Analyzing Real-Life
Examples of Top Ranking Sites
by Robin R. Nobles
Have you ever wondered how top ranking
sites are spending their advertising dollars? Do they advertise
offline? Do they outsource their SE positioning work, or do
they optimize their own sites in-house? What are they doing
to increase the visibility and popularity of their sites?
For this article, I chose two highly competitive
keyphrases and one moderately competitive keyword and then
contacted three companies who are having success in getting
their sites ranked at or near the top and asked them a series
of questions.
The two competitive keyphrases:
The moderately competitive keyword:
- shortwave -- (as
in shortwave radios)
Of course the examples used in
this article reflect the positioning of these sites at the
time of writing. Naturally they are bound to fluctuate
up and down in the listings. Even so, you'll likely find them
placed closely to where their positioning is described below.
And, regardless of where they're positioned at the time you
happen to read this article, the examples and the analysis
remain strategically valid.
Keyword phrase: homes
for sale
Site: HarmonHomes.com
HarmonHomes.com boasts the following top
10 rankings for the keyword phrase, homes for sale:
- #1 in AltaVista
- #3 in Google
- #4 in Fast/All the Web
- #7 in Lycos
- #3 in Yahoo! Web Pages
It's important to note that HarmonHomes.com
is owned by Trader Publishing Company out of Norfolk, Virginia,
which also owns several other large Web sites, such as CareerWeb.com,
ForRent.com, Parenthood.com, and Roomsaver.com.
Erin Cullipher, Marketing Manager of HarmonHomes.com,
gave a quick summary of the site:
Headquartered in Virginia Beach, Va.,
HarmonHomes.com is a leading provider of online real estate
classified ads. As a division of Trader Publishing Company
and part of the family of Trader Web sites, HarmonHomes.com
provides a comprehensive homes-for-sale database for home
buyers while serving as a convenient and effective advertising
forum for real estate professionals.
According to Erin, Trader has a complete
Web development team that is responsible for each of their
domains, with the exception of Roomsaver.
It's also important to note that the main
page of HarmonHomes.com is a straight HTML page. However,
most of the interior pages, since they are a classified ad
site, are database delivered.
Erin answered the following interview
questions:
Question: Do you do
anything special to boost your site's link popularity?
Erin: We are lucky
to have a strong, built-in system of links due to our company's
network of highly trafficked sites. We have links to HarmonHomes.com
on all sites within the network and we, in return, link
to all of them as well. In addition, we have agreements
with two companies who provide Web sites for real estate
agents. To offer a national real estate listings database
to the mostly local visitors to these agents' sites, our
link is typically placed under a "Search Homes Nationally"
button. In addition, we are pursuing a links page and reciprocal
links program with businesses affiliated with residential
real estate.
Question: How do you
spend your advertising dollars for your Web site?
Erin: Our online business
is somewhat unique in that we have two target markets: we
sell our advertising products to real estate professionals
in order to serve home buyers. So, while we market our products
to agents, we also have to drive consumer traffic to the
site to satisfy our agent clients and further build our
business. As far as our trade advertising efforts, we concentrate
our dollars and efforts in the following areas: trade shows,
email marketing, print ads, direct mail and online ads.
To attract consumers to the site, we concentrate on the
following areas: SEO, home show sponsorships and email marketing.
To reach both of these markets, we also place our URL on
the front cover of every issue of Harmon Homes magazine
(78 million issues annually) and advertise the site in the
publication. We also conduct intensive media efforts nationally.
Both of these initiatives are high impact and relatively
low cost, if not free.
Question: Do you purchase
keywords from the pay engines like Yahoo! Search Marketing?
If so, approximately how much do you spend each month on
Yahoo! Search Marketing advertising?
Erin: Yes, we feel
that pay engines are integral to our SEO efforts, especially
here in the beginning when we're trying to establish a strong
Web presence. We do have an account with Yahoo! Search Marketing.
We spend less than $300 on Yahoo! Search Marketing and other
PFP engines.
Question: How much
actual search engine optimization work do you do on the
site?
Erin: Optimization
is done on an almost daily basis. In order to serve our
customers, the site changes daily. Being graphically heavy
and with most of our pages being dynamically generated,
we have worked to increase the amount of text on our pages.
We have paid special attention to relevancy factors by maximizing
keywords and phrases.
Question: Are you
using cloaking technology on your site?
Erin: No, we do not
use any cloaking technology. Our pages are submitted to
search engines manually with no doorway pages, agent name
or IP delivery.
