Top Tips from Some of the
Best SEO's in the Business
. . . Learn from the Pros in this Informative Article!
by Robin R. Nobles
Have you ever wondered what types of strategies the top search engine optimizers use for their own sites or the sites of their clients?
In an industry like the search engine industry, where no one can possibly know everything, it's important to learn from trusted experts in the field. So for this article, I interviewed some of the best SEO's in the business in an effort to share their winning strategies with you.
Important facts about these tips
Please remember that these tips aren't necessarily the fundamental strategies that should always be used when working on a Web page, such as including your keyword phrase in your title tag or capitalizing on headline tags or link text. Instead, many of these tips are meant to be applied to the top of the basic strategies in an effort to give you an edge over the competition.
Also, these tips aren't in any particular order of importance. The first tip in any category isn't necessarily the most important, and the last tip certainly isn't the least important.
I've identified each tip with the SEO who wrote it. Then, at the end of the article in alphabetical order, I highlighted the various SEO's who participated in this article, along with brief information about their qualifications.
Enjoy these tips from some of the best SEO's in the business!
Basics
* Stick to the basics of search engine optimization for your existing Web pages
(i.e. optimized titles, header content, keyword density, the order
your text is presented in the code, etc.), before you move into
supplementary techniques like doorway pages, doorway domains, and
the like. The odds are that if you have not mastered the basic skills
to optimize your existing Web pages, you are not going to be able
implement supplementary techniques successfully. (J.K. Bowman with
Spider Food http://www.spider-food.net)
* My advice to everyone is always to remember the basic, simple
things that have not changed rather than get lost in details that
may change on a regular basis. I find that even very advanced people
sometimes need a reminder of the basics to see the forest from the
trees. (Danny Sullivan of Search Engine Watch http://www.searchenginewatch.com)
Content
* Focus on building useful "research content." Remember that the Internet is
constantly being used for all types of research. Take advantage
of this and develop content that will appeal to the people who are
doing the research. What is it that people want to know? People
are looking for "how to" articles, "inspirational" articles, reference
material, financial advice, technical advice, comparison charts,
phone numbers, historical information, serial numbers, and the list
goes on and on. Don't just do up a general page on a topic. Do a
little research. Talk to some real people and see what it is that
fascinates a specific group. Look for a newsgroup and see what they
talk about. From your research, try checking a few keywords in WordTracker.
From WordTracker, you can discover trends that people are using
to conduct research. If you have a garden center online, perhaps
you'll want to build a content rich doorway page that offers detailed
blue prints for building a birdhouse or an article on "How to attract
hummingbirds to your garden," etc. If you have an online jewelry
store, perhaps you'll want to offer articles on how to determine
the real value of a diamond or a tutorial on Victorian gemstones.
(John Alexander with Beyond-SEO.com http://www.beyond-seo.com/)
* If your site makes heavy use of graphics and has no substantial
real text content, this will severely impact your ability to get
good search engine listings because there is nothing for the search
engines to read when they index your Web site. You should consider
redesigning some of your pages to include real text rather than
graphical text. (Paul Bruemmer with Web Ignite http://www.web-ignite.com)
* Customize content for each page. Every URL is a potential entry
point. Keep content in the header tags focused and terse. Simplicity
is so important in search engine optimization. (Marshall Simmonds
with About.com http://www.about.com/)
* Use cgi-based date scripts to keep the site fresh. (Ginette Degner
with ServiceBrokers.com http://www.servicebrokers.com)
Directories
* Proper submission to the major directories is critical. One of the most significant
changes in search engine marketing in recent years has been the
rise in popularity of human-reviewed directories and catalogs like
LookSmart, Yahoo, and Open Directory. Some search engines prominently
display directory listings for many popular searches. MSN is a prime
example. Some of the other major engines also list directory results
prominently, or at least emphasize them in various ways. You can
recognize directory listings since they are often called "Web Site"
results rather than "Web Page" results. Once you submit to a directory,
it's difficult to go back and correct mistakes later. Some of them
like Yahoo and LookSmart charge you for the privilege of simply
being reviewed for inclusion. Therefore, it's of utmost importance
to get it right the first time. (Brent Winters with FirstPlace Software
http://www.webposition.com)
* Get listed with the human-powered directories of Yahoo, LookSmart
and the Open Directory. If this is all you do, you'll get plenty
of traffic. All either get lots of visitors or "power" other sites
that get plenty of visitors. In addition, getting listed with them
helps crawler-based search engines locate your site and perhaps
help it rank better, because of the link importance these sites
provide to you. (Danny Sullivan with Search Engine Watch http://www.searchenginewatch.com)
Diversify
* It's important to experiment and diversify your optimization strategies.
