What Does It Takes to Seo A Landing Page 

 

How to Find Good Help 

So, let’s talk about your landing page.  If this is not right, you might as well not spend any money on SEO because your prospective customers on the internet have become spoiled brats – they have high expectations of websites and won’t stay on a sub-standard website long enough to buy a product or book an appointment.  They have become sophisticated shoppers. 

 First of all, you want to ensure someone that clicks onto the landing page will understand it and wants to read it.  This is called “customer experience” and we digital workers use the term “UX” to talk about “customer experience.”  You may think we are silly, but the good webpage designers really focus on this overall response to a landing page. 

Note: There is a place called Fiverr.com where you can shop for things digital.  Be sure to choose someone who has English as their first language. Ask for references before you buy services. 

So, I Have My Landing Page, Now What? 

 Working with clients to transition their websites to make them more SEO compatible, I get a lot of questions. The number one question I get is:  I paid to have this website, why do I have to pay AGAIN to do more programming on the website? 

 THAT, my friends, is a valid question.  And there is a simple answer. 

 SEO is extremely complicated.  It takes a set of very specialized skills to get a website optimized (this means adjusted or re-programmed) to be SEO responsive.  The normal, everyday website developer does not have these skills. 

 Clients every day attempt to pay less for their websites.  I get it.  The problem with this type of negotiation is – website development is labor-intensive.  Website developers have to eat, too, and they have kids going to college just like everyone else.  If you push their pricing too far down, you get fewer hours into your project, and you might never know you were short-cut.  A lot of what developers do is invisible to the non-technical person.  It may be much later before you figure out what was skipped. 

 And a website all by itself out on the internet doesn’t necessarily get you traffic.  The owner of the website has to go out into the web world and give shout-outs:  “HEY, I’M OVER HERE.  COME SEE ME.”  That’s called SEO (Search Engine Optimization). 

 SEO is expensive, and the time commitment is between six months and one year before a business owner will see a change in their website traffic.  It takes a lot of patience – AND money.  And there is no guarantee it will meet your expectations.  There are just too many moving parts, not the least of which is the general public itself with their search patterns. 

 The reason it’s expensive is, again, because it’s very labor-intensive.  It’s not a process a technician does once and done.  The program is monitored each month to ensure the results are coming through – slowly, for sure, but coming through.  SEO builds and builds, taking on steam as it goes.  The speed depends on your industry, on how competitive your business is in your location, and several other items. 

 And, to boot, there are jillions of companies out there spamming your email saying, “Hire me, hire me, I’ll do SEO for you.”  It reminds me of that old joke.  What do you call the guy who graduated last in his medical school class?  You call him “Doctor.”  Same way with digital marketers.  How can you tell the difference between the good guys and the scammers?  Especially since they are more often than not from other countries – you never meet them face-to-face; zoom is the best you can do. 

 First, as a digitally uneducated owner of a website, you need to know just a few fun facts: 

Your landing page is the most critical page of the website.  Google (the largest search engine in the world) crawls (scans) a website looking for certain programming.  If you get your landing page right, you are on the way to conquering SEO. 

Once you get your landing page up to standards, THEN you can start working on SEO. 

 What Exactly Do I Need from My SEO Company? 

 These are some of the re-programming topics you will want to have done.  This blog post is not nearly long enough to cover every step of SEO installation, but these will open the conversation with a technician. 

You get the idea. 

 Once you decide on your main keyword, this keyword should appear right at the beginning of your website, and it should be tagged by the programmer.  This tells Google, “Hey, THIS is what I’m all about.”   

 

  1. An “internal link” is a hyperlink that references (goes to) another page on your website.   

 

Important Note: Links are critical to SEO.  Link building is tedious and tricky.  Whatever you do, be sure that each and every link that is added to your website are “quality” – they have some real connection to your industry.  For instance, a “chicken wing” link to a sky diving instructor’s website would not be quality.  Google will actually penalize you for these types of links.  When you interview your prospective digital marketing company, ask them specifically how they will determine the links for your website.  And listen very carefully to their response. 

 

 

There is more to this thing called SEO, but I am out of time and space. 

 As a business owner you are responsible for something called Return On Investment.  If you don’t make money from your marketing programs, why do them?  Your family, your employees, and your banker rely on you to make effective decisions on how you spend your corporate funds. 

 Come back to my blogs for other good information you as a business owner might need in order to make an informed decision on 1) which digital marketing firm to hire, and 2) what are the key components to your website for SEO to work for you. 

 

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