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Will You Add? - SEO Copywriting is a Waste of Time for Blogs
Powerful Nonprofit Blogging via The Corporate Blogging Book al SEO techniques.Whenever I'm diving into something new, I like to have some guidance on hand. Whether I cobble that together from several online sources (of course, I have to know which ones are reliable), a peer or workshop, or a handbook, I just need that guidance. Guidance seems to be a basic human need for most folks.So if your nonprofit is blogging, or going to blog, (and you should be), I urge you to plunge into Debbie Weil's just-published guide to organizational blo Content Matters Most This is why traditonal (not SEO) copywriting skills that catch and hold reader attention are important for bloggers. I would argue that great copywriting is the new SEO for bloggers, if it gets you positive links from others. And since blogging is a new form of public relations, and PR depends on great copywriting… Well, you get my point. So, maybe you should quit worrying about SEO and start producing incredible content and networking in your niche. Copywriting techniques will help you excel in both. Don’t be Search Engine Ugly Hanging Onto Your Customers In fact, you’re probably wasting your time even worrying about traditional SEO techniques when it comes to blogs. Here’s why. Writing for Search Engines Search engine optimization (“SEO”) copywriting means writing web page copy that is optimized to rank well in the search engines. This includes inserting targeted key words in certain places (like titles), and in frequencies and densities designed to satisfy a particular search engine algorithm. Why isn’t this as important anymore? Essentially, SEO experts think traditional SEO for blogs is a big waste of time. Humans Matter More The gist of the argument is that when it comes to search rankings, what’s written on a web page is less important than what other people say about that web page, and how many times. It all comes down to links. First of all, referral traffic (links from other bloggers) is of higher quality for the things that matter most – subscriptions and sales. It’s like the difference between a prospect who is sent your way from a happy former client, measured against someone who finds you in the Yellow Pages. But this also impacts your search engine rankings. The algorithms favor sites and pages with incoming, non-reciprocal links from body text – in other words, express recommendations from other people. And much more weight is placed on the words used in those links (anchor text) than the words on the page linked to. Just ask George W. Bush. You won’t find the words “miserable failure” anywhere on the biography page of the current U.S. President, and yet that page ranks number one for the search term in Google. That’s because a whole bunch of other people (mostly bloggers) decided to link to W’s bio with the anchor text “miserable failure,” and obtained top ranking. The trend of search engine’s favoring what others say is intensifying. Just like offline, word of mouth matters most. As mentioned above, search engines like Google already incorporate user feedback (links + anchor text) in their algorithms. When people link to and tag the posts of other bloggers on social book marking sites, and tagging is more fully integrated into the current version of search, rankings will rely on recommendations even more. The end result will be better search, and the end of traditional SEO techniques. Content Matters Most This is why traditonal (not SEO) copywriting skills that catch and hold reader attention are important for bloggers. I would argue that great copywriting is the new SEO for bloggers, if it gets you positive links from others. And since blogging is a new form of public relations, and PR depends on great copywriting… Well, you get my point. So, maybe you should quit worrying about SEO and start producing incredible content and networking in your niche. Copywriting techniques will help you excel in both. Don’t be Search Engine Ugly How To Write a Resume: The Way To Your Employer's Heart Humans Matter More The gist of the argument is that when it comes to search rankings, what’s written on a web page is less important than what other people say about that web page, and how many times. It all comes down to links. First of all, referral traffic (links from other bloggers) is of higher quality for the things that matter most – subscriptions and sales. It’s like the difference between a prospect who is sent your way from a happy former client, measured against someone who finds you in the Yellow Pages. But this also impacts your search engine rankings. The algorithms favor sites and pages with incoming, non-reciprocal links from body text – in other words, express recommendations from other people. And much more weight is placed on the words used in those links (anchor text) than the words on the page linked to. Just ask George W. Bush. You won’t find the words “miserable failure” anywhere on the biography page of the current U.S. President, and yet that page ranks number one for the search term in Google. That’s because a whole bunch of other people (mostly bloggers) decided to link to W’s bio with the anchor text “miserable failure,” and obtained top ranking. The trend of search engine’s favoring what others say is intensifying. Just