Question: Do you hire
a professional SEO or outsource your SEO work, or do you
do the search engine work yourself?
Erin: We have a full-time
Web Promotions Specialist who handles SEO for HarmonHomes.com,
in addition to three other Trader-owned sites. She has a
Web development background and conducts extensive research
on SEO topics. Even with a full-time person allocated to
these efforts and significant strides made already in SEO,
we realize that we still have a lot to learn and a lot of
work to do.
Question: Do you check
your rankings periodically?
Erin: While we formally
check our search engine rankings weekly based on our keywords,
we also informally spot check our rankings throughout each
day. We also check random words and phrases periodically
to see if there are 'quirk' areas from which we are gaining
traffic.
Question: Do you monitor
your traffic? Do you analyze your traffic and use that knowledge
to strengthen your site?
Erin: Yes, we do monitor
our traffic. Since we are a data-driven site, we are working
very hard to increase and improve our listings. With that,
the user experience will improve, traffic will grow and
the hard work we do in the area of SEO will pay off even
more. We analyze traffic weekly and use the information
to improve our placement in search engines.
Analysis
Remember that rule number one regarding
site optimization is: never mess with success!
That said, there are some interesting observations worth mentioning
regarding this site.
* Noteworthy is the fact the keyword
phrase -- homes for sale -- does not appear
in the main page's title, description, or keyword tags. However,
the keyphrase Houses for sale does appear.
This apparent oversight actually lends
itself as evidence that the appearance of the keyword home
in incoming links that point to the Harmonhomes.com
site is a more important factor that having the keyword in
the title, at least on some engines. By the way, we've determined
this by checking LinkPopularity at http://www.linkpopularitycheck.com/
where our search revealed the following results for HarmonHomes.com:
- AltaVista: 23,630 incoming links
- HotBot: 3,500 incoming links
- MSN Search: 5,221 incoming links
- Lycos: 1,007 incoming links
Impressive! And our research revealed
that every single link on every linking page that we happened
to spot-check had the keyword homes somewhere in the link.
This fact builds an overwhelmingly strong case that incoming
links that include your keywords are critical to high relevancy
scores. In many cases ONLY the single keyword "Homes"
was used to link to the Harmonhomes.com site.
* By taking into account that "Houses for sale"
DOES appear in the title, and that there is slightly less
competition for the "houses for sale" keyphrase,
coupled with the finding that Harmonhomes.com is listed way
down at position #20 for houses for sales, we could further
conclude that keywords in the incoming links are MORE important
that keyword(s) in the title.
* Having the keyword "homes" built into the URL
is a smart strategy. We found many of the incoming links listed
as Harmon Homes -- which certainly gets the keyword homes
into the incoming link.
* The fact that HarmonHomes.com is a "theme-related"
site with only a single minded focus -- homes for sale --
should also be considered a crucial element of its successful
SEO model.
Now, let's look at another top ranking
site.
Keyword phrase: used
cars
Site: Used Cars Online - http://www.ausedcar.com/
Used Cars Online boasts
the following top ten rankings...
- #1 in Yahoo! Web Sites (directory)
- #1 in AltaVista
- #3 in Lycos
- #3 in pure Inktomi results
- #8 in Google
Used Cars Online is just what the domain
name suggests: a Web site devoted to buying and selling used
cars. Phil Anderson is one of the site's Webmasters and he's
in charge of the search engine marketing aspects of the site.
Phil was good enough to answer the following interview questions:
Question: Do you do
anything special to boost your site's link popularity?
Phil: We just ensure
that we are on every search engine, and we work with several
affiliates in sort of a link exchange. We are also linked
to or bookmarked by several hundred Web sites.
Question: How much
business do you get from your Web site?
Phil: We look for
a 2% sales rate based on the number of people that view
our site and make it as far as the sales page. (Most of
our money is made by people placing ads). We usually make
this 2% quota.
Question: Do you purchase
keywords from the pay engines like Yahoo! Search Marketing?
Phil: No, we are listed
high enough on enough major search engines that we don't
feel it's justified to pay for keyword search engines. Incidentally,
we still end up on some of them any way.
Question: How much
actual search engine optimization work do you do on the
site?
Phil: This was one
of the things we spend the most time on. Having a small
advertising budget when we first started out, this was a
crucial way of Îgetting the word out.' We have directly
correlated most of our success to Yahoo, even though we
are on many other search engines. Our biggest obstacle is
Yahoo continually shifting its index in the search for Îused
cars.' We also worked a long time on our META tags, which
are vital for a good position on most other search engines.