The algorithms of each engine change frequently to keep content
fresh -- so should your techniques. It is important to abide by
all the rules and regulations as set forth by the engines to avoid
spamdexing. (Marshall Simmonds with About.com http://www.about.com/)
Due Diligence
* First comes content, then optimizing your pages for the search engines, checking
your HTML code, etc. Next comes the submission of your pages to
the search engines. Possibly resubmit your older content, depending
on ranking and various other factors. (Introduce at least some minor
changes before you do.) Follow the rules of the craft. Later, check
your logs daily. Learn how to recognize search engine spiders to
see if your submissions were successful. Check out all search engine
generated hits to determine: a) your ranking, b) what people are
really searching for and finding you under -you may be in for a
surprise or two on that score. (Ralph Tegtmeier, a.k.a. Fantomaster
http://fantomaster.com/)
* Read, read, read - learn the trade from scratch. Test out stuff
- your mileage may vary immensely from the gurus' -every Web site
is different, or, at least, should be. (Ralph Tegtmeier, a.k.a.
Fantomaster http://fantomaster.com/)
Frames, JavaScript, and Dynamic Delivery Systems
* Framesets need NOFRAMES content added to the FRAMESET section. Also, sites
using frames, image maps, or JavaScript navigation do not get properly
indexed by search engines because the frame containing links to
other pages within the site gets overlooked. A remedy for this is
to create a redundant set of text links in as many of the frameset
component pages as is practical, such as at the bottom of your main
content page. (Paul Bruemmer with Web Ignite http://www.web-ignite.com)
* Build crawler-friendly. Avoid using frames or dynamic delivery
systems, and ensure that you have good internal linkage between
your pages. (Danny Sullivan with Search Engine Watch http://www.searchenginewatch.com)
* Consider putting your JavaScript in external files. This also
will streamline your source code and make your pages load faster
and more search engine friendly. (Bill Gentry with The Selling Source
http://www.sellingsource.com)
Keywords
* Know what you want to be found for. You should know the top two or three
terms that are most important to your Web site and have incorporated
them into a 25-word description that doesn't use marketing hype,
which can then be submitted to human-powered directories. You should
also know a list of the top 10 to 100 terms you'd like to be found
for and ensure that you have pages within your Web site with good,
solid content for these terms to please the crawlers. (Danny Sullivan
of Search Engine Watch http://www.searchenginewatch.com)
* Don't make the mistake of picking the wrong keywords. Nothing
is more disappointing than taking the time to achieve top rankings
and then seeing no increase in traffic from all your efforts. Also,
don't pick keywords that are too popular or broad like "games" or
"entertainment." You'll not only get visitors that are far less
likely to buy your product, but the amount of work needed to gain
that ranking will not be worth the trouble. You'll then join the
ranks of misinformed critics screaming "search engine optimization
doesn't work - don't waste your time!" SE optimization works and
works well, IF you take the time to do it right. (Brent Winters
with FirstPlace Software http://www.webposition.com)
* Research your search phrases. If you can, also check your referrer
logs or other traffic tracking program to help you. If you don't
have referrer logs, install a traffic tracking program such as Web
Trends Live on your site and let it gather stats for you for a couple
of months before you decide on your search phrases. A program such
as this or your referrer logs will tell you which search phrases
are currently bringing you search engine traffic. You might want
to use some of these for your optimization, since you already know
that people find you using these. Then, check your rankings for
the search phrases that you researched from WordTracker, or other
search phrase research tools, as well as those from your traffic
tracking program or referrer logs. I suggest this because you may
find that you are already doing fairly well with some phrases and
you may not want to mess with those. (Bill Gentry with The Selling
Source http://www.sellingsource.com)
* Build focused pages around "real world" queries. Use phrases
exactly how they are typed into a search engine, such as "How can
