I presented a professional development seminar at the National Press Club in Canberra on Tuesday 8 June 2010 for a local networking group called Schmooze.
Here’s the presentation:
I presented a professional development seminar at the National Press Club in Canberra on Tuesday 8 June 2010 for a local networking group called Schmooze.
Here’s the presentation:
I’ve recently started delivering training to small groups of website owners about how to take their websites to Number One on Google. Here’s the presentation slides that I have been using:
It’s a good practice to secure your ‘name’ on the plethora of social networking sites on the web, if only to deny others from securing the name first.
The other day I tried to secure the username ‘boomerangbooks’ on MySpace, only to find that it has been taken already by a small bricks and mortar bookstore by the same name in Texas, USA. Doh! Not that I was intending to use the MySpace account anyway….but it did teach me a lesson and gave me an idea for a post!
At the very least, I recommend that you get out there and secure your name on the most popular services quicksmart - namely Facebook, MySpace and Twitter. If you have the time, then you might consider doing same for those listed on the Wikipedia list of social networking sites. And here’s another list of niche social networking sites for you to sign up to as well.
Ultimately, it may be worthwhile signing up to these sites for the SEO value alone: because many of them allow you to specify your website or blog URL on a profile page, which in turn is indexed by the search engines.
It won’t be physically possible to maintain an updated profile on every site, but Ping.fm is a good tool for ’syndicating’ your updates and blog posts to all of your social networking accounts at once.
A prediction: the growing popularity of Twitter and the ability to register multiple names/any name that you wish on that site will result in major stinks in the coming months….in the meantime, make sure you snap up the account names that will be useful for your business.
Search engines exist to provide users with the most relevant information quickly. That’s why it’s in the interests of Google and co. to filter out content which is duplicated elsewhere on the internet. The search engines will only display one instance of each piece of content, and will ignore other instances of that same content.
It’s important then that you a) only display original content that is not replicated elsewhere on the internet, or b) optimise your site so that it is chosen as the most authoritative source (if you do happen to publish content that is replicated elsewhere).
A point to note – the content doesn’t need to be identical for it to be excluded from Google. The search engines know when content has been altered slightly in an attempt to dupe them!
Also, if you publish various versions of the same content on your site (eg regular view, mobile view, text format, print version), then the search engines might penalise you – use the NOFOLLOW, NOINDEX metatag to ‘hide’ certain versions of content from the search engines, because this duplicate content could be seen as an attempt to manipulate the search engines.
If you do use syndicated content, then you need to be optimised for the search engines to make sure that you are ‘the one’ that appears in search results – most importantly, you need to have quality back links from other authoritative and thematically-similar websites.
The best bet is to create your own quality, unique content – but be aware that your content may be republished without your permission elsewhere on the web in an attempt to improve search engine results…this eventuality will be the subject of another post at a later time.

One thing that will attract customers to your website is free stuff. Everybody likes to get something for nix.
You should consider offering something on your site for free – for example, a white paper, an electronic book, free reports, forms or templates. This will help to attract prospective customers to your website and to help build your mailing list.
Here’s some free stuff that I provide on my company website: http://www.bluetrainenterprises.com.au/goodies-useful-docs-templates.html. I am getting some good traffic to this page, as people go in search of CV templates, interview proformas and small business templates.
Here are some tips for providing free content:
- Make sure that the free stuff is good stuff – there’s no point providing something that is not good quality. The free stuff needs to be representative of the quality of your business and help build your credibility in the eyes of prospective customers.
- It is important that the free stuff is good, but you shouldn’t give away your entire suite of intellectual property for free! Your free stuff should be a taster, prompting the recipient to engage in further business with your organisation. For example, you might offer a free PDF containing a single chapter of a book you have written - if the recipient enjoys reading the free chapter, then it is likely that they will want to purchase the entire book.
- Ensure that your free stuff contains appropriate copyright notices and links back to your business, so that readers who have been forwarded your document know where it emanates from and can get in contact with you. It should also be in an uneditable format – ie. PDF instead of MS Word – so that the content is not easily stolen and rebranded (this is a real problem on the web today).
- You should try and capture the prospect’s contact details prior to giving them access to the free stuff – for example, you might only give a person access to a free report once they have filled out an online form that provides you with their email address details. This interaction enables you to market to the prospect at a later time via an email newsletter or a follow up phone call (it’s a good idea to expressly state what you intend to do with the contact details on the subscription page, in accordance with privacy guidelines)
- Do a follow up with all recipients, preferably by telephone. The fact that the prospect has downloaded a free document or tool from your website ensures that your call is not ‘cold’ – you have a context in which your phone conversation can take place, making it easier to determine whether the prospect is interested in further engagement with your organisation. At the very least, you can ask the prospect whether they enjoyed the free product and whether they have any suggestions for improving it.
- Many people use the search term ‘free’ in their search engine queries – make sure that your pages and documents are search engine optimised for this work. For example, if you are offering a ‘free CV template’, then consider having a separate HTML page optimised for this search term combination. That way, you are likely to attract many more people to your site.