In fact, we have noticed several competitors that directly
copied both our tags and our wording, and they indeed get
placed right with us on the search engines.
Question: Do you use
cloaking technology on the site.
Phil: I'm not sure
what you mean by cloaking technology, so I suppose the answer
is no.
Question: How do you
spend your advertising dollars for your Web site?
Phil: Most of our
advertising is done through newspapers and trade magazines,
as this is where people would look when they are going to
buy or sell a used car. We also use a good amount of signage
in the Baltimore/DC area where we are based. Also, there
are many sources of free advertising on the Internet.
Question: Do you check
your rankings periodically?
Phil: Yes, as this
is vital for our income.
Question: Do you monitor
your traffic? How much traffic do you get to the site (user
sessions)? Do you analyze your traffic and use that knowledge
to strengthen your site?
Phil: We do indeed
monitor our traffic; however, we do not give out our actual
numbers. Traffic is analyzed to determine the best way to
attack any future advertising/search engine placement.
Question: Do you have
a search engine marketing person on staff, or do you hire
an outsource company?
Phil: I am in charge
of this, and if you'll notice, we are not just top at Google,
we are also at the top in almost every major search engine.
There are some inside secrets to getting these positions,
but I think the number one thing is longevity ...we have
been around since 1996 which is ancient in the Internet
world.
Question: How important
do you consider search engine marketing to be in the success
of a Web site?
Phil: Extremely important
if you don't pay for national TV or banner advertising.
It's the only way besides word of mouth to get hits. We
started out with around 100 hits a day in December of '96.
Then in January '97, Yahoo! put us at the top and our hits
increased ten fold.
Question: How large
is your Web site?
Phil: As far as number
of pages, there are few for the actual site (maybe 10-15),
but if you include the car ads themselves as pages, then
there are hundreds.
Analysis
Again, incoming keyword links are the
main ingredient contributing to the high ranking of this site.
- Our search on LinkPopularityCheck.com,
revealed the following numbers of incoming links...
- Lycos: 855
- AltaVista: 575
- MSN: 120
- HotBot: 87
- Most interesting is the fact that
Used Cars On-Line was consistently THE keyword link used
in every case we spot-checked. Obviously, Phil or someone
within the company suggested, precisely HOW their site's
descriptive link should be listed. The success they've enjoyed
as a result of this focused strategy is the payoff.
- In addition, it should be noted that
the biggest link relevancy gorilla on the block, Yahoo,
rated the site #1 for their target keyword phrase. This
alone significantly enhances the site's relevancy because
a Yahoo link is given much more relevancy weight than virtually
any other site on the net.
- Worth noting is the fact that on the
home page the title and description tags begin with the
keyword phrase. Generally speaking, this strategy will always
help, and will never hurt, a site's relevancy.
- Another boost, especially on Yahoo,
is attributable to the fact the keyword phrase is present
within the URL.
- Another factor that can only help
and will never hurt is that the target keyphrase appears
in the company name itself.
- Notice that the keyword phrase is
only used once in the visible body text; evidence that repeating
a keyword phrase within the text of a page isn't as effective
as some webmasters believe it to be.
- As with almost all high scoring sites,
the focus is on one topic, or theme, only! ...and that theme
is buying and selling used vehicles.
As Phil pointed out, the site has been
around for a long time. Although he attributes a large portion
of their success to "longevity", we suspect it's
more attributable to the link popularity that blossoms from
a strategic campaign focused on gaining incoming links. Such
a strategy, of course, takes time to build
resulting in erroneous reports that "longevity"
is responsible for success when in fact it is the accumulation
of incoming links over time that
becomes the actual key factor. And, when links like Yahoo
add a major degree of relevancy, site positioning
can suddenly improve significantly and traffic can increase,
as Phil noted, "ten fold" overnight.
Our next example site is an online store
that sells shortwave radios and accessories -- a category
we'd consider to be only moderately competitive. This classification
reflects, perhaps, a more middle-of-the-road analysis that
would be typically applicable to the average retail store
doing business online.
Keyword: shortwave
Site: The Shortwave Store - http://www.shortwavestore.com/
Let's look at the site's top 10 rankings
for the keyword, shortwave.
