Low
Cost Web Site Promotion For Small Businesses
Daria Goetsch
Search Innovation
September 4, 2002
Promoting your small business website in the
search engines can be a daunting task. Use of
free submissions and link popularity is a good
starting point for your website promotion campaign.
Start with the basis of good search engine and
directory listings. Make sure you read and follow
each search engine and directory's rules for submissions.
Before making submissions, always verify that
all your website links and pages work, with no
pages "under construction".
Search Engines and Directories
Begin with the Open Directory Project (ODP http://www.dmoz.org).
ODP is free and provides secondary search results
to many other search engines. (Secondary search
results are search results that come up after
the primary search results of a search engine
are shown.) Google uses the ODP directory results
in their search engine results.
It is preferable to secure a listing in ODP before
submitting your website to Yahoo!, but it often
takes time to become listed in ODP and may not
be possible. If you can afford a yearly $299.00
subscription to submit to Yahoo! (http://www.yahoo.com),
do so. If you are a non-commercial website, you
may be able to submit your website for free. You
will find the rules about free submissions when
you click on the "suggest a site" link at the
bottom of your chosen category page.
Google is the top search engine and one you want
to be listed in. Google provides secondary search
results to other search engines and directories.
If you do B2B (business-to-business) with other
companies, Business.com (http://www.business.com)
is a reasonable $99.00 subscription per year and
gives you the opportunity to list not only your
home page, but four other pages from your website.
The Business.com search results are used by many
other business sites for search results.
Inktomi is a good choice for a reasonably priced
link (yearly fee of $39.00 for first page, $25.00
per page 2-1000 for additional pages) and will
get you into secondary search results for the
MSN search engine. Position Technologies has a
good submission program available for Inktomi
(http://www.positiontech.com/).
Zeal.com (http://www.zeal.com)
listings are part of the LookSmart directory,
which provides primary search listings for MSN.
You must sign-up to become a Zeal editor and pass
a test before being able to add your non-commercial
submissions to Zeal. Articles and tutorials are
good choices to use when submitting non-commercial
information from your website to Zeal.com.
Many of the major search engines still include
a free submission section for their listings.
Paid Inclusion and PPC (pay-per-click) are always
the faster choices, but if your budget is limited
you may want to consider submitting and waiting
the 6-8 weeks (or more) it often takes to see
your listings show up.
Major search engines providing free submissions
include: Google (http://www.google.com),
AltaVista (http://www.altavista.com),
and AlltheWeb (http://www.alltheweb.com).
Secondary search engines you can submit to for
free include Gigablast (http://www.gigablast.com)
and ScrubtheWeb (http://www.scrubtheweb.com).
One smaller directory is JoeAnt (http://www.joeant.com).
Link Popularity Methods
If you are a small business, seek out business
directories to submit to, especially those directly
related to your business.
Looking in Yahoo! and ODP categories for business
directories can be very helpful in getting a start
on your search for links.
For link popularity, searching in Google is a
quick way to find suitable websites to request
links from or submit to.
Search for specialty search engines. If your
business is in the medical field, search for medical
search engines.
When looking for link partners, select sites
that reflect your website's topic or subject.
Links from sites that are not related to your
site are not weighted as heavily by the search
engines in deciding how to rank your site.
Visit your competition's websites. See how they
are ranking in the search engines and find out
which keywords they are found under.
Link popularity is a very time-consuming activity,
be prepared to spend a minimum of 10-20 hours
in order to start building your link popularity.
This may be a daunting enough task you might want
to consider working with a search engine marketing
professional.
Helpful Tools
It is always a good idea to keep in mind that
many tools are not "exact" and can vary due to
the search engine algorithms changing (which can
be often). I like to think of it as an "approximation"
of the information I am seeking.
The Google Toolbar (http://toolbar.google.com)
shows you the approximate link popularity of other
websites (note the green bar that says "PageRank"
after downloading the tool), as well as giving
you choices such as checking backlinks (who is
linking to the webpage), similar pages, a cached
snapshot of the page and more when you right-click
on the web page. Visit your competition's webpage,
then use the toolbar to view who is linking to
them.
The PageRank and backlink information is very
helpful in regards to researching your competition.
The backlinks you find via the toolbar may show
you some quality websites to submit links to.
Seek out websites with PageRank 4 and up to get
the most out of your submitted or reciprocal link.
Hovering your mouse over the Google Toolbar tells
you the page rank of the page you are visiting.
To learn about writing an email request for a reciprocal
link and other linking strategies, visit Eric Ward's
website (http://www.ericward.com/articles/index.html).
The Overture suggestion tool (http://inventory.overture.com/d/searchinventory/suggestion)
is a free way to check how popular your keyword
phrases are in comparison to the monthly results
of Overture. This will not give you a complete
picture since Overture is used on many but not
all search engines. It will help you decide which
keyword phrases are the best choice, as well as
as variations on your keyword phrases.
MarketLeap (http://www.marketleap.com/)
measures your link popularity, and that of three
of your competitors. The report is free and gives
you a benchmark showing where your popularity
lies online vs your competitors.
Lastly, if you want to "do it yourself", the
top places I've found to research and learn from
are Search Engine Watch (http://www.searchenginewatch.com)
and Webmaster World (http://www.webmasterworld.com).
Search Engine Watch and Webmaster World's sister
site, Search Engine World (http://www.searchengineworld.com)
both have free newsletters full of information
to help you promote your website.
About the Author:
Daria Goetsch is the founder and Search Engine
Marketing Consultant for Search Innovation Marketing
(http://www.searchinnovation.com),
a Search Engine Promotion company serving small
businesses. Besides running her own company, Daria
is an associate of WebMama.com, an Internet web
marketing strategies company. She has specialized
in search engine optimization since 1998, including
three years as the Search Engine Specialist for
O'Reilly & Associates, a technical book publishing
company.
Copyright © 2003 Search Innovation Marketing.
All Rights Reserved.
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