I" and "Where can I." You will notice that sites with FAQ pages
like this can end up garnering an awful lot of top placements and
traffic. (Ginette Degner with ServiceBrokers.com http://www.servicebrokers.com)
* Searching for the key phrase in Yahoo and noting the Yahoo Categories
returned can suggest key themes and words useful to the site for
optimization as well as showing the quantity and quality of the
competition. (David Johnson and Annam Manthiram with Position Research
http://www.positionresearch.com)
* I like to thoroughly explore all possibilities when researching
keyword phrases. I like to think of keyword phrases as "fuel" for
specific topics. After much study using a resource like WordTracker
(one of my favourite tools), I like to identify several "high performance"
keyword phrases. Then I try not to simply settle for the first ideas
that come to mind for how that topic might be employed. I try to
"think outside of the box." Learn to develop topical content with
a unique spin on it, always keeping the visitors in mind. In a nutshell,
understand your visitors' demand for useful topics and then give
them what it is they are seeking. Focus should not just be on how
to get tons of general traffic to a page. Use page optimization
strategies to create useful pages with content that is "in demand"
by a target audience. When you start thinking this way, it has a
wonderful compound effect on making actual sales or achieving your
site objectives. Isn't this why you started a Web site in the first
place? (John Alexander with Beyond-SEO.com http://www.beyond-seo.com/)
* Check log files for user country location and most often used
keywords in search engine search. This may demonstrate the need
to offer the site in another language (or to provide a link to Alta
Vista's Babelfish or the Lycos equivalent) if there are a lot of
hits from another country. Knowing the keywords used to arrive at
the site helps to decide on variations and changes to the site theme.
(David Johnson and Annam Manthiram with Position Research http://www.positionresearch.com)
* Did you know that the KEI Factor used in WordTracker is an excellent
guideline to follow? According to WordTracker, an excellent keyword
phrase has a KEI (Keyword Effectiveness Index) of 400+. Are you
having trouble finding appropriate phrases with high KEI factors?
Try using one single word (appropriate for your site) in the "comprehensive
search" feature. I very often extract excellent phrases with a KEI
level well into the thousands or even into the hundreds of thousands.
Always ensure that the search phrases you select are solidly related
to site content. (John Alexander with Beyond-SEO.com http://www.beyond-seo.com/)
Link Popularity
* Submit to link popularity-based engines LAST after you have had a chance
to build your inbound and outbound links up. (Ginette Degner with
ServiceBrokers.com http://www.servicebrokers.com)
* Examine your internal link structure carefully. Even for large
Web sites, to the extent that it is possible, you want every Web
page linking to every other page. Complex linking structures will
work to your disadvantage. (J.K. Bowman with Spider Food http://www.spider-food.net)
* Build links. Search for the top terms you want to be found for.
Review the sites that come up. Visit those sites and ask the non-
competitive ones if they'll swap links with you. These sites are
important because the search engines themselves are telling you
they are important, by ranking them highly. That means links from
them can help you in link analysis systems. It also means that if
these sites get visitors, you may get visitors who follow links
out of them. (Danny Sullivan with Search Engine Watch http://www.searchenginewatch.com)
* Link exchange with other like sites, and be sure to interlink your pages. (Rocky Rawstern)
* Develop your inbound link popularity the old fashioned way, one link at a
time. An investment of just 10 minutes per day to this with a personalized
e-mail to Web site owners of similar and significant sites will
produce immediate results. And you will never have to worry about
the risk associated with link popularity programs. (J.K. Bowman
with Spider Food http://www.spider-food.net)
* Upgrade your site to an info hub by offering prime outgoing links
- such as a search engine portal. This will help boost your site's
ranking with the search engines. Contrary to popular opinion, linkage
counts both ways, incoming and outgoing. Check out this free distributed
search engine portal: http://searchenginebase.com/.