like offline, word of mouth matters most. As mentioned above, search engines like Google already incorporate user feedback (links + anchor text) in their algorithms. When people link to and tag the posts of other bloggers on social book marking sites, and tagging is more fully integrated into the current version of search, rankings will rely on recommendations even more. The end result will be better search, and the end of traditional SEO techniques. Content Matters Most This is why traditonal (not SEO) copywriting skills that catch and hold reader attention are important for bloggers. I would argue that great copywriting is the new SEO for bloggers, if it gets you positive links from others. And since blogging is a new form of public relations, and PR depends on great copywriting… Well, you get my point. So, maybe you should quit worrying about SEO and start producing incredible content and networking in your niche. Copywriting techniques will help you excel in both. Don’t be Search Engine Ugly Practical Steps For Making Money From Blog But this also impacts your search engine rankings. The algorithms favor sites and pages with incoming, non-reciprocal links from body text – in other words, express recommendations from other people. And much more weight is placed on the words used in those links (anchor text) than the words on the page linked to. Just ask George W. Bush. You won’t find the words “miserable failure” anywhere on the biography page of the current U.S. President, and yet that page ranks number one for the search term in Google. That’s because a whole bunch of other people (mostly bloggers) decided to link to W’s bio with the anchor text “miserable failure,” and obtained top ranking. The trend of search engine’s favoring what others say is intensifying. Just like offline, word of mouth matters most. As mentioned above, search engines like Google already incorporate user feedback (links + anchor text) in their algorithms. When people link to and tag the posts of other bloggers on social book marking sites, and tagging is more fully integrated into the current version of search, rankings will rely on recommendations even more. The end result will be better search, and the end of traditional SEO techniques. Content Matters Most This is why traditonal (not SEO) copywriting skills that catch and hold reader attention are important for bloggers. I would argue that great copywriting is the new SEO for bloggers, if it gets you positive links from others. And since blogging is a new form of public relations, and PR depends on great copywriting… Well, you get my point. So, maybe you should quit worrying about SEO and start producing incredible content and networking in your niche. Copywriting techniques will help you excel in both. Don’t be Search Engine Ugly Your Financial Planning Clients May Hold the Key to Free Publicity The trend of search engine’s favoring what others say is intensifying. Just like offline, word of mouth matters most. As mentioned above, search engines like Google already incorporate user feedback (links + anchor text) in their algorithms. When people link to and tag the posts of other bloggers on social book marking sites, and tagging is more fully integrated into the current version of search, rankings will rely on recommendations even more. The end result will be better search, and the end of traditional SEO techniques. Content Matters Most This is why traditonal (not SEO) copywriting skills that catch and hold reader attention are important for bloggers. I would argue that great copywriting is the new SEO for bloggers, if it gets you positive links from others. And since blogging is a new form of public relations, and PR depends on great copywriting… Well, you get my point. So, maybe you should quit worrying about SEO and start producing incredible content and networking in your niche. Copywriting techniques will help you excel in both. Don’t be Search Engine Ugly Using Amazon to Get Started Making Money As an Affiliate Marketer Content Matters Most This is why traditonal (not SEO) copywriting skills that catch and hold reader attention are important for bloggers. I would argue that great copywriting is the new SEO for bloggers, if it gets you positive links from others. And since blogging is a new form of public relations, and PR depends on great copywriting… Well, you get my point. So, maybe you should quit worrying about SEO and start producing incredible content and networking in your niche. Copywriting techniques will help you excel in both. Don’t be Search Engine Ugly Now, for that grain of salt. There’s no reason to completely ignore things like keywords in your writing. For one thing, it can influence the anchor text that is used to link to you, which is a good thing. For example, take this article. It’s got the keyword phrase “seo copywriting” right up front in the post title, and yet the headline still manages to be provocative. There’s no reason why you shouldn’t strive for human titillation and keyword relevancy. But… if you have to choose between the two, go for the human factor first and foremost. So, optimize your post URLs and include your keywords, but beyond that, let it go. Search engine algorithms come and go, but human nature remains the same.
HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
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