- #6 and #7 in AltaVista
- #7 in Google
- #2 in About.com Sprinks
- #1 in AOL Web Sites
- #2 in Netscape
For this article, I interviewed Keith
Carcasole, owner of The Shortwave Store.
Question: Do you do
anything special to boost your site's link popularity?
Keith: I used to ask
for reciprocal links. However, there doesn't seem to be
enough time in the day for that any more.
Now I carefully choose popular non-commercial
sites where I can inexpensively advertise via a small text
link. It is rumored that some search engines take the quality
and popularity of the sites linking to you into consideration
when determining the ranking of your site.
Recently I purchased a popular domain
(http://www.worldtimezones.com) and paid to have the Web
site designed. It is dedicated to time zones of the world.
This handy site is great for travelers, business people
and those interested in world politics. These are the same
people who might be interested in purchasing a shortwave
radio to pick up world news and to listen to free speech
stations! Not only do I get to advertise there for free,
but I get a quality link that will help increase the popularity
of my shortwave site. In some ways, this is actually better
than a doorway page because people are visiting the site
for another reason. This exposes my site to customers who
may not visit otherwise.
I highly recommend this technique to
anyone who has time to develop a popular site that offers
a service that may be of interest to potential customers
but at the same time has nothing to do with the subject
matter of your main site.
Question: How much
business do you get from your Web site?
Keith: It has been
extremely difficult for us to gauge how much business we
get from the net because we still have customers who refuse
to do business online. This is especially true around Christmas
time when people want reassurance that the item that they
are about to order is not out of stock and will arrive in
time for Christmas. If forced to venture a guess, I would
estimate that 80% of our total business from our shortwave
division comes from the net, either by phone order or by
secure online order. It appears that the remainder comes
from radio ads and referrals from friends.
Question: Do you purchase
keywords from the pay engines like Yahoo! Search Marketing?
If so, approximately how much do you spend each month on
Yahoo! Search Marketing advertising?
Keith: We buy keywords
on a number of pay-per-click engines. We are currently paying
about $125 per month to Yahoo! Search Marketing. The sum
of the rest probably totals $25 per month.
Question: If you feel
comfortable with this question, I'd like to know if you're
using cloaking technology on the site.
Keith: None of our
sites use cloaking at this time. I plan to use cloaking
on one of our other sites in the very near future. We are
not doing this to Îfool' the search engines. When
we change technology on our site, we will lose many of our
high-ranking positions. I plan to keep our old pages cloaked
so that we do not lose traffic.
Question: How do you
promote your Web site offline?
Keith: Business cards,
print ads in magazines and newspapers, radio ads, and when
customers call our store we often direct them to the site.
Question: Do you purchase
banner ads?
Keith: Not really,
however this does not mean that I don't have banner ads.
1. I do advertise via FREE banner
ads on my own sites. If you own another high traffic site
(related or not), there is no harm in advertising your
products there. Even if you create a site just for your
banner, the CPM will still be a fraction of what it would
cost to buy impressions elsewhere.
2. I have purchased tile ads and convinced the webmaster
to switch me to small text ads for the same price. I find
that this yields a higher click-through ratio.
3. Some pay-per-click search engines give you free banner
impressions for your top positions, I believe.
Question: Do you monitor
your traffic?
Keith: I seldom look
at our stats any more. If the orders were to suddenly stop,
I would take a closer look. When I look at our stats my
main focus is the referrers rather than the volume of traffic.
Question: Do you analyze
your traffic and use that knowledge to strengthen your site?
Keith: I like watching
where our traffic is coming from. Every few months I calculate
how many visitors it takes to generate one sale just to
make sure we are getting a reasonable return on our advertising
dollars. I use this to adjust our advertising campaigns
rather than to strengthen our site.
Question: How much
traffic do you get to the site (user sessions)?
Keith: So far this
month...(on the 21st day of November): The Web site received
22,945 visits. A typical visitor examined 8.81 documents
before leaving the site. A typical visit lasted for 1.25
minutes. The longest visit lasted for 79 minutes. Visitors
came from 9,150 distinct Internet addresses. Please note
that we expect to Îspike' in December!.
Question: How large
is your Web site?
Keith: Here's proof
that size doesn't matter. Our site is only 33 MB including
all images, cgi-bin, and downloads.
Question: Do you have
a search engine marketing person on staff or do you hire
an outsource company?
