing out the information on your site that you would want to read about your subject. Here’s not only your chance to establish yourself as the utmost authority on your keywords and key phrases, but also an opportunity to gain the trust of your readers by giving them the tools they need to make an informed decision about your products and services. If they find it really helpful, they may very well link to your SEO content page in a forum, blog, or on their highly trusted website (we can always shoot for the stars, right?).

8. Use Unique Language Throughout Your SEO Writing

Search engines and people have a striking similarity when it comes to the kind of copy they find boring. They both will yawn if you repeatedly say something the same way. The search engines are smart enough to know if you are trying to pack keywords and key phrases into your copy to the detriment of your content with the sole intention of trying to get indexed for those terms, so why risk getting penalized for such poor-quality SEO content? Instead write in a unique voice that isn’t afraid to phrase things differently. Try to never say the same thing twice in your copy. Pick out an alternate way of relating your terms so that they’ll make the highest impact possible.

9. Write Captivating, Keyword-Rich Headers For Your SEO Copy

Everyone is drawn to a well-worded title, so don’t skimp out with your attention when it comes to creating them for your passages of content. Trying to be sly and clever can work to an extent; that tactic is best used when you’re targeting a demographic that appreciates that brand of humor. Whatever you do, make sure not to let your slick wit get entirely in the way of the keywords and key phrases that you’re trying to get picked up for in your SEO copy. The search engines do consider the wording of your paragraph headers (at all levels), so make sure they contain the gist of what each portion of copy is getting at.

10. Link To Authority Sites From Your SEO Copy

This one doesn’t have much to do with the copy itself, but it still can help get your text picked up by the search engines: pick quality sites with high pagerank (and relevancy to your content) and link to them throughout your SEO writing. Sprinkle them in, don’t make every sentence contain two links! Always use keyword and key phrase text as your links to resources that are relevant to them. Of course, don’t link to your competition, or link to pages that have a lot of advertising by your competition. If you go about this in a highly selective manner that makes sense to a reader (meaning they aren’t jarred by a lack of relevancy when they visit one of the links you put on your page), then they may follow that link. And when you direct enough traffic to an authority, they might do you the ultimate favor of linking to your site, so keep track of where your visitors exit; it might make sense to contact those sites you link to down the road for some favorable reciprocal linking.

Filed Under: SEO Tips

Extreme, 101, Top Ten… Use Buzzword Content Topics!

April 16, 2007 by Vinny Leave a Comment

There’s no better way to get yourself on the path to RSS syndication or linking than to start drafting a series of catchy-sounding lists. There’s also no better way to establish yourself as the authority on any subject. If you can grade the top ten office supply innovations of 2007, or list out “Extreme Mountain Biking Upgrades”, or give a 101 course on how to soothe a crying baby, you’re much more likely to get the attention of someone than by simply relating your professional experiences.

In the case of the top ten list, that approach gives you credibility as a judge of products. With the bike upgrades, you’re setting yourself up as a trend-setter. And as for the 101 lesson, you’re enticing potential visitors with free professional advice. All three ways attract the attention of visitors in different ways, but the main thing to take away from this is that your content is more attractive to other sites if it can be easily integrated. And these buzzword content templates make it easy for you to expound upon what might be the most boring subject… Top Ten Nifty Features Of The New Swingline Stapler sounds much more appealing than New Swingline Stapler Released.

So let your imagination run wild. These topics also give you plenty of opportunities to inject some humor and personality into the subject matter. So take advantage of it!

Filed Under: SEO Tips

Kill Google Search Network

April 16, 2007 by Vinny Leave a Comment

We’ve found that the buzz is true; turning off Google’s Search Network and running your campaign on Google search alone is the best way to go. A lot of the Search Network traffic (we’re not talking about Content Network, but Google’s affiliate search partners) doesn’t carry much value because a large majority of it comes from parked domains with a generic search box, spam directories and portals, and other low-content sites. Some accounts we’ve nearly run into the ground sharply avoid hitting the runway after we turn off Search Network, and then perform exceptionally well. It’s just one more tool in your PPC management arsenal, so don’t forget about it!