The signup page is here: http://searchenginebase.com/sbfreeportal0.html.
Link to lots of useful sites not directly competing with yours.
Request reciprocal links. Create more domains and interlink them
all. Avoid mere link farms - there's a ongoing witchhunt targeting
those currently. Also, check your linkage regularly. (Ralph Tegtmeier,
a.k.a. Fantomaster http://fantomaster.com/)
Make it a Game and Have Fun!
* Make a game of it. I like to akin SEO to playing chess. It's
a matter of thinking three steps ahead of your competition. For
those who do this, the nip and tuck battle for the #1 spot can be
quite fun. In fact, it's addictive! So, when you think about SEO,
don't just think about it in terms how much money you might make.
If you truly become interested in the art and competitive element
of search engine optimization, you will be incredibly more successful.
(J.K. Bowman with Spider Food http://www.spider-food.net)
Newsletters, Forums, and Lists
* The best thing you can do to help your search engine efforts is to stay informed
via newsletters and forums. Some of those will cost a great deal
of money, and others will be free, but staying informed of search
engine developments is important. (Brett Tabke with Webmaster World
http://www.webmasterworld.com)
* Participate in discussion forums. Promote on Usenet via your
sig file if you can answer (or ask) questions in areas you are either
proficient or at least interested in. Contribute to mailing lists.
(Ralph Tegtmeier, a.k.a. Fantomaster http://fantomaster.com/)
Online Marketing
* Generate lots of fresh, useful content. Keep your blatant marketing activities
on economy drive (pardon the pun), be subtle about your promotion.
People will notice, and will favor, less dumb hysteria, more openness,
and honesty. Admit to mistakes if you make them (as you're bound
to), but don't cringe and don't give the impression of reacting
self-assertive or self- deprecating for the heck of it. If you can,
issue a newsletter of your own. Never mind if you only have yourself,
your wife and your stepmother for subscribers - put it on site and
submit it to the engines. They simply adore that sort of all-text
stuff! (Ralph Tegtmeier, a.k.a. Fantomaster http://fantomaster.com/)
* Search engine optimization in only one aspect of a well rounded
promotion campaign. That campaign should slowly broaden into more
traditional avenues. Search engines aren't the formula for long
term site success - it's up to your site to produce repeat visitors.
(Brett Tabke with Webmaster World http://www.webmasterworld.com)
* Make sure your top scoring pages include a call to action. This
is not difficult or time consuming but it can make a real difference
in getting results. You can easily provide a visitor with some sort
of reason to take action now. If it is done well, you can even have
customers place a order from a doorway or gateway information page.
Every business is different of course, but if you don't believe
it, give it some thought and try it. At the very least, experiment
with placing your toll free phone number (if applicable) on your
top ranking pages. I have a number of clients that do a really great
business with a toll free number displayed prominently on their
top ranking pages. One of the easiest ways to prompt action is to
purposely leave an important piece of information off of your site.
At first this does not sound too professional, but really think
about it. If they are impressed with your site content, obviously
the depth of your content has gained you some respect and credibility
with the reader.... so just leave one vital bit of information out.
This may start more phone calls and e-mail responses than you expect
but it's one of the easiest ways to trigger response. You see, from
those e-mails and phone calls, you can now enter further dialogue
with the visitor and this will often result in the visitor becoming
a customer. (John Alexander with Beyond-SEO.com http://www.beyond-seo.com/)
Pay Engines
* Open your wallet. If you have the money, paid placement and paid inclusion
programs can be a fast, easy way to get good listings or better
representation. But even if you have money, don't forget to do all
the basic things that can help you get plenty of traffic for free.
