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Nov 27 2007
9 Paths of SEO Enlightenment, Part I
Tuesday, 27 November 2007

Many SEOs obsess over search engine algorithmic details. They spend hours looking at the minutest of details hoping to achieve the perfectly "optimized" web page. In the process they often forget that the web page can't just be optimized for search engines, but must also be optimized for human visitors.

Optimizing for spiders and visitors are both important for a web site's overall success. But I don't think they are necessarily equally important. In order for the search engines to be able to index and rank a site, a "search engine friendly" website architecture must be implemented. And while having a search engine friendly site is good, it must not be accomplished at the expense of the visitor. At best, it must complement the user friendliness of the website. At worst, it must be invisible.

Can a proper balance between optimizing for spiders and humans be struck? Can you achieve the perfectly optimized web page for search rankings, while also maintain a perfectly optimized page for your audience? Well, no. In fact I don't think there is such thing as a perfectly optimized page for either search engines or users. If there were such a thing then sites such as Amazon would not invest millions of dollars in user testing every year. But since perfection is unattainable, what you can do is find the most effective balance between being both user friendly and search engine friendly.

When looking for the perfect balance between search engines and human visitors, there are nine distinct paths available. When developing, updating or optimizing a website, every decision must have a question asked and answered to determine if what is being contemplated is the best course of action. The question is: Is this good for my visitors and the search engines. Based on the answer to that question you'll have an idea of whether or not you're facing a sound course of action.

Path 1: Bad for spiders, bad for people

SEO Path 1

One of the problems many websites face is that they were designed to meet one, or a small group of people's particular likes and dislikes, with no regard to anything beyond that. I've run across many business owners who have invested thousands of dollars into creating a "pretty" website, only later to find that it is not structurally sound in regard to meeting the needs of the search engines. Nor was it very usable or able to meet the shoppers needs. The developer, or the person fronting the money, decided what looked good and went forward without any other considerations. This is obviously one of the worse courses of actions that can be made as a web site is being developed.

Once you've gone down this route the only course of action is to stop and go back. You'll have to re-invest into your website to make it more search engine friendly and in the process learn more about the wants and needs of your target audience. Yes, you'll lose time and money. But the worse scenario is doing nothing and to continue to lose time and money every day as neither search engines nor your visitors give your site the time of day.

When faced with any decision, and it is determined that a course of action is bad for search engines and users, run away. It doesn't matter how many people think that the proposed change looks good, your business depends on being able to get exposure and persuade your visitors, not the web designer or the managers who don't know enough about web marketing to make sound decisions. Going down this path will only lead to disaster.

Path 2: Indifferent to spiders, bad for people

SEO Path 2

There are many changes you can make to a site that are not going to effect search engine accessibility issues at all. Things such as having a 100% tableless design or achieving full validation of your HTML are a couple things that come to mind that, on a small scale, don't really matter a whole lot. Both have their benefits but by themselves don't really have a significant effect on the search engines (unless you're removing some genuine search engine road blocks or excessive code bloat). Overall these types of changes don't have much sway when it comes to overall search engine performance.

So the next question to consider is if the change being considered will be good or bad for your target audience. If it can be determined that while a change won't effect your performance on the search engines, but would ultimately create a negative experience for your visitors, then this is another path that you want to avoid. The only possible outcome is still a net negative.

You won't have helped your goal in pushing rankings up, but by creating a negative visitor experience you will have hurt your ability to get conversions. Even if the net negative effect on your human visitors is small, over time it will add up. And for what? For a change that, at best, didn't improve performance on the search engines? It's just not worth it.

Path 3: Good for spiders, bad for people

SEO Path 3

Surprisingly, this is a mistake that many SEOs make. Of course, these are the SEOs that are focused exclusively on achieving top search engine rankings, no matter what the cost. To be fair, many of them are talented individuals who study the search engine algorithms excessively. The only drawback is that they often don't know how to balance the needs of the spiders with the needs of the human visitors.

The result if often a very fantastically search engine friendly website, that is, at the same time, one that has extremely poor visitor conversion rates. Many businesses and SEOs that implement these kinds of strategies often appear to be very successful at getting results. Rankings are strong and traffic increases, and even the number of conversions increase due to the the increase in traffic volumes. But what often gets lost is that those increases can actually be hurting the business.

How can more sales be a bad thing? When you're losing credibility in the process. When you have to pay more for lower conversion rates. When the costs of being successful is more than the profits being realized. While many decisions that improve ranking performance feel positive, many won't be good enough to be sustainable over the long-term, especially those that create a negative user experience. If the overall net gain is positive, then a justification can be made for this type of decision. But while it's better than the previous two, it's certainly not the best path to choose overall.

Of the nine paths business owners and SEOs face with their online marketing campaigns, these are the worst of the bunch. In the next installment we'll look at another group of paths to SEO enlightenment. While the next three are not the best options available, you certainly could do worse.


Read more at: http://www.searchengineguide.com/stoney-degeyter/9-paths-of-seo-enlightenment-part-i.php.
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