Google’s products are great, and we’re sure that they will eventually figure out a way to phase this horrible waste of marketing dollars that’s currently called Search Network out of the picture. But there’s no sense in you helping them (in an expensive and ineffective way) through the tranisition. If you can’t find enough traffic on Google search alone, then by all means set up separate campaigns with slightly less relevant keywords or on the Content Network, with a different bidding and ad strategy, but don’t use Search Network until they clean it up first.

Filed Under: Paid Search Marketing

Always Disable Google Content And Search Networks At First

April 13, 2007 by Vinny Leave a Comment

Another common mistake amateur internet marketers can make is to use a shotgun approach when it comes to the different “streams” the search engines offer to advertise using. Remember that success using paid search not about how many people you can put your ads in front of. It is all about selectively targeting your markets in a systematic manner, only adding streams as you either require more traffic, or if the initial marketing effort doesn’t work. Sure, there may very well be useful traffic out there in the Google content network, but you’d be crazy to let the same ad campaign with the same text ads, bids, and budgets run on search and content networks simultaneously.

First start out by setting up a campaign that ONLY runs on the search engine itself. This traffic will be the highest quality you can find because you won’t get inquiries from people who found you on the cheesy search forms found on a lot of ‘parked’ domains, commercial spamming portals, etc. The way you do this in Adwords, for example, is to only opt into Google’s search. Not their search network, and certainly not their content network, which just places your ads next to often (but not guaranteed to be even half the time) relevant pages of content.

What you’ll find by using this systematic approach is that either you get:

  1. Really great quality traffic (and plenty of it).
  2. Great traffic but not enough to support your business model.
  3. You get poor traffic.

Here’s the next step for each scenario:

  1. If you get plenty of great quality traffic using only Google search, then congrats! Keep it up.. instead of thinking about traffic, focus instead on continuing to improve your clickthrough and conversion rates. And also about your response to those leads.

  2. If you get great traffic, but not enough of it, then consider expanding your keyword list first. The Google keyword tool works great for that. Only after doing this should you set up a separate campaign to target the search network. And only the search network. Then try that for awhile. If you’re still not getting results, the last option is the content network. Again, you want to set up a separate campaign for that.

  3. If you get poor quality traffic, then that could mean a lot of things. Either your landing page isn’t up to snuff, your ads are not serving high enough on the page, or your keywords aren’t set up right. Regardless of the problem, it’s not going to make things better by opting into search and content network.

Filed Under: Paid Search Marketing

Utilizing and Optimizing PPC Landing Pages

April 11, 2007 by Vinny Leave a Comment

Are you still directing all of your keywords and ad texts to either your site’s homepage or one of your site’s inner pages?

If you answered in the affirmative, then you are most likely finding yourself paying close to, if not, the premium click prices for your keywords and key phrases. If you haven’t realized by now, these pages are not the best places for your destination url’s to point to. The reason lies within the relevance and focus of these pages. Your landing page should be the most relevant and specific page associated with a certain ad group or even keyword or phrase.

For example, if you are a real estate agent and are selling properties in Santa Monica, Beverly Hills, and Malibu, instead of having visitors directed to a page within your website that has information and/or properties about all three areas, you should rather have them led to a page that has information about just one of the communities. Even better would be to create a single marketing page (a.k.a landing page) that is just about one area. This will help to increase the quality score of your keywords and phrases, which will in turn lower your click prices, thus allowing you to spend more of your Paid Search Marketing budget or allocate it elsewhere.

Once you set up a unique and focused landing page for each Ad Group within your PPC campaign there are some simple things you can implement to optimize this page to help stretch your budget a little more. These are some very basic steps that anyone can install. For more advanced tips please check back for our follow-up post about Advanced Landing Page Optimization Tactics.

