This issue of
The Search Light Newsletter
is Proudly Sponsored by: :
The Industrious Hamster
The Search Light Newsletter
Guiding your site to the top of the search engines... (28 December 2003 - Vol
3 Issue #10)
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Dear Reader,
Seasons Greetings! I hope you
all had an enjoyable holiday season and recovered well from your
Christmas celebrations.
My husband and I spent the day sleeping in, having ham on toast for
breakfast, extricating the cat from the Christmas tree, unwrapping bad
gifts from well- meaning relatives, over-indulging in the Christmas
Feast and having to take a nap mid afternoon. All in all, an enjoyable
day! And of course, being Down Under, the weather put on a great show,
with a typically gorgeous New Zealand Summer day of 25 degrees celsius.
Just perfect for sitting out on the deck with a glass of bubbly,
watching the boats sail by. But, it's back to business as usual now
*sigh*.
This month's newsletter features an excellent article from SEO expert
Daria Goetsch about the need for patience when planning your "organic"
search engine optimization campaigns.
Our newsletter sponsor this month is the fast-growing Gimpsy
Directory. Don't miss their special anniversary offer for guaranteed
site inclusion.
Enjoy this issue and remember to visit our daily Search
Engine News Blog for the latest industry news and gossip.
Till next time - wishing you high rankings...

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In this issue...
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* Organic SEO : Patience for Long
Term Ranking Results
* Google Expands Language Support for AdSense
* LookSmart UK to Shut Down
* Google Says "No" to Drug Advertisers
* Sponsorship Notice
* FindWhat and Espotting Delay Merger
* Search the Printed Word With Google
Organic SEO :
Patience for Long Term Ranking Results
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
By Daria Goetsch of Search Innovation
When does long term SEO show ranking
results? It takes time for optimization to produce targeted traffic to
your website. Organic SEO requires time to take effect, just as it
takes time for your web pages to start showing up in the search engine
results.
Clients regularly ask me about the timing of a search engine
optimization campaign and when those results will be seen in the
search engine listings. A long term marketing campaign based on search
engine optimization takes time: patience is the name of the game.
Optimization Timeframe
SEO's timeframe depends on a number of factors. Part of this involves
the accuracy of keyword phrase choices: is the keyword phrase one your
visitors would use to find your product or website? If your keyword
phrases are targeted to your audience, you will gain optimum results.
Did you use Paid Inclusion and/or PPC services? The best combination
for success involves using a combination of SEO, Paid Inclusion and
PPC services. If you do not use Paid Inclusion or PPC, using organic
SEO only, it takes more time to achieve results.
Paid Results
When you use Paid Inclusion or PPC (Pay-Per-Click) bidding, your
results show up sooner than traditional SEO. Paid Inclusion
submissions state the time-frame in which your page will be indexed by
the search engine robots when you sign up for services. PPC bidding
results show up as soon as searchers start clicking on your PPC ads.
This type of search engine marketing requires an annual budget to
renew Paid Inclusion submissions and payment per month for PPC click-
through costs. If you are paying too much for your PPC services,
organic SEO combined with PPC often helps to keep the prices down for
the paid service. By generating additional targeted traffic on those
costly terms you may be able to bring the bidding prices down in your
PPC campaign or even eliminate some keyword bidding.
The timeline given for paid submissions means the search engines are
generating income through this process. Paying for results also gives
you a guarantee the listings will be relatively stable in the
database.
Paid Inclusion submissions will always take precedence over free
submissions because the company makes money from Paid Inclusion. For
this reason most search engines will implement free search engine
submissions over a longer period of time than paid submissions. When
using SEO without the paid submission choices, the process is the same
but the optimized pages take longer to be processed into the search
engine databases.
Organic SEO
Organic SEO works differently. The best reason to use organic SEO is
that it is a low-cost method to promote your website. It can take up
to three to six months to see the full results of optimizing your
website, especially if you are only using organic optimization. The
plus to an organic approach is that once you optimize your pages, the
main part of the work is done. You may tweak your keywords and text
here and there, but unless you completely re-design your pages, you
have what you need in place to begin drawing in targeted traffic.
Continue checking your ranking status and reading your log statistics,
especially for new keywords visitors are using to find your website.
When using free submissions, expect a three to six month wait before
seeing most of the long term results showing in the search engine
listings. If you build on a link popularity program and have links
pointing back to your website, the search engine robots will find your
website through the links, eliminating the need for free submissions.
Look at it this way: you pay once for basic optimization and over time
the results improve to optimum level. You don't have to keep paying
for this service because, unless search engine databases drops your
free submission pages (which is not often these days), you will be
visible and present to the search engine users when they search on
your targeted keyword phrases. Over time you should see a progression
in your ranking, depending on how competitive your keyword phrases
are.