You have probably heard the mantra ‘content is king’ is web circles. Well, nothing is truer than these three little words on the web. If you publish interesting, quality content on your website, then the search engines will reward you with high rankings. It’s as simple as that.
Search engines exist for one purpose – to deliver their users the most relevant, authoritative content quickly, in response to the user’s specified search criteria. That’s why Google, Yahoo and MSN have become huge money making machines – they sift out all the rubbish and provide you with the path to enlightenment within milliseconds. Remember when you had to go to the library to find out stuff? Search engines have changed all that.
It follows then that content that is a) unique b) true c) detailed and d) sought after will eventually find its way to the top of the search engine results pages.
Whilst other SEO strategies, such as inbound linking and keyword tweaking, are important (and shouldn’t be neglected), they are subordinate to the requirement to publish quality content.
There are people out there that will try and convince you otherwise, but ‘content is king’. Everything else is incidental on the web.

It is important to know which pages the search engines have indexed on your site. Not only does it allow you to tweak your TITLE tags, page copy and metadata, but it also gives you an indication of how your search engine optimisation efforts are going over time and how good your competitors are at SEO too.
To see how many of your pages are indexed in Google, type the following into Google Search:
site:your URL
A search using site:www.boomerangbooks.com returns 7510 results. My competitors, Dymocks, have over 149,000 results, so I have some work to do.
As you can see, it’s also a useful tool for checking up on your competitors.
Here are some other operators that you can use in Google to obtain information about your listings:

Google is the king of the search engines. So when Google offers you a set of webmaster tools to assist you with your listings in Google, you would be silly not to use them, wouldn’t you?
With Google Webmaster Central and Webmaster Tools you can learn how Google ranks websites, how to submit all of your content to Google and how to improve traffic to your site.
Webmaster Central can be found at http://www.google.com/webmasters/. There are a bunch of excellent resources for every webmaster on this page.
Google’s Webmaster Tools can be found at Webmaster Central. These tools can assist you with statistics, diagnostics and management of Google’s indexing of your website, including sitemap submission and reporting.
To get started you will need to specify your website URL and then verify that you are the owner of that site (you will be required to add some code or a file to your website for recognition by Google). From there, you can diagnose how well your site is being indexed by Google, view statistics, learn which sites link to yours, get information about keywords used to find your site, specify sitemaps, and generate a robots.txt indexing file.
Sitemaps are relatively new to the web world. These are XML files that reside on the top level of your domain and which contain a listing of all pages in your site. These files make life easier for Google’s indexing spiders because they tell the spiders where to look and what to index. They are definitely worth setting up and there are a number of tools that can assist you to do so. Try XML Sitemaps Generator, a server based generator that can be set up to auto-run periodically on your host.
Similarly, the robots.txt file sits at the top level of your website and directs Google’s spiders to indexable content. Google has a robots.txt generator tool here – https://www.google.com/webmasters/tools/robotsgen.