(1) Whatever the page is about (Malibu real estate, used books, iPods), make it very apparent that the visitor has come to the right place. Any and all reassurance of landing on the right page and not being led to an unrelated marketing ploy page will immediately increase your credibility. In addition, it will also help to increase the page’s quality score because when these pages are reviewed by actual people over at Google for instance (yeah, actual people review these pages) they will see that the page is completely relevant to the Ad Group and search terms utilized.

(2) Have as much relevant content on this landing page as possible, but keep it brief. This poses somewhat of a dilemma for most marketers because as they attempt to have as much unique, relevant content on their landing page as possible they are unintentionally scaring away visitors with a seemingly bottomless page of text. The search engines love to see this content, but you have to keep the visitor in mind at all times because they are ultimately the ones who these landing pages need to appeal to first and foremost. So, keep your content very concise, relevant, and unique and a happy medium will be met. Think of how you act when you come across a landing page. How much time do you spend on this page? 15-30 seconds? Does a page of text appeal to you? Are you really going to read all of the landing page text?

(3) Try to include the ad creative you used in your text ads on your landing page and make them very apparent. For example, if you advertised in your ad text:

Santa Monica Real Estate
Looking For Santa Monica Real Estate?

Register Once For Unlimited MLS Access

Make sure to include “Register Once For Unlimited MLS Access” on your landing page. This will again verify that the visitor has come to the right place and has not been led to a spamming site. In addition, it creates another call to action on the landing page, which is what is going to increase your page’s conversion rate.

(4) Keep the design of your landing page simple, and of course, aesthetically pleasing. Remember that you have to keep two people in mind; the visitors who see your landing page and the people who work for Google, Yahoo, MSN, etc that personally review your landing page. If the page is extremely busy with too many photos or cut up in numerous scattered tables, then most people are going to be immediately turned off. Once again, just ask yourself how you react to certain landing pages? Did the page catch your attention? Does the page keep your attention? Does it look professional and make you believe or want to provide your personal information?

There are many more things that can be done to optimize a landing page. In the sake of keeping our blog posts as concise as possible, we are going to follow up this post with successive additions so please check back with us in the coming weeks for more useful and free information.

Filed Under: Paid Search Marketing

Don’t Waste Your Money On PPC “Bleeder” Terms

April 10, 2007 by Vinny Leave a Comment

The first mistake that people often make when setting up a Google Adwords or Yahoo Sponsored Search campaign for their business is that they don’t go after key phrases, instead targeting only single key words. If you sell websites for bands and then make the gaffe of bidding to show up for ‘websites’, you may quickly find out how to destroy your monthly budget in a couple of hours! The reason this can happen is that ‘websites’ applies to not only website designs of all types, including all industries that aren’t the music industry, it also applies to any use of ‘websites’ outside of website design. When you consider how many different ways ‘websites’ can be used as a search term, it’s easy to see how your campaign could receive several million impressions a day! Of course, you won’t see that many before your account is turned off from reaching it’s daily or monthly spend limit. Regardless, the quality of the traffic you receive from this term will be poor as well, since you’ll get a lot of clicks from people who aren’t looking to buy a website design for a band. So it’s clear to see how these kinds of low-quality, high-traffic terms have earned the name “bleeder terms.”

The best way to go is very conservatively at first, picking only phrases that describe your products/services in full detail. In case you’re wondering what PaidSearchPros would try out in this example, we’d go after key phrases like “band website design” or “music marketing” at first, ones that are very specific.

Filed Under: Paid Search Marketing

Drilling Down Into Your SEO Content

April 10, 2007 by Vinny Leave a Comment

This tip is for those who have already drafted (or contracted out with a professional copywriter to have written) some unique, original content for their website. If you’re not one of those people… Come back here once you’ve installed multiple pages of copy on each of your web pages.

This tip is for the person who is now wondering “what more can I do other than wait?” Well, I’m sorry to say it, but you can ALWAYS use more relevant content. The search engines will send their spiders to your site more often if they notice that you regularly, relevantly, and significantly update your site. If you update your site frequently enough, they may even spider your site multiple times a day. Imagine that, getting daily attention from some of the most powerful companies in the world. It can happen, but you have to be willing to put in the work, and do it wisely.