Keith: No one on staff
is dedicated to this job. What little work we do is done
internally. I get to it when I get to it. If something important
comes up, I'll do a little work. Our positions on the search
engines are not carefully monitored any more. I think it
is important to watch it in the beginning. Make sure the
site is fully functional first. Make sure you are competitive
and then dedicate some real time to positioning. If you
do it right once, you will only have to touch things up
from time to time.
Question: How important
do you consider search engine marketing to be in the success
of a Web site?
Keith: We would not
be here without it. Just because we don't watch our positions
every day doesn't mean it's not important to us. We know
we're doing well and we can tell by the number of orders
we receive every day that everything is working.
Analysis
This example is a good one because it
typifies a fairly common approach that many online businesses
take in regards to their commercial Internet presence. As
Keith noted, he did his search engine optimization work in
the beginning and initially spent time soliciting reciprocal
links in general and then (rightly) shifted focus to securing
incoming links from high quality and popular sites.
Based on his answers, one gets the feel
that he is currently letting his strategy ride and tends to
check his positioning on an as-needed basis. He uses his sales
activity as an indicator of whether or not his SEO efforts
are in need of a booster shot.
In checking his
LinkPopularity we find the following numbers of incoming
links...
- 157 in AltaVista
- 108 in Lycos
- 97 in MSN
- 52 in HotBot
...not bad, but not great either. And
when digging a little deeper to determine the quality of those
incoming links in an effort to tell whether or not they are
helping the site's relevancy we find something lacking. What's
missing is the keyword (shortwave) from the
link descriptions.
Unlike the two sites profiled above, The
Shortwave Store site lacked the keyword in any of
the incoming links that we found. Instead, we found banner
graphic links or non-keyword text links such as...
A comprehensive list... More
Stations from Around the World
...and although the above link pointed
to the URL: http://www.shortwavestore.com/shortwave-stations.html,
it did not contain the keyword shortwave anywhere
in the link description.
A better link description would have been...
Shortwave stations
...or at least,
Shortwave stations from around
the world
Another example we found of an unoptimized
incoming link was...
You can also order online via
our secure server at our shortwave web site. Click HERE
to order.
...unoptimized because "Click HERE"
is not a relevant keyword for the Shortwave store.
A better incoming link would look like
this...
You can also order online via
our secure server at The Shortwave Store.
And...
- Worth noting
is the fact that it's not necessarily the number (volume)
of incoming links that's important; it's the quality of
those incoming links. Factors such as link relevancy (i.e.,
are relevant keywords being used to describe your links)
coupled with the link popularity of the referring site (i.e.,
Yahoo is a very popular and excellent referring site) are
factors that help determine the validity and weight of a
site's incoming links which in turn help determine a site's
overall ranking.
- On the plus side, the site focuses
on a single theme and uses the keyword in the title, description,
and headline tag at the top of the page -- all solid search
engine optimization strategies.
- The site is also no-nonsense -- without
frames, Flash, JavaScript, or dynamic content. Design simplicity
is always a solid search engine strategy.
- Most importantly, the domain name
contains the keyword which can only help and will never
hurt a site's scoring chances.
Regardless of whatever shortcomings we've
found, this site is testimony to the satisfactory success
an online store can experience in a moderately competitive
keyword arena simply by getting some of the
search engine optimization factors right. In other words,
your strategies don't have to be perfect to work well enough.
In Conclusion
I'm reminded of the old story where two
guys are hiking in the woods. They receive word that a grizzly
bear is headed in their direction at which point one fellow
starts putting on his running shoes. The other guy scoffs,
"Are you crazy? ...you can't outrun a bear!" The
guy smirks and replies, "It's not the bear I have to
outrun -- just you."
The lesson of the story can be applied
to search engine optimization strategies. You need only to
"outrun" your competition, not the whole world.
It's unlikely you'll ever have to do everything perfect --
you only need to outperform your competition.
Success comes from knowing the game, analyzing
your competition, and just doing a better job than they do.
And when you start solid and plan for the long haul, you can
often enjoy the luxury of letting your work ride while it
continues to produce satisfactory results with only occasional
adjustments and minimum effort.
About the Author
Robin Nobles teaches 2-, 3-, and 5-day
hands-on search
engine marketing workshops in locations across the globe
(SearchEngineWorkshops.com) as well as online SEO
training courses (OnlineWebTraining.com). They have recently
launched localized
SEO training centers through SearchEngineAcademy.com,
and they have expanded their workshops to Europe with Search
Engine Workshops UK. They have also opened the first networking
community for SEOs, the
Workshop Resource Center (WRC).
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