Budget SEO
What if you can't afford Paid Inclusion or PPC services? Organic SEO
is a great way to increase targeted traffic to your website over time.
If you do not have a budget for Paid Inclusion submissions and PPC
programs, organic SEO will give you good results if you are willing to
wait instead of gaining immediate results. Combine organic SEO with
plenty of good content and a solid link building program for optimum
results. Remember, the search engine listings may entice visitors to
come to your website, but you must give them a reason to stay once
they arrive. Build your content to keep your new visitors at your
website.
Patience Pays Off
Organic SEO is "common sense" promotion. Not a lot of fancy bells and
whistles, and it takes time. The addition of good navigation, good
content with your keyword phrases throughout the pages and topical
sites pointing links back to your website equals long term success.
Practice patience when going organic for your SEO campaign. It may
take time but it will be worth the long term results you reap.
Daria Goetsch is the founder and Search Engine Marketing
Consultant for Search
Innovation Marketing, a Search Engine Promotion company serving
small businesses. She has specialized in search engine optimization
since 1998, including three years as the Search Engine Specialist for
O'Reilly & Associates, a technical book publishing company.
Copyright © 2003 Search Innovation Marketing, All Rights Reserved.
Last
week, Google announced the introduction of expanded language support
for AdSense publishers.
This expansion includes dedicated email support and account pages in
French, German, Italian, Japanese, and Spanish. New applications to
join the AdSense program can now be submitted in any of these five
languages or in English. In addition, provided that pages comply with
Google's Terms and Conditions, AdSense ad code can now be placed on
pages with content in any of these languages.
Existing AdSense advertisers can now view their account information
and receive technical support in five languages.
LookSmart UK to Shut Down
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LookSmart
has announced
the impending closure of their UK business early in 2004.
According to a company spokesperson, the announcement is a direct result
of MSN's recent decision to end their partnership with LookSmart in
January. An FAQ on the LookSmart UK site states:
"Following MSN's decision to end their relationship with LookSmart as
of 15th January 2004, we have reached the conclusion that we will be
unable to operate profitably in Europe next year. We have therefore
decided to close our office in London in early 2004."
LookSmart UK advertisers are being advised that although their listings
won't be shown on MSN UK after mid January, they will continue to be seen
on the LookSmart UK site for "the time being", with no click- through
charges after that date.
LookSmart's other international offices in Australia, US and Japan
apparently remain unaffected and open for business. But the question is,
for how long?
Google Says "No" to Drug
Advertisers
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Google
recently
declared that they will no longer be accepting unlicensed
pharmaceutical dealers as advertisers on their search sites and
partner sites.
The announcement follows similar moves from Overture and MSN in an
attempt to crack down on unlicensed prescription medication sales over
the Internet that breach drug regulations set down by the US federal
government.
All existing and future pharmaceutical-related AdWord ads will be
verified by a third party hired specifically by Google for the task.
Sponsorship Notice
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Gimpsy
Anniversary Special Deal!
To celebrate our first immensely successful year, Gimpsy announces
a special offer to site owners:
> Your site listed in 72 hours
> Promotion to a top position for 90 days
> Full money back guarantee!! (ALL your money back if not listed)
> All this for just 40 USD - one time fee
This is a limited time offer!
Click here for more info...
FindWhat and Espotting Delay
Merger
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The proposed merger between pay-per-click search engines FindWhat.com and ESpotting has come to a grinding halt this week. The two firms have come to a mutual agreement to postpone the merger deadline for one month, taking it from 31 December, 2003 to 31 January, 2004.
Search the Printed Word With
Google
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Thanks
to Google, you can now search the printed word. Google Print BETA
was
launched last week and enables searchers to browse the contents of
offline books via keywords, just like regular web pages.
To use the service, simply go to
Google and type in 'print.google.com' followed by your search
topic. Results will feature a tag reading "BOOK - BETA". Clicking on
these links will take you to excerpts from related books, plus links
to retail sites from where you can purchase them, e.g. Amazon.com,
Barnes & Noble and Books-A-Million. Despite the links to
retail sites, Google claims it does not profit if users buy a book as
a result of a search.
The content for Google Print BETA comes from thousands of books,
individually scanned by software. However the idea is not a new one.
Amazon.com launched a similar "search inside the book" feature a few
months ago. Amazon's version is thought to be extensive, featuring
some 120,000 titles from 190 publishers, or 33 million pages of
searchable text, whereas Google has not yet revealed the number of
titles indexed by their service.