Understanding
Search and Design
If you are entertaining the idea of launching a new Web site
or having one redesigned, you need to understand the balance
between “search and design” and how this affects
your Internet presence. Your Web designer or Web developer
should be able to help you achieve these goals.
The problem, however, is that many Web designers still cannot
grasp the purity of Google’s laser-like approach to
search. It is the purity of this search that connects Web
sites to one another.
Let’s look at a case study of a public relations agency.
Design Matters
In the case of Virginia-based Rourk Public Relations, www.rourkpr.com,
the challenge was to communicate with potential clients using
just the right balance of text content and Web graphics. Using
Google as a search engine benchmark during the design phase,
a good Web site designer understands that Google uses text
content to index or list a Web site in the appropriate category.
Another factor is a Web site’s locality. Have you listed
your address, city, state, zip and phone with area code in
“text form” throughout your Web site? This helps
Google determine regional factors as they apply to your search
engine ranking. Usually the best place to position this is
in the footer or bottom of your Web site.
Rourk Public Relations features a nice balance of graphics
and text with ample white space for readability. The design
is striking, yet clean and easy to read. A Web site need not
fill every inch of white space for the sake of filling up
the browser space. If you’re still not convinced, look
at Google’s home page.
Content is King
Search engines love content. In the Rourk Public Relations’
web site there is a ‘Team’ section with short
bios and pictures. David Rourk, the agency’s president,
shared with me that one of his clients found his Web site
when searching for the advertising agency Barker Campbell
Farley & Mansfield. This search result was due to text
within one of his team member’s biographies. Unfortunately,
this competitor’s Web site was not found by the user,
most likely due to the fact that their Web site is not correctly
optimized for search engines.
Write meaningful, informative copy about your business. Write
well-formed paragraphs that are error free. Google fine tunes
its search algorithm daily. They have teams of coder-programmers
who work to make Google 2nd to none in terms of pure search.
So don’t write copy for search engines, write copy for
your visitors. Talk about your company, your business, what
you do.
Copywriters Can Increase Your Search Rankings
Writing great copy is no easy task, so it is well worth the
investment to hire a good copywriter that will make your site
sing and help elevate it to the first or second page of major
search engine rankings. Rourk Public Relations has written
copy for several of my Web clients with outstanding results.
You may be the brains of your business, but you may not be
a wordsmith. Hire a good copywriter. Competition on the Web
is tough. You need to put your best foot forward if you want
to tap into the billions of dollars that well designed and
written Web sites are generating.
You have no doubt seen ads on the Web or in your email titled
Top 10 Ranking Now or Drive Tons of Traffic to Your Web Site.
Don’t be fooled. There are no short-cuts to driving
traffic to your Web site. It takes a keen understanding of
search engines through years of study and the correct design
and text to get to the top.
About the Author
Rick Vidallon is President of Visionefx, a Web
design company based in Virginia Beach, Va. They provide
services to national companies as well as small to medium
businesses throughout the United States. Rick can be reached
at (757) 619-6456 or rick@visionefx.net. |