SEO Case Study #1: Me

As long as I’ve been a professional web developer, I’ve been learning the ins and outs of SEO. That’s Search Engine Optimization for those who don’t know and is basically the answer to the common question of “How do I get my site to appear first when I Google [such and such word]?”1

It’s such a common request and the process is so frequently misunderstood that I’m starting this new series to pass along the very, VERY simple things that anyone could be doing to optimize their website for search engines.

First let me say that never trust any company that claims they’ll get you #1 rankings in any Search Engine. It’s a scam, end of story. There is no guarantee when it comes to rankings. The processes used to determine the order of search results in Google, Yahoo, Bing, or any other engine, are highly guarded trade secrets. Because there is money involved people are always trying to game the system, while the Search companies try to stay one step ahead.

“How can I make Google show my site first when I search for my name?”

Your name, as an individual, company brand, whatever, should easily be the first thing you’ll start ranking for, and the home page should rank highly, if not 1st, in search results. It will probably happen naturally whether you try or not, because a web page has several pieces of content that a search engine evaluates for ranking, and many you’ll already be using. Let’s take my name “Joel Sunman” for the following examples.

My site in all its incarnations has always ranked 1st for my name, with or without quotes2. I’m not sure if I’m the only Joel Sunman in the world, but as of now I’m the only one appearing in any form on the web. So the repetition of the actual text “Joel Sunman” in the website is really all it takes, because there was no competition. Copyright statements in the footer, the text of the logo, text in an About Me-type page, all repeated the same two words.

Content like this will rank highly only when we’re talking about very unique phrases like names. Don’t expect this kind of repetition to do the same thing for a common word like “Computers.” Just think of how many other sites use that word in any way, shape or form (about 390 million today according to Google).

Now let’s say there is another Joel out there on the web. He doesn’t have a website, but maybe he gave an interview to a local newspaper and that story and his name appears online. Based on the overall popularity of the newspaper’s site, this article may start appearing above my own pages, but two more factors can give me the edge.

  1. Domain Text:
    The domain www.joelsunman.com directs to my site. Google and search engines pick out the words in your URL and you can think of each of these factors as adding points to a score. A URL that contains the searched for phrase counts for more “points” than just that phrase inside the copy of a page.
  2. Page Titles:
    Title bar example
    This is the text that appears at the top of your browser for any page. It’s purpose is to tell users (and search engines) what the page is about. A typical mistake is to use generic phrases to title the page such as “HOME”, “ABOUT US”, “CONTACT.” Since the page title is valued highly in the eyes of the search engine, higher at least than in-copy text, at the very least these titles should include your name, to distinguish it from all the other generic “HOME” pages out there. “Home of Joel Sunman & The Dam of Knowledge” > “Home Page.”
    Simple tweaks to page titles can have a big impact on ranking for keywords and phrases outside of just your Brand name. More on that later.

There are further ways that the actual HTML code of a web page is structured that has SEO significance, but most of these should already be implemented during the normal course of standards-based site development, so I won’t go into them here.

These are the first basics of optimizing your site for the search engines. After all that if your site is still not showing up highly for even just your name there are two possibilities:

  • Your site is too new and the search engines just haven’t found it yet…
  • Or, you’re unfortunate enough to share a name with someone/something that is very common or more popular than you in the search engine index.

All is not lost though, I’ll cover those cases in the future.


1 I’m aware other search engines exist, but I and 74% of search users don’t use them, so much so that “to Google” has become a verb. Unless otherwise noted, the specific case studies I talk about here deal with results in Google, while the techniques discussed will often benefit the results in other Search Engines in very similar ways.

2 There are always exceptions to the rule. When searching for my name Google now first returns “Local business results for joel near Sunman, IN.” This happens more and more as the top of the search results page is taken up with ads, maps, video results, etc. If I can’t even beat my namesake town in a search there may be no hope for any of us.

Google Results

“You ain’t the Diamond I’ve been Looking For”

This is not a music blog. There are plenty of those and they do a far better job than I; but that being said, I DO listen to a lot of music, and sometimes I like to share.

What is it about the Scandinavian countries that has produced some of my absolute favorite bands, particularly Sweden and Norway? With Kings of Convenience, The Soundtrack of Our Lives, Jens Lekman, etc., half my iTunes is probably populated by them.

Earlier this year I was excited to see that Erlend Øye’s (he of Kings of Convenience) other band The Whitest Boy Alive had a new disc out and were touring. Opening up for them are Erlend’s new protégés in The New Wine. Great stuff from these kids, the five songs they’ve released so far have been on constant repeat for the last month. There’s a lot of room to grow certainly, especially in the lyrics, but the music is that perfect blend of indie-y rock/dance-y that I always like. This classification probably means nothing to anyone but me.

The New Wine – Revolving Cylinder
[audio:http://www.damofknowledge.com/wp-content/uploads/01-Revolving-Cylinder.mp3|titles=The New Wine – Revolving Cylinder]

Sadly it’s been years since Øye in any form has been anywhere near the Midwest on tour, so for now I watch shaky hand held videos from the recent European dates on YouTube and wait. So jealous. It’s enough to make me want to buy a plane ticket and just head over there. Hmm…

Grab four songs for free from The New Wine at the band’s website.

via headphonesex

Domain Speculation: Case Study #1

Dear Sir or Madam,

I recently had a great idea for a mini site, but when I arrived home to register the domain I see you had already beaten me to it by a month. Well played. Through an intermediary I pursued, inquiring if you might be open to selling. I offered a small but reasonable price, inline with third-party appraisals. It would have netted you a nice profit for an obscure two word phrase that has no history.

Your counter offer asking price of $750 is ridiculous. Thank you, but no; you can keep it.

If you ever do something with it I’ll let go of my disdain for you, but I suspect it will forever be parked for free.

Signed,
The Dam of Knowledge

Anyone have any good luck purchasing domains or getting those on back order? Seems like a nice little scam for the registrars. If my opinion ever changes I’ll let you know.

Tim’s Idea

Since moving to Chicago last year my opportunities to continue to be in ThesePeople sketches have sadly been fewer, but our latest video just came out and it features a little cameo by yours truly.

I probably say this about every video of ours, but this is a fun one, enjoy!

Tim’s Idea
Tim has a great idea for a new sketch.

Pre-programmed Randomness

That’s a pretty consistent theme in all of my interactive work… randomness. It’s a perfect way to introduce variety and gives a project a little bit of the feel of playing a (very simple) game. Your reward for returning is a little bit of new information, and if the experience is enjoyable enough why not keep hitting that refresh button?

Truth is, it’s also nice cover for a site like this where updates and new info may be sporadic. Keeps it fresh without having to update every single day (a big reason I retired the first site, creative burnout). Google loves it too, trust me.

Anyways, today I finally added a little bit of randomness around here, setting up the next development step for the site. For now the sample set is pretty small so it might not appear very random at all, but it’s just proof that it could work on something larger.

Two things:

  1. Never used PHP inside JavaScript code before, but I’m using it here to pull up a random profile pic. A feature that I’d love to see on Facebook.
  2. Getting a random post displayed out of WordPress is extremely easy. Why would I use an extra plugin? Here’s what my code looks like:
    <?php $rand_posts = get_posts('numberposts=1&category=5&orderby=rand'); ?>
    <?php foreach( $rand_posts as $post ) : setup_postdata($post); ?>
    The code block for one of those front page features would go here, blah blah blah.
    <?php endforeach; ?>
    

Both of these are just stop gaps on the way to moving the Google map code over to XML, which will allow so much more flexibility.