Completed So Far:
I now have a list of powerful keywords that I will be effectively scattering through my website. However, as effective as keywords are, every successful blog/website needs quality content. Two characteristics of quality content is that the content is both useful and unique. So, the next task is to start developing some useful and unique content.
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New Developments:
Regardless of what other search engine optimization techniques you use, having quality content on your blog is an absolute ‘must have’.
Although quality content generally consists of content that is well written (with correct spelling and grammar), it is, in fact, much more than that. Think of the websites and blogs that you regularly visit. Why do you keep going back to those sites? Usually visitors keep returning to sites, or sign up for subscriptions to the site’s email newsletter or RSS feed, because they find the information on the site useful to them, in one way or another. For example, the site entertains them, or it solves a problem they have, or it helps them learn how to do something, etc.
The other factor that most, if not all, successful sites have is that they are unique – the personality of the author shines through. So, if you have a natural laid-back attitude, let it come through in your site’s content, but if you don’t, then don’t force it. If you have a great sense of humor, let the content of your site reflect that, but, again, if you don’t then don’t force it. Write your content in the style that reflects how you would naturally hold a conversation.
Below are 10 tips that can help you create useful and unique content:
- use your own ‘voice’ – make your blog unique by letting your personality through, don’t try to copy someone else’s blog
- know your audience – know what their interest’s are, what problems they are trying to solve, what they are trying to learn more about, etc.
- be entertaining – people won’t read dry, academic materials
- be educational – create how-to articles and posts
- be informative – provide useful information on a topic
- be practical – provide interviews, case studies, and profiles
- provide breaking news – keep people up-to-date with what’s going on in your area of expertise
- create a sense of community – ask questions, solicit feedback, generate comments
- be inspirational
- be controversial
When you create quality content, a great idea is to use both your posts and your pages in tandem to generate the kind of content that keeps people coming back to your site, not just reading your posts on from their email. This is particularly useful if you have affiliate connections on your site, or are selling your own e-books or information packages from your site.
One way of doing this is to create posts that are relatively short, between 250 and 500 words or so. These posts could contain, for example, a brief introduction to an idea or a topic that is more fully discussed in an article that you have published on one of your site’s pages. You could then link the post to the article on one of your site’s page. (Search engine bots and spiders like internal links – more on this in a later post.) The article could be either a static page, or a Word document or .pdf file that you have published on a page. This way, too, the static pages remain ‘evergreen’ - they are easily available as stand alone content that keeps readers coming back to your site to read, while the dynamic posts can be more topical or controversial in nature.
If you are interested in exploring the type of content that can be found on very successful sites, then check out the Technorati website at: http://www.technorati.com, for a list of the Top 100 blogs (based on popularity). Interesting that most of these blogs are informative, useful and unique blogs.
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Next Step:
The structure and format used when writing for the Web is quite different than the structure and format used when writing for other media. The next post, to be published on Monday, will list some of these unique structure and formatting features that writing for blogs and websites require.
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If you liked this post, you can read this series on Search Engine Optimizing Your Blog from the beginning by going to the Introduction post.