Optimizing Engagement Efforts

by Brian Magierski on October 31, 2006

It’s a well known fact that by blogging and commenting on other people’s blogs, forums, and community sites, that the search engines will more easily find your own site for relevant search terms. As you begin your engagement efforts on the Web, it is important to keep in mind how the major search engines will interpret your content and linking efforts. Below are some pointers from seomoz.org, as well as a link to a good resource outlining Search Engine Ranking Factors.

Most Important Factors

The following are the top 10 ranked factors across the 5 categories:

1. Title Tag – 4.57
2. Anchor Text of Links – 4.46
3. Keyword Use in Document Text – 4.38
4. Accessibility of Document – 4.3
5. Links to Document from Site-Internal Pages – 4.15
6. Primary Subject Matter of Site – 4.00
7. External Links to Linking Pages – 3.92
8. Link Popularity of Site in Topical Community – 3.77
9. Global Link Popularity of Site – 3.69
10. Keyword Spamming – 3.69

Web engagement to ensure your message is heard by key constituencies involves some or all of the following activities:

  • Blogging your own message
  • Commenting on external sites
  • Establishing a Hub community, where others can start their own blog conversations on your site

The last point above is one that is often overlooked in these engagement debates that can center around blogs only far too often. By encouraging other constituents to converse on your site, search engine results can be enhanced through many of the items above. This includes the fact that more terms will be relevant on your site, more internal links and links to external sources will exist. And most of all, with outside constituents such as your customers blogging on your site, the chance for quality inbound links from external sites will go up tremendously and not involve the action of internal company team members.

It’s well worth the effort to scan Search Engine Ranking Factors to be aware of how your activities will be interpreted by the search engines.

– brian

  • http://www.talkingportraits.com Tom Parish

    Brian – you’re spot on with this post. I’ve done SEO work for the last 5 years and have been encouraging people for a couple of years now to blog. Specifically because of what you say – the search engines pick up your posts. The key here is specificity. If you’re real careful about the keywords you pick and then repeat from your title into your post you’re likely to get better search engine visibility. Use the product name and any nicknames it has, product number and so forth. If you’re countering an inaccurate review of a product or service – be sure to say in the blog title something like “Response to Recent Review of xxxxx product by xxxx blogger ….” you get the idea. Don’t just start talking about your products and services without using the same naming convention others are using when the blog or comment about it. Otherwise, you’re responses may not be found.

    Anyway, good bits there Brian. Super helpful.
    Tom

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