Now when faced with what to write about, the most important thing is knowing how to “fill in the gaps” of the content you’ve already written. Go back and look at all of your copy. I’m certain that on each page there are several missed opportunities. Things mentioned, but never fleshed out. It is now your job to go back in and think like a search engine; visualize scanning your pages for additional links to drill down into. It should become obvious what things you can continue to expound upon in additional pages of content.

This new content will not only continue to build your website to the search engines, but it will make it a more entertaining, informational read to your visitors. Which leads to them spending more time on your site, becoming familiar with your branding, and perhaps even doing you the ultimate favor: linking to your site from their trusted site because they value your wealth of knowledge.

Filed Under: SEO Tips

Share Your Knowledge In Your SEO Content, Not Someone Else’s

April 10, 2007 by Vinny Leave a Comment

There is little to no debate that duplicate content is going to hurt your natural rankings in the search engines. However, there is plenty of debate as to how much duplicate content actually hurts your marketing strategy. There is, of course, no absolute answer to this question so why take a chance…write something original. There is plenty of knowledge and insight on just about every subject so why not share your spin? You might not think it is going to benefit someone or be read, but do not underestimate the plethora of inquiring minds on the Internet.

The best thing you can do to expedite the process of your site’s content being indexed and being ranked high, naturally is to share your own knowledge on a subject. Do some research, try not to regurgitate someone else’s knowledge, and let loose with what you have learned, gathered, and experienced. You will be surprised at the audience you attract. I know that I do not speak for myself when I say that I am always looking for as much information on a subject as possible. And that includes any and all sides, views, and opinions on every subject matter.

As more and more people turn to the Internet each day as their primary source of research, the demand for as much information as possible increases exponentially. When you can provide even the smallest piece of information that no one else has replicated many times over, you are going to gain a strong following and a certain amount of respect as a resource on the Internet. And, in turn, your site/blog/forum is going to gradually leap frog your competition for those natural spots you have been longing for ever since you were a novice SEO’er.

It is no doubt that providing original content on the Internet is one of the most difficult things to do, hence the respect it is given, but if you are able to share your own knowledge, no matter how minuscule you may think it is, you will most definitely reap the benefits. Just think – one little piece of information that is brand new and informative on the Internet is going to cascade into thousands of pairs of eyes on your hard work. How do you think the tabloids sell so many magazines and distract you when you are standing in line at the grocery store? When we see something that we have never seen before we are immediately and sub-consciously attracted to it. Use that mind set when you are writing your next blog entry or page of copy for your website. It is going to be harder to start that typing, but the end result will surpass your initial frustrations.

Filed Under: SEO Tips

An Introduction to SEO Content and Why it Matters

April 9, 2007 by Vinny Leave a Comment

You came to this page because you were looking for something, anything that will help your new (or older) site climb up the natural Google or Yahoo page rankings to the first page. That’s where everyone wants to be! Unfortunately, figuring out how to get there is a little like turning a blank canvas into a masterpiece. Fortunately, there are a lot of things you can do that, when combined, will shape your website slowly into the ‘something to behold’ that you want it to be to the search engines.

The first thing we always ask someone is: “What is your site about?” Often proud site owners will go on for hours about what they are trying to accomplish, the services they offer, and why they are the best. And then we open up their site to see nothing more than a (sometimes) flashy domain name and some contact information. That means little more to the search engines than a flimsy digital business card: maybe they’ll tuck it in a folder somewhere. Though they might just wash it after leaving it in their jeans, or worse yet decide after getting it that they really don’t need it.

What Google, Yahoo, MSN Live, and the other engines really need to deliver relevant content to their searchers is substance; meaning professionally written, captivating content that keeps visitors on your page once they get there, and most importantly, gives the search engines something meaty to spider onto. Without in-depth SEO content, all the work in the world on page tags, domain name research, and other considerations will be pointless, because in the end anyone who visits your page will still be asking “What is your site about?”

BigSERP.Com provides professional SEO content solutions for businesses of all sizes.

Filed Under: SEO Tips

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