SEO can be a confusing venture for most people. Even many so-called-experts can have a difficult time keeping a website at the top of the search engines.
First … the search engines are constantly changing their algorithms in an effort to bring you the most relevant website listings for your search query. Search engines also change their algorithms to stay ahead of the dishonest companies that quickly learn how to manipulate the search results.
As soon as the search engines change the way they list websites, there are unscrupulous people who go right to work trying to figure out how to cheat the system.
These people are using what's known as "Black Hat SEO" and if you are trying to run a legitimate website, stay away from them at all cost! Sure your website will get a high listing rather quickly using black hat techniques, but as soon as the search engines figure out what you're doing, they will probably ban your website from their listings forever (forever). And sooner or later, they will figure it out.
Second … There's a lot of misnomers about what's more important when it comes to SEO. Some so called SEO gurus will have you believe page rank is the most important thing when it comes to search engine listings. This is simply not true.
Page rank (or Google PR) is one important factor when it comes to ranking a site for the search engines, but SERPs (or Search Engine Results Page) is what really counts.
"Page Rank" is Google's way of putting a number to the authority of a site. If they believe your site is important, they'll give you a higher PR.
But it does not mean the authority of your site will get you indexed for you main keywords.
There are thousands, sometimes even millions, of websites that have a low page rank, but are listed on the first page of the major search engines (including Google), for some top keywords. By contrast, there are just as many high PR ranking web pages, that are buried in "no mans land" when it comes to the search engines (including Google).
Also, the other major search engines (Yahoo, MSN, Bing, and hundreds of smaller search engines) do not really care about your "Google Page Rank" at all. They only care about giving their visitors relevant search results.
So ask yourself this … would you rather have a low Google PR of 1 or 2, and be listed on the first page of the search results? Or would you rather have a high PR of 5 or 6, and be listed on the tenth page of the search results, where no one will ever find you ..? I think the answer is obvious.
One of the websites I built for my other online business, has not had a Google PR of more than 2 for the last 4 years (since it's been live on the internet). But it has been on the first page of ALL major search engines (for my main keywords) for 3 1/2 of those 4 years. I'll take the low PR and keep the high listing any day of the week.
What about this "Alexa Rank" I've heard about?
Alexa rank is supposed to be an indication of how much traffic a website gets. The lower the number … the more visitors a website is getting. If your Alexa rank is 50,000 it's supposed to mean (out of the millions of websites on the internet) your site is the 50,000th most popular site there is.
If your site has an Alexa rank of 2,000,000 then your site is only the 2,000,000th most popular site on the internet.
But here's the truth … Alexa ranking is NOT an acurate measure! It only registers websites that are visited by people who have the Alexa toolbar installed in their browsers (mostly SEO companies and web developers) So it does not count actual visitors to a website.
Here's a statistic that proved this fact to me …
I currently have a dozen websites I maintain, and I regularly check the traffic stats on all of them (like every good webmaster should)
One of my sites has an Alexa ranking of 171,246 (pretty good … right?) Another has an Alexa rank of 4,276,996 (which is lousy) but according to my analyzing stats (I cross reference Google Analytics with AWstats and a couple other programs , to get a more accurate statistic) The one with the better Alexa rank is only getting around 40 to 50 visitors a day, but the one with the worse Alexa rank is seeing over 400 visitors a day.
What does this tell us?
It tells us the one with the higher rank is being visited by a few people who have the Alexa toolbar installed (and the toolbar is sending stats back to Alexa) But the site that's actually doing better is being visited by real people who do not find it necessary to have Alexa monitor their browsing habits.
A lot of SEO companies will use the Alexa rank to show their customers "proof" that they're getting their money. ("see, your Alexa rank has gone up … so keep paying me") But remember this … Alexa rank is an indication of how well a website is actually doing!
So, what gets your website listed on the first couple of pages of the search engines? In a word … "Relevant Content" (OK in 2 words)
Search engines are only concerned with showing relevant search results for a persons "keyword search query". Search engines make their money by showing their advertisements to as many people as possible, and having as many people as possible clicking on those sponsored lists.
If their search results are useless to their visitors, people will stop using their search engines, and start using a different search engine. No visitors … no revenue for the search engine.
So while there are a number of important techniques you need to use for a higher search listing (back links, internal linking, proper meta tags and keyword percentage, to name a few) Remember … relevant content is king! And as the search engines become more sophisticated, relevant content on your website will only continue to become more important.
There are also many other factors that play a role in getting your website listed at the top of the search engines. It takes consistent effort and continuing learning to keep up with the ever changing algorithms of the search engines, and a quality SEO person (or company) will continue to learn and keep up with the changes.
But remember … there are no "secret" methods for getting a high search engine listing. If you're talking with an SEO company, and they will not tell you their methods for increasing your website's listing (because they say it's "proprietary information") then I recommend immediately finding someone else to talk with about your website's SEO.
A quality (and honest) SEO company should have no problem telling you what methods they will use to increase your website's exposure on the search engines. So before you give anyone (or any company) your money, there are a few questions you should ask them first …
9 Important questions to ask your SEO company BEFORE you hire them!
And yes, SEO is something you can effectively do yourself, but it does take a lot of time and effort, and most business owners have better things to spend their time on. That's why you hire an SEO company … to do the work for you. They provide a service, and you pay them for that service.