Lead Generation » The SEO Hobbyist

As mentioned in previous posts, patience is a virtue when dealing with SEO. If you are lucky, some site changes you make can show results in Google Search after a few days/weeks. In my personal experience, it can take months before you notice the effects of Google Image Optimization. I personally run a few media/picture websites because I’ve noticed that the page views as well as time on site  is astronomically high. One example of this is my site http://randomfunnypicture.com, which averages 15+ page views per user.  It is actually the main reason on why I decided to write this post. If I break that page’s web stats down by referrer, my most active traffic comes from image search (25-35 pages per visitor).

Here are some of the things I’ve learned along the way that will help you increase your Google Image Search traffic.

1) Provide ALT Text For <IMG> Image Tags

Why is ALT Text Important? ALT Text is one of the most important because without it, Google’s search bots have no idea what the actual content of the picture is.  How else would you expect your site to be returned in an image search if your content isn’t properly labeled? Of all these tips, I’d say this one is most important because not only does it help you get your images indexed, but it also gives you an opportunity to adjust the keyword density on your site. You have the ability (WHEN RELEVANT) to use the keywords you are trying to rank highest on as your image descriptions. A Win/Win Situation.

2) Add Title Information to <IMG> Image Tags

Just like ALT Text, Title Text is another great opportunity to increase the density of your target keywords. What makes Title Text arguably even more important, is that many social media sites will auto-detect this information during submission/linking. For example, if you are submitting an image to Digg or Facebook, if you fill in the title tag it will automatically be entered into the description. Even at a minimum, this could be just another free relevant back link for traffic generating methods you are probably already using.

3) Choose Relevant File Names For Your Images

This one is a little bit simpler. Just as having a relevant domain name and URL are important to regular SEO, the same goes for file name. Choose a name that is highly descriptive of the content.

4) Provide Height and Width Data  to Your <IMG> Image Tags

Using the previous tips, an example of an SEO Image tag would be:

<img src=http://www.example.com/very-descriptive-name.jpg width=”433″ height=”600″ title=”Just as Descriptive Title”>

The reason for this is to help prepare your images for Google Image Search’s Advanced Options.

These Include:

› Medium
› Large
› Icon
› Larger than…
› Exactly…

If your dimensions are already included in your tags, it will be indexed faster and contain the right image information to be returned in when users perform these advanced searches.

5)  Surround Images with Relevant Keywords

Another way Google Image Search indexes pictures is by analyzing the content directly around images. If you can provide relevant keywords surrounding the image, it will help that picture get indexed correctly. When possible, I even use the <CAPTION> tag which makes it clear to search engines what the image is about.

Follow the steps above and your image search referrals will increase I guarantee it. Not only that, but you might also be pleasantly surprised about how much image search you get from Google’s foreign TLD’s (top level domains).

Not just images.google.com, but also

images.google.co.uk
images.google.ca
images.google.de
images.google.com.au etc…

Image search is responsible for 10% (and growing) of my overall traffic on my network and has way higher pages/visit and time on site than other traffic sources.

I frequently get asked by readers to review their websites and give feedback on some simple changes they could make to improve their SEO. Universally, these are the top 5 problems I find that are easy to fix. Granted, they aren’t the ultimate solution by any means, but instead they are just easiest changes one can make that have the largest benefits.

1) Register your domain for longer than one year.

Believe it or not, all of the top search engines run some sort of background check on every domain they index. They compare your server’s IP address to make sure it isn’t listed on any spam blacklist, as well as performing WHOIS lookups to make sure your domain isnt registered by any known spammers. Another thing they look for is length of registration. If your domain is registered for longer than a year it shows the search engines that the owner is committed to the domain, and there is a lower likelihood that is a spam website. (Most spam websites are registered for short periods or time.)

2) Beware of Canonical Domains

This is the biggest killer of SEO rankings that I come across. It has a scary name but its really a simple idea. If you do not setup your domain name correctly,
example.com will be treated as a completely separate site from www.example.com. Check out this post on How To Fix the Canonical Domain Issue.

3) Utilize Free Tools

http://google.com/analytics
http://websitegrader.com
https://www.google.com/webmasters/tools

4) Monitor and track your changes

5) BE PATIENT!

Many beginner webmasters expect for changes to happen overnight. It can often take weeks, even months to really benefit from the SEO tips found on this blog.

I have been following Google Real Time Search since it was first released, I even attended their webinar announcing it. Since then I have been wondering what metrics they use to make sure that their hallowed home page wouldn’t be over run by spammers. A daunting task indeed…

The guys over at hubspot put together this great article that helps you understand how your ‘twitter authority’ affects whether or not your tweets are displayed in their real time results.

From the Article:

Since Google rolled out the new feature, there has been a lot of chatter about the good, the bad and the ugly.  And while Google’s real-time streams feature results from a variety of sources (news headlines, blogs, feeds from social sites like Twitter, etc.), there has been quite a focus on how Google will sift through all this clutter to deliver quality results, specifically from Twitter, which we all know has its share of spam and low-quality content.

So what are some of the factors Google takes into consideration when determining which tweets will show up in real-time search results? Here Are 5 Factors that Determine a Tweet’s Authority

Read More…