(Danny Sullivan with Search Engine Watch http://www.searchenginewatch.com)
Relevancy
* There are countless tips for optimizing your page's content so that it will
be more "relevant" to a given search. Each engine ranks pages differently,
so most tips are not universal. However, there is one tip that overrides
them all: Create pages that emulate the "statistics" of pages that
already rank at or near the top of the search results. These statistics
include: a) Frequency of the keywords on the page. Tip: This does
not mean more keywords are better. b) Total words on the page. Tip:
Mimic the approximate number of words of a top ranking page on your
own page. c) Weight of the keywords on the page. (i.e. frequency
divided by the total words) Tip: Too high a weight is just as bad
as too low a weight. d) Area or location of the keywords on the
page. (i.e., title, heading, etc.) Tip: A keyword is given more
relevance by an engine when the keyword appears in the engine's
"preferred" areas. e) Prominence. Tip: Generally, the closer to
the front of the area you can place the keyword, the better. f)
Proximity. Tip: The closer that the words of a phrase appear together,
the better. g) Off-page criteria. (i.e., link popularity, click
through popularity, etc.) Tip: Even when you've done everything
else right, don't forget the off-page factors! (Brent Winters with
FirstPlace Software http://www.webposition.com)
* For best positioning, content should be placed at the top of
a page. However, for splash pages or pages without any content,
content can be added at the very bottom and the scroll bar can be
hidden to prevent a visitor from reading the optimized content.
(David Johnson and Annam Manthiram with Position Research http://www.positionresearch.com)
* Keep the graphics low and the content high. All engines do two
things: index text and follow links. Give the spiders the opportunity
to do just that. Keep the content as high on the page as possible
and give relevant links to quality content either on or off-site.
The HTML title should be focused and accurately represent the content
of the page. (Marshall Simmonds with About.com http://www.about.com/)
* If you run a regional business where most of your business is
local, it's critical that you include your full company address
on every page of your site. Otherwise people could search for "Ford
dealer in Chicago" and you'd not appear if your company address
is buried only on your contact page. Also take advantage of "proximity"
by putting the word Chicago as close to the phrase Ford dealer as
possible. Lastly, make sure the address is in text form since search
engines can't read your address out of a graphical logo on your
page. (Brent Winters with FirstPlace Software http://www.webposition.com)
Simplicity
* Keep things simple. Write good content and titles, and use text links either
as your main navigation or in conjunction with graphic buttons,
image maps or flash menus. It's ok to use Flash animation on your
site, but if you use it on your index page, be sure to integrate
it with content so the search engines can index your home page.
Also consider making your Flash animations smaller where possible,
such as banner size. They are much easier to integrate into a page
with content. Flash does not have to dominate the page to be effective
or add pizzazz to your site. (Bill Gentry with The Selling Source
http://www.sellingsource.com)
* Did I mention keeping things simple? General optimization will
get you good results without a lot of extra time or effort. (Bill
Gentry with The Selling Source http://www.sellingsource.com)
Site Maps
* Web Ignite recommends the creation of a site map page that includes plain
text links to as many pages within your site as possible. This will
increase the ability of search engines to spider your site and can
result in more of your pages being listed. A plain text link to
the site map should appear on all pages. (Paul Bruemmer with Web
Ignite http://www.web-ignite.com)
Software Programs
* Consider getting SE Optimizer (http://www.se-optimizer.com). It's a snappy
little tool to help you with your optimization efforts and helps
remind you of all those things you ought to try to do every time
you optimize a page. (I am not an affiliate of SE Optimizer or AWCS
trying to sell you this program. I just really like it and think
it belongs in every optimizer's tool box.) (Bill Gentry with The
Selling Source http://www.sellingsource.com)
Spamming
* AltaVista has been vocal lately with the statistic that approximately 95%
of all submissions are spam. Therefore, take the time and effort
to learn what search engines consider spam and do everything in
your power to avoid these violations. It will save much grief if
optimization and submission are done properly the first time. (Marshall
Simmonds with About.com http://www.about.com/)
Stylesheets
* Consider using a stylesheet to redefine html tags and define custom classes.
Also make this an external .css file and link to it in the head.
Doing so will streamline your source code and make future site-wide
style changes much easier. Also, consider using layers instead of
tables to further streamline your source code. Streamlining your
source code will make it more search engine friendly and your pages
will also load faster. (Bill Gentry with The Selling Source http://www.sellingsource.com)
* Use linked Cascading Style Sheets creatively. Using CSS, you
can custom define how your HTML tags display text and links, which
is a powerful optimization advantage. (J.K. Bowman with Spider Food
http://www.spider-food.net)
Tags
* Properly done TITLE and META tags at the top of the homepage HEAD section
are crucial to your SEO efforts. When applicable, all frameset component
pages should contain those tags as well. Properly done ALT text
tags are suggested for images. (Paul Bruemmer with Web Ignite http://www.web-ignite.com)
* Take one minute, at least, and eyeball every page in your site
when you make it, in order to write a descriptive 7-15 word HTML
title. Think newspaper headlines! You want to grab the readers'
attention when they see this title in search engine results and
convince them to click through, though you don't want to be misleading.
Look at the page, think of the top 1 or 2 terms you'd like it to
be found for, then incorporate those words into a title. Don't worry
if you go longer than 15 words or shorter than 7. Those aren't limits;
just guidelines from my experience on making your titles attractive
to readers. What about meta tags? Use the first sentence or two
on your page for your meta description tag's content, and in the
meta keywords tag, list any important keywords you think the page
should be found for and which ALSO appear in the HTML copy of that
page. (Danny Sullivan with Search Engine Watch http://www.searchenginewatch.com)
* You need to create titles and descriptions that are focused on
getting that click, not just on keyword density. The more clicks
you can get, I guarantee you the more popular your site will be.
(Ginette Degner with ServiceBrokers.com http://www.servicebrokers.com)
Themes
* Before you touch one line of code, make sure that you have diligently
defined your Web site. You should be able to say, "My Web site is
about _____ ______ ______" without any hesitation. You will be able
to optimize for many keyword phrases, but this single one, two or
three keyword phrase theme should resonate on every page. (J.K.
Bowman with Spider-Food http://www.spider-food.net)
* Use lots of text on each page [over one hundred words], specific to one extremely narrow theme. (Rocky Rawstern)
* The primary technique for good positioning is rich, robust visible text.
A theme page is much better than a doorway page, since it emphasizes
relevant body copy. (David Johnson and Annam Manthiram with Position
Research http://www.positionresearch.com)
* Create a themed mini-library that pays off in big numbers of
targeted traffic! Using WordTracker, find an appropriately related
"hot topic" for your Web site. What I like to do is to build a little
group of information rich, top ranking pages and fashion them into
a little mini-library (6 to 20 pages), all with slightly different
variations of that hot topic. They are all linked together with
a separate topical index page. The key to success is to first research
the best keyword phrases (high KEI values), then build quality content
(the stuff that folks love to learn about). Only use topics that
appropriately apply to the overall theme of the site. Each content-rich
"library page" should also employ creative text links into different
parts of your main pages. You want lots of horizontal "click throughs"
to your entire site. Make sure each optimized page within your themed
library is for a DIFFERENT or slightly different phrase. Also ensure
your library pages are not just slapped together from a template.
Each library page should have a unique layout and differing content
to avoid penalization with anti-spam filters. The result is a flood
of targeted traffic to the "library" which can then move throughout
your entire Web site. (John Alexander with Beyond-SEO.com http://www.beyond-seo.com/)
Tracking
* As you learn more about search engine marketing, you'll discover it is not
an exact science. Some of your pages will rank well the first time
out, and some will not. In addition, your rankings will fluctuate,
calling for tweaks in design from time to time. Therefore, as with
any marketing strategy, you need a method to measure your progress.
In this case, you need a convenient way to report your rankings
for each keyword and engine you're targeting, and to track the number
of visitors to your Web site, along with where they came from. WebPosition
Gold (http://www.webposition.com) helps you manage and automate
both these essential tasks. (Brent Winters with FirstPlace Software
http://www.webposition.com)
Web Design
* Design the Web site with the search engines in mind. Use text links especially
if you have image maps or frames, etc. (Ginette Degner with ServiceBrokers.com
http://www.servicebrokers.com )
A special thanks to the following Search Engine Optimizers who were willing to share their tips for this article (listed in alphabetical order):
* John Alexander is a Professional SEO who operates an independent Internet consulting business in affiliation with WorldSites.Net (http://www.Worldsites.net). John also owns Beyond-SEO.com (http://www.beyond-seo.com/), a Web site devoted to professional SEO's looking for tips beyond the basics.
* J.K. Bowman is the Editor of Spider-Food.net (http://www.spider-food.net), one of the largest tutorial resources on the Web for search engine optimization and Web site promotion techniques. He currently lives in Mississippi, where he also provides consultancy and positioning services.
* Paul J. Bruemmer is CEO of Web-Ignite Corporation (http://www.web-ignite.com), a search engine traffic agency. Founded in 1995, Web-Ignite provides search engine traffic for Fortune 1000 dot-coms and for B2B and e-commerce sites.
* Ginette Degner operates Service Brokers (http://www.servicebrokers.com), a Web Optimization and Marketing Strategies firm providing expert search engine placement and consultation services since 1993.
* Bill Gentry is Manager of Search Engine Optimization Services for The Selling Source (http://www.sellingsource.com), an online marketing company that offers a wide array of online marketing solutions to a diverse clientele.
* David Johnson and Annam Manthiram are Search Engine Research Specialists with Position Research (http://www.positionresearch.com), a search engine optimization firm that considers "research" an integral part of optimizing Web sites.
* Rocky Rawstern is a Senior Search Engine Analyst with a prominent search engine optimization company on the West coast.
* Marshall Simmonds is the Director of Search for About, Inc. (http://www.about.com/), a division of parent company PRIMEDIA Inc. Marshall is responsible for maximizing search engine exposure for About's 700 topic sites which cover 1,000,000 articles. He also oversees search engine strategies for Primedia's online properties, such as Americanbaby.com and Seventeen.com.
* Danny Sullivan, Editor of Search Engine Watch (http://www.searchenginewatch.com), is often considered the Internet's "search engine guru." He has been helping Webmasters, marketers and everyday Web users understand how search engines work for half a decade.
* Brett Tabke of PHD Software Systems is also the owner of Webmaster World Forums (http://www.webmasterworld.com) and Search Engine World (http://www.searchengineworld.com/), extremely popular informational sites designed "by Webmasters for Webmasters."
* Ralph Tegtmeier is the co-founder and principal of fantomaster.com Ltd. (UK)
and fantomaster.com GmbH (Belgium) (http://fantomaster.com/), a
company specializing in Webmasters software development, industrial-strength
cloaking and search engine positioning services. He has been a Web
marketer since 1994 and is editor-in-chief of fantomNews, a free
newsletter focusing on search engine optimization, available at:
http://fantomaster.com/fantomnews-sub.html
* Brent Winters is the President of FirstPlace Software, Inc. and author of the highly popular MarketPosition Newsletter. FirstPlace Software develops and markets WebPosition Gold (http://www.webposition.com), the first software product to track your rankings on the major search engines and to help you improve those rankings.
This article was written by Robin Nobles, a professional freelance writer and
the Director of Training of the Academy of Web Specialists. Over
the past few years, she has trained several thousand people in her
online and onsite courses in search engine positioning strategies
and has written three books that can be ordered through Amazon.
Visit the Academy's Web site to learn more about their online courses
and products: http://www.academywebspecialists